Morbid - Episode 452: Doris Duke and the Murder of Eddie Tirella

Episode Date: April 20, 2023

On a cold October afternoon in 1966, billionaire heiress Doris Duke returned to her palatial Newport estate in the company of friend and interior decorator Eduardo Tirella, stopping her car j...ust outside the large iron gate that barred entrance to the driveway. Having offered to open the gate, he stepped out of the car and walked toward the gate, when the car began rolling forward, knocking Eduardo to the ground and crushing him under the two-ton weight of Duke’s station wagon. Within four days of Tirella’s death, the Newport Police had closed the case, calling it an “unfortunate accident,” but the residents of Newport, Rhode Island weren’t as convinced. Thank you so much to the remarkable David White for research assistance!ReferencesDuca, Rob. 2021. "Newport police closed Doris Duke case, again." Newport This Week, November 24.Duke, Pony, and Jason Thomas. 1996. Too Rich: The Family Secrets of Doris Duke. New York, NY: Harper Collins.Lance, Peter. 2021. Homicide at Rough Point: The Untold Story of How Doris Duke, the Richest Woman In America, Got Away with Murder. Auburn, NH: Tenacity Media.—. 2021. The triple 'murder' of Eduardo Tirella, gay confidant of Doris Duke. November 29. https://www.advocate.com/commentary/2021/11/29/triple-murder-eduardo-tirella-gay-confidant-doris-duke-newport-rhode-island.—. 2021. "The Doris Duke Cold Case Reopens: The Only Known Eyewitness Speaks for the First Time." Vanity Fair, August 5.Mansfield, Stephanie. 1992. The Richest Girl in the World: The Extravagant Life and Fast Times of Doris Duke. New York, NY: G.P. Putnam & Sons.New York Times. 1964. "Divorce suit filed against Doris Duke." New York Times, January 11: 14.—. 1935. "Doris Duke is wed to J.H.R. Cromwell." New York Times, February 14: 23.—. 1966. "Duke estate death ruled an accident." New York Times, October 12: 25.Newport Daily News. 1967. "Crash victim's kin asks $2.5 million of Doris Duke." Newport Daily News, December 8: 1.—. 1966. "Death of Miss Duke's friend ruled 'unfortunate accident'." Newport Daily News, October 10: 1.—. 1966. "Doris Duke kills friend in crash." Newport Daily News, October 8: 1.—. 1966. "Press blasts police chief Radice on handling public information." Newport Daily News, November 3: 1.Schwarz, Ted, and Tom Rybak. 1997. Trust No One: The Glamorous Life and Bizarre Death of Doris Duke. New York, NY: St. Martin's Press.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, Prime members, you can listen to morbid, early, and add free on Amazon music. Download the app today. You're listening to a morbid network podcast. Audible lets you enjoy all your favorite audio entertainment in one app. You'll always find the best of what you love or something new to discover. Audible offers an incredible selection of audiobooks across every genre, from best sellers and new releases to celebrity memoirs, mysteries, thrillers, motivation, wellness, business,
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Starting point is 00:02:14 It's morbid in the afternoon. Woo! You be high-a. It hasn't been morbid in the morning for a while. It's morbid in the afternoon. Woo! You be high-a. It hasn't been morbid in the morning for a while. It hasn't been morbid in the morning for a while. It hasn't been morbid in the afternoon. Yeah, it hasn't been morbid in the morning for a while.
Starting point is 00:02:30 Because we're always doing like admin shit in the morning. And it's like kids going to school. So it just gets chaotic in the morning now. It really does. The puppies are like cry cry. Yeah, now this puppy's involved in the whole thing. So our morning start, John and my morning start at like 3 a.m. now. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:46 So it's been a ride. Oh, and by the way, thanks everybody for mentioning litter mate syndrome. I have gotten more messages than I can count about litter mate syndrome. Fun. And I appreciate the concern. I did research litter mate syndrome
Starting point is 00:03:03 before I got these puppies. So I know all about it. We have a trainer. We're very like on it. That's when they get separated with training and being separated with sleeping and all that good stuff. They just snuggle together sometimes during the day. The litter make syndrome thing is when they get like two bonded and then they hate you. Yeah, they either like super bond with each other and don't bond with you or they get super aggressive with each other and can get like, it can get like dangerous.
Starting point is 00:03:30 Oh, they can get like, too aggressive with each other. Yeah. So we're on it. You know, I can't just like, sniff each other's nose, to be honest. Well, Sydney and Blanche seem to dig each other. Yeah, they're good bros. Yeah, they're good bros. Yeah they're good bros. I love that. They can handle being apart right now so that's good. Yeah. Yeah. We'll just keep it up.
Starting point is 00:03:50 Dogs. But thanks for everybody mentioning that. I appreciate it but just know that I know what it is. So I promise I know what it is. It which is bad. It's been a busy week. We got to collab with Bailey Sarian. With the girls from Red Hannah. With the girls from Red Hannah. Hannah! And Sarude. It was too.
Starting point is 00:04:15 And then she took a breath. Yeah, I really did. And she looked at her page and I said, oh, what's coming. And then nothing came. I think I just forgot how to do this for a second, which is bad. It's been a busy week. We got a busy week. We got to collab with Bailey Sarian.
Starting point is 00:04:24 With the girls from Red Hannah. With the girls from Red-Han? Would the girls from Red-Han? Hanna! And Sarooody. It was too. They, all three of those gals are top fucking notch humans. They really are. Let me tell you.
Starting point is 00:04:37 It's so weird, though, seeing not many humans within a one week period. Because we live a life where like we see each other. Yep. Our spouses and like, yeah. And that's literally it. And it's even weirder because we have collabed with Bailey before. But it was over the internet. And like we feel like we know each other and then we got to do it this time in person.
Starting point is 00:05:02 Right. So we were like, we're meeting each other, but like, we're not meeting each other because we know each other. Yeah. But it was very strange. And then Red Handed was in person too. So it was like, we're usually doing these things on Zoom. So it was a whole week of in person getting to hang with pod friends. It was great. It was so much fun. It was just wild. Like, I forgot how to act for a minute. Yeah, I always forget how to act. I was like, oh, hi. Yeah. Oh, hey. A nash.
Starting point is 00:05:27 He weirdos. And then they're like, this is life. This is life. Ash, are you broken? Like, oh, hey, weirdos. What's going on? They're like, that one. Be checking out at Target.
Starting point is 00:05:37 I'm like, hi. Oh, yeah. We're not. Keep it weird, bye. I'm just like short circuit. I forgot. Oh, we're fine. Keep it weird, bye. It's who we are. No. I just like short circuit everywhere. Oh, we are five.
Starting point is 00:05:46 That's weird. That's who we are. No, I feel like a robot sometimes, but don't we all? Don't we all? Yeah. I'm trying to think if I have any more... I'm sure I'll have more TikTok shout outs for you guys. Ooh.
Starting point is 00:06:01 Like the next episode I haven't been on TikTok as much. Yeah, that's fun. But I'm gonna get back on to it it. So I'll have some more for you because it's fun to shout out TikTok people. Did you see Tom Sandivall and watch what happens live last night? Tom, something we could talk about. Oh no, God no, Tom Schwartz.
Starting point is 00:06:15 You were like, I did it. No, that happened in an alternate universe. Yeah, no. Tom Schwartz was on watch what happens live and he told people to hug Tom. No, Tom Schwartz was on and he told people to hug Tom. No, Tom Schwartz was on and he told people to hug Tom sand of all if they saw them. And did you see La La's response to that?
Starting point is 00:06:32 No, but I'm gonna hug him. She said, we're not gonna hug him. We're gonna atomic wedgie, which I was like, yeah, that's pretty, pretty epic. So you can, don't put your hands on anybody else, but atomic wedgie. I like it. That I mean, welcome to VPR corner for a second, but I can't wait for that reunion guys. And it's not happening until like the end of May.
Starting point is 00:06:55 I know you keep telling me that and it's almost like you punch me in the face every time. Well, it's because if I remember it, I feel like I've been punched from within my face. So then I have to outwardly punch you in the face But like figuratively. Yeah, you know, it makes me sad though. I don't want to wake that long I don't either but Ariana looks phenomenal. She looks so fucking good. The revenge dress. Oh my god Shouldn't we all be so lucky? Shouldn't we all be that goddess the baddest bitch on the planet? She really is But you know what I have a long one for you today. I'm here for it. There was really no way to transition
Starting point is 00:07:27 on a vendor's and to true crime. But there never is. We should probably begin with vendor pump rules, get into Chit Chat and then go into the story because it's probably an easier segue. Yeah. Sagu. But who knows?
Starting point is 00:07:38 Who the, isn't that, where did I hear Sagu? Was it the office? No. Oh, it's, and that's why we drink. Oh, they say that? Yes, Sagu. I was like, I wanna give them a credit. Cause I remember hearing that word.
Starting point is 00:07:51 I like Sagu. I like it. And I like it, that's why we drink K.M. and Christine. Hey, what's up? We love you. Okay, well yeah, so we're gonna be talking about what's one of my favorite things in the entire world other than old Hollywood.
Starting point is 00:08:02 Socialite. And old life. Socialite. I fucking love it. And we're gonna be talking about Doris motherfucking dudes. Oh, let's go. And she's actually one of the most famous socialize in America. From the very start of her life,
Starting point is 00:08:16 she had access to quite literally all the money and all the power in the world. Wow. But weirdly, she spent a good portion of her life like bouncing from one disappointing relationship to the next in the world. But weirdly, she spent a good portion of her life like bouncing from one disappointing relationship to the next. Unfortunate. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:29 Every time she entered a new relationship, she was more and more jaded from the last one. And it was kind of a pattern that was taking shape. Doris really seemed to be losing control of herself and her emotions toward like the middle part of her life. Not great. Which could be part of the reason
Starting point is 00:08:45 that she is linked to the suspicious death of one Eduardo Tarella. But because he appears in like the leader portion of her life and there's a lot to cover before that, we're gonna start at the very beginning before we give too much away. Well, it's good, because I know you guys don't like if we give too much away, so I said,
Starting point is 00:09:02 no way. I won't, I won't do it. I won't, I will cater to you, my little babies. And I meant that lovingly, not like you're being a baby. I meant like you are my babies. I meant you are my bibbess. My bibbess. Actually, Moira Rose is on the other side of my mic right now.
Starting point is 00:09:17 So Doris, she was born on November 22nd, 1912. And from the time she took her first breath, she was among the rarest class of individuals set above and apart from other Americans because of all the money she was born into. It's the whole lot of money in a small fucker. You know what I mean? You know what I mean? Yeah. Cardi. Totally. So her father was James Buchanan, Duke, better known to his friends and family as simply Buck. Buck?
Starting point is 00:09:49 Which I'm like, if you have a mother fucking name like Buchanan, don't you dare shorten it to Buck. Yeah, don't. Buchanan is Hannan. Beautiful. Yeah. But come on. He could do whatever he damn well pleased because he was one of the richest men in the world and he was one of the richest men in the world
Starting point is 00:10:06 Because he had inherited his father's tobacco company and also a power company later So he expanded the tobacco company greatly. He actually made them the first company to operate automatic Automated cigarette machines and the US which like so cool, but like so terrible. Wonderful. Cool that like he invented something that could make it happen so quickly, but bad because cancer sticks. Truth. So by 1900, he had gained control of a lot of the competing brands and he consolidated
Starting point is 00:10:38 all of them and formed the American tobacco company. Awesome. Yay. So happy about that. This is wild. Eventually he owned almost 93% of the tobacco market in the US. Wow.
Starting point is 00:10:52 And a power company on the side. Damn, like money. The money. The money. I told you, it's a whole lot of money. That's a lot of money. It's almost all of it actually. Damn, and you said money and power and you meant it.
Starting point is 00:11:07 Oh, I meant it. And I meant it. And I meant it. Literally power. I got the power. But it's literal power in tobacco, which is also power at this point. Yeah, I really I go.
Starting point is 00:11:18 Yeah, at that point, people thought like smoking cigarettes cured everything, exactly. So Buck married his second wife who was known as Nanny. That's what they called her because her name was Nanneleen, I believe, I say? I love it, Nanny. Yeah. My grandmother was Nanny. Yeah. My kids' grandmother is Nanny. My kids' grandmother will also be Nanny because my mother, well soon to be mother-in-law is Nanny. Yeah. And she spells it just like our Nanny day. Oh, I love the trace be happy. Yeah. So yes, he married Nanny Holt in men in 1907 after a very messy and very public divorce from his previous wife just one year before her name was Lillian, but I didn't really look
Starting point is 00:11:58 into her to be honest. That's okay. So sure Lillian was fine. Who really knows? Because they got divorced. It could have been him. It could have been her. It could have been her my business. But Nanny, she's my business. Nanny, she had become a young widow in 1902 when her husband, wealthy industrialist, does that how you say that? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:16 Thanks. Lilliam Inman, he died in 1902. From what is listed as diabetes, but in all likelihood, it might have been alcoholism. Yeah. Yeah. You know, diabetes will do. So after might have been alcoholism. Yeah, yeah. But you have diabetes, we'll do. So after her, that'll do. After her husband's death, she spent years traveling, shopping, being a young society
Starting point is 00:12:34 woman, pretty much all I've ever hoped and dreamed of, until she met Ben Duke, who was Bucks younger brother, and they met in 1906 at Lake Toxway Resort, which I'm like, did you name it Toxway because like even back then it was like trendy to get the toxins away. Oh, I like that. Or maybe it's a place I don't really know. But who really cares what it was? I mean, maybe you do, but whatever. The meme changed the entire course of Nanny's life is the point here. Ben ended up writing a letter to his older brother and told him, quote, I have met the most beautiful woman in the world.
Starting point is 00:13:12 Essentially trying to set his older brother up with this sexy ass lady. Good for him. Guess what? What? The plan worked. And by the next year, Nanny and Buck were married on July 24th
Starting point is 00:13:23 and a small ceremony in Brooklyn. Oh, adorable. Yeah. Now, Nanny, she brought a huge inheritance to this new marriage and also her son from that previous marriage, Walker Inman. Buck initially actually wanted to adopt Walker because he would be a son, he would go on
Starting point is 00:13:41 to carry the Duke legacy. And it would be wonderful. But Walker was like, fuck all of that. He didn't care. He literally said that. It's the direct quote. I don't know where I found it, but it's direct. He was not interested.
Starting point is 00:13:56 He made it clear from a very early age that he did not wish for Buck to adopt him. And they actually fought a lot over their years, like a ton, but especially more and more as Walker got older. And the fights led Buck to worry that he was not going to have anybody, especially like a child, to leave his fortune to or to carry on his name. Yeah. Like he's like, well, shit, this is all going to end with me. And this is like an amazing empire. Yeah. I feel like you can't just let it load off into the ether. That would suck so bad.
Starting point is 00:14:26 That would be a stranger, take it? I know, right? So luckily in the spring of 1912, that all changed. When at 42 years old, Nanny discovered she was pregnant. Whoa, right? Which like must've been crazy back then, because like, we know a lot more about pregnancy now, but like in 1912, I feel like that must have been a little scary.
Starting point is 00:14:45 Yeah. Yeah. I don't think she expected to find herself pregnant. No, definitely not in 1912. Exactly. Now that fall, she went into labor actually unexpectedly. And Doris, our girly girl, but not really, was born in the master bedroom of the Buck and Nanny's
Starting point is 00:15:02 rented house, which was on New York 78th Street. And as she was born, she was surrounded by quote, a fleet of high priced private physicians and nurses. She was just surrounded by money. By money. As she came into the world, they just threw cash at her. They absolutely did. Yeah, they were like, let's make it rain up in here.
Starting point is 00:15:20 Let's make it rain for this infant. And it's really interesting that this happened, but it's also really scary, because her birth made headlines in major cities across the country in America. That's terrifying. And of course, the press noted that she was now the sole inheritor of Bucks $100 million estate,
Starting point is 00:15:41 which led to her being nicknamed The Richest Girl in the World. Oh, that's a little scary. Right? That's a little scary. And you know what, maybe I'm thinking of it in like a now age where social media is so scary and things fly so quickly. But I mean, back then, the news was the news, obviously. But it was like social media, I guess.
Starting point is 00:16:00 Yeah. It's like, oof, that's a little scary. And by the way, a lot to put on a baby. A lot to put on a baby. A lot to put on a baby. And on her family to shield her from. And by the way, so as a state was worth 100 million then, today, that would be worth $3 billion. Whenever you bring me into a place of billion,
Starting point is 00:16:19 I don't, my mind cannot comprehend a billion. No, like a billion. That's watching succession the other night, they were talking about some deal and they were like 10 billion and they were just saying it like it was like. It sounds fake, here's a Cobb salad. Like it was just like,
Starting point is 00:16:37 would you like an egg with that adorable? And I was like, billions, like billion. Billion literally sounds fake too. Billion exists, like that's so crazy to me. It's wild. Yeah, just ask, you know, shiv and Logan Roy. I will. They exist.
Starting point is 00:16:53 It exists. And they throw it around like monopoly money over there. I mean, once you get to a billion, I feel like it is fucking monopoly money. Yeah, at that point, it's gotta be like whatever. What's scary is I was never gonna monopoly money so I don't know I was never monopoly gal. I am gonna go on the record right now. I fucking hate monopoly That's that's a bold stance to take I I will you know what I'll stand with you
Starting point is 00:17:15 Okay, but only because I cannot remember the last time I played monopoly Don't be I never remember it being a good time. It's never a good time Whenever it was like brought forth that we were gonna bring out the monopoly board, I was like, I would rather go lay in the middle of the world. Yeah, you're gonna bring out clue, let's mother fucking go. We'll make a night of it.
Starting point is 00:17:37 Yeah, I got kids clue for my kids. It's really cool. It's really cool. It's so much fun. You have to figure out who broke the toy. That's what you do in kids clue. Cause. You have to figure out who broke the toy. That's that's what you do in kids clue. Cause like I'm not going to be later. I'm like right now when they're seven. Why not? But I know it's crazy. But man, they love that. And they keep asking me to play the adult clue. And I'm like, not yet.
Starting point is 00:17:57 Not yet. Just because of the basis of it. Yeah, you don't need to explain it. One, I don't want to explain that to you. And two, you don't need to go to school and talk about like the botlar was murdered in the kitchen. With the candle stick. Oh my God. Oh, but kids clue who broke that toy and what toy was it that broke? Yeah, that's fun.
Starting point is 00:18:13 It's fun. It's all the same characters. I like that a lot of it. But yeah, clue I'm all about. Monopoly, not so much. No, I'm fuck monopoly. Too much. But Doris.
Starting point is 00:18:22 But Doris, dude. She's rich as fuck. And from the moment she was born, it was clear her life was going to be very, very different than anybody else's life around here. Yeah. Buck was also a huge germaphob, and he was like incredibly protective of her.
Starting point is 00:18:35 So he bought a private Pullman car that he named Doris. That way the family could travel around New York, just like totally isolated from the general public. But the car was stocked with champagne, cigars, That way the family could travel around New York just like totally isolated from the general public. But the car was stocked with champagne cigars and staffed with a full-time chef. That's the way, this is a car for the child. And like a family.
Starting point is 00:18:56 But like he got it so that the child wouldn't be like just wheeled around on a little. I thought he met this was literally just for the child and it was like stocked with champagne. He's a guard. Tobacco. He bought it when they had the jail. It's kind of like when you have more than two children
Starting point is 00:19:13 and you get a third row. Yeah, like you get the bigger car. You get a rich little baby to give all your inheritance to so you get them a car that's stocked with all that shit and a chef. That's it. Which I was like, but where does the chef cook though? Yeah, that was my first question
Starting point is 00:19:29 that I was gonna have about that. It's like, what's happening there? What kind of chef is it? Is it only a salad chef? He's a full-time chef. He's a full-time chef. So also, is he just hanging out in that car? Always.
Starting point is 00:19:41 All the time. That's not good for you. Just after ready. I don't know. And it's like, where is it? Is everything up to code? I don't think there even was a code. Is the temperature of everything right? Probably not. I don't know. I don't know. It's going to get real fumey up in that car. Yeah. I'd rather just stop and get some burgers on the way. Yeah, too much going on.
Starting point is 00:20:01 Yeah. But Buck also hired what was described as a battery of nurses and bodyguards to protect his daughter. Yeah, that. Because he was rightfully convinced that she had become an attractive target for kidnappers. Yes. And everyone was like, hey, this bitch has $300 billion. Yeah. You know, wait, no, $300 billion.
Starting point is 00:20:20 Oh, excuse me. That would be why. That would be crazy. And you know what, I don't blame them. I don't see that. I don't get billions of dollars. You can afford to do it. Whatever the fuck you want.
Starting point is 00:20:29 You can do it, man, it's for your kid. But that's the thing. When she had been born and dubbed the richest girl in the world, it opened the floodgates and tons and tons of letters were starting to be sent to the family on a regular basis, begging the baby for money. Like she can't even write you back. People have always been people and people.
Starting point is 00:20:46 Yeah, people always just, people always take it that extra mile. People stay people. They make two. Yeah, true. Like you said that and I was like, what the hell got in there. I was like, no, that makes sense. That makes sense.
Starting point is 00:20:59 That's really not. Open up your bed, Mo. Yeah, but the thought of someone kidnapping her for ransom wasn't far-fetched. So Buck was spending money to protect his daughter out of pure fear and constant paranoia. And when he wasn't doing that, he was showering her and his wife with like,
Starting point is 00:21:13 super extravagant gifts and artwork and antiques, like craziness. Sounds sick. Sounds like the life of, is it the life of Riley to this side? It sounds like that, is. Is it Riley? Is it Riley? But from the moment she Riley to this side? It sounds like that. Is it Riley?
Starting point is 00:21:25 Is it Riley? But from the moment she arrived in this world, there was a very loud and clear message being conveyed to Doris that you could have whatever the fuck you want, whatever the fuck you want, and there is nothing that can't be bought because you have the means to do so. And here in Liza, the problem, all of that other stuff, you're like, that sounds cool.
Starting point is 00:21:44 Beautiful. Oh, yeah. Yeah, why not? You got the money for it, do it that other stuff, you're like, that sounds cool. Beautiful. Oh, yeah. Yeah, why not? You got the money for it, do it. But then when you get to that part, you're like, and there it is. That's the issue. Exactly. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:21:55 Exactly. That doesn't make a great adult. No. Or an easy to deal with adult. No. No, no, no. No, no. So shortly after Doris was born, the family actually moved back to Duke Farms,
Starting point is 00:22:06 which was their 2,700 acre in Hillsboro Township, New Jersey. It's actually cool to read about Doris because she's from around here. I know, that is cool. She spends most of her time in New York, New Jersey, and Rhode Island, actually. Oh, that's funny. Yeah, like the Newport Manchains will be coming up.
Starting point is 00:22:23 I'm gonna say, the Newport Manchains, they have such like a cool mystique about them. Oh, that's funny. Yeah, like out in the Newport Manchains we'll be covering this. I was just gonna say, the Newport Manchains, they have such like a cool mystique about them. Oh my God. Like they're so knives out. They're so murder mystery. Yeah. They just got that vibe about it. I just love it.
Starting point is 00:22:36 I was like looking at some of them online as I was doing this story just to see because I've never been inside of one. Have you? No, I don't think I've actually been inside the Newport mansion. I can, though. Like, there's...
Starting point is 00:22:47 Yeah, they do tours and stuff. I want to do that. And I think, like, part of them... It's in, like, Salve Regina, that campus, like, some of the mansions are part of it or something. Probably. I think it's, like, a beautiful campus. Oh, love that.
Starting point is 00:22:58 I didn't even know that just saying. I just said probably because it sounded good. Probably, you know, it's like, you ever sit down on your ankle and then you go to move your ankle to the opposite way and you're afraid you're gonna break it in half all the time. That just happened to me. So like that was the moment. All the time. Fuck.
Starting point is 00:23:12 This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. Getting to know yourself can be a lifelong process, especially because we're always growing in changing. I feel like this year especially for me has come with so much growth, so much change, and every now and then it can get a little exhausting. I'm like, what do I expect next? Now listen, therapy is all about deepening yourself awareness and understanding, because sometimes we don't know what we want or why we react to things the way we do until we talk through things.
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Starting point is 00:24:19 flexible, and suited to your schedule. Just fill out a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist, and switch therapists anytime for no additional charge. Discover your potential with BetterHelp. Visit betterhelp.com slash morbid today to get 10% off your first month. That's BetterHelpHELP.com slash morbid. What if you were trafficked into a cult over shot nine times, or fell in love with a vampire,
Starting point is 00:24:47 or went into a minor surgery and woke up one week later, paralyzed? What would you do? I'm Whit Missildine, the creator of this is actually happening, a podcast from Wondry that brings you extraordinary true stories of life-changing events, told by the people who lived them. From a young man that dooms his entire future with one choice, to a woman who survived a notorious serial killer, you'll hear their first-person account of how they overcame remarkable circumstances. Each episode is an exploration of the human spirit and personal discovery. These haunting accounts sound like Hollywood movies, but I assure you this is actually happening.
Starting point is 00:25:29 Follow this is actually happening wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen ad-free on the Amazon Music or Lundery app. So they moved back to New Jersey to their, you know, there's like small, quaint little farm with 2,700 acres. No, in addition to the... No, in addition to the... Yeah, just a couple of... Just a couple of... Just a few acres.
Starting point is 00:26:00 Yeah. But in addition to the main house, the property included more than 40 other buildings. Damn. Nine lakes. Nine lakes. And one and a half miles of stone walls. Huh? So before Doris was born, the property
Starting point is 00:26:15 had actually been open to the public. Like they were welcomed to come stroll on the grounds. There was a lot of diverse wildlife that could be spotted. The landscape was beautiful. It was like visiting a park. But when the family returned, Buck was way too scared of having the public room
Starting point is 00:26:30 the property while they were there. I don't blame them. Yeah, especially because a lot of interest had peaked in his family. Yeah, of course. So he closed the property and he said he effectively kept the world from his daughter and keeping his daughter from entering the world.
Starting point is 00:26:46 And that's tough. And it's like, the thing is totally, protect your kid at all costs, but you can't cut them off from the world. I know, that's, but I understand why that was so hard. Yeah, total balance. Because it's like, how do you balance that? Because I'm sure, especially in that position.
Starting point is 00:27:04 That's why I was just gonna say, I'm sure every parent feels that to a certain degree, you wanna shelter your child as long as you can, but then to enter all the money that they had into it. Yeah. It's scary. That's when it gets really, really tough. But I don't know.
Starting point is 00:27:20 I feel bad. That's a shitty, I'm just saying. I feel bad for billionaires, I'm not saying that., but I'm saying like that position. I feel bad for this I worried about your kid. Yeah. Yeah, you're like parent to parent parent to parent You don't relate on that much in common Not many by nine legs So while she was shut off from the outside world at Duke Farms buck do it it on his daughter entirely he would buy her
Starting point is 00:27:44 Anything she could have wanted toys pets ponies outside world at Duke Farms, Buck do it on his daughter entirely. He would buy her anything she could have wanted, toys, pets, ponies, but he never really let other children come over to play with Doris. And on top of that, for the first 10 years of her life, I just got super Boston right there. And I like for the first 10 years of her life, but she was homeschooled by private tutors. So between being kept away from children her age and play and at school, her social skills were lacking to say the least. Yeah. But luckily, luckily, he came around.
Starting point is 00:28:14 And in 1922, when Doris was 10, her parents decided to enroll her in the Brearly School. I think that's how you say it. It was an All Girls Private School on the Upper East Side of New York. Oh, excuse me. XOXO gossip girl Now I had it right originally written wrote and I just said I'd originally I had a Regidly that she became best friends with a girl named Blair and Serena and then they lived happily ever after the end There you go, but that's not the character Doris. Yeah. Right? I had originally written that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:46 You had written that. They wrote in her out of there. Now, School of Doris dive into different interests and things like music, art, and literature, which those were all things that she really loved to, like, dive into. But School didn't do much to improve her social skills. She was still getting piles and piles of letters
Starting point is 00:29:01 from strangers either making threats to her or begging her for money. And she would show them to her classmates very unaware that this was not something they would ever really do. I was gonna say. Or understand that. I'd be like, that's wild, you wanna be friends.
Starting point is 00:29:17 That's really scary. I'd be like, I'll help you. I wanna help you. Now one friend she did make, recalled that Doris was, quote, a smart girl, Serdonic and kind of scrawny. But then she went on to say Doris was, quote, a smart girl, sardonic and kind of scrawny. But then she went on to say she was definitely something of a pariah among the other kids.
Starting point is 00:29:29 That's sad. It was giving me, like, a little princess. Remember that movie? Oh my God, you know I've been thinking about that movie. Really? Yeah. For some reason, the vibes were similar. That's how I felt.
Starting point is 00:29:41 Yeah. Sometimes you and I are like, really, like lately, I feel like too. Like I'm like, can you just like leave my head for a moment? Get the fuck out of my head. That's my head. Okay.
Starting point is 00:29:51 I just feel bad because it's not her fault. No, you know, like it's not her fault she was born into. I just said her for, it's not her fault. She wrote it. It's not her fault. It's not her fault that she was born into a family of a billionaire legacy.
Starting point is 00:30:08 Wanted a billion chances. Yeah, it sucks that she reaps the benefits of it, the monetary benefits of it. Of course, but that's not everything. Exactly, and it's like, obviously, that's really tough for a kid. Exactly. I do too for the kid. But sadly, things we're going to take a sad turn for Doris. That is sad.
Starting point is 00:30:29 Because in 19, sad, brought to you by sad. In 1925, life shifted really dramatically for her because her father's health started to take a serious decline. As she was getting older, like into her like 10, 11, 12 years, I don't know what the fuck you call those. It her 10, 11, 12 years, I don't know what the fuck you call those. It was her 10, 11, 12s. Yeah, the 10, the 11, the 12. Preteen.
Starting point is 00:30:49 He was constantly fatigued. He was constantly sick. But now it was becoming clear that this was a lot more serious than anybody had originally thought. Oh no. And on October 10th, John Buchanan Duke did end up dying from pernicious anemia. Pernicious.
Starting point is 00:31:06 Yeah. Damn. It's a condition where the body is incapable of absorbing enough vitamin B12. Eek. Yeah. Yeah, that's rough. Now, Doris was a self-described daddy's girl and Bucks' death, excuse me, left a major hole in her life and left her alone with a very cold and very distant mother.
Starting point is 00:31:26 Oh, no. And of course, a full staffed house. Of course. But the year before he died, Buck had established the Duke Endowment with a $40 million donation to Trinity College in North Carolina, where he was from. Damn. After that, the school was redeveloped
Starting point is 00:31:42 and branded as Duke University to honor him. Oh, that one. Some people say that he made them rename it after that, the school was redeveloped and branded as Duke University to honor him. Oh, that one. Some people say that he made them rename it after that, but if he donated $40 million, I think that's fair. Yeah, I would say so. I'd want it named after me. He definitely bought that name. That is for sure.
Starting point is 00:31:58 Now, after he died, his will left another 65 million to the school, but the bulk of his estate went to his daughter, leaving 13-year-old Doris with roughly again, a hundred million dollars in cash. Damn. She's flushed with cash. And again, $3 billion today. So she had $3 billion in cash.
Starting point is 00:32:24 Damn. She on top of that had control of Duke Farms among other properties. Wow. At that point, she quite literally was the richest girl in the world. Wow. The entire world. The world, the planet, all of it.
Starting point is 00:32:40 The planet. But sadly, her inheritance put more of a strain on the relationship she had with her mother because Nanny, which I would too, resented the fact that her husband had left everything to their daughter. Can you imagine? Yeah, you marry this man's.
Starting point is 00:32:57 And like, I want my kid to be taken care of or my future kids, but like, they get everything. Yeah. All those nights we spend together, that's a tough thing. They get everything. That's a tough hit to take. That's right.
Starting point is 00:33:09 I will say that. And what was even harder of a hit to take was they're actually ended up being a lawsuit where Doris sued Nanny over the sale of Duke Farms because Nanny wanted to sell the property but Doris wanted to keep it. So she ended up suing Nanny and the executors of the will successfully. Wow.
Starting point is 00:33:28 And she kept Duke Farms and the family until she died. It was like the primary residence. Wow, look at that crazy. But like 13 years old and she sues them. 13 years old having to see them too. Yeah, and that's so traumatic too. Like, what the fuck? And it's like, how do you even come to that place? And's like, how do you, how do you even come to that place?
Starting point is 00:33:47 And you guys just, you know, like how do you even know to do that? Yeah, and you guys just like go home and eat dinner together after you're all souped, get settled out of court. And like who got her to do that? And I do have been somebody I think. I don't know,
Starting point is 00:33:59 because it's like that person must have had a vested interest. Maybe it was just her though, because she sued her mother and the executors of the will. Maybe. Right. And she's a very steadfast girl. I mean, yeah, so that definitely could be it. No, fast forward a few years from that to the fall of 1930. Now Doris is celebrating her 18th birthday with a big old
Starting point is 00:34:20 coming out party. Oh, you always wanted one of those. A debut. Tom. There it is. With the white gloves. Ever since you've always wanted one of those. A debutant. There it is. There it is. The white gloves. Ever since you saw it on Gilmore Girls.
Starting point is 00:34:29 Oh, I've always wanted a debutant party. Yeah, you wanted to do a fan dance. I really, really wanted to do the fan dance y'all. I don't know any of the interworkings, but anything else, but I really want to do the fan dance. Yeah, like you don't want to have anything else to do with it. You just want to do the dress. Yeah, like you don't want to like have anything else to do with it. You just want to do the dress. Yep.
Starting point is 00:34:47 Probably the food. Absolutely. And the fan dance. And the white loves. I love it. Now, most society women would have this at this time and love it and all that jazz. Doris fucking hated this. She wanted to go off to college.
Starting point is 00:35:00 She didn't want to have it at these, but Nanny was like, you are having a coming out party. Of course. Like duh. Your door stucke. Now, the coming out party was held at rough point, which was their New York Rhode Island, no, Newport, Rhode Island estate, that will end up becoming a huge point in this story later on. But it marked Doris' entrance into a high society.
Starting point is 00:35:21 High society? And the world of the elite and the wealthy American families. Chiching, chiching. Which all sounds pretty terrible if you ask me. But like the food and the white gloves and the fantants, sign me up. Into it.
