Dark Downeast - NEW SEASON: CounterClock Season 6
Episode Date: May 10, 2024Since the release of CounterClock Season 1, Delia has received hundreds of requests from families of victims of violent crime. In November 2022, one message in her inbox stood out from the rest. It wa...s from a middle-aged woman asking for Delia's help investigating the mysterious death of her 27-year-old brother from 1991. The message stood out for one big reason. The man's mangled body was found in an all-too familiar place to Delia. Eastern North Carolina.Thirty-three years after Douglas Wagg, Jr. turned up on a lone stretch of railroad tracks in the middle of the night in rural Martin County and over a year since Delia took on the case the scope of what was really going on in the area during the 1990's has come into view. Who was Doug? How did he end up so far from home? Who was he last seen with? Was the train really what killed him? Why was his case never investigated?The journey to find the answers to those questions has revealed a web of small town secrets that feel like fiction, except they're not. Over the course of the Season 6 investigation Delia has interviewed more than 45 people, spoken with convicted murderers in prison, and traced the origins of a disturbing pattern of behavior within local law enforcement that may have resulted in a decades-long cover up of multiple deaths. The investigation into what happened to Doug Wagg appears to be just the tip of a very large, very complicated iceberg that someone has worked hard to keep hidden for more than three decades. For even more time with CounterClock, follow us on social media.Instagram: @counterclockpodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @CounterClockPod | @audiochuckFacebook: /CounterClockPodcast | /audiochuckllc
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Hey, Dark Down Easter's. In the newest season of Counter Clock, my friend and investigative
journalist Delia D'Ambra takes us back to Fourth of July weekend in 1991, when 27-year-old
Douglas Wag Jr. set out on his bike to sell some cans for some quick cash so that he and
his wife Sandy could attend the local festivities. But Doug never returned home, and the next time anybody would
see him is when his body turned up on a stretch of railroad tracks on the outskirts of Williamston,
North Carolina, under the dim headbeam of an oncoming train. This season, Delia dives into
exactly how Doug died and how he ended up on a stretch of tracks so far from his home. And while her
investigation began with her probing into this one suspicious death, she ended up uncovering a
string of potentially related crimes, a climbing number of mysterious deaths, and a web of small
town secrets that the community and Doug's family remains committed to unraveling. So join Delia D'Ambra in CounterClock
as she takes us back to the railroad tracks
where her journey to the truth
about what really happened to Doug lies
and walks us through the twists
even she didn't see coming.
Listen to the trailer for CounterClock season six up ahead
and then join the Crime Junkie fan club
to binge all episodes now.
Or listen to new episodes of Counter Clock Weekly, wherever you're listening.
Busy track. Still is. And they were on a pretty tight schedule. I mean,
you could pretty well set your clock by them.
In the early morning
hours of July 8th, 1991,
something was on the railroad
tracks just outside the town
of Williamston, North Carolina.
Everything goes through your head.
This was not supposed to be there.
That something turned out
to be a someone.
There was no movement at all.
He said, your son Doug is dead.
There's really no way to word it how you feel
when you lose somebody you're thinking
you're going to spend the rest of your life with.
For more than three decades,
questions about what happened to 27-year-old
Douglas Wag Jr. have gone unanswered.
Why was he down here?
What was going on with Dougie? Where was he?
I don't know any more now than I did 32 years ago.
Doug's family never got a straight answer from police about what led up to his demise.
And that's because law enforcement chose not to seek answers.
They said, I don't know what you think you're doing
in my county working my crime scene,
but this was an accident.
For them not to have followed through
with what they were required to do,
to me, is negligence.
The longer I've studied Doug's case,
the more I've realized
the investigator's decision three decades ago doesn't make any sense
because the circumstances of Doug's death don't make any sense.
It's almost like somebody's trying to throw you off track
from what might have really happened.
It's not the train that killed him.
He was killed somewhere else, and he was put on those tracks.
Over the last year, I've uncovered a web of small-town secrets
that many people have worked very hard to keep silent.
Don't go asking questions.
Do not go looking for answers.
The only answer is why. And why will get you in trouble more than once. Do not go looking for answers.
I never expected that probing into one man's death would reveal a string of crimes. There was a lot of heroin, a lot of cocaine
coming in.
Missing people.
They went missing for
inapparent reasons.
And the truck went missing at the same time.
He came to me in a dream
and he said, Mom, I will
kill them. Don't let them get away
with this. And at least
nine deaths.
When he shot, we heard this.
All of it has made me rethink everything I thought I knew about where I'm from.
On the highway, you'd see a sign,
Welcome to Johnston County, KKK country.
So buckle up.
This season is the most intense investigation yet. When you have one big thing, it makes you question everything.
And just like me, you won't see the twists coming.
All I could think about was this baby.
He was a living testimony, and they needed him gone.
Has anyone other than me contacted you about this
in the last 30 plus years?
No.
At some point in time,
somebody was going to come asking questions.
Somebody was going to want to know
what happened to their loved one
because somebody was getting away with murder.
Episodes of Counter Clock Season 6
begin releasing this May.
Be sure to follow the show
wherever you listen to podcasts.