Mr District Attorney 53 05 03 039 Case Of The Murder By Amateurs
Picture this: it's late evening, the city streets are shrouded in fog, and in a modest apartment, an ordinary citizen lies dead—not by the hands of a professional criminal, but by those of well-meaning amateurs whose desperation has led them to the unforgivable. In this riveting episode, listeners will find themselves entangled in a web of circumstantial evidence, moral ambiguity, and the relentless pursuit of justice. As the District Attorney's office peels back the layers of this seemingly straightforward homicide, what emerges is far more complex: a portrait of everyday people pushed to their breaking point, whose amateur attempts at solving their own problems have spiraled into tragedy. The tension crackles as interrogations cut to the heart of human weakness, while our hero—the incorruptible voice of justice—methodically separates truth from desperation.
This 1940 episode epitomizes what made Mr. District Attorney such an enduring favorite throughout its thirteen-year run. Eschewing the sensationalism of typical crime programming, the show grounded itself in the procedural realities of law enforcement and courtroom drama, starring Jay Jostyn as the principled D.A. himself. In an era when Americans were hungry for tales of institutional order and moral clarity, Mr. District Attorney delivered exactly that—not through pulp fiction theatrics, but through meticulous detective work and the inexorable march of evidence toward justice. The show's opening tagline promised listeners would witness "the true facts and cases from the files of the District Attorney's office," lending an air of authenticity that kept audiences coming back night after night.
Don't miss this masterclass in radio drama, where amateurs meet their reckoning and the machinery of justice grinds forward. Tune in now to discover what drove ordinary people to commit the extraordinary crime.