Starting point is 00:35:32 So they coming out party like I said, definitely meant to hell of a lot more to Nanny than it did to Doris. Nanny was a member of what was referred to as the old guard. Oh, yeah. Which is just like the Old Thai Society, the original, it's like how it meant more to Emilie Gilmore than it did to Murray and Loreline, exactly.
Starting point is 00:35:52 Exactly. Now, she took Nanny, she took the rights and responsibilities of society life very seriously. While Doris, on the other hand, saw the responsibilities of all this wealth and privilege she had as an inescapable burden. At some point, I'm sure she probably loved it. There was probably some pretty sick parts of it.
Starting point is 00:36:13 Yeah, definitely. Not gonna lie. But at least at this point in her life, she felt like it was an inescapable burden. Yeah, I'm sure there were definitely those moments of being like, oh cool everyone wants to kidnap me. Yeah, exactly. That's a good life to burden. And I'm sure it was very difficult to make friends that were not... there were definitely those moments of being like, oh cool, everyone wants to kidnap me. Yeah, exactly. That's a good letter, burden. And I'm sure it was very difficult to make friends
Starting point is 00:36:27 that were not of her station. Exactly. Like you don't know if people are just being friends with you because you got money. Exactly. Now, she would tend to hang out to us with a different crowd. That nanny deemed the lower class.
Starting point is 00:36:40 Ooh. And she called them undesirables. Wow, I call you an uncrustable. That's a big compliment though, so don't even call her that. But these people, what was flavor though? What's not a great flavor? Remember when I got them to tweet at me about the girl cheese flavor? That was a good time.
Starting point is 00:36:59 I need uncrustable to please bring back that flavor. I never had that, but I'm intrigued by it. It was greasy and beautiful, and everything that dreams are made of, if you ask me. And it also probably sent me into a very, I don't even know. Very unhealthy lifestyle. I'm reading down the health highway. Yeah, that was a really bad occurrence. Yeah, exactly, with my lights off.
Starting point is 00:37:27 Yeah. These, but these people who were the undesirables to Nanny were Doris' friends. Yeah. They were the musicians, artists, and writers. And they would all hang out at the Harlem Jazz Club. Oh, that sounds cool. Which Doris discovered in her late teens
Starting point is 00:37:42 and absolutely fell in love with. She was a big, big fan of jazz. Madapau. There you go. Yeah. What did the watchwood crappens guys call the lady? Oh, Trixie Monaco. Trixie Monaco.
Starting point is 00:37:55 Melissa. If you love Bravo, go listen to watchwood crappens. Ronnie and Ben are chef kiss. Chef kiss. We love them. We too. Now try as she might to express her disinterest in the high society life that was so important to her mother, Doris could not escape the responsibility or the pressure of her wealth.
Starting point is 00:38:13 And the most important expectation that she was faced with was finding a husband that her mother felt was a good match for her status and social position. Oh, yeah. No, Nanny tolerated Doris' art and musician friends from the Harlem Nightlife, but they would literally never do for a husband in Nanny's eyes. Yeah. Now, Nanny had her eye on another man and Doris' laugh. Oh.
Starting point is 00:38:37 I don't know why I'm getting southern, because they're not even southern. But this guy was Jimmy Cromwell. He was an aspiring politician, and he was also the sole heir to a fortune that was made from investment baking with one JP Morgan. I wonder if he was also related to the family from Halloween town. It's entirely possible.
Starting point is 00:38:58 I couldn't find any valuable sources on that information, but you should look into it. I'm going to look into it. I think you should. You know, do you know, you know. Do you know Marney? Do you? Jenny. Halloween is cool. Okay.
Starting point is 00:39:10 What's the scale? Is it Benny, the skeleton? Yeah, Benny. He's my favorite. Yeah. But Cromwell, he sounds like a big creep. He's not like Benny. That's not great.
Starting point is 00:39:19 He had his eye on Doris, and she was just 16 years old, and he was 33 at that point. And I, you. What's that? TikToks, I'm like, that's weird. But as they got older, the relationship was actually encouraged by Nanny Duke. I hate that. And friends of the Duke family, they all felt that quote, a merger of the two families
Starting point is 00:39:41 would strengthen their position and consolidate their wealth. So they were like, yeah, it's totally fine that he's been hitting on us since she was 16. Will it make us richer? Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. So Jimmy and Doris, they actually did end up marrying in 1935. Doris was 22 and he was 39.
Starting point is 00:39:58 Okay. This ceremony took place in the library of the Duke's New York home at East 78th Street, which I'm pretty sure is where she was born. Oh. And was described by the New York Times as unostentatious and somewhat mysterious, which is the theme of my way. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:40:16 I like the somewhat mysterious, not entirely mysterious, totally, but somewhat. But there was a little mystery in there. And I like that. Unostentatious. It's unostentat mystery and I like that. Unostentatious. An ostentatious. I like it. Yeah, I feel that. I'm into it.
Starting point is 00:40:29 They're like Tom Sandevol and Rachel. Oh, they're age gap. I was like, in what way? They're age gap in the creepiness of it all. There you go. Now Doris had made it a point to shield herself from the press throughout her entire life. And that's why the wedding was as private as it was.
Starting point is 00:40:45 She was sentatious. Very, very private. And I feel about too. Now, she and Jimmy made a quick exit after the wedding. They headed to the Habba. And they got on board an Italian ocean liner that was bound for Egypt, which was where they would spend their honeymoon. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:41:00 Right? My friend actually just went to Egypt. Hi, Holly. And it looked so fucking beautiful. And now I want to go to Egypt. Let's go to Egypt. Hi, Holly. And it looked so fucking beautiful. And now I want to go to Egypt. Let's go to Egypt. Okay. Cool. Now in the years before Jimmy and Doris were married, Nanny was really confident, like I was just saying, that his wealth was sufficient. She seemed to think that his intentions with Doris were genuine. She never thought he was a gold digger. Until the stock market crash of 1929. Uh oh. And she said, I think he might be a gold digger until the stock market crash of 1929.
Starting point is 00:41:26 Uh-oh. And she said, I think he might be a gold digger. You know what? She started getting a little skeptical, a Jimmy boy there, and his motivations to marry her precious daughter. Because the financial crisis had caused his family to lose a large amount of their fortune. So he was kind of clinging to his relationship, and it seemed to be a way of keeping up appearances
Starting point is 00:41:45 and maintaining a lifestyle that he'd gotten used to. Oh, no. Versus like being in love. Yeah. But still, no matter how right Nanny might have been about this man, her constant criticism of Jimmy only seemed to push Doris closer to him. Uh-oh.
Starting point is 00:42:01 It was like Doris wanted to fight her mother any chance she could get. Of course. Defiance was kind of a pattern in her relationship with her mom, whether it was the coming out party, the wedding celebration, or even the marriage. If Nanny thought it should be one way, Doris was like, cool, I'm going the other way. I'm so sad that Nanny was not like a radical, Nanny. I know. And I mean radical in the way that's like radical. Rad. Rad. She's so radical. Yeah, I was like, I don't think she's a little radical. I think she maybe was.
Starting point is 00:42:29 Yeah, I'm mad that she's not rad. Yeah. Yeah, I mean, she's a product of her environment. She sure is. But, you know, you have a choice. Yeah, don't be a shit. Don't be a bitch. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:41 Don't be a bitch. I'm saying she's like, what did you just say young lady? Now another thing emerging in Doris' life was her desire for privacy and this tendency to avoid the press. This was probably a behavior that grew over time, I think, and most likely came from Bucks last words to her. On his deathbed, he had told her, never trust anyone. I mean, solid advice.
Starting point is 00:43:05 Those were his dying words to the doctor. I can't even, like, 13 year old daughters. Solid advice. Solid advice. I definitely don't trust anyone. I wish she had said, like, and if you're going out, if you're going out, that's all you're like, I gotta throw something important in here.
Starting point is 00:43:21 That is solid advice to throw out at the last, at the buzzer. Like also, like, go see what advice to throw out at the buzzer. And it is. And also like, go see what you want to see in the world. I mean, I hope and I love you was thrown in there. So I'm sure it was. I bet it was because he loved his daughter. Maybe that's what it led up to. Maybe it was like this whole thing.
Starting point is 00:43:35 Like, I love you. I never want anything to happen to you. So I fly Little Bird. I don't know if it's all these wonderful things. And it was like, follow your dreams, travel the world, but don't trust anyone. And that was the end of it. Maybe I'll give my kids that advice when I die. I think it's good advice.
Starting point is 00:43:50 I would. I'm already, already handing out that advice to everyone I know. Don't trust anyone. Don't trust a hoe. I'm not giving it to people I don't know, because I don't trust anyone. Especially if you don't know them. But anyway, she was probably right to guard her privacy.
Starting point is 00:44:05 Because like we know since she was a child, it was this endless line of strangers asking for money, threatening her safety, or prying into her personal habits to write about them in tabloids. Sounds awesome. And even her mom kind of had a way of slipping in and out of those categories,
Starting point is 00:44:18 especially when it came to one money and to how Doris' choices would choice is what affect her social status. It was like, Nanny had, I think she had good intentions at her heart, but it was also always layered with like, well, how will people think of us? I think it's literally, and I know, like Emily Gilmore. It's like Emily Gilmore, and literally is. It's like, there's times when you're watching that show and you're like, fuck yeah, Emily. Like, you love them.
Starting point is 00:44:46 Like, I know you love them. I know you want what's best for them. And then this time's where you're like, God, Emily, what the fuck? Shut your mouth. And it's always to do with like appearances. Yeah. And like, what is like socially acceptable?
Starting point is 00:44:57 And I think it's just like, that's the, that is a product of how they were raised. Totally. Unfortunately, the old guy. The old guy. that's the, that is a product of how they were raised. Totally. Unfortunately, the old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy.
Starting point is 00:45:09 The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy.
Starting point is 00:45:17 The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old guy. The old And the reason why I think she was like, like she did love Doris and had good intentions
Starting point is 00:45:25 is because she was really, really worried about Doris getting together with Jimmy. Yeah, so worried so that she actually, before they were officially married, hired a private detective to dig into Jimmy's life. Hell yeah, which I think was again, a mixture of caring a lot about her daughter, but also like, what could come out?
Starting point is 00:45:44 Yeah, making sure that you aren't going to tarnish my legacy here. Exactly. Now, it could have tarnished her legacy in her eyes because the investigation for one reason or another led her to believe that Jimmy was a gay man. And that would not be acceptable for her daughter, which is lame. Yeah. Now, of course, she warned Doris, but I can literally picture Doris rolling her eyes into the back of her head and not giving a shit. Yeah. Because she's like, cool mom, bye. And she probably thinks at this point that her mom's going to say anything to get to
Starting point is 00:46:14 where she doesn't marry Jimmy. Mm-hmm. Now, whether it was because Jimmy wasn't necessarily interested in Doris physically or not, signs of a troubled marriage began almost immediately after they got on the ship headed for Egypt. According to one biographer, quote, they had delayed sex to enjoy the ship, but they retired early. She slipped on a negligee.
Starting point is 00:46:35 Jimmy asked his bride what he could expect in the way of annual income. Wow. So like, those are two different things. She's trying to go a little spicy and celebrate, right. The Mirage. Of course. The marriage. The Mirage. I was gone for a minute, but I'm back now. I literally died. Like actively, actively died.
Starting point is 00:46:57 You might have heard some of that actually. I don't think we cut it entirely possible that you heard me die slightly. Yeah, but I'm back now. She's back. Here I am. So yeah, she's trying to get a little spicy and he's just focused on his yearly projection. So I'm just getting ready for taxes. Which like, imagine like the night after you got married or like a couple nights after,
Starting point is 00:47:17 you're like, oh, like, let me put on this outfit where I look a little cute and like, let's go. And he's like, so like how much money are you gonna give me annually? I'd be like, I fucked up. Can you sign this tax form for me? Like, God. Yeah, that's not good. Yeah. So this night, uh, laid the foundation for a marriage where Jamie constantly wanted more, more, more when it came to money. And Doris wanted more, more, more when it came to intimacy. It was not ideal, but at the same time, divorce would have been a scandal. So hey, they went on as a married couple for a good while, with both of them just maintaining affairs on the side, trying not to get caught by the press. Wow. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:54 Now the marriage finally did fall apart though in early 1943 and it was a messy divorce. Oh no. Doris told the press that Jimmy was a reckless spender and he was constantly demanding more money. And Jimmy pointed the finger back at her and revealed a ton of the affairs that she had had throughout the years. Did she say like, same to you? Pretty much. But the court did end up siding with Doris probably because she had more money and influence. Probably. Jimmy got literally nothing and he would spend years contesting the divorce and still begging for more money.
Starting point is 00:48:30 Oh no. So the divorce from Jimmy, it really marked the beginning of a new era for Doris. New year knew her. That's right. She dove deeper into her interest. She started traveling more. She took tons of trips abroad to Europe
Starting point is 00:48:42 and in the last days of World War II, she was like going there constantly. Wow. And she fell in love with the culture and of course the men. We love a European woman. Of course the men. Of course the men. She kept going back more and more and she was so inspired that she started writing and eventually took a position as a foreign correspondent for major newspapers across the country.
Starting point is 00:49:03 Oh, shit. Like bad bits. I didn't know that about her. Nor did I until I started looking into it. position as a foreign correspondent for major newspapers across the country. Oh, shit. Like, bad bitch. I didn't know that about her. Nor did I until I started looking into it. Hi, I'm Lindsey Graham, the host of Wondries Podcast American Scandal. We bring to life some of the biggest controversies in US history, presidential lies, environmental disasters, corporate fraud.
Starting point is 00:49:29 In our newest series, we look at the Kids for Cash scandal, a story about corruption inside America's system of juvenile justice. In Northeastern Pennsylvania, residents had begun noticing an alarming trend. Children were being sent away to jail in high numbers and often for committing only minor offenses. The FBI began looking at two local judges,
Starting point is 00:49:50 and when the full picture emerged, it made national headlines. The judges were earning a fortune, carrying out a brazen criminal scheme, one that would shatter the lives of countless children, and force a heated debate about punishment, an America's criminal justice system. Follow American scandal wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:50:08 You can listen ad-free on the Amazon Music or Wonder App. Now, it was during one of her European trips that she met, uh, poor, porphyryl-rubarossa, and I did look up how to say that, and I'm doing my best. He like, and I nailed it if I do say so myself. Maybe. I think I did it all right. Now he was a Dominican diplomat, and actually the former son-in-law of a Dominican dictator. Oh.
Starting point is 00:50:38 So he was a little messy. Well, he was a little messy. He was a little bit of a lot going on. Now Ruberosa was usually on the fringes of violent political movements. And a lot of people were really fucking terrified of him. Yeah. One, because he was perfectly fine being aggressive. And two, he had major, major scary, scary political ties.
Starting point is 00:50:58 Eek. And also, he had a reputation as a popular ladies man. Oh, look at that. He's like super handsome. I don't know. I don't think he was the at that. He's like super handsome. You see, I got one. I don't think he was the best human being, but like, super often. Sometimes the worse human beings have good faces.
Starting point is 00:51:11 They sure do. He'd actually been linked to our girl, Marilyn. Oh. Miss Marilyn Monroe. Damn. And also to Rita Hayworth and Veronica Lake. Oh, wow. So he really liked her around.
Starting point is 00:51:21 Yeah. No, and Doris met him in Paris in 1945. He was still actually married to popular French actress Danielle D'Arou, I believe is how you say it, or D'Arou. But he was my. I just looked at the matter. Is it a little hot in here? That's unfortunate.
Starting point is 00:51:36 I know. Not the kind of smond, though. But he was still married to this French actor, actress Danielle D'Arou, I believe. But he was completely taken with Doris, and she felt the same way toward him. He was to her sexy, dangerous, exciting. Ooh, quite frankly, everything that Jimmy was not.
Starting point is 00:51:55 All right. Now, it was no surprise that not long after meeting, Doris and Ruberosa started an affair that would eventually lead to marriage. Okay. Now, by the time she married him, she knew it was highly unlikely that she was ever going to build a relationship on love and mutual respect because she was one of the wealthiest people
Starting point is 00:52:12 in the world. That's tough. And unless she wanted to keep having her heart broken over and over again, she just kind of had to accept that most people were attracted to her at least partially because of money. Okay. Now this was 10,000 million gajillion percent true of Rubroza. He was already known to swap one opportunity or partner out for another if it was for more money.
Starting point is 00:52:35 Oh. Which is sad. Yeah. So, and this is fucking wild. Doris put up 1.5 million dollars for her relationship with him. Whoa. A million dollars went to Danielle with the expectation that she would divorce her husband and walk away, which she did.
Starting point is 00:52:52 Holy shit. She was like, a million, a million, a million. She was like, all right. She was laughing straight to the bank. Literally laughing to the bank. Yeah, and that was in 1947. Damn. And then Doris and Rubirosa were married in September of 1947.
Starting point is 00:53:08 Wow. Now in true Doris fashion, the ceremony was understated. It took place, I think this was really cool. It took place at the Dominican Consulate in Paris and there was just a handful of guests there. And at that time, actually, Doris was working as a fashion correspondent for Harper's Bazaar. Look at Doris. So a lot of the guests were coworkers from the magazine. Now, she definitely entered the marriage with Eyes Wide Open, but it also didn't make it suck any less that her husband was almost entirely motivated by her money. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:40 Within days of the wedding, he was already making demands and clearly expected to be showered with expensive and extravagant gifts, including an apartment and Paris and an airplane. Just a little stuff. That's what I got drew for our wedding. I was going to say, just stuff that you expect when you get married. Here's a chateau and a fun-ing device. Love you. Love you. You mean it. Jokes. Now, things couldn't go on that way, obviously, and be, you know, love you, love you, mean it, jokes. Now, things couldn't go on that way, obviously, and be, you know, hunky-dawry forever. So as the years went on, Doris started getting more and more jealous and resentful of her husband
Starting point is 00:54:12 between his demands of her and his flirtations with other women. So she would try to work on things, but he saw it as her making unreasonable demands of his time. So it just forced a greater wedge between them. Hi. Now, to get away from all of that, just as she had done with her mother when she was a teenager, Doris hid from the status and wealth and the quiet cafes and nightclubs in Paris.
Starting point is 00:54:36 In the post-war years, Paris was getting more and more popular with Americans and jazz musicians, so that was drawing a huge, huge crowds of people who either knew nothing or didn't care about high society. That's kind of cool. Yeah, it's awesome. Yeah. So she could just be another American jazz enthusiast when she was out with them instead of the Richard Skull and the world. Oh, that's cool. Yeah. So after spending more and more time in the club, she actually started sitting in with the bands. playing piano and like socializing with the people there who liked her for who she was. That's wild.
Starting point is 00:55:09 Not what she could buy them. Yeah. Her new phone popularity and acceptance at the jazz clubs of Paris only exacerbated the tension between her and her husband though. At first, it started as her getting away, but then it was like, I'm sure her eyes started to open and she was like, what the fuck am I doing?
Starting point is 00:55:23 Yeah, she's like, why am I settling for this? I can have this life just as easy. Yeah. So the final nail in the coffin came when Rubarosa was named Dominic and Republic's ambassador to Argentina, which meant that he was going to have to move to Buenos Aires. What a terrible predicament to be. What a terrible one. Doris, she didn't want to move there for multiple reasons and she was especially concerned over fears for her personal safety. Yeah., she didn't want to move there for multiple reasons. And she was especially concerned over fears for her personal safety. So she decided to stay back in the US. But she brought, or she bought him yet another airplane that he could use whenever he wanted to see her. My God. Which was by an airplane. And she was like, for whenever you want to see me,
Starting point is 00:56:01 but he like barely came home to see her. Of course. Sad. Yeah. So the distance clearly made things worse. And by 1948, her second marriage had completely fallen apart. Yeah. They were barely together a year. But this time, she had planned ahead and they had signed a prenup that actually I read in one source, the US government helped pen this. Holy shit. Holy shit.
Starting point is 00:56:22 Yeah. But it allowed for a quick divorce. But also, unfortunately, required her to pay him $25,000 a year for the rest of his life. Holy shit. Which she did until 1965 when he was unfortunately killed in a car accident. Wow. Now allegedly their relationship actually never truly ended, sexually at least. Oh. And she was so upset over his death when he did die. She spent several days in bed. Oh, wow. And she's so like, it's like,
Starting point is 00:56:50 so she really loved him. She really did. We're like cared for him. I think she loved him. In a big way, for sure. That's sad. And I think it's also like a parent how much she loved him
Starting point is 00:57:01 because this relationship, I think, changed her fundamentally. Really? She knew that everybody wanted something from her how much she loved him because this relationship, I think, changed her fundamentally. Really. She knew that everybody wanted something from her and throughout the year she had learned to use that to her advantage, but I think years of trying not to let that bother her were starting to catch up. Yeah, that makes sense.
Starting point is 00:57:16 She was spending more and more time at the jazz clubs and the lifestyle in her case was a bit of a catch 22. She was learning more and more about the music and the culture and like having really a lot of fun with that, but at the same time, she started to experiment more with drugs. So now this scene eventually led her to Joseph Joey Castro.
Starting point is 00:57:38 He was a young jazz musician. He was gaining popularity in LA. And in 1950, Doris invited him to stay with her in Hawaii. She had part of the house renovated to accommodate musical performances. You know, as one does. I was just gonna say that's what everybody renovates their house. Yeah. Like my boyfriends in a band. Yeah. So let me just renovate part of my house for him. Of course. No. She had cultivated a lot of relationships with the people in the jazz scene, and a lot of these people she considered close associates,
Starting point is 00:58:07 but Joey was one of the few people that she actually considered a close friend. They shared a passion for music, but he also understood things about her that a lot of people had overlooked. Like, she struggled massively with social anxiety, and he understood that and like, could help her. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:24 It was actually the reason that kept her from actually pursuing a career in music or performance, what's her social anxiety? Oh, that's sad. I know. Social anxiety sucks. It does. I get social anxiety too. I think everybody does.
Starting point is 00:58:36 I think everybody does. It's very difficult. Just like varying degrees. Oh, yeah. And I think hers was like on the higher end of the spectrum. Yeah, for sure. But eventually, their friendship, you know, Joey and Doris here,
Starting point is 00:58:47 grew into a romantic relationship. Oh. And in 1953 Doris actually bought a home for them in LA where they could unwind. Unwind. This is my unwinding home. I was gonna say you just have a home to it. I unwind in that one.
Starting point is 00:59:01 We make music in that one. We unwind there. We sometimes eat cereal in that one. We make music in that one. We unwind there. We sometimes eat cereal in the room. This is where we watch the prices, right? And this is where we watch the spooky stories. Exactly. Imagine. Imagine.
Starting point is 00:59:17 Now, according to her biographers, Doris' purchase of the House in LA quote, implied a commitment to Castro. But she had only made the decision to buy the place after her on and off again relationship with another man, novelist Louis Brumfield appeared to be going nowhere. Yes. Now the end of the affair with that means freed up more of Doris' time, so she refocused that time to her relationship with Joey. Now, in 1954, Joey had actually assembled a small jazz combo with Doris and they were performing together
Starting point is 00:59:50 in small clubs with Doris in disguise, so she couldn't be recognized. Oh my God, she is like Duke Silver, Ron Swanson. Bitch, I literally wrote that in the set. Oh my God, I love that. I literally wrote that. I also said I couldn't help a picture her wearing a Cia wig and playing a saxophone.
