The Double Life of Ted Bundy

He worked a suicide hotline. He ran political campaigns. He wrote pamphlets on rape prevention — and handed them out to women. This is the story of Ted Bundy: a serial killer who murdered at least thirty people across seven states, escaped from custody twice, and sat on death row for nine years before facing justice. In April 2026, a DNA match finally closed the coldest chapter — fifty-one years after a seventeen-year-old girl named Laura Ann Aime left a Halloween party in Utah and never came home.

The Double Life of Ted Bundy
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For four years — from 1974 to 1978 — a man worked political campaigns, volunteered at a suicide prevention hotline, and wrote pamphlets on how women could protect themselves from sexual assault. He was finishing law school. He was charming and organized and well-connected. And he was killing people.
This episode traces the full arc of the Ted Bundy case: from the rain-soaked Pacific Northwest campuses where women began disappearing in 1974, to the mountain resort in Snowmass Village, Colorado where a nurse vanished from a ski lodge hallway, to the Florida State University campus where the worst night came — and finally to a Utah press conference held in April 2026, where a sheriff stood at a podium and confirmed what a family had waited fifty-one years to hear. Along the way, we look at the kidnapping Carol DaRonch survived and what she saw in Bundy's eyes, the two astonishing jailbreaks that allowed him to continue killing, the landmark bite-mark evidence that convicted him, and the question his case forced American law enforcement to permanently reckon with: what happens when no one is sharing information?

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