LONDON- THE SECRET CODE and ROQUEL STEVE'S MURDER DANGEROUS ASSIGNMENT
Release Date: 04/03/2026
1001 Radio Crime Solvers
William Gargon starred as Barrie Craig, Private Investigator in the popular NBC radio drama which aired from 1951 to 1955. He was a little more laid back than Sam Spade and some of the others, but the cases he took on were tough. His office was on Madison Ave.
info_outline1001 Radio Crime Solvers
William Gargon starred as Barrie Craig, Private Investigator in the popular NBC radio drama which aired from 1951 to 1955. He was a little more laid back than Sam Spade and some of the others, but the cases he took on were tough. His office was on Madison Ave.
info_outline1001 Radio Crime Solvers
William Gargon starred as Barrie Craig, Private Investigator in the popular NBC radio drama which aired from 1951 to 1955. He was a little more laid back than Sam Spade and some of the others, but the cases he took on were tough. His office was on Madison Ave.
info_outline1001 Radio Crime Solvers
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — “For Love of Murder” A Crime Fueled by Passion, Secrets, and a Dangerous Obsession In “For Love of Murder,” Barrie Craig steps into a case where emotions run hotter than the facts. What begins as a simple inquiry quickly turns into a tangle of jealousy, hidden relationships, and a love affair that has spiraled into something far darker. Craig finds himself navigating a world where every suspect has a motive, and every motive is tied to the same volatile mix of desire and desperation. As he interviews the players involved, he uncovers lies told to protect...
info_outline1001 Radio Crime Solvers
The New Adventures of Nero Wolfe is a 1950-1951 radio drama series starring Sydney Greenstreet as Rex Stout's fictional armchair detective Nero Wolfe. The series was unique in that it stressed characterization over plot. It was well written and well-produced.
info_outline1001 Radio Crime Solvers
PURSUIT (CBS 1949 - 1952) was a detective series that presented the cases of the fictional Scotland Yard Inspector Peter Black. The Inspector was a dedicated policeman, a man hunter, who once on the case, would not rest until the wrongdoer was brought to justice. Black was assisted in cases by Sgt. Moffet. The series was unusual in that it featured dual narration. Starting in the Spring of 1950, Bill Johnstone provided the opening and closing narrations and sometimes, bridges between commercials. Inspector
info_outline1001 Radio Crime Solvers
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — 1001 Radio Crime Solvers The Adventures of Sam Spade: “The Overture Caper” A Missing Musician, a Strange Request, and a Case That Hits All the Wrong Notes In “The Overture Caper,” Sam Spade is pulled into a case that begins with a simple request from a worried client — find a missing musician who vanished just before a major performance. But the moment Spade starts asking questions, he discovers that the world of music has its own brand of backstage intrigue. What should have been a routine missing‑person job quickly turns into a tangle of jealous rivals,...
info_outline1001 Radio Crime Solvers
The Falcon radio series premiered on the Blue Network on April 10, 1943. Some 70 episodes were produced between 1943 and 1954. Beginning in the late 1930's three very popular novels popularized the character called The Falcon- who was really an investigator named Michael Waring. The Falcon was also the hero in three movies in the 40's- so the character was well established before it hit radio.
info_outline1001 Radio Crime Solvers
Show Notes — Dragnet Episode: “The Big Trunk” Tone: Methodical police work, quiet tension, classic procedural realism Summary: Friday and Romero are assigned to a case that begins with a routine warehouse burglary and quickly escalates into something far more serious. A stolen trunk turns up containing evidence that points to a larger criminal operation—one involving interstate theft, forged identities, and suspects who are far more organized than the average smash‑and‑grab crew. As the detectives follow the trail, they encounter reluctant witnesses, misleading leads, and a suspect...
info_outline1001 Radio Crime Solvers
Here are polished, atmospheric, spoiler‑safe show notes summaries for the two Mr. and Mrs. North episodes — “The Sparkler” and “Pam Takes a Message” — written in the same clean, narrative-forward style you’ve been using for your classic radio series collections. 🎙️ Show Notes — Mr. and Mrs. North Episode: “The Sparkler” Tone: Light domestic comedy meets sharp mystery Summary: When a valuable diamond known as “The Sparkler” goes missing under baffling circumstances, Pam and Jerry North find themselves drawn into a case where glamour, greed, and misdirection...
info_outline .⭐ SHOW NOTES — Dangerous Assignment
“London: The Secret Code” — Summary
In “London: The Secret Code,” Steve Mitchell is dispatched to England when U.S. intelligence intercepts fragments of a mysterious code being used somewhere inside London’s diplomatic circles. The fragments are meaningless on their own—but someone is using them to pass highly sensitive information, and the leak is putting international negotiations at risk.
Once on the ground, Steve finds himself navigating a maze of double identities, shadowy couriers, and a handful of suspects who all seem to know more than they’re saying. A routine contact goes missing, a coded message turns up in an unexpected place, and Steve begins to suspect that the traitor may be hiding in plain sight.
The episode blends classic Dangerous Assignment elements: fog‑shrouded London streets, tense meetings in safe houses, and a final reveal that hinges on Steve’s ability to spot the one detail everyone else overlooked. It’s a tight, clever espionage puzzle with a distinctly British backdrop.
⭐ “Raquel: Steve’s Murder” — Summary
“Raquel: Steve’s Murder” opens with a jolt: word reaches Washington that Steve Mitchell has been killed overseas. The report is shocking, the details are thin, and the location—Raquel, a fictional Latin American hotspot—has been simmering with political tension.
But the truth is far stranger. Steve is very much alive, and his “death” has been staged to draw out the people behind a series of assassinations targeting foreign agents. Operating under the assumption that he’s out of the picture, the conspirators begin to move more boldly, giving Steve the chance to work undercover in the shadows of Raquel’s back alleys, cafés, and government offices.
The episode mixes danger with deception as Steve races to identify who ordered his supposed murder—and why. Every ally might be an enemy, every conversation a trap, and every step forward risks blowing his cover. The final confrontation brings the plot full circle, revealing who wanted Steve dead and what they hoped to gain.
It’s one of the series’ more dramatic entries, built around the idea that sometimes the best way to catch a killer is to let them think they’ve already succeeded.
angerous Assignment was an NBC radio drama starring Brian Donlevy broadcast in the US 1949–1953. It preceded the James Bond character and books and may well have inspired them.
"The Commissioner" sent US special agent Steve Mitchell to exotic locales all over the world, where he would encounter adventure and international intrigue in pursuit of some secret. Each show would always open with a brief teaser scene from the episode to follow. After the intro, Steve Mitchell would be summoned to the office of 'The Commissioner', the regional head of an unnamed US State Department agency created to address international unrest as it affected U.S. interests. "The Commissioner" would give background information, explain the current situation and tell Steve his assignment. Steve's cover identity, in almost all his adventures, was that of a suave debonair foreign correspondent for an unnamed print publication — his assignments invariably involved deceit, trickery, and violence, all tied together into a successful resolution by the end of the episode.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices