Morbid - Episode 580: Charles Whitman: The Texas Tower Sniper
Episode Date: July 8, 2024On the morning of August 1, 1966, twenty-five-year-old Charles Whitman arrived at the University of Texas Austin campus a little before noon, carrying with him several rifles, pistols, and a ...shotgun contained within a military footlocker. After talking his way past a guard, Whitman climbed to the twenty eighth floor of the campus clocktower and walked out onto the observation deck, then began firing at the people on the ground below. In the span of a just over an hour and half, Charles Whitman killed fifteen people and wounded thirty-one others before finally being shot and killed by a police officer who’d managed to make his way to the top of the tower. Investigators later learned that, prior to arriving on the UT campus, Whitman had also murdered his mother and his wife.In 1966, mass shootings were virtually unheard of in the United States and Whitman’s spree killing shocked the nation. By most accounts, Charles Whitman was the picture of an all-American man, which made his actions all the more confusing. He was well-liked, had a successful military career, a beautiful wife, and once out of the military, he began pursuing a college degree in preparation for the next phase of his life. But behind the façade of American middle-class success lurked a deeply troubled man whose personal history and acute medical problems would eventually go a long way to explaining his actions on the morning of August 1.Thank you to the incredible Dave White of Bring Me the Axe Podcast for research!ReferencesAustin American-Statesman. 1966. "U.T. sniper shoots 33." Austin American-Statesman, August 1: 1.Colloff, Pamela. 2006. "96 minutes." Texas Monthly, August 1: 104.—. 2016. "Memorial day." Texas Monthly, August 1: 22.Flemmons, Jerry. 1966. "UT tower sniper kills 14, dies in hail of police gunfire." Fort Worth Star-Telegram, August 2: 1.Governor's Committee. 1966. Report to the Governor; Medical Aspects, Charles J. Whitman Catastrophe. Fact-finding report, Houston, TX: Texas Department of Public Safety.Krebs, Albin. 1966. "The Texas killer: Former Florida neighbors recall a nice boy who liked toy guns." New York Times, August 2: 15.Lavergne, Gary. 1997. Sniper in the Tower: The Charles Whitman Murders. Denton, TX: University of North Texas Press.New York Times. 1967. "U. of Texas to reopen ." New York Times, June 18: 25.Stuever, Hank. 1996. "96 minutes, 30 years later." Austin American-Statesman, July 29: 1.Texas Department of Public Safety. 1966. Statement of John and Fran Morgan. Intelligence Report, Houston, TX: State of Texas Department of Public Safety.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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Hey, Earthlings.
Hello.
And tall grays.
And short grays as well.
What are they called?
Sorry, my brain's just going into it.
It's connected.
Okay.
Because you're talking about aliens.
In the Berkshires, there's a bridge where a UFO incident happened.
It's on the new Unsolved Mysteries, all that fun stuff.
And they've put up a plaque and everything.
I think they call it an off-world incident on the plaque.
And I think it is just the most delicious way to explain an alien coming down, like
an off-world incident.
Yeah, I like otherworldly better.
See, I like it's just off this world.
It's just such a strange way of saying it,
but like a poetic one in a weird way.
Yeah.
That's like you just being like,
oh, excuse me, I'm just gonna go off-world for a minute.
Off-world.
I'm going into space, see you later.
I'm going off-world.
Cause does space not count as the world? No, I think just Earth is the world. Is'm going into space. See you later. I'm going off world. Because does space not count as the world?
No, I think just Earth is the world.
Is that how it is?
I don't think of it like that.
Oh, that's how I always see it.
I think of the world as like the whole fucking shebang.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
I never thought of it that way.
I always think the world is Earth.
Because it's our world and other people have their own worlds or other creatures. Have and have their own world, but it's all, it's all a world.
No, it's all a universe. No, I look at it as it's all a universe,
but this is our world. See for me,
I feel like world and universe are like synonymous.
You're blowing my mind a little bit. You're blowing my mind a little bit.
I don't see those as synonymous at all. Huh? Well, that's our brains. So thanks for tuning in. Yeah. Cause I always think that I know we're
harping on this, but you know, that's an interesting discussion. Cause I always say like,
you know, you're the greatest in all the world to me is like the whole planet, like all earth. But
if I say you're the greatest in the universe, that's a step up. Oh, okay. Yeah. Yeah. I guess I see
that. But I can see why you would think that as well.
For me, if I tell you you're the greatest in the world,
I also mean you're the greatest in the universe.
Well, that's good to know.
Yeah.
Because to me, I was thinking you were downgrading.
Really?
I mean, usually, I usually don't say world.
I usually just say universe.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Interesting.
I will. Never think of these things.
Maybe though, it's because like your kids say,
like if like we're talking about like
imaginary things, they say like in our world.
Yeah.
Like do we have that in our world?
Yeah.
That's maybe that's why you think of it the way you think of it.
Yeah, because they're always saying like, is that an all world?
Yeah.
Maybe that's like our planet where we are.
Yeah.
And our reality is what I think of it as.
Yeah.
Our world is our reality.
Outside of that, I don't know. It's fucking bleak either way. Or maybe it's great outside
of this. I mean, it's gotta be great somewhere. It does. It has to be. But I feel like you
get the good with the bad, the happy and the sad no matter where you go, probably. I'm
assuming. I don't really want things to be like super fucking awesome
all the time because then you would lose,
you would like lose that feeling.
You wouldn't be as grateful for the great times.
You don't want it to be so fluctuating
as it feels like it is now with everybody.
But it's like, you want a little bit of dips
just so you can appreciate the highs.
This got so theological.
I know what it started with me being like, isn't it funny that it says all four of them?
Look at us.
Look at us go.
Wow.
That just got insanely deep.
Yeah.
And another deep thing before we get into the story is, um, Apple did some kind of weird update in like
November, but we just start finding out about it. We're not up on anything. We never know
what's happening. We're too busy having theological discussion. Exactly. Too busy talking about
off world incidents. But we're always behind on shit. Like you guys know this about us.
We're six years into this. Like we know each other now. You know us. We're always behind on shit. Like you guys know this about us. We're six years into this. Like we know each other now.
You know us.
We're always behind shit.
We don't know what's going on in this industry at all.
No.
And so-
It's fine.
We like it that way.
We shut the door at the end of the recording
and we say bye.
Bye.
But it's been brought to our attention.
Which is probably a good thing that someone told us.
Oh no, it's great.
I'm glad somebody did.
But that apparently Apple has done this update in November where you're not getting our new
episodes automatically.
How horrible for you.
You have to hit follow on our thing on Apple podcasts now.
There's three little dots at the top and if you hit it and just hit follow, that way you'll
get automatically updated
with our new episodes because like you could be,
who knows, you might not even be hearing this.
You might not even be here for this awesome discussion
that we just had.
You might hear about this six months from now.
So can you imagine?
If you haven't and you're just one of those lovely people,
which if you're listening right now, you are,
that just like either is already following us,
figured it out, or you've like searched
and found this episode,
like you actively went and found this episode
to get and listen to.
Then you're incredible.
One, you're incredible, thank you.
But two, you can just follow and it'll do it for you.
Yeah.
And that'll be great.
And it will help out the show too,
and we appreciate it. Yeah, it'll help out the show.
So if you do that, just, that would be sick.
And also you'll get all of the episodes automatically.
We'll all just be in a better place because of it.
What a weird thing to do.
Yeah, it was strange.
It's very strange.
It was.
That's the only real podcast-y thing
we have to talk to you about.
Before we get into the whole episode, a quick little, this is a trigger warning just because
the episode is something that is pretty relevant for recent years.
This is about a mass shooting.
I'm going to be describing what happened during the shooting.
It can be triggering for a lot of people.
Some of you may have even been touched personally by one in recent years. So we wanted to make sure that you knew right
up up front that we will be discussing it. And it could be a little distressing. So if
it is, and you want to skip this episode, we get it. We totally understand. Maybe just
like put it on on mute and let it run all the way through. No, I'm just kidding. You
don't have to do that, but that would be sick.
We totally get it if you want to go to the next episode.
We love you for it either way.
And if you're sticking around, here we go.
Today we're going to be talking about a pretty infamous case that I know a lot of people
have probably heard about.
I didn't know all the like detailed details of it,
but we're gonna be talking about Charles Whitman,
also known as the Texas Tower Sniper.
Sounds familiar.
Yeah, it's a gnarly one.
It's you, so that checks.
It's awful, it's tragic.
It's also like confusing why it happened,
but I think it had a lot to do with,
like confusing why it happened. But I think it had a lot to do with,
I think there was a lot of undiagnosed mental illness here
that it was in the sixties.
So it's not like-
Oh, okay.
I think we talked about this on crime countdown
at one point.
Yeah, I'm sure we mentioned it on crime countdown.
But this was in 1966 mass shootings
were virtually unheard of in the United States.
Which is crazy to think about now.
In 2024, we're like, what do you mean? It wasn't just like a known thing every day
that you get a new one?
Imagine being in that place.
Yeah. So Whitman's spree that happened in 1966, it shocked the nation. I mean,
shocked. And what was worse at the time is that by most accounts,
he was kind of by an outsider's point of view, you know, the picture of an all-American man,
which made his actions all the more confusing to a very 1960s society.
Right.
Because this very picture of, you know, like the happy husband with the, you know,
the happy wife.
The American dream kind of thing.
Outwardly, he looked like a very, you know, again,
the picture of a 60s happy all American man.
Looks can be deceiving.
He was also well liked.
He had a, you know, a successful question mark
on paper military career.
Okay. On paper.
You look deeper into it and there was a lot of shit going on paper military career. Okay. On paper.
Okay.
You look deeper into it and there was a lot of shit going down.
All right.
He had a beautiful life and once out of the military, he had at least started pursuing
a college degree in preparation for an architectural engineering.
Oh, wow.
Career.
So it's like he was everything you could hope for.
But behind this facade of an American middle-class success story, there was a very deeply troubled
man whose personal history and what we find out to be acute medical problems would actually
go a little bit of the ways to explaining what happened here.
But nobody else really knew what was happening.
So who was Charles Whitman? Tell. Who? Do tell.
I ask. Do tell. Charles Whitman III was born June 24th, 1941. So today, and I didn't realize that.
I was waiting. I was like, girl, do you know that that is the current day?
Why does this happen? It happens a lot.
I did not plan this. No, it happens a lot. It's weird.
Like I pinky promise all of you that I did not plan this. No, it happens a lot. It's weird. Like I pinky promise all of you that I did not plan this.
That's weird.
In fact, I was supposed to do this one last week
and I didn't.
Weird.
That's really weird.
Ooh, today.
So he was born today in 1941 in Lake Worth, Florida.
And he was the first of three boys born
to CA and Margaret Wilson.
From the outside, this family appeared to be the perfect American family.
Just everything you could want to be.
You know, C.A., the dad, was a financially successful business owner.
He was supported by this lovely wife of his who kept the books for the business, also
managing to, you managing to keep the
household afloat, raising the three children, her three lovely boys.
What else could you ask for?
Behind closed doors, however.
Things were not very idyllic.
C.A. Whitman was very obsessed with appearances, very obsessed, and he was also a very strict
disciplinarian.
He did not hesitate to use physical punishment with his children and also his wife.
Oh, wow. He was an asshole.
It does sound that way. In fact, he said later, I did on many occasions
beat my wife, but I loved her. No, no, no. If you can beat your wife, you don't know
what love is. That's not a
try though. I, he doesn't even say I hit my wife, which is bad enough. I beat my wife,
which to me sounds so much like barbaric. So much. It's like, they're all barbaric on
every level, but it's like, for some reason, the term beat my wife just sounds, it gives
me like shivers and to say it in the same sentence as, but I also loved her. And also he says it like, what?
Ugh.
And it's like, okay.
But he was also equally as unashamed about his abuse of his children.
He said, I'm not ashamed of the shamed of any spankings.
I don't think I spanked enough if you want to know the truth about it.
I think they should have been punished more than they were punished.
He sounds horrible.
He sounds delightful.
Yeah. Yeah sounds horrible. He sounds delightful.
From a very early age, young Charles was described as being an extremely bright, very spirited
boy.
One neighbor said he was a noisy little devil, but they said, but he was a nice little boy
and made a handsome man.
And it's true.
If you look up a picture of Charles Whitman, he did make a very handsome man and he looks like an all-American boy.
He really does.
And it's true, a lot of the Whitman's neighbors found C.A., however, to be a disagreeable
man.
But according to Gary Laverne, who wrote the book, Sniper in the Tower, the Charles Whitman murders.
He said that basically the neighbors
nearly universally characterized Charlie
along with his brothers as good normal boys.
And they characterized the mother
as a perfectly good mother.
Okay.
Despite being an abusive and very highly critical father,
following his son's death,
CA would tell reporters that
Charles was quote, a brilliant student who never caused trouble for his family. He's
like, I did beat the shit out of him as a child, but he never caused us trouble.
Like, that's good. So why did you get the shit out of him then? Yeah. Even causing trouble
would warrant that. No, but it's just like, wow. By the time he entered grade school,
it was pretty clear that Charles was advanced for
his age.
Many of his teachers said that he was very capable and actually a clearly gifted student.
His teacher suspicions were confirmed in fact in 1947 because he was given an IQ exam and
he measured 138.9.
So he wasn't just gifted in academics though. He also really loved music and he
started taking piano lessons around age four. And he went on to honestly be a very successful,
like he would have been a successful pianist. And he was in a local band actually.
Oh, okay.
And he did well.
It's weird that he seems so well-rounded.
He started off very well-rounded and things went awry.
Things started turning.
But if there was anything about
which Charles was truly passionate, it was guns.
Oh.
C.A. Whitman, the father, said,
"'I'm a fanatic about guns.'"
He said, "'I raised my boys to know how to handle guns.
And following the shooting evidence of Charles's love of firearms was obviously talked about
in the press quite a bit.
And in a lot of those reports was a photo of a two year old Charles Whitman standing
on a beach holding two rifles, both taller than him.
No.
Yeah.
No. Have your own opinions about him. No. Yeah. No.
Have your own opinions about guns.
This is mine.
No one's telling you that you can't have them, but that's, I don't love that.
But again, however your opinion on guns is, you are allowed to have it.
That's totally fine.
But that, the idea of a two yearold holding two rifles is not for me.
It's just not for me.
It's not for a lot of people.
Yeah, it's not for me. It's for you, that's fine.
But this would seem to be one of some of the things that they had in common,
like the father and the son.
And C.A. often actually bragged about this.
He bragged and said, Charlie could plug a squirrel in the eye by the time he was 16.
So there's that.
Why though?
You're going to eat the squirrel?
Yeah, maybe, who knows?
But having spent most of his childhood in an orphanage, actually, CA Whitman, the father,
he really struggled and worked hard to get everything he had.
Well, that's one thing I will say for him.
He grew up with nothing,
so he worked to get everything he had.
It also, growing up in an orphanage,
you can now see where some of his behaviors
probably manifested from.
And disciplinary style.
Especially orphanages around that time period.
And I don't know a lot about obviously his childhood
aside from being in an orphanage,
but when you hear that, it makes a little more sense why he's very angry.
Yeah.
So, and obviously C.A. Whitman drove his sons to be high achievers as well.
He wanted to be a high achiever.
He wanted perfection out of his family, which nobody can be perfect.
No, absolutely not.
You're driving for something that can happen, which is going to cause a breakdown eventually.
But Charles was the eldest son and he was the one push harder.
Charles's father pushed him to join a ton of clubs and associations like the Cub Scouts,
Boy Scouts.
He attained the highest levels of achievement in both of those, like an eagle cub.
An eagle cub.
TBT. TBT.
Young Charles also inherited his father's obsession
with accumulating as much wealth as possible.
So he got a job right away as a paper boy
as soon as he could meet the age requirement,
which is good, that's a great thing.
And he was successful,
because he was successful in most of the,
if not all the things he did at that point.
But on the rare occasion that he did get any kind of
feedback or criticism for his performance,
he tended to quote, personalize customer complaints.
Which at first, when I heard that,
I was like, I didn't remember his birthday and I was like,
is he a Capricorn?
But I was like, no, he's not.
He's a cancer.
Yeah.
Which I guess maybe that also could make sense.
Cancers can be very highly emotional and sometimes don't get offended.
They can be vindictive.
Oh, okay.
Interesting.
Yes.
Just the idea.
Okay. The idea of personalizing criticism for your performance seems very Capricorn for me because
I tend to do that.
Like immediately becomes personal for me, which is not like a greatest attribute to
have.
It harms you more than anything else.
I feel like it can be like, obviously like it can do with your sign, but also your upbringing. I think that probably had a lot to do with it in his case. Yeah,
that makes a lot of sense. Almost sounds like it was like, you're right. Because it was like
his dad criticizing him. Yeah. And telling him you have to achieve this. Right. By the time he
entered high school in 1955, he was, again, Charles was well liked, pretty
popular, excelled at most things, really had a lot going for him.
His school friend, Frank McCarty actually said he was a thinker who never went off half
cocked.
He was completely normal.
Now the idea of him being a thinker who never goes off half cocked comes back later when
he commits the atrocities that he committed.
Cause he wasn't half cocked.
He went, he planned it down to the second.
So that is almost a little scary of like a sentiment to have about him.
Definitely is.
But so like most people who were interviewed following the murders, this guy, Frank McCarty,
remembered really nothing unusual
about his high school career reputation, Charles's.
Wow.
McCarty really was just like, yeah, I don't know.
During his freshman and sophomore years,
he had good grades, good attendance.
By his junior year, his grades had kind of dropped somewhat.
And he ended up having 26 absences that year.
That's a lot.
16 of those were because he had a surgical procedure done
and he had to recover from it.
That surgical procedure was to remove a blood clot
on his left testicle.
Oh wow.
Yeah.
But even with all that,
he ultimately graduated seventh in his class in 1959
with a 3.3 GPA. With all of those absences and all of that shit he had to get through.
