Her Last Call 2020 reaches ABC on Friday, 19th June 2026, with a two-hour window set for 9:00-11:00 p.m. EDT. The episode, Her Last Call, puts Denise Amber Lee’s case back in prime time and sends it to Disney+ and Hulu the next day.
That rollout gives the program a broadcast first, then a streaming tail, which is the standard path for ABC News franchises built to keep a true-crime story moving after linear air. For readers tracking the case, the useful detail is not just the premiere date; it is that the new material arrives in a format designed to travel across platforms.
Denise Amber Lee in North Port
Denise Amber Lee disappeared from her North Port, Florida home, and her husband came home from work to find the couple’s two young children unattended. He called 911, and her father joined the search; he was a veteran sheriff’s detective. Those facts matter because the episode is built around a case that moved through the system in real time, not one reconstructed only from courtroom memory.
A 911 call also came from Denise Amber Lee using her abductor’s cellphone. That detail is the spine of the story, and it explains why the case still carries weight nearly two decades after Michael King was convicted for her murder. A sequence of 911 calls emerged over the next few hours, and witnesses kept calling with tips as the search widened.
Michael King in March
Michael King was executed in March, and Denise Amber Lee’s husband and son were in attendance. The episode includes new interviews with both of them after that execution, which moves this installment beyond a standard recap and into a post-sentence family account of the case.
The family believes one eyewitness 911 call was critical and could have possibly saved Denise Amber Lee’s life. That is the complication built into this episode: the case is not just about a conviction and an execution, but about the gap between what witnesses saw, what callers reported, and what arrived too late.
ABC News and 20/20
20/20 is anchored by David Muir and Deborah Roberts, with Janice Johnston serving as executive producer. The series has run for over 45 years, and ABC News describes it as its no. 1 award-winning primetime program, so a case like this fits the show’s operating model: a familiar brand, a finished legal chapter, and fresh interviews that can reopen the timeline for viewers.
For anyone following Denise Amber Lee’s case, the immediate next step is simple: the broadcast arrives on Friday, and the streaming release follows the next day on Disney+ and Hulu. What the episode has to answer is narrower and sharper — what exactly did that critical eyewitness call say, and why was it not enough to save her?