Starting point is 01:00:09 Right? Yeah. Right? I literally all I could think of as doing so bad. Turn it in. Oh my god. Turn it in. I'm obsessed.
Starting point is 01:00:18 I love it. So it wasn't quite as stimulating as her last relationships, but this relationship with Joey, excuse me, was comfortable and familiar for Doris and also allowed her to pursue her love of music. It was a bit out of convenience, I think. I think it sounds like it. Unfortunately, again, it was a lifestyle that put Doris
Starting point is 01:00:39 in contact, close contact, I'll say, with a lot of questionable characters, including those who are more than willing to sell her drugs. She's getting a little more on drugs throughout this time period, which we all know doesn't lead to wonderful, wonderful things. No.
Starting point is 01:00:55 Always. Now, by 1956, Doris's world had undergone a dramatic and unexpected transformation. In a very short amount of time, she had gone from introverted socialite to secret jazz performer. And this is where I wrote, it's giving Duke silver. She was literally traveling around the world at this point,
Starting point is 01:01:14 performing in some of the most prominent jazz clubs, of course, still in disguise. And while she may have been privately living out her fantasies, she was like, I think she was really going through it, I think mentally, and then I think the drugs didn't help. And she couldn't ignore the reminders of a lot of past failure starting to creep in around her. That year, Lewis Brumfield died, and it was the first of several events that hit Doris really hard. After he passed, she learned that rubroosa, because this was before he had passed,
Starting point is 01:01:45 yeah, had married Sochelite and her former rival, Barbara Hutton. Uh-oh. And the disappointments and heartbreak caused her to retreat even further into her secret lifestyle, which made her dive even further into drug use and casual sexual encounters. So by the early 1960s, her relationship with Joey Castro started to become more strained because of that. Yeah. Mostly because she was also reluctant, reluctant, excuse me,
Starting point is 01:02:12 to fully commit to their relationship. Joey really wanted to get married, but Doris was like, no. And according to her cousin, Pony Duke. Doris loved Joey. Pony Duke, Pony Duke, isn't that great? Doris loved Joey's music and appreciated his companionship, but quote, was not about
Starting point is 01:02:28 to get married again. She didn't want to get married again. She'd been scored twice. I was going to say, I can't, yeah, I can't really blame her. So instead she quote, orca straighted a strange sort of marriage ceremony. That was not really a marriage ceremony to appease Joey. So I think she low-key made a fake wedding. I was just gonna say so what you're saying.
Starting point is 01:02:49 It seems to me like he was very much under the impression that they were legally married, but she just made it up. It was like, no, this is like not for realsies. Wow. Okay. Now the sham marriage did ease tensions for a little bit, but the fights were gonna start back up again.
Starting point is 01:03:04 Yeah. And by the end of their relationship, the arguments between Doris and Joey had not only increased in frequency, but also intensity. Uh-oh. They usually ended violently. Oh no. And things took a dramatic turn for the worse in June of 1963, when during one of these intense arguments, Doris grabbed a butter knife from the kitchen counter and allegedly stabbed Joey in the arm. Oh, that's not a normal fight. She stabbed him, y'all. That's not a normal argument. That's, if you are grabbing any kind of knife
Starting point is 01:03:34 to stab your partner in the midst of an argument, it's time to walk away. Yeah, any kind of weaponry that's being brought into an argument is really, that's the time to think about it. Yeah, I would say so. That's the time to really take stock of what's happening here. Seek guidance.
Starting point is 01:03:52 Yeah, you know, yeah, everybody needs that occasionally. That's not good. So by 1964, Doris and Joey had become completely estranged. And he's not guilty in all of this either. Yeah. But he and we'll get there. He was totally cut off from the life of luxury that he'd been enjoying with Doris for a decade at this point.
Starting point is 01:04:11 So as a result, he filed a shit ton of lawsuits and divorce suits demanding financial compensation. Anywhere from $5,000 to $150,000. I guess it just depended on how he felt that day. Yeah, you know, yeah, but he also wanted part ownership of the house in LA. Now among other things, his suits alleged that they had been married twice first in Rhode Island in 1956 and then again in Philadelphia in 1960. But in response, Doris filed for and was awarded a restraining order in May of 1964,
Starting point is 01:04:45 which barred him from ever publicly claiming to be her husband, and effectively ended his pursuit of a quote-unquote divorce. Oh, damn. Or any kind of compensation. They were like, you're not married. Now, he had allegedly broken her jaw at one point in 1966 after she pulled the plug on his record company what she owned. What the fuck?
Starting point is 01:05:07 The morning after she fled to Hollywood to go to Newport with her designer and a man that would soon be at the center of this story, Eduardo, Eddie Torella. Uh-oh. Now, Doris' life before this point had always been kind of like a fairy tale. Whether she liked it or not, her wealth, her money,
Starting point is 01:05:25 and her privilege shielded her from a lot of the more difficult realities in her life. Yeah. But they were only going to protect her for so long and she knew that. Now, that knowledge and that where were starting to show in her personality. Anytime a relationship ended, and especially
Starting point is 01:05:41 because they usually ended badly, she would become harder and tougher on the outside and more depressed on the inside. And at the same time, her experimentation with drugs paired with her mental struggles, that was starting to make her a lot more impulsive and that was becoming more clear, especially in the violent fight she was starting to, I mean, she literally stabbed her.
Starting point is 01:06:02 Yeah. Sort of husband. Yeah. Her fake husband. Yeah, her fake husband. And while she hopefully regretted those arguments and altercations, they were not going to be the last time she became violent. Oh, no. And the next time should have come with greater consequences. Eek.
Starting point is 01:06:17 So even though she felt more and more comfortable with the LA Nightlife through Joey, during the 1950s, she was kind of retreating further into herself. And at the the 1950s she was kind of retreating further into herself, and at the same time she was surrounding herself with what her cousin referred to as a colorful group of Hollywood types, which included Eddie Tarella. And I would also assume that he was probably referring to her Butler Bernard Lafferty and this other woman, Shandy Hefner, who Doris actually ended up adopting when Shandy was like 35, and Doris was in her like 60s or 70s.
Starting point is 01:06:52 It's like a sidetrack story that I can't get into here because we need to be here for hours. Okay. But please go look into that. Oh, yes, I will. It is wild. Wild. Okay. Yeah, okay.
Starting point is 01:07:03 Yeah, I would definitely... I'm gonna accept that information. Definitely read some of the biographies that I'll link in the show notes and the variety, uh, variety, vanity fair articles written about her. But right now we're going to focus on Eddie. Okay. Now, it's crazy though. Like that that, yeah. Wow. Yeah. I think there's a whole A&E show about adopting adults. They should feature Doris. Oh, my. Okay. So anyways, Doris met Eddie Torella in LA in 1959. This was before she had cut Joey off.
Starting point is 01:07:31 And that's how they met. He was an aspiring interior designer and occasionally Moonlit as a nightclub singer, which I think is really fun. Moonlighting as a nightclub singer that's so old Hollywood. Yeah, but a boom. It's also how Lady Gaga got big and pretty. She did. But didn't she use to sing in night old Hollywood. Yeah, but a boom. It's also how Lady Gaga like got big and pretty.
Starting point is 01:07:46 She goes, and then she used to sing in nightclubs. Yeah, probably wasn't she on the hills. Oh my God. Yeah, she was. I think that's when she was starting to get like getting her, I'll fit together on an episode. Yeah, you're not wrong. When choosing in like, poker face, I think that's a deep cut. Yeah. I want to watch the hills now. Yeah, but Eddie to watch the hills now, but Eddie. He had played some of those same venues that Joey had played because
Starting point is 01:08:09 remember he's also like a singer guy. Oh, yes. And Joey had learned that Torella's real passion in life was through design or was for design. And while they were still together, Joey told Doris about Eddie because it just so happened, she was looking for an interior designer. Of course. Look at that. So it was Joey who suggested she take a chance and hire Eddie.
Starting point is 01:08:29 Literally the only thing that Doris and Eddie had in common was that they had both grown up in New Jersey. It started and ended there. I feel like that's like the ultimate in common thing though. It's like if you're both from Jersey, I feel like it's like that's okay. That's it. I think so too. Yeah, actually. I just don't know why. You'll feel like it's like, that's okay. That's it. I think so too.
Starting point is 01:08:45 Yeah, actually. I just, I don't know why. You'll just feel so great. Yeah, I think you'll get each other. It's not great here. No. But they did seem to sort of get each other. I think Eddie got Doris a little more than Doris got Eddie,
Starting point is 01:08:57 but I thought she got him to a degree. Cool. Now, by all accounts, Eddie was a charming, popular, and super, super talented dude. And high school, his classmates actually referred to him as Playboy of the Western Front. Wow. Which like, wow.
Starting point is 01:09:12 I'm obsessed with that. Who are these high school kids that came up with that? Well, like high school kids were like way better back then. That was like the 40s and 50s. I feel like they all had like trans and Atlantic accent. They were just like, hey. These are like high school kids that like had cigarettes rolled up and for sure, like, which had transatlantic accents. They were just like, hey. These are like high school kids that like had cigarettes rolled up and shurled up.
Starting point is 01:09:27 For sure. Which like don't smoke cigarettes, but like back then it was cool. Yeah. Yeah. So after graduating from Dover High School, he had pursued a career as a dancer and an artist, but at the same as he was like trying to pursue that,
Starting point is 01:09:41 he got drafted into World War II. And when the war ended and he returned home, he worked on Saks Fifth Avenue, designing hats for people like May West. Oh, who's she? Yeah, crazy, I love her. Now, then he decided to move out to LA where he started gardening and he found work
Starting point is 01:09:58 with famous clients like Alan Ladd and Peggy Lee. Oh! He was like in touch with a big people. Damn. He was an incredibly hard worker. He really never had any trouble finding a job, especially through word of both of these very famous influential people. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:10:14 It was just that he struggled to maintain an interest in one job or one field for a long time. By the early 50s, he was actually though becoming pretty successful as a designer in Hollywood. But because he refused to join a union, it limited the work he could get. So to make extra money, he was singing in the nightclubs, where he met Joey. Just moonlighting. Moon lighting.
Starting point is 01:10:42 Now his first work with Doris was when she had him remodel and design the 20 greenhouses at Duke Farm. Now this is like, I thought you would be all over this. She wanted him to revive them, and she wanted them to be used as a public attraction, because she opened the grounds up again. Oh, okay. Now, Eddie impressed the shit out of her when he redesigned each greenhouse into a garden that represented a different ecosystem or part of the world.
Starting point is 01:11:02 Shut the fuck up, that's awesome. How fucking cool is that? I want to see that. Right? Damn, I love a theme. I love a good theme. You guys know we love a theme. We love a theme.
Starting point is 01:11:13 But like, it's so cool. Transforming gardens that represent different ecosystems. That's cool. Like, that's a cool mind right there. Yeah, that was a mind at work. Yeah. So she was like, oh, let's fucking go. Like, youanger right there. Yeah, that was a mind-out work. Yeah. So she was like, oh, let's fucking go. Like, you're my guy.