That's crazy.
So that's interesting.
On the night of his graduation, he went out to celebrate with some friends and they ended
up drinking.
Yeah, duh.
Yeah, duh.
I'm like Like obviously. And when he returned home later that evening,
C.A. lost his shit on him for coming home slightly drunk.
In fact, it was said he lost all control of his temper.
Charles told later, Charles told his priest and former boy scout troop leader, Father
Joseph Deluck, that his father beat him severely and threw him into
the pool where he almost drowned.
What the fuck?
Yeah.
So when people question, I mean, obviously a lot of people go through horrible things,
which is a horrible thing to think about like this, and they don't go off to do the things
that he did.
But I think there's also a couple of injuries involved to his head that we'll
find out later that I think also contributed to mental illness and some neurological issues.
And this kind of mixed with this kind of upbringing came out horribly.
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And after years of this, after years of his father's constant abuse and honestly his
like tyrannical behavior at this point, he's like a dictator in that house. It was the
last straw. So, and he was 17 years old at this time
and he had been accepted to Georgia Tech.
And he would have, if he went there,
he was going to have to at least remain financially dependent
on his dad, but instead he chose to enter the military
because he wanted to escape.
And he wanted to start building his own life.
So he was like, I want to cut ties.
It was a way out.
On June 27th, 1959, just three days after his 18th birthday, And he wanted to start building his own life. So he was like, I want to cut ties. It was a way out.
On June 27th, 1959, just three days after his 18th birthday, he enlisted in the Marines
and a week later he boarded a bus for Jacksonville.
So he was off.
Charles Whitman had enlisted in the Marines obviously to escape the unrealistic expectations,
the abuse of his father, everything.
Yeah.
Just get out of that house.
But which also it needs to be said,
his mother was somebody he could like count on
and try to really like, you know,
protect her sons from everything,
but she also was being abused.
Right.
But from what I can see, his mother was never abusive,
never anything but a good mom. Yeah, a great mom, to be honest.
But he had tried to get away from all that,
but he soon learned that he had just kind of traded
one extremely regimented life for another.
Now he's just gonna be under the control of someone else.
After completing basic training,
he was sent to Guantanamo Naval Base in Cuba,
a very difficult post given, especially at the time, the increasing tension between US
and the Cuban governments at the time.
But Charles tried to make the best of his 18 month assignment there.
And in an effort to be more well rounded as a person, he took a lot of classes while he
was stationed at the base.
And apparently he took classes from sanitation to history. Wow. All the way across the base. And apparently he took classes from sanitation to history.
Like all the way across the board.
He was trying to keep detailed notes all the way through.
He had this thing in his head where,
and he carries this a lot through his life
that he needs to be busy.
Okay.
He cannot be alone with his own thoughts, I feel like.
That's not great.
And this is a prime example of it.
Miley was generally a good student
and really excelled in most of his classes.
He also found himself really drawn
to the firearms training again,
because he loves guns.
He was brought up to love guns.
Gary Laverne wrote fairly early in his Marine's career,
Charlie established himself as a very proficient with guns.
He took copious notes on the care and techniques
of firing a three caliber M1 carbine.
At the end of the detailed notes, he scribbled in large letters, world's finest! Exclamation
point, exclamation point, exclamation point. On the firing range, he consistently achieved
high scores and actually ended up earning a sharpshooter's badge. And in a very macabre
bit of foreshadowing,
he would be remembered as quote,
an excellent shot who appeared to be more accurate
against moving targets.
Wow.
Which is a horrific bit of foreshadowing here.
That's chilling.
In general, his conduct during this period was pretty good
and it appears people liked him.
His fellow Marines liked him.
Everything was pretty normal.
According to Larry Phillips,
who was stationed at Guantanamo with Charles Whitman,
he said Charles would quote,
do anything for others in his squad.
However, at one point Phillips and Whitman
were in a serious accident.
And that's, it seems to have been the result
of Charles' complete disregard for danger
while in most situations.
Really?
He had a very like, I'm invincible way of looking at things.
He was very, he could be very like irresponsible when it came to like those kinds of situations
and really following the rules by the book.
And so an accident happened and he ended up getting a head injury from it.
It was like a Jeep accident.
Yikes.
While at Guantanamo, Charles learned of a
scholarship program for enlisted soldiers that was known as the Naval Enlisted Science
Education Program or NESEP. NESEP? Couldn't tell you. N-E-S-E-P. I was like, what is that?
Which was developed as a way of training soldiers in math and science to try to compete with
Russia essentially. Oh, okay.
Charles applied in February, 1961 and was actually among the few Marines selected to
participate and started the program in mechanical engineering at University of Texas Austin
in September, which this is very highly prestigious.
Absolutely it is.
He had spent his entire life now under the thumb of his father and commanding officers,
just under the thumb of everybody above him.
But now he had a newfound freedom.
He wasn't under anyone's thumb now.
He could study.
He was part of this scholarship program and he had difficulty adjusting.
It's almost like when people come out of prison and they have trouble adjusting to being not
regimented and not regulated. One night,
not long after moving into his dorm, Charles and two other students illegally poached a deer
and brought the animals' dead carcass back to the dorm. Which like, I'm tapping my head right now,
like think, use the gray matter between your ears. Maybe don't do that. A local resident spotted them doing this, however, like coming back into the dorm.
And was like, hey, what the fuck?
They reported the poaching to the authorities and police followed a trail of blood back
to the UTA campus.
They entered Whitman's dorm room and they found the two of them skinning the deer in
the dorm shower.
What's weird is you did say he took a sanitation course.
Yeah.
And then he just dragged a deer through the hallway
and brought it into the shared bathroom.
Yeah, and then just was skinning it in the shower.
That's bizarre.
That's unusual behavior to me.
Can you imagine walking in to take a...
You're just at your college dorm, you're like,
I've got to shower. Yeah. You walk into that, college dorm, you're like, I've got a shower.
You walk into that, I'd be like,
oh, oh, you gotta go...
And it's like, whoop.
Like, that's bizarre behavior.
That should have been a pretty red flag to me.
Like, that's...
First of all, that's not smart decision-making skills.
Like, I'd be like, what happened here? And two, it's like, that's not smart decision-making skills. Like I'd be like, what happened here?
And two, it's like, that's fucked up.
Yeah.
I don't know if people just looked at it like,
oh, he likes to hunt.
And it's like, but that's like fucked up.
Like, even if you like to hunt, it's like,
I don't need to see a deer being skinned in my shower.
Like, what are you doing?
Yeah, I don't know.
Like do your business elsewhere.
Like, I'm not telling you you can't.
Yeah, if you want to do that, go for it, but don't do it in my shower.
There's a time and a place for everything.
My shower is not it.
But it's so weird.
But what's crazy about this is he got off with a light sentence.
He was forced to pay a hundred dollar fine.
What the fuck?
This is very bizarre, very red flaggy behavior, but we're just going
to make you pay a hundred bucks.
You don't drag a deer through the hallway again after killing it for no reason.
And then skin it in the shower.
Just a hundred bucks, please.
Yeah.
So he was arrested at the time, like he got arrested for it.
So after that arrest, it was really just the first of several incidents that really
indicated that women was not taking this program seriously.
LS. That literally sounds like a Florida man incident.
It really does.
It really does.
Florida man poaches deer illegally, skins it in local shower.
It's true.
Like I'm not past this yet.
No.
LS. Don't laugh.
It's true. It really is very Florida man-ish.
LS. I mean, he is from Florida.
He is from, he's a Florida man. So, he is from Florida. He's a Florida man.
So it makes sense. He's a Florida man. He's a Florida man. To our Floridian listeners,
we love you. We love you. You're not that Florida man. No, we love Florida man.
But it is very Florida. We had another crime countdown. We had like four segments of Florida
man crimes. I miss crime countdown. I miss crime countdown daily. Hi, Max. Hi, Max. But yeah, he wasn't
taking this program seriously. Evidently. He also wasn't handling the increased freedom very well,
obviously. Because once he's up to his own devices, that's what he does. That's the first thing he
does. It's like, I get going a little buck wild. Oh, bad choice of words. Yeah. I get going a little
wild, like when you have your own freedom. like that's that's a different guy. That is
You took that far to literally
But during his first year at UTA Charles was focusing way more on all that kind of shit and also he was a gambler
He loved gambling and he was focusing on it.
And he was focusing on every other weird, wild hobby that he had going on.
So his grades started plummeting.
He just wasn't focusing on it.
No one was making him.
So he wasn't.
It's like your first year when you get to do online courses, you're going to fail that
shit unless you're awesome.
Online courses are tough.
Figuring out how to self-discipline is one of the hardest things you will do at first.
And this is where he was.
So given his reputation as a prankster, and because he liked to play pranks, he was a
jokester, you know, all that stuff.
And he would also make like outrageous comments a lot.
But like they just took that as like, he's just a joker, that
kind of thing. But his friend, Francis Shuck, didn't think much at all when one night the
two of them were sitting out on the dorm balcony and Charles pointed up to the top of the campus
clock tower and said, a person could stand off an army from a top it before they even
got to him. And of course his friend
didn't, why would they think?
