By 1980 the name “Ted Bundy” was one of the most recognized in the United States for all the wrong reasons. The former law student – who was a rising star in the Republican Party – was believed to have killed dozens of young women across the country. He was eventually convicted in Florida and sentenced to death for the brutal slayings of two college sorority sisters and a 12-year-old girl. Yet through the trials and years of appeals, Bundy maintained his innocence. His legal team did win several stays of execution, but as the clock wound down on his final death warrant, Bundy made a last desperate attempt to save his own life and he began to talk. Were his confessions too little – too late, or a could this last-ditch effort save him from the electric chair?