Starting point is 01:11:28 Yeah. She was super excited to dive into her love of gardening, because she actually was an avid gardener. With the completion of the project, she was like, let's go. But she had also gained a new companion. And at this point, her relationship with Joey Castro is falling apart, and then it ultimately does fall apart. So she wasn't interested in a romantic relationship with Joey Castro's falling apart and then it ultimately does fall apart. So she wasn't interested in a romantic relationship
Starting point is 01:11:46 with a man, she just miscompanied him, which she had found in Eddie. And he was the ideal companion because he was a gay man. He wasn't after her for, like, love or anything like that. She knew that he would stick by her and not lose interest in her sexually. And at the same time, he was funny, talented, and also nice to look at.
Starting point is 01:12:06 Now according to Pony Duke, Eddie quote, was the mixture of masculinity and taste that Doris Duke found so very attractive. And the perfect ornament for Doris as she aged. I was like, wow. Damn. But her dramatic and theatrical aesthetic was also a perfect match for Eddie because he was just starting to make a name for himself in the theater and film industry.
Starting point is 01:12:28 Very multifaceted man. Okay, oh, he was a handsome man, too. Well, Zani, I was just looking at him. Super handsome. Just looking at him. Just looking at him. Now, like, I know, really good. Just like, he looks friendly. Doesn't he? He does.
Starting point is 01:12:47 It's got a friendly face. I like his face. I give him a little smooch. But probably not, because he'd be like, got away from me. I give him a little smooch. A little smoochie kiss. Like, you watch Bluey? A smoochie kiss.
Starting point is 01:12:58 Now, before long, Doris had actually made space for the first time. I was like, I'm going to give him a little smoochie kiss. I'm going've given him a little smooch. A little smoochie kiss. Like you watch, Bluey? A smoochie kiss. Now, before long, Doris had actually made space for Eddie and all of her houses and apartments, which there's a lot of them. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:13:14 He always had his own room wherever they went. He could have privacy when they traveled together. But aside from him getting to sleep in his own space, Doris was starting to dominate all of his time. Because remember, she doesn't have a man's right now. And she, I, she's somebody that needed to have someone. Yeah, I could, I'm starting to see that about her. She treated Eddie like a romantic partner in always other than sexually.
Starting point is 01:13:40 And a lot of times she would actually get jealous if she wasn't feeling like his first priority, but like, they're not together. Yeah. So it's like, uh, and that was a lot of times she would actually get jealous if she wasn't feeling like his first priority, but like they're not together. Yeah, so it's like, uh. And that was a lot for him. And by the mid 90, oh, sorry, I just kicked you in the foot. Kick in my feet, foot five. But by the mid 1960s, her demands were starting to wear on him. He was on the payroll and happy for the work,
Starting point is 01:14:00 but the expectation that he would be at her back in call every hour of every day was getting exhausting. It was a little buff of his pay grade. It was. One of his friends said he hated those nights, the nights that he worked for her and had to spend time with her. But as tired as he was, he was trying to stick with it as long as he could, because he had bills, he had debt, and working for Doris paid a pretty penny. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:14:21 Now, as she got older and started cutting more and more people out of her life, Doris was actually starting to seem a lot more like the generation before her that she used to hate. Yeah. Her mom's generation that treated working people, like that people that were working for them, like the help. That's how she was kind of starting to act.
Starting point is 01:14:40 Yeah. She was getting that attitude and that's something that Eddie was starting to really hate the most It was making it harder and harder for him to stick around And he also felt like he was getting pulled in another direction He really wanted to make a name for himself in Hollywood and it actually seemed like that dream was headed in the right direction Because by 1965 his work in LA was finally paying off and he had landed a job doing the set design for the sand paper, which was starring Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor. Who are they? I don't know. Too relative unknowns. Yeah, just like credited briefly. Yeah. Then in 1966, film producer Martin
Starting point is 01:15:19 Ransow Hoff, is that how you say? I think that's how you say that. Sounds good to mean him. He offered Eddie the production design job on Don't Make W So, I was gonna main him. He offered any other production design job on Don't Make Waves, which was a movie starring Tony Curtis and Sharon Tate. Oh, Sharon Tate. Yeah. And it was due to start production that fall. Now, this opportunity was like exactly
Starting point is 01:15:37 what he was hoping for. And it was proof to him that he could make it in Hollywood. Yeah. He started to make strides. And it was also proof that he could get out from Doris' thumb. Mm, but Doris lost her GD mind when Eddie told her about the job offer.
Starting point is 01:15:53 Yeah, I was thinking it would happen. He was sure that she was going to fully freak out if he told her that he had already accepted the job, which he had. Ooh. So instead, he told her he was only considering it. Now Doris was begging him not to take the job, and she thought of every last thing
Starting point is 01:16:09 she could offer him to stay, but he just wasn't committing one way or the other. So she kept let begging and pleading for months and months, and she invited him to come to her family a state in Newport, Rhode Island for the fall. Remember rough point from the beginning of the story. Okay, here's where it becomes a pinnacle point of the story. Now, Eddie did finally cave and he agreed to send the fall in rough point with Doris. And that was a decision
Starting point is 01:16:34 that was going to change his life forever. No. Eddie arrived at rough point early in October of 1966. And he had still planned actually to work on Don't Make Waves. But at the time he was really behind on taxes, so Andorris offered him more money than he was making before. He couldn't refuse. He had to go there with her. His plan was to get the work done for Andorris that fall, and then returned to Hollywood and begin building the career that he wanted, and he was finally going to be free. So it's really unclear what happened on the evening of October 7th, but by most accounts, Doris' mental state
Starting point is 01:17:08 was not very good that night, Eek. And the months leading up to that fall at Reff Point, she had been drinking a lot more than usual. She was still using drugs, and she was experiencing very intense mood swings and depression that related to her failed relationship with Joey and then the most and then the recent death of Ruparoza.
Starting point is 01:17:28 This is what he did. Oh no. And it was that was among like many other things too. Now she could have she for most of her life was used to getting what she wanted. She even meant she could get from them what she wanted, but at some point they were going to leave her and move on to someone else and now it seemed like like that was happening with Eddie, and she simply couldn't take it. Yeah. Now, that fall, she had rented a 1966 Dodge Polaris station wagon to use while she and
Starting point is 01:17:54 Eddie were in Newport. On the evening of the 7th, when she was not in a very good headspace, they got into the station wagon a little after 4 p.m. They were going to actually meet with the president of the Newport Preservation Society, because Doris wanted to discuss her interest in funding a project that was actually going to preserve a lot of Newport's historic homes. Oh. She was like, I want to pay for that.
Starting point is 01:18:16 That's pretty cool. Yeah. It was also probably a really good tax write-off. Yeah. But for one reason or another, Eddie and Doris were arguing with each other even before they headed out and they were still said to be arguing as they were getting into the car. And when they got to the bottom of the driveway leading to the road, Eddie put the car in park, pulls the parking brake and hopped out of the driver's seat to open the large iron
Starting point is 01:18:40 gate so they could pull out. I'm very nervous. You should be. Okay. As he turned around to start walking back to the car, he saw that Doris had moved from the passenger seat to the driver's seat, where she disengaged the parking brake, shifted the car into drive,
Starting point is 01:18:56 and quote, press down so hard on the accelerator that she left tire-wide gouge marks in the gravel. Oh my, the car's bed forward, struck Eddie, which sent him flying up onto the hood. Then she tapped the brakes, he rolled off the car and landed in the middle of Bellevue Avenue. Holy shit. She stopped the car momentarily
Starting point is 01:19:19 while Eddie laid screaming in the middle of the road, and then she hit the accelerator again. Drow forward, crushing Eddie under the front tires. Oh my God. And dragging his body across the street under the weight of the station wagon. Before the car jumped onto the curb on the opposite side of the street,
Starting point is 01:19:37 drove through offense and came to a stop when she finally hit a tree. Holy shit. So days later, an autopsy would show that the first impact had broken Eddie's hip, which had sent him up onto the hood, but the second impact caused crushing injuries to his lungs, spinal cord, and brain, which killed him almost instantly. The police arrived on the scene, no more than five minutes later, it said, where they found Doris in a daze behind the wheel of the car. Eddie, or excuse me, Edward Angel, who was the
Starting point is 01:20:08 first officer to arrive, he remembered seeing a small amount of blood coming from Doris' mouth, and his report describes that as a steering wheel injury. Hmm, but other than that, she was physically fine. As he approached the car, she jumped from the driver's seat and just started frantically pacing back and forth, and then she ran back into her mansion, looking for someone named Ed. Even though she knew he was underneath the car, she had just driven over him. Oh no. Now, once they were able to calm her down, police escorted her to the nearby Newport hospital where she was treated for facial cuts and severe shock.
Starting point is 01:20:45 But other than that, she was literally fine. Oh, no. So the next day, This is very upset. It's horrible. The next day, the local paper, the Newport Daily News, ran with the headline, Doris Duke kills friend and car crash.
Starting point is 01:21:00 The article was like very light on information and noted that police chief Joseph Radis, or yeah, Radis, quote, could not be reached for comment on the case. Ooh. And reporters were told that he would not be available that day for questions. It would actually be two days before the police chief made a statement to the press about the death of Eddie Torella. And when he did, it was to inform them that an investigation had been conducted.
Starting point is 01:21:26 And it was determined that Eddie's death was the result of an unfortunate accident. Oh, yeah. That's okay. That's what we're going with. Yeah. Okay. According to Doris, who wasn't interviewed by the police until over a day after the incident. Okay. She was in the passenger seat when Eddie got out to open the gates. She slid over into the driver's seat to drive the car out onto the street. She told police, it was something we'd done hundreds of times before. But this time she said,
Starting point is 01:21:57 quote, the car leaped forward. And after that, everything was a blank. Oh my. Cars usually, like, don't leap forward. I don't know what they're going to say. I've never had that experience. The old car leapt forward. Yeah. It's very similar to dog ate my home. Yeah. That's not a great defense. Now, the only other information that the police was the police chief was willing to report on was that as far as he knew, Eddie and Doris were, quote, on very good terms. No, they were not. No, no, the hell they were not. They were literally arguing as they got into the car and he was planning on leaving and
Starting point is 01:22:33 she was begging him not to. Oh, no. Now, two days after he responded to questions from the Newport Daily News, a larger press conference was held and the police chief told reporters that Tarella's death was definitely an accident, quote, and quote, as far as we're concerned, the case is closed. How though? Quick, quick, cush, hush, bye bye.
Starting point is 01:22:52 How though is what I need to know? Yeah. How though? Yeah. So Doris may have been able to use her money to hide from any kind of responsibility or public scrutiny in the past, but times have changed and people cared a lot less than 1966 about this random American socialite.
Starting point is 01:23:09 Times they are a change. They were pissed by the lack of information on the case. Yeah. And they found it extremely suspicious. In Newport, the press were super critical of the way that this was handled and the way that the police released information. And they felt actually like the police chief had handled similar incidents poorly.
Starting point is 01:23:30 Because in the years past, he had written off crimes like this that involved the rich summer residents. Ah, shocking. Even though people were upset and critical over the investigation, it still seemed like whatever had happened at the gates of Ruff Point were to remain a mystery. And as far as Doris Duke was concerned, Eddie Turella's death was nothing more than a tragic accident, and she went on to live the rest of her life, saying so. That is shocking. Shocking.
Starting point is 01:23:59 That just was like, crescendo, crescendo, crescendo, then it's like, no, it's fine. Oh, no, we're not done yet. Like, but I mean, like that part of it. Oh, yeah. Just that it's like, crescendo, crescendo, crescendo, then it's like, no, it's fine. Oh, no, we're not done yet. But I mean, like that part of it. Oh, yeah. Just that it's like, it ended. Oh, and this big crazy thing happened and oh my God. But everything was fine.
Starting point is 01:24:13 It was an accident. Yeah, it was just like, you're like, oh, don't you know that I've been seeing it? I've been seeing it before, you should watch out. You don't even have time to be like, oh, no, because like, oh, oh, okay. It's just an accident, okay. We're just gonna live the rest of our lives.