Yeah, no, why would you think anything about that?
He's rattling off a future plan.
And he's somebody who came from a military background, like to a degree makes sense that
he would make a comment like that, I guess. Like, I don't know that I would think twice
about that.
Yeah. So he just sat there and listened to him.
And then he went on, like Charles went on and he was like, he described basically a
scenario where someone could just fire from the top of the tower and just kill spectators
with a rifle.
Now, again, we look back on it, knowing what we know, and we go, oh my God, like foreshadowing
who knew.
But think about it.
How many times, hopefully everybody's on board with this or I'm going to sound weird, but
how many times have you been somewhere weird, like some like weird ravine or something where
you're like, oh my God, that goes down so far.
And you're like, oh my God, imagine if somebody just like threw somebody down there.
Like you think something weird and fucked up and you're just like, guys, imagine that.
It's not because you're planning to do it.
It's because you're like, whoa, like, I'm just like, that's imagine that. It's not because you're planning to do it. It's because you're like, whoa, like, that's crazy.
Like that's a wild thought.
You know, like you think of these things.
And you think like, how scary is that?
Yeah, like you're not.
And who knows, maybe he posed it that way.
Like how fucked up is that?
How fucked up would that be?
Like, you know, and then his friends just like,
oh yeah, that'd be fucked up.
Like holy shit, you're fucked again.
Like you can't, that wouldn't strike me
as like somebody telling me a plan.
Especially if he's shown absolutely nothing to me. That makes me think he's making a plan
to do that. Exactly. So I understand why that wouldn't really ring alarm bells in that moment.
Hindsight is 2020. Obviously. Now after a year of pretty poor grades and some really shitty
pranks, Charles finally started to take his schooling a little more seriously the following year. Thanks in large part to meeting this woman named Kathy Leisner
in February, 1962. Unlike Charles, Kathy was very focused on her goal of graduating. She
was getting a degree in education and she wanted to be a teacher.
Nice.
But she was very charmed by Charles and they started dating very soon after meeting
and she kind of kept him on the path.
Keeped him in check.
Like she gave him something to be like,
you know what, I better get my shit together
because look at this girl focusing on her shit.
Yeah, hell yeah.
And Cathy definitely had a positive influence on Charles
but having spent most of his time hanging out with friends
and playing pranks on campus and gambling, his grades were just too abysmal to really pull out of the bottom here.
He was getting one A and it was an algebra, which A for algebra, but the rest were all
like barely Ds.
Like he was, oh wow.
He let it get crazy.
He really did.
He had some Cs in there, but they were like, there was a lot of really abysmal ones. He did show a slight improvement in summer of 1962 after he married Kathy that
August.
Hey.
She really did. She had a good influence. And he seemed to be taking the program more
seriously at that point, I think because he saw his future is with Kathy now. He knows
he has to get his shit together.
I just brought up their wedding pictures and it's so, they just look like any other like
old timey married couples.
Like they look super happy.
He looks very like a normal guy you'd wave to on the street.
The way he talks about her is like he adored her from what he said.
Now unfortunately for the Marine Corps
who had invested a lot into him at this point,
these little improvements were just not enough.
They weren't enough to justify him
continuing that scholarship.
And in the winter of 63, he lost the scholarship
and was called back to active duty
and stationed at Camp Luzhen.
Okay.
Now, when he entered the military after high school,
he was trying to get away from an abusive home life,
which probably made that transition a little easier
because he was leaving an abusive home life
and going into a place where he was also regimented,
but in a different way and not being personally abused,
by someone he loved, essentially.
But this time the transition back into the military
was a little more difficult.
He's coming from independence.
He had that taste of freedom.
Yeah.
He had failed pretty spectacularly,
probably for the first time in his life at UTA.
But his being assigned to Camp Lejeune
meant that he had to leave Kathy behind in Austin
because she was finishing her degree program.
These challenges kind of set him off on the wrong foot
right away on the base
and things really only got worse from there.
From the moment he arrived on base,
he was very difficult, very insolent, very immature.
His immaturity came out big time in this time period,
way more than it had in the past
when he was kind of being again, highly regulated.
His early record of good conduct
had earned him a little leeway
because he had that good behavior in the past.
But after a few months, it was becoming clear
that he really didn't wanna be a Marine.
Now, according to Gary Laverne,
Charles quote, had become embittered
and formed a hatred of the Marines,
especially after he was informed that his time spent in Austin would not count as part of his active
duty enlistment.
To make matters worse, although he was now back in the rigid confines of the military,
he continued his problematic gambling and other really fucked up behaviors that got
him in trouble at UTA. In October of 64, Charles and a friend got
into a fight with four or five other Marines. And during this whole fight, he was actually
knocked to the ground and repeatedly kicked in the head and face.
Yikes. Like repeatedly, very harmed.
Another TBI. He spent a few hours in the infirmary for dizziness and headaches and he was given aspirin
and then sent back to his bunk.
Aspirin.
No doubt, concussed.
Yeah.
No fucking doubt.
You put that with the Jeep accident a few years earlier.
And the years and years of being abused.
Of actually abused.
Because think about it, when he came home that night after his graduation, his dad beat
him severely and then threw him in the pool where he almost drowned.
That's also lack of oxygen to your brain.
Absolutely it is.
So there's a lot happening here that is not good.
Oh man.
Yeah, it's really bad.
So if the first phase of Charles's military career was a success and the second was a
struggle, then this third would be considered
a complete fucking abysmal failure.
Oh no.
Throughout his time in North Carolina,
Charles was honestly always in trouble,
always admonished for being challenging, disruptive.
He was still carrying on the excessive gambling.
He would carry non-military weapons
and get in trouble for that.
His behavior took an even more dramatic turn when he tried and failed to get his scholarship
back that NESCPE won in April 63, which honestly was the worst thing that could have happened
was him failing to get that back because it just made him hate the military more and it
made him more bitter.
In November of 63, his superiors had finally run out of patience and Charles was actually
court-martialed for quote gambling usury.
And I looked it up usury is lending money at high like crazy high interest rates.
Oh shit.
And the unauthorized possession of a non-military pistol.
And he was ultimately found guilty.
He was sentenced to 30 days confinement and 90 days hard labor.
And then he was demoted back to the rank of private. Yeah.
So things are not going well.
Maybe just do a little discharge.
Doesn't seem like this is a great environment for him. Doesn't seem like,
he doesn't like it and it doesn't seem like he's a good member to have.
I don't think this is working out on either side.
No, I don't think so either.
Throughout 64 though, his life had taken obviously a very significant turn for the worse and
he seemed to be struggling on literally all fronts.
He hated the military at this point.
He regretted enlisting at all,
but still had a large amount of time left
before his discharge.
Yeah.
So desperate, he turned to his father
in hopes that his father's connections
with Florida state representatives
could help him win an early discharge.
Okay.
It took nearly a year, but it actually worked
and CA's connections paid off.
And he was, Charles was honorably discharged
from the Marines on December 6, 1964.
And that's when he went back to Texas
to join back with Kathy.
So that's why I said before,
he had a successful military career
because he was honorably discharged.
But it was a shit show while he was there.
It started off bright, but whoop, plummeted.
So he had a chance at a bright future,
but he had literally gambled it away.
Like quite literally.
Literally.
It was only after his death
when his diary was discovered among his possessions.
And that's when anyone really learned
how much misery he was in during this period of time.
He referred to this time as quote,
the pit of life's experiences.
Wow. Wow.
Yeah. Not only did Charles diary entries from his final year in the military really show
how desperate he was to be discharged, but it also showed how much he was very much investing
in his marriage to Kathy and how it pained him to be away from her.
Wow. Charles wrote in an entry from November 63, quote, it is so good to know that she loves
and understands me.
She's definitely the best thing I have in my life.
Or as I say, my most prized possession.
I don't love that.
Strange way of saying it.
Yeah, women aren't possessions.
It's like, you have me till the end.
Having failed at his first attempt
at getting a college degree at UTA
and then his failed military career,
Charles had kind of come to see the relationship
with Cathy as literally the only good thing
in his life at that point.
It kind of sounds like it was.
It was the only thing that was keeping him going,
to be honest.
In the final days of his active duty,
Charles wrote in that diary, quote,
"'God, I can't stand the core.
"'My love for Cathy and my sense of responsibility responsibility to our unborn children is the only thing that keeps me from going
berserk. At times it seems as if I'm going to explode. So he's already showing that he's
not handling his own inner turmoil well. No, not at all.
Also she's not pregnant, just so you know, but he was just thinking like in the future.
Yeah. So he's no longer being controlled by the military
and Charles and Cathy ended up moving back to Austin.
And at this point, he's like, all right,
I'm ready to like take off.
I'm ready to like succeed.
I want to be like a family man.
I wanna be successful.
So what are you gonna do?
He re-enrolled at UTA, not with the scholarship program
or anything, just his own thing.
And before long, unfortunately,
the old feelings of self-doubt and frustration
started creeping back into his mind.
