The After Show: Yogurt Shop Murders
20/20
ABC News
4.0 • 8.9K Ratings
🗓️ 2 March 2026
⏱️ 41 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | Is this on? |
| 0:01.6 | Season 3 of Proof. |
| 0:03.1 | Murder at the bike shop is available now, wherever you get your podcasts. I'm scared to be sitting here in this damn chair talking about this shit. This is a guy confessing a murder to her, and she has no idea what day it happened. Everything I tell you is the truth. I hope I don't bring a ton of shit down on me. Listen to season three of proof now, wherever you get your podcasts. |
| 0:22.1 | There was evidence in the house and they would not listen to me. |
| 0:26.4 | It's not me. I didn't do it. |
| 0:34.3 | Welcome to 2020 The After Show. I'm Deborah Roberts. And as always, it is really a pleasure to have you here with us. |
| 0:41.5 | As we take a deep look at a 2020 episode that we have covered, as you all know, we always take a deeper dive into some of those details that you learned about on a Friday night. |
| 0:51.8 | Well, our most recent episode called Yogurt Shop Murders is a notably |
| 0:57.2 | chilling story that just made headlines for really more than 30 years. It goes back to |
| 1:03.9 | December 6th, 1991, when 14 girls were brutally murdered. I mean, just in a way that it just almost hard to describe at a |
| 1:13.3 | yogurt shop in Austin, Texas. The victims were sisters, Sarah and Jennifer Harbison, who were 17 and 15 at |
| 1:19.7 | the time, Eliza Thomas, a friend of theirs who was 17, and Amy Ayers, who was only 13 years old |
| 1:26.4 | when she was murdered. These girls were found bound, sexually |
| 1:30.3 | assaulted, and shot. It was just something that was beyond imagination. And then afterwards, |
| 1:35.8 | the shop was set on fire, obviously, in an attempt to cover the grisly crime, to cover up all |
| 1:41.3 | the evidence. And the case just left the community heartbroken and as you |
| 1:45.1 | might imagine a police force just struggling to try to solve this case along the years as they |
| 1:50.7 | began to investigate and I say years because this case did take years to solve there were false |
| 1:55.6 | confessions there were dead ends and then thanks to a team that just would not give up, ultimately a killer was identified, but it was 34 years later. |
| 2:06.2 | Well, if you saw our 2020 episode, you know our story centered around exclusively, by the way, an interview with Mindy Montfort, who is a former assistant, Texas Attorney General, who really helped crack this case. Mindy is here with us now to share some details about this case. Mindy, it is such a pleasure to have you. Thank you, Deborah. I'm very happy to be here and thank you for the coverage you've given this case. Oh, my goodness. Of course. I mean, it's one of those that people have been talking about for a long time. I wish you and I could be together in person, but I know you're working on lots of things out there in Texas. But let's just start |
| 2:39.6 | off with the case to begin with, because you worked tirelessly on this, along with other |
| 2:44.3 | investigators, of course. But when you came into the case, people had essentially kind of given up |
... |
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