Starting point is 01:24:24 That's fun. Insane. What the fuck? So the following year, Eddie's five siblings filed a wrongful death suit against Doris in the Superior Court of Rhode Island. They were seeking $2.5 million in damages, and they alleged that Doris had, quote, negligently and carelessly operated the car
Starting point is 01:24:40 that led to their brother's death, which is literally the truth. Now, the case actually eventually made its way to the Supreme Court of Rhode Island in 1973, but the justice is mostly cited with Doris, and the family only received, and I say only because she's a billionaire. Yeah. $75,000.
Starting point is 01:25:01 Wow. That's it. Wow. Like, who did you pay off? I'd be so pissed. They were also treated terribly by her legal team. They made it seem like Eddie was like worse. Like they made it seem like he was worse than Doris somehow. What the fuck? Yeah, very strange. And in the, uh, sorry, I messed up, hold on. Oh, silly me. What I meant was it was worse in the way
Starting point is 01:25:29 that the family was treated by the legal team during the trial. Particularly when it came to their brother's legacy, they described him as an opportunist who hung around famous people, hoping their talent and fame would rub off on him. Wow. I'm like, no, he didn't need it too.
Starting point is 01:25:46 He was incredibly talented on his own. I was just gonna say, like, what's just ignore the fact that he had any success on his own? Yeah, absolutely. Actually, didn't need Doris to ignore all that. Fully intending to leave her employment. But I know. His niece later told her porter, she killed him twice.
Starting point is 01:26:00 She destroyed his body and then eviscerated his memory. Yeah. Which is so sad. That is so sad. And throughout the trial investigators privately and publicly tried to get any information from Doris about the accident, excuse me, but by then she had completely shielded herself with lawyers and doctors that made it impossible to get anywhere near her. Damn. But by the early 1990s, she was a fucking shell of herself.
Starting point is 01:26:27 After Eddie's death, she pulled even more into herself and she became almost entirely a reclusive. And more and more people were cast out of her circle. In the end, there was only a very small group of doctors, lawyers, and quote unquote hangers on who hoped she was just going to leave them something in the will. When she turned 79 in 1992, allegedly her butler talked her into getting a facelift, and that started a slew of health problems. It would go on to include a broken hip, a knee replacement surgery, and a severe stroke in the fall of 1993. And she's so scary, right? Like the stuff that can happen from plastic surgery,
Starting point is 01:27:07 like that. And you hear about like implants and stuff, like the scary, like health problems that can come from it. It's crazy. Watch me show the Sanchez documentary on that. They go, it freaked me out. I was like, okay, never.
Starting point is 01:27:18 That never, never. But on October 28th, 1993, Doris Duke did die of a cardiac arrest at 80 years old. Damn. She had no children and no spouse to leave her enormous fortune too. Wow.
Starting point is 01:27:32 Because she had a huge falling out with the woman that she had adopted. Oh, I forgot she's adopted a 30 something year old. Yeah, but they had a huge falling out. And that's like its own whole separate story that involves her very shady butler. Holy shit. But she left a lot of her like enormous fortune to the butler.
Starting point is 01:27:49 I knew I was gonna say that. I knew it. And a lot of people speculate on his motivations and whether or not he had something to do with accelerating her death, I'll say. Oh boy. Yeah. But that's like layered in a different other time. Do the lawfully.
Starting point is 01:28:04 So, when Doris passed away, most people figured any revelations about the more mysterious aspects of her life had gone with her, especially the accident that murdered Eddie Torella. Yeah, that's a big one. Yeah. But that all changed in the summer of 2020. Whoa. When journalist Peter Lance published an article about Eddie Turalist's death in Vanity Fair. I love Vanity Fair. I do too. I actually just signed up to get their hard copies too. Nice. Because I had online access and then I got like signed out for some reason and I was like, oh, give me hard copies. Yeah, they have great articles. They do. Now Peter Lance, he had actually been born and raised in Newport and he remembered not only Eddie's death, but the controversy
Starting point is 01:28:42 and the suspicion surrounding it. A lot of people in town believed that there was a cover-up and the story he wrote prompted a flood of comments and memories from Newport's residents who pretty much confirmed the suspicious nature of the quote-unquote accident. Oh man! One man in particular would take Peter down a path that would eventually uncover what many accept
Starting point is 01:29:04 as the truth about Eddie's death. What? Bob Walker was a 13 year old paper boy living in Newport when Eddie Torello was killed. And on the afternoon of the quote unquote accident, he was out on his route delivering papers near the rough point mansion when he heard a commotion coming from the direction of a massive estate.
Starting point is 01:29:25 He would later tell Peter, quote, I initially heard the argument in screaming of two people. And he said, because it was usually such a calm and quiet area, it was very easy to hear that these people were definitely pissed off at each other. He said the argument was followed by silence and then, quote, the roar of a motor, the crash and the screaming of a man. Oh no. Now according to Bob, he could hear the accident happen and rush to the scene, arriving well before the police did.
Starting point is 01:29:52 And when he got to the gates, he said Doris was just getting out of the car and was staring down at the wreckage when he wrote up on his bicycle. And he asked if he could do anything to help because he had no idea what was going on. Yeah. Doris turned to him pointing and screaming, you better get the hell out of here.
Starting point is 01:30:09 Oh, that just gave me chills. And then she began what he described as a kind of crouched pacing in front of the car. Like she was trying to block his view of whatever was beneath it. And she kept yelling at him, get out of here now. It was literally like walking around the car
Starting point is 01:30:28 like an animal. Exactly like an animal. Holy shit. Hiding his view. So Bob was completely shaken by this. And as far as he could tell, she wasn't hurt. So he got back on his bike and got out of there because he had, that's all he had seen.
Starting point is 01:30:41 Yeah. He's like, what the fuck? But when he got his bundle of papers for delivery the. Yeah, he's like, what the fuck? But when he got his bundle of papers for delivery the next day, he saw that headline about the accident and he read the article, but everything in the paper didn't match what he had seen and heard that afternoon. So he ran home to tell his father
Starting point is 01:30:58 and explain what had happened the day before. But he got a very different reaction than what he was expecting. When he got home and he told his dad everything, his dad grabbed him by the shirt and slammed him up against the wall and told him, no, you listen to me, son, you will never, ever tell anybody this story again. You will not tell your brother, you will not tell your friends, and of all people, you're not going to say anything to the police. Do you understand me? Do you understand me?
Starting point is 01:31:28 What? Bob Walker did not understand, because his dad was usually completely adamant that his children always tell the truth, but Bob said he was so serious that it was scary, and he didn't want to say anything to anybody about what he had seen until years and years later. And by that point, everybody had more or less forgotten about Eddie Turella.
Starting point is 01:31:52 Shit. So years like way down the road years later, as his dad was declining in health, Bob asked his dad why he reacted that way. And this is what his dad told him. You know, son, at the time when you told me the story, I recognized that you could have shown motive and intent. I was concerned that you as a key witness could have gone,
Starting point is 01:32:13 or could have been doing your paper route on the ocean drive, and a truck could have come up on you from behind. The life of my child was more precious to me than that woman on Bellevue Avenue. That's why I reacted the way I did. Oh my God. So basically, he was saying like,
Starting point is 01:32:28 that woman has all the money in the world and all the power. And I was protecting you. You a little informant, anything could have happened to you or our family. And I love you more than I love anyone in this world. Oh my God, I got full chills. Because at first I was so mad.
Starting point is 01:32:42 At Bob Walker's dad, when I first read it, I was like, what the hell? See, in my head, I was like, he's scared. He at first I was still mad. At Bob Walker's dad, when I first read it, I was like, what the hell? See, in my head, I was like, he's scared. He's scared. Like, he's scared that something is gonna happen to his kid and he's like, I don't give a fuck about anybody else. I care about you. When I found that out, I was like,
Starting point is 01:32:55 I am literally crying right now. Because I would be the same way. You don't give a fuck about anybody else. Exactly. I'm protecting you. Exactly. Damn. And the thing is, even if Bob had gone to the police
Starting point is 01:33:05 and spilled everything that he had seen that day, it wouldn't have made a difference. No. Because Doris was spending all that money restoring the homes and new parts. Exactly. So it wouldn't have made it. The only difference it would have made
Starting point is 01:33:20 was putting Bob in danger. Exactly. But literally, the reason why Eddie's death was covered up is because she had so much money in power, and she was doing so much for the community that they were like, okay, it didn't let it go. It's an accident. It will take blood money for you to restore these homes.
Starting point is 01:33:36 Damn. So as Peter dug deeper into Bob Walker's story, he found that there were other people who had come to similar conclusions about Eddie's death, including a police sergeant who had been assigned to the case at the time. His report concluded there was no way this could have been an accident, and that Torella's death was most certainly intentional. And he also learned that right after the accident, Doris hired the county's acting medical examiner, the one who was literally filing the autopsy and the death certificate, as her private doctor.
Starting point is 01:34:08 Wow. Conflict. Oh, I was just gonna say, can you say? And there were other people in town, including police chief, Radist there, whose lives and personal fortunes seem to drastically improve in the weeks and months following Eddie's death. Holy shit.
Starting point is 01:34:25 A.K.A. She paid a shit ton of people off. Yeah, it certainly looks that way, allegedly. So Peter, allegedly, Peter definitely took all that information to the police and they sat on it until they felt enough public pressure to reopen the case. Whoa. And they especially felt that pressure
Starting point is 01:34:45 after Peter Lances' book, homicide at rough point, which I definitely recommend reading was published. Now, unfortunately, the reinvestigation of the case was just as doomed as the initial case. And just after a few days of review, days, the Newport police determined, quote,
Starting point is 01:35:02 that new evidence presented in the book is insufficient to warrant further investigation. I love that there were like, we've thought about it for 48 hours, and we decided that after that long think on it. No, we're not even going to look into it. Yeah, like that. Cool. In a statement to the press, town administrator said, it remains the opinion of the Newport Police Department that there's not sufficient evidence to draw any firm conclusions as to the motivations of Mrs. or Miss Duke. For that reason, it appears that this will continue to be a case that will have to be left to the court of public opinion. So they essentially said you can think whatever you want and you're probably right, but according to us, nah.
Starting point is 01:35:41 We're going to agree to disagree. But as far exactly. But as far as Peter and pretty much all of the residents of Newport, Rhode Island are concerned, the police had all the evidence that they needed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Doris Duke intentionally murdered Eddie Torella. But it seemed that even 30 years after her death, nobody wanted to fuck with Duke family name. Wow. Trust.
Starting point is 01:36:06 No one. Trust no one. And that's the really, really sad story of the death of Eduardo Torella. That is very sad. Right? Damn. Bunkers. What a story.
Starting point is 01:36:16 A bunker story. What a life. What a legacy. Right. What a drownfall. Yeah. Like shit. I definitely recommend like looking even more into Doris
Starting point is 01:36:27 because I'm sure that fall like a very long episode I think it might have been. But there was so many things that I ended up skipping over because we could have just been here for like hours and hours. That's so, that's a wild story. She lived a crazy ass life. Yeah. And at the end of it, she wasn't a great person.
Starting point is 01:36:42 Allegedly. Allegedly. You know? To say the great person allegedly allegedly, you know The car hopped forward, you know, maybe the cars do they do leap forward so allegedly allegedly allegedly That's allegedly that's it Allegedly, we hope you keep listening and we hope you allegedly keep it weird Allegedly and keep it weird allegedly. I love you. Hey, Prime Members! You can listen to Morvid, Early, and Add Free on Amazon Music. Download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen ad-free with Wondery Plus
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