
49 episodes

Park Predators audiochuck
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- True Crime
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4.5 • 13.4K Ratings
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Sometimes the most beautiful places hide the darkest secrets.
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The Road Trip
In 2010 an elderly couple set out on a road trip across Canada only to have their travels and lives cut short by a ruthless killer.
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The Lens Cap
A teenage girl disappears while on a horseback riding trip in Yosemite National Park during the summer of 1981.
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The Pond
The brutal shooting deaths of two college students in a Florida forest in 2006 reveal a budding serial killer was on the loose for years before anyone stopped him.
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NEW SEASON: CounterClock
When 57-year-old Bruce Cucchiara was gunned down in the parking lot of a New Orleans East apartment complex in 2012 his murder devastated his family and stumped law enforcement. For more than a year CounterClock's Delia D'Ambra has investigated the case and unraveled a web of bizarre information and circumstances about his life and those who benefitted from his death.
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The Congo
An attempted assassination of the warden of Africa’s oldest national park reveals to the world the dangers and violence lurking inside one of the most beautiful landscapes on earth.
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The Backpackers
A vicious serial killer terrorized and hunted young backpackers in Australia’s Belanglo State Forest in the early 1990’s. The impact of his heinous crimes still resonates with residents to this day. How he committed his crimes made even the most seasoned investigators shudder and the true number of victims he’s suspected of murdering may never be known.
Customer Reviews
The pond episode.
At around 19:22 in this episode something weird happens with the audio like double audio. It quits shortly after. Just wanted y’all to know
Audio editing?!
For a professional podcast it’s pretty disappointing that a full minute around 19:45 of
The Pond episode is two voices speaking over each other at the same time…
Love it!
I love Delia and I love this podcast! The stories always have a great balance of being detailed and concise, as well as humanizing the victims/survivors without feeling exploitative. Delia is a fantastic journalist and really solid storyteller.