And he himself wrote in his diary
about his concerns for his own mental health.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, and he said, I think she is just neglecting me
as she says she is getting lazy.
He's talking about Kathy.
He was very insecure about their marriage.
He was always worried that it wasn't where it should be.
He said, I'm undecided what to do, but I definitely feel as though there's something unusual in
my mental state.
I noticed an unusual uneasiness inside myself.
It's sad when you read his diary entries because he recognized it, but it's just in
a private diary.
Right. It wasn't like he went to his doctor or anything and who knows what would have
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Now when he re-enrolled in the fall of 65 he changed his major from mechanical engineering
to architectural engineering.
He was excited about this option because he thought like he likes creative endeavors he
thought this was going to be really where he can express his creative side.
And during this period, he also found a job as a bill collector for the standard finance
company that he could pay his bills and him and Kathy's bills, but they didn't really
have a lot of extra money.
And by April, he took a new position as a teller at the Austin National Bank.
He was determined at this point to fill his time.
Fill, fill, fill that time.
You don't have any time alone to think about your thoughts.
When he wasn't working, wasn't going to school full-time, he volunteered as a scout master
with the local Boy Scout troop.
But by January of 66, he had been asked to be relieved of his duties as scout master
because the pressures he was
feeling from work and school were just too much.
She couldn't handle the volunteering part, but that shows you how hard he was trying
to fill his time.
He was volunteering on top of all the shit he was doing.
He just didn't want to be by himself.
Now despite the fact that his post-military life seemed to be going in a positive direction,
there were definitely signs that he wasn't doing well
emotionally or physically for that matter.
By January of 66, he had put on, from everybody around him,
they said he very quickly put on a noticeable amount
of weight and he was suffering from frequent,
severe headaches, exhibited symptoms
of very severe anxiety.
He would chew his fingernails. He would sweat
even if it was cold, like he was just always on edge. Um, and the self doubt and insecurities
about he felt about his marriage and professional life. It appeared to be coming up way more
frequently now that he was back home with his wife in his diary. He wrote, as I look
back over my past few adult years, they seem so wasted.
Will I ever accomplish anything I set out to do?
Wow.
So he was just really falling into an abyss.
Things continued this downward trajectory too, as they entered 1966, because Cathy's
really busy with her teaching schedule and her school schedule.
And so it ended up being like a frequent stressor
on their marriage.
They would get in arguments a lot that
because he didn't really know what to do
when she wasn't there.
And he would panic when she wasn't there.
You need to have your own life.
Exactly, and he wasn't.
And your own.
He couldn't handle it.
Adventures and.
Yeah, and he was able to maintain good grades
during this period, which is interesting.
But he struggled to make friends.
Most people found him pretty difficult to deal with
at this point.
His mood had changed, his attitude had changed,
which is a very big turn from when he was in that
highly regimented but very abusive home.
People liked him.
Because I think that's the only thing he knew.
But it's also so indicative of like the brain trauma that he had gone through.
It shows you after all that, he has changed completely.
Irreversibly.
Yeah, completely.
And to make matters worse, he also struggled to maintain employment and he changed his
job several times between 65 and 66.
Which is a stress on his wife too.
And I'm sure that led to arguments also. Yeah. She's really the one earning the most money at this point,
which is hard. And he, he doesn't even want to be like home without her. And she's like
to have to fucking do everything. And to the world around him, he seemed like a nice young
man who, you know, despite some interpersonal difficulties, appeared to be patient, driven
to succeed, trying to make the best of the situation. But he was living in an almost constant state of panic, anxiety,
unease, discontent, nothing positive.
Wow.
So it's pretty significant that he himself recognized these signs and symptoms of like
mental illness and neurological issues in himself at the moment, because at multiple
points between 64 and 66, he did undergo routine physicals and evaluations through the military.
And if he had mentioned these things outside of his diaries at any point, he might have
been able to at least start on the path to like stopping the tragedy that was about to happen. You
know, like just mention it to someone. You wonder what would have been done. Cause I
don't, I know obviously like there would be back then, and especially for men wasn't what
it is now, but I know we're heading toward the seventies. So it's gotta be progressing
like somewhat, you know, I do wonder what would have happened. But at the same time, unfortunately, like most Americans at this time period, he was
facing the stigma of mental illness.
And in fact, he himself actually had some pretty archaic views on the matter while he
was struggling.
Well, it makes sense with where he was brought up and his lifestyle.
Yeah, precisely.
And in 64, when his brother Patrick
was actually having a difficult time emotionally,
Charles wrote in his diary,
"'I just found out that Pat ran away from home
a couple of days ago and had a car accident
in Kissimmee, Florida.
He was injured pretty bad.
The boy has definite emotional and psychological problems.
Until he puts forth some effort to make good.
I don't want anything to do with him.
Wow.
Which shows you how it was like.
I just keep saying wow, sorry.
But it's like, it shows you how archaic his own views are.
Like, fuck that guy until he does his own shit
and fixes it, I don't want anything to do with him.
When support is probably what Patrick was looking for.
And so it's interesting because it's like, you can see then that he is volunteering all
his time, taking all these courses, trying to do all this stuff on his own.
Yeah.
And it's like that opinion in and of itself shows why he's not reaching out for help.
Exactly.
He thinks this is his problem.
And he probably fears being cut off by his family.
I mean, if he thinks that about his brother, then he probably thinks the same thing would
happen to him. So I'm not going to say anything. That's really sad. And so lonely.
Because of how he was raised and abused, he perceived emotional problems and mental
illness to be a form of weakness. And given that his post-dischar discharge life hadn't really been working out the way he wanted it to
and that he was struggling to achieve even the most modest of his goals, he probably felt as though
his symptoms would have kind of really further derailed any further future success for him.
So instead of seeking help for the clear growing depression and anxiety and distorted thinking that
he was having, he just tried to suppress it all and just carry through like nothing
was wrong.
He was not doing a great job at it, obviously, because it was a lot more severe than I think
he could have handled on his own.
And everything was far from fine.
Entering the new year, he was struggling academically, professionally, personally, literally in every way you could struggle,
but he continued to invest
as much as he could into his marriage.
At that point, like we were talking about before,
Kathy was the primary earner in the family.
That was also a big blow to his ego,
especially at that time.
And despite the fact that he outwardly said
he adored his wife and acted as if he adored his wife,
they had hit a rough patch in their marriage.
And the previous summer,
Cathy had actually confided to a friend
that she was thinking about divorce.
Wow.
According to her friend, Fran Morgan,
Cathy said Charles was quote, a perfectionist
and expected too much from her, which is his dad.
And as an example, Kathy told her friend Charles
would quote, wipe his hand behind pictures hanging on the wall looking for dust. And
on at least three occasions, he had lost control of his violent temper and hit her. So he's
taking notes from his father.
100%.
So that's why I say like, he says he adores her.
And also, motherfucker, you're at home. If there's dust behind those pictures, that's why I say like, he says he adores her. And also, motherfucker, you're at home.
If there's dust behind those pictures, that's on you, baby.
She's out making the bacon.
Getting the bacon.
And now you make it.
Yeah.
And in early March, 66, Charles faced another huge stressor because he got a call from his
mother on the night of March 2nd,
saying his father, CA there, had become very violent and she was afraid of him. Charles
anonymously called the Lake Worth Police Department and reported a disturbance at the home of
CA and Margaret Whitman, telling the dispatcher they're going to kill each other. But when
an officer arrived at the house, everything was quiet.
A short time later, he called the police again, this time saying that his father had quote
threatened to do bodily harm to his mother and that he was on the way to Florida, but
worried something bad would happen before he got there.
It stresses unbelievable.
It's unclear what actually happened here, but two days later, Charlie did succeed in
convincing his mother to finally leave his father. Wow. After all those years. And she returned back
to Austin, Texas with him and settled into an apartment near where Kathy and he were
living. It's also worth noting because I feel like listening to the story, I'm like, oh,
he's probably like in his mid thirties at this point. He's in his early 20s. Yeah, he's young.
Like for anybody that doesn't know the story, he's in his early 20s and this is everything
he's going through at this point.
It's a lot.
Now Margaret and CA's separation was definitely
an additional strain on an already increasingly
emotionally fragile Charles.
Yeah.
Although he wasn't exactly hostile,
CA made strong and repeated attempts
to convince his wife to come home, it was
bordering on harassment at that point, especially after what he had done.
It's like, fuck off.
It's like you've been abusive to her your entire marriage.
Later, he would say, I'm not ashamed of the fact that I spent a thousand dollars a month
on the phone bill begging her to come back.
I kept begging Charlie to come back to me too.
I promised Charlie that if he'd only persuade his mama to come back, I'd swear never to
lay a hand on her.
This is so toxic.
That's also putting it on your child.
And you have to imagine, I mean, like I was just saying, he's in his early twenties and
he was the oldest.
So I think there's and younger earlier he mentioned one of his brothers ran away from
home.
They're younger.
It's like they're they're experiencing all this firsthand.
Yep.
It's so sad how toxic this family is.
