Skip to playerSkip to main content
The freeways of Southern California hold millions of drivers every day... but they also hold secrets buried deep beneath the asphalt. 🛣️

In the 1950s and 60s, heavy-equipment operator Mack Ray Edwards used the state’s massive highway expansion to construct a literal graveyard right under the concrete. He famously boasted that his victims would never be found, because "no one would tear up a freeway."

On June 14, the next episode of Histories of Horror dives into the terrifying legacy of a monster who hid in plain sight, the sickening confession that shocked the LAPD, and the cold cases that still linger in the shadows of the Golden State.

Mark your calendars. The new episode drops Sunday, June 14, wherever you get your podcasts. 🎙️🕷️

The next time you’re driving through LA... ask yourself what you’re really driving over.

#TrueCrimeCommunity #SerialKillerHistory #LAColdCases #TrueCrimePodcasts #CaliforniaTrueCrime
Transcript
00:00On the next episode of Histories of Horror, every single day millions of people drive across the sprawling freeways of
00:10Southern California.
00:12They sit in traffic, play music, completely unaware of what lies just beneath their tires.
00:20In the 1950s and 60s, those highways were still being carved into the dirt, and one heavy equipment operator used
00:28his machinery to build a graveyard right under the asphalt.
00:33He famously boasted that his secrets were safe because no one would tear up a freeway.
00:40On June 14th, Histories of Horror uncovers the terrifying legacy of Mac Ray Edwards, the monster who hid in plain
00:48sight, and the victims trapped beneath the concrete of a booming paradise.
00:53This next episode drops Sunday. Subscribe wherever you are to get podcast updates.
00:59And the next time you're driving through LA, ask yourself what you're really driving over.
01:05Check us out on Histories of Horror.
Comments

Recommended