This Is Your Fbi 49 01 07 (197) The Out Of Date Killer
Step into the shadowed corridors of the Federal Bureau of Investigation as a cunning criminal exploits the gap between modern crime and outdated detective work. On this January evening in 1949, listeners will experience the tense cat-and-mouse game between FBI operatives and a killer whose methods seem to belong to a bygone era—yet prove devastatingly effective in the present day. As the case unfolds with crisp dialogue and atmospheric sound design, you'll hear the clack of typewriters, the hum of filing cabinets, and the urgent ring of telephones as G-men race against time to decode a killer's twisted logic. The tension builds methodically, the way only the finest crime dramas could construct it, culminating in a thrilling confrontation that hinges on one agent's ability to think like a criminal from another age.
This Is Your FBI arrived on ABC airwaves in 1945 at the precise moment American audiences craved authentic law enforcement drama—and the Bureau itself enthusiastically cooperated, lending the show legitimacy and access that few competitors possessed. This wasn't fictionalized glamour; listeners heard stories ripped from actual case files, sanctioned by Director J. Edgar Hoover's office. By 1949, the show had become a cultural institution, representing the very best of postwar America's faith in federal authority and investigative prowess. "The Out-Of-Date Killer" exemplifies the show's genius for finding menace in unexpected places—not in spectacular gangland shootouts, but in the methodical work of detection itself.
Tune in to discover whether the FBI's modern machinery can outthink a criminal operating by yesterday's rules. In the golden age of radio, mystery and justice awaited at the turn of a dial.