And Charles said later that his father was calling daily or every other day.
I mean, it was constant.
I mean, $1,000 on the phone bill back then.
And he's putting it on his child.
You have to convince your mother to come back.
No, no, my friend.
You're the one that fucked up in your marriage.
It has nothing to do with your child and their relationship between either one of you. He's not part of your marriage. Like that's what a lot of people
need to understand. Like you, your child is not part of your marriage in that way. They
have no responsibility to get you two back together or figure anything out. That's on
you dog. And it's like, what the fuck dude. And maybe you should have fucking thought
one day she was going to leave if you kept
beating her.
Yeah.
Like, you're just mad because she finally hit her breaking point and you lost out on
the thing that you like to hit when you're mad.
Exactly.
Like, that's fucked up.
Now at a time when his mental health was clearly deteriorating rapidly, getting drawn into
this separation divorce later would really only make things worse for Charles.
Not only would it likely have made him even more paranoid about his own marriage,
which was by then in trouble, but he also felt an urge to protect his mother
and smooth things over with the whole family because he's the oldest.
So the stress had actually become bad enough that Charles did finally start talking to his friends about what he called the quote gross disharmony in the Whitman household.
In late March, she actually finally sought professional help from the UTA student health
center.
Okay.
He attended a one hour session with a psychiatrist, a one or two hour psychiatrist session.
When the session ended, the doctor recommended that Charles come back the following week
for ongoing treatment and to call if he was in crisis
or needed help before then.
Well, that's great.
But he never came back.
And they can't force you to.
And it should be noted that while it was definitely
like he needed to return for help,
like that was part of the, you know, he's an adult,
he needs to come back for help.
There might've been a reason for him
not wanting to come back,
because according to other students
who had seen that same psychiatrist,
Dr. Maurice Dean Heatley,
around the time of Charles' visit,
they reported that he was very unimpressive.
He was not a good doctor.
His demeanor, his clinical approach, not good.
One student, Bill Helmer said that
while he was explaining his marital problems to the doctor, that the doctor quote, talked
on the phone, on the phone to a driller engaged in the installation of a well on the Heatley
ranch. And then he just wrote this guy a prescription for Librium. Okay. So as much as it was, it was definitely, he's an adult. He needs to say if he's going
to go back, he should go back. But it's like, I think that could have possibly been the
reason he didn't go back. Yeah. If that's your first experience, I guess I can understand
not having a lot of faith in that approach. But in interviews with the authorities directly
after the shootings that would later occur, those closest to Charles
would actually deny noticing any neurological deficits
or evidence of a disability in his state of consciousness.
So nobody was reporting that like they noticed
like something, you know, he was forgetting things,
disassociating things like that.
But that wasn't entirely true.
I don't know why people were reporting that
because in the months leading up to that summer,
Charles had clearly been demonstrating some odd behavior,
some like disordered thinking.
Some of this definitely could have been attributed
to what had been prescribed to him in the spring,
which was like amphetamines.
Oh.
And he ended up becoming addicted to them.
Was that, sorry, was that when he went to the psychiatrist?
Yeah, I think they just like handed him a prescription.
Oh, first fucking appointment, you just get amphetamines.
Exactly.
Jesus Christ.
And he became addicted to them.
Yeah.
But there were other symptoms, like he had some increasingly bizarre beliefs about God
and spirituality that were like becoming more and more bizarre.
And he had a very noticeable lack of inhibition when it came to talking about things in front of people.
Like he was inappropriate, you know?
And he wasn't like that before.
Every once in a while, you know,
like when he was in the military,
I said like he would sometimes like make a crazy comment
or something that was like a little different
than what this was.
This was like, I'm gonna talk to you
about my sex life kind of thing when like I've known
you for an hour.
Interesting.
In an interview with authorities the day after the shooting happened, Charles's friend, John
Morgan told investigators that the last time he had spoken with Charles, they had spent
hours, quote, talking about philosophy, religion, marriage problems, sex, et cetera.
And Charles had some way out ideas about those subjects.
Really?
Yeah, and he wasn't afraid to share them.
Okay.
According to Morgan, Charles was uncharacteristically open about his marriage problems.
He seemed, as he said, quote, over sexed and talked at length about how much he hated his
father, which were all things he just wouldn't have talked about before, like wouldn't have
gone into that much of detail about.
There were also other strange changes in his behavior as well.
That spring, he had spoken extensively with instructors
about his depression and told several of them
that he planned to drop out of school
at the end of the semester,
which previously he was like very committed
to completing this degree,
like that was one of his main goals.
So these type of comments would have definitely seemed strange.
Yeah, suddenly.
Like somebody would have been like, wow, that's a weird change and we should look at that.
And also that spring after an argument with Kathy, he left the house and was just missing
for an entire day.
Kathy didn't know where he was and he returned
the following day. I mean, that sounds like it was out of character. Yeah, very out of character.
Like he hadn't done that before. Yeah. On the afternoon of July 31st, 1966, Charles and Kathy
visited the home of John and Fran Morgan around 4pm. And John noticed then that Charles quote,
acted different and was extremely quiet.
About two hours later, the couple left the Morgans, Charles drove his wife to work at
the telephone company and she was scheduled to work until about 10pm.
So she was working really hard.
Kathy's supervisor later confirmed that she did finish her shift and left work a little
after 10pm.
And it was the last time anyone saw her alive.
Oh, no.
Now after dropping Kathy off at work, Charles returned home, sat down at his typewriter,
and he wrote, quote, I don't understand what it is that compels me to type this letter.
Perhaps it is to leave some vague reasons for the actions I've recently performed.
Now the letter was dated and time stamped 6 45 PM, which means he hadn't done anything
yet.
But this indicates that whatever reservations he might have had about his plans that he
was going to carry out, they were gone by this time when he sat down at the typewriter.
He went on to write, I don't really understand myself these days.
I'm supposed to be an average, reasonable, and intelligent young man.
However, lately, I cannot recall when it started.
I've been a victim of many unusual and irrational thoughts.
In March, when my parents made a physical break, I noticed a great deal of stress.
I talked with a doctor once for about two hours and tried to convey to him my fears
that I felt some overwhelming violent impulses. So he shared that with the doctor. And then the doctor prescribed him amphetamines.
Good. I never saw the doctor again. And since then I've been fighting my mental turmoil alone
and seemingly to no avail. After my death, I wish that an autopsy would be performed on me to see
if there are any physical physical disorders.
So he was literally being like, something is drastically wrong with me. I can't do this.
I'm just going to, I don't know why I'm about to do what I'm about to do, but I'm going
to and after I die, which I plan to die today, I want you to find out what's wrong with me.
Like that's a scary series of plans and thoughts.
Yeah.
You know, like for someone to be so aware
of the struggling, but so aware that like something
is severely wrong with me, but I don't know what it is.
I can't imagine that feeling.
No.
And I know a lot of like, I know a lot of our listeners probably either know people
or have felt that way that you're like, something's wrong with me and I don't know what it is.
Right.
Like I can't imagine feeling that way.
It must be.
So out of control.
That's the thing.
When you're not in control of your own shit and like you don't feel like you can get in
control.
Yeah.
That's scary. It is scary. Like that's, I can't imagine that feeling.
I really can't.
And based on the note left behind, it's obviously clear that he intended to die that day.
Either he was going to do it or he was going to have the police do it.
But what's not clear here are his reasons for what he said he did next, killing his
mother and his wife.
Oh, he killed his mother too?
Yep.
He hadn't done it yet.
But he said, it was after much thought
that I decided to kill my wife, Kathy tonight.
I love her dearly and she has been a very fine wife to me.
I cannot rationally pinpoint any specific reason
for doing this.
That's terrifying.
Yeah, it is.
Charles was equally vague about
killing his mother. He said, similar reasons provoked me to take my mother's life also.
It's like no reason. I can't pinpoint it. He just feels compelled.
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morbid. Now when he finished writing the note, he went back to the phone company to pick up Kathy
a little bit like basically at 10.
Oh, and she has no idea.
No idea.
They returned home.
What's worse is they returned home.
A short time later, he got a call from his mother.
He left Kathy at home, went to his mother's apartment building and she met him at the
front door.
She introduced him to the doorman, Dick Tom Tomlinson explaining that Charles intended to study
while he was here, like, you know, just nice little casual combo.
The two of them went up to the fifth floor apartment and once inside he wasted no time
killing his mother.
It is unclear exactly what happened, like in what order it all happened because there
was actually no autopsy done on his mother, which I'm a
little confused about.
That's strange.
But authorities found a length of black rubber hose at the scene and assumed she was strangled.
But there was also a severe injury to the back of her skull, which Gary Laverne notes,
quote, is commonly interpreted to be a gunshot wound.
But he said no autopsy was performed on Margaret
and those reports cannot be positively confirmed. But he also stabbed his mother in the chest
with a large hunting knife. Wow. So she was either shot, strangled or stabbed or all through,
like she was all those things, but one of the who knows what the cause of death was. That's insane. I do wonder why she didn't. I know sometimes people can put it in their
will that they don't want an autopsy. So maybe this is obviously a complete speculation,
but because she had been suffering at the hands of her husband for so long, maybe she
was worried that like that might end her life someday. And she didn't want something to
happen to him. She wanted him to be like around for the kids. Yeah. I don't know. But I'm
Cause that's so strange that they just said they didn't do not have a murder victim.
