Suspense 450104 124 I Had An Alibi (128 44) 28332 29m52s
# I Had An Alibi
When the police arrive at your door with murder in their eyes and your name on their warrant, what good is an alibi if no one will believe you? In this tension-laden installment of Suspense, a man finds himself ensnared in a nightmare of circumstantial evidence and damning coincidence, where every word of protest only seems to tighten the noose. As the interrogation room closes in and the clock ticks toward a verdict that could mean the gallows, our protagonist must unravel the truth of his whereabouts—but with each revelation, the waters grow murkier and the shadows of doubt grow longer. The radiophonic tension builds relentlessly, each sound effect a heartbeat, each silence a held breath, as listeners are swept into a whirlwind of guilt, innocence, and the terrifying gap between them.
Suspense ran for two decades as CBS's crown jewel of atmospheric storytelling, and by the 1940s when this episode aired, the show had perfected the art of psychological terror delivered through sound alone. Without a single visual frame, the program's writers and sound engineers conjured complete worlds of dread—the squeak of an interrogation chair, the shuffle of papers, the crack in a voice—transforming living rooms across America into noir-tinged crime scenes. This was radio at its most sophisticated, proving that fear needed no picture show, only imagination and expert craftsmanship.
I Had An Alibi exemplifies everything that made Suspense essential listening for millions of Americans huddled around their dials. Whether you're a devoted fan of classic radio mysteries or discovering this golden age for the first time, this tightly coiled drama demands your attention. Press play, dim the lights, and prepare yourself for twenty-nine minutes of pure, unadulterated suspense.