That's what blows my mind. It's like what like I would think like nine out of 10 times.
Well, before leaving the apartment, he Charles washed his hands and sat down at the table and
wrote a note. He wrote, I have just taken my mother's life.
I am very upset over having done it.
However, I feel if there is a heaven, she is definitely there now.
And if there is no life after, I have relieved her of her suffering here on earth.
Wow.
And once he'd finished the note, he carried his mother to her bed, covered her body with the bedspread,
and left the apartment around 1.45 a.m.
It's just so...
Bizarre.
It's so bizarre and it's so, like...
It seems like he's so removed from the situation,
but one part of him is still so present and connected.
Like placing her in bed.
Yeah.
And to think that, like, he placing her in bed. Yeah.
And to think that like he relieved her of suffering.
Yeah, it's very disordered thinking.
After inflicting the most amount of suffering.
It's bizarre.
It is.
Now he returned home around 2.15 a.m.
and entered the house very quietly.
He snuck up to the bed where Kathy was sleeping in their bed,
pulled back the covers, and stabbed her in the chest with the hunting knife five times
in rapid succession, killing her almost immediately. Oh my God. Now with Kathy murdered, he replaced
the bedding and covered her back up and then went back to the letter
he started writing earlier on the typewriter and in the margins, he wrote 3 a.m. both dead.
Isn't that chilling?
It's just so callous.
Now he had killed the two most important people in his life.
Yeah.
It's, I don't know if it's like he,
cause he says he doesn't know why he did it.
It's like, did he,
but part of me just wonders, did he do it
so that they didn't have to be aware
of what he did afterwards,
like what he was planning on?
Maybe.
And I don't, maybe he didn't even realize
if that was the reason.
Subconsciously that was it or something.
He had such disordered thinking
that there's like really no way to tell.
No, there's not.
And he sat down at the table again
and he wrote three more notes to his brothers and father.
And then he prepared for the next step.
Now, the most shocking,
I mean, there's so many shocking things about this case,
but the way that he was so prepared,
like I said, he didn't go into things half cocked. That's what one of his friends said. He didn't, he was so prepared, like I said, he didn't go into things half-cocked.
That's what one of his friends said.
He didn't, he was very prepared for this.
This was not the impulsive act of a desperate man.
He had planned meticulously for his trip to the UTA campus.
And he intended to be there for a long time.
Really?
After finishing his notes to his brothers and father,
he went to the garage to get his
old military footlocker, and into that footlocker he loaded supplies, including three and a half
gallons of water, three and a half gallons of gasoline, a hatchet and machete, an alarm
clock, several hunting knives, 12 cans of different food, tons of lengths of rope. He also packed a 35 millimeter Remington rifle, an illegally customized 12 gauge shotgun,
a six millimeter Remington bolt action rifle, a 357 Magnum revolver, a nine millimeter lug,
I think it's a Luger.
I don't know.
I don't, I think it's a Luger pistol and a 30 30 caliber M1 carbine capable of rapid firing.
That's what he's bringing with him.
Charles left his house a little after 7 a.m. and went into the direction of the UTA campus,
but he stopped at the hardware store on the way and rented a two-wheeled dolly to transport
all this gear.
Then he stopped at the bank and cashed two checks in the amount of $125 each.
Then he was like, you know what?
I don't think I have enough guns and ammo.
So he made three more stops at Davis Hardware where he bought another 30 caliber carbine
and several more boxes of ammo.
Sorry, is that a gun?
I believe so. Okay. Uh, then at Chuck's
gun shop, he bought more ammo on top of that. And then he stopped at the local Sears and
bought a pump action shotgun and more ammo. The fact that you could buy a shotgun at Sears
is absolutely mind boggling. It's Texas. All I think of is, and Mean Girls when she goes,
you could try Sears. That's what I was thinking that too.
You could try Sears.
That's how much this man is bringing it.
Three more stops to get three more giant things of ammo and at least two more guns.
When he already has at least what?
An absurd amount.
He packed with him in a nuts amount of ammo and like canned food.
Oh yeah.
And like three and a half gallons of water.
When I say he was planning to be there for a while,
he was planning to be there for a while.
He was gonna cause some damage and he does,
but he was planning to do even more.
Seems like he was planning to be there for like days.
Oh, I think he was.
And honestly, he made it really hard for them to stop him.
Really?
He had thought of every single thing in this and it was people got for them to stop him. He had thought of every single thing in this.
And it was people got hurt trying to stop him.
People died trying to stop him, like police officers.
So while checking out at Sears, it occurred to Charles
that actually he hadn't made any attempt to explain
why his mother wouldn't be in work that day.
And that they would end up wondering why she wasn't there.
And that could interrupt his plans because he planned to be there for a long time and
he didn't want to be interrupted by them trying to figure out where she was.
So he drove back to the apartment.
He placed a call to his mother's boss, told them she was sick and wouldn't be in that
day.
Then he rearranged everything in the foot locker, packed it all back up, and he was on his
way at about 11 a.m. And what about Kathy? Nobody's going to be looking for Kathy. Apparently that
didn't strike him. He arrived at the campus a little before 11 a.m. and he used the two-wheeled
dolly and made his way towards the little guard shack at the foot of the tower. Now, when asked
his purpose in the tower, he explained that he was there
to deliver some equipment and he showed them his campus ID card. And because he had been
given lab access as part of his studies, his campus ID actually indicated that he was responsible
for transporting large equipment. So the guard had literally no reason to believe that this
was anything other than what he was saying
it was. I have to bring equipment up there. He's allowed to do that.
And again, at this point, school shootings weren't a thing.
Mass shootings weren't a thing. This was not a thing. So he allowed him to enter the tower.
And once inside, Charles started frantically pressing the button for the elevator and it didn't feel, it wasn't working.
So finally the woman at the reception desk was like, oh, I got you.
And she switched on the power and the elevator came on.
He looked at her and said, thank you, ma'am.
You don't know how happy that makes me.
Oh, that would just be my stomach stinking.
Then before he entered the elevator, he turned around and shot and killed the receptionist,
Edna Townsley, and then
dragged her body behind the desk so that no one would find her.
Oh my God.
So after she turned on the elevator for him and he said, thank you so much ma'am.
That makes me really happy.
Boom, gone.
Yeah.
Riding the elevator to the top of the tower, he barricaded the door behind him and then
stepped out onto the observation deck and set out the equipment all over the place.
The first rifle shot rang out at 1148, 8 a.m. Shelton Williams, who was a senior at the
school, recalled, a lot of people thought it was a car backfiring. I attribute this
to the fact that I'm from West Texas, but I knew immediately that it was gunshots.
The first person to be hit was Marguerite Lamport,
who was a 45 year old tourist visiting the campus
that afternoon with her family.
Oh God.
Her nephew, Mark Gabor was also struck with a bullet.
The family had planned to view the city
from the top of the tower and they were super frustrated
because they found the door barricaded.
So Mark and his brother started pushing aside some things that were in front of the door
and Whitman fired at them through the door with a pump action shotgun.
Mark and Marguerite were killed almost instantly and several other family members were wounded.
The first call to police came in just after the shooting started and officers were dispatched
to the scene.
John Pipkin, a senior
at UTA, remembered being in a nearby cafe when it all started. He said, we were eating sandwiches
when some guy busts open the door and jumps up on the bar and starts screaming for everybody's
attention. He's yelling, you got to hear what I'm saying. There's a sniper up on the tower and he's
shooting people. Everybody in the place starts laughing and saying, yeah, right. A sniper in the tower.
Let's drink to the sniper. So everybody raises their beers and makes a big joke of it. And
about that same time, we suddenly started hearing sirens. Mass shootings were so fucking
non-existent that this was a joke. If someone ran into a place today and said someone's shooting,
oh, everybody would go running. Not a one person would think that's a joke. Not a one person.
No, no way. But everybody raised their glasses and said to the sniper in the tower.
That's how non-existent these were. It's. Yeah. Wow. Now, what's from his position so high in the tower, Charles could never have seen the faces of
the people he was shooting at.
He was just firing indiscriminately.
And like you said, he was better at shooting a moving target.
Oh yeah, he was a sharpshooter.
Right.
Freshman David Bayless said, I ran towards Bats Hall and I'd just gotten inside when
the bell rang.
People started pouring out of the classrooms.
It was lunchtime and everyone was in a hurry.
He actually tried to stop all the other students
from walking out directly into the line of fire,
telling everyone someone's shooting out of the tower.
No one believed him.
And they all just pushed past him
and walked right out into the line of fire.
And to feel that helpless, like you're trying.
And no one's, and again,
what do you do to make people believe you?
That's how non-existent? This was no one believed him. If someone said that today, the entire thing would go
into lockdown as it should. But by the time it became clear that he was telling the truth,
it was too late and the quad exploded into chaos. People were running in every direction
trying to find any kind of cover. Junior Bob Higley said he was killing indiscriminately,
aiming wherever he saw targets,
riding their bicycles, looking out windows,
walking down the drag.
18 year old Paul Sontag was shot next
and was killed instantly, just walking.
And his body fell right in front of the university co-op
and his girlfriend, Claudia R Rutt was walking next to him
and she was also killed and shot and killed instantly.
By then most of the students who were able to,
had escaped and had gone to safety somewhere,
but there were still so many others
who were just now pinned down by the gunfire
and they were terrified to move.
Because if he saw you move, he was shooting you.
So some of them were just pretending to be dead
on the ground, just hoping that he wouldn't shoot
in their direction.
They're just trying not to move a muscle.
And some of them had found hiding spots,
but they were hiding spots where they couldn't get
somewhere else.
So they were just hiding behind something
and they couldn't get out of there.
Michael Hall, who was a history professor at the time said,
to my left, there were three live oak trees.
A young man was crouched down behind one of them, his fingertips touching the bark, terrified,
staring up at the tower. It just like paints such a picture.
It does.
And like the students and faculty on the quad, the officers who came to the scene couldn't
get very close because they were targets as well. As one reporter described it, blood
literally ran down on the sidewalks throughout the sprawling
campus as the sniper picked off victim after victim.
Charles had planned his assault very well and had set up stations around the observation
deck, which allowed him to move quickly from one station to the other and could fire in
multiple directions.
So no one, especially law enforcement,
knew where the next shot was coming from.
And they probably assumed like it was multiple people.
Yeah.
They had no idea. So they would be approaching from one end. He's shooting out of the other.
He can shoot from that in a second.
Right.
And so it made getting closer to the tower very risky.
And almost impossible.
Claire Wilson and her boyfriend, Tom Eckman, they hadn't heard the shots when it actually
began.
They had been drinking coffee at a cafe nearby and they decided they were going to put another
nickel in their parking meter before it ran out and they were just going to walk across
the campus.
So she said, we were walking across the South mall, holding hands when all of a sudden,
I felt like I'd stepped on a live wire,
like I'd been electrocuted.
And this is, she told a reporter in 2006,
I was eight months pregnant at the time.
Oh my God.
And Tom reached out for Claire,
but then he was hit too and they both fell to the ground.
She said, Tom never said another word.
I was lying next to him on the pavement
and I called out to him, but I knew he was dead.
Later when it was all over, she also lost the baby.
Oh my God, that's heart breaking.
Or should say he killed the baby.
Yeah.
Despite all the chaos going around the quad,
there were still some people
who didn't even realize what was happening.
It was the mid 1960s and the anti-war movement
was beginning to gain momentum,
especially on college campuses in the US. So people were just becoming kind of accustomed It was the mid 1960s and the anti-war movement was beginning to gain momentum, especially
on college campuses in the US.
So people were just becoming kind of accustomed to seeing protests and other public events
around them in these environments.
So Claire recalled, a conservative looking guy in a suit walked by and I yelled at him,
please get a doctor.
He looked annoyed and said, get up.
What do you think you're doing?
I think he thought it was guerrilla theater
because we'd started doing things like that
to bring attention to the war in Vietnam.
The conservative man didn't know what was going on,
but when 33 year old math professor Robert Boyer
saw Claire and Tom fall to the pavement,
they immediately knew something was wrong
and he ran for help.
Robert's friend Alfred Child remembered Boyer
as a free spirit by
choice and inclination and told a reporter he did not believe Americans were gentle enough
and that they were far too competitive, aggressive, and easily swayed towards war and killing.
Seeing two young people in obvious trouble, Robert ran in their direction to offer help.
But before he could reach them, a bullet hit his abdomen. His
kidney was absolutely destroyed and there was an extensive internal damage. It sent
him flying across the steps that led up to the tower and his body landed at the foot
of the Jefferson Davis statue and he died a few minutes later. Just trying to save students.
After witnessing the carnage unfolding in front of him,
22 year old Austin police officer, Billy Speed,
decided I'm not fucking waiting anymore.
Like they were all hiding
because they were trying to figure out some kind of plan
to get up to the tower.
They didn't want to all just run out at once.
That would cause more chaos.
But Billy Speed was like, fuck that.
I'm going to take this guy out.
He was 22.
Wow.
With a fellow officer providing cover fire,
Billy and this other officer, Jerry Culp,
made a break for the tower
and got as far as the Davis statue
when Charles saw the two men and took aim,
just as they were able to hide behind the base of the statue.
The first shot hit the base and exploded the base
like concrete flying everywhere. The second shot hit the base and exploded the base like concrete flying everywhere.
The second shot hit speed near the right shoulder, but the bullet traveled to his chest and sent
him just flat on his face.
And at first the other officers were like, Oh, he got hit in the shoulder.
Like that sucks, but like he'll be okay.
But then they saw that his uniform was just soaking in blood.
Charles changed position at this point, cause he hit his target.
That gave the officers the opportunity to pull Billy to safe, to at least a safe location
out of the sun and the line of fire.
And several civilians, including one, one nurse ran over to them to try to provide aid
and try to make Billy comfortable at least, but they tried.
Billy Speed died a short time later. And it's like these civilians all ran up to him. You
know what I mean? Like people were trying to help each other. Now, again, it's understandable
that the officers at the scene were hesitant to advance too quickly and risk more injuries.
Because they also don't want to run out and endanger the people around them if you start
shooting wildly.
Yeah.
Or run out of officers.
Yeah.
Um, but after officer speed was killed, it seemed that a lot of the other officers lost
any inhibition and became determined to get to the tower and stop him.
Um, one officer asked the commanding officer if they should shoot on site and the officer
replied you shoot the shit out of him.
Yeah.
While the officer began making a plan to reach the tower,
Charles kept firing from various points.
Nearly an hour had passed already.
Holy shit.
And his remaining time, in the remaining time he had,
he would end up killing 29 year old Roy Smith,
who was an electrician who tried to run his truck
for cover. Harry Walchuk, who was a graduate student hiding near a newsstand. Thomas Ashton,
who was a student attending a Peace Corps training class.
Oh my God.
Thomas Carr, a young man who was walking down the street, just walking down the street.
Just taking a walk.
And Whitman's final victim was Karen Griffith, who was a 17-year-old who was shot and ended
up dying a week later from her injuries.
Oh, God.
Now, finally, after more than an hour and a half, four officers managed to make their
way into the tower with underground tunnels.
Oh, wow.
Two of the officers guarded the front door while officers, Ramiro Martinez and Houston McCoy
started climbing up the stairs slowly.
And once they made it up to the top floor,
they just made like crept up to the door
and then they just burst into the observation deck.
But as soon as he heard the sound,
Charles whipped around and immediately prepared to fire.
But before he could, Officer Martinez just quickly fired
six shots in his direction, all six shots missed.
But it was like a quick like boom, boom, boom, boom, boom,
you know, like just whatever they could do.
It did do something though, because it forced Whitman
to lower his weapon long enough that the other officer
McCoy aimed a shotgun and fired at his head.
And it actually in quotes tore away his left side of his head.
Wow.
Now Charles Whitman's rampage at the UTA campus
lasted a total of 96 minutes, which is a long fucking time.
96 minutes.
In that time, he killed 14 people on that campus
and wounded 31 others before
he was finally shot and killed by police. When the ordeal was finally over in all 17
people were dead because his wife and mother and himself. But at this point, everybody
was like, what the fuck happened? Why did he do this? And how was he able to like, I
can't imagine the amount of questions people had.
And like we talked about before, unfortunately now, mass shootings are a daily occurrence,
which is fucking awful.
But in the 1960s, they were so fucking rare and I mean, like non-existent.
So his actions literally bewildered everyone.
Nobody knew what to even think of this.
Within a day of the tragedy, various law enforcement agencies in Texas were dispatched to gather
information about him, hoping that something in his history or recent interactions with
friends, associates, employers, anything, might explain something to do with this.
And those interviews did provide some insight.
And what they found was this man had been slowly unraveling
for months leading up to this shooting.
Right, like you know.
But more often than not,
his friends and family were just as stunned
as everyone else.
And two decades later, Charles's brother, Patrick,
recalled the complete panic and confusion
that he felt when he learned what happened.
He said, I
went in to listen to the TV, but the news bulletin didn't come right back. So I called
the station and I asked them to repeat the news bulletin. At first they wouldn't repeat
it. So I said, my name is Patrick Whitman. Would you please repeat it? Then I broke up
and went and got my father. From then on it was turmoil. They had to sedate me.
Wow. Yeah. God. And he was already going through his own stuff too.
He was going through it.
Like he had run away from home.
Yeah. And again, other than like comments from people about like his academic struggles,
his employment issues, the marital problems, like everyone was like, but why did you snap
like this? Like this is a big.
Why did you go to the school and-
Why are you killing innocent people?
Like what are you doing?
Right.
And why you get like your mother and your wife, the two people who supported you the
most.
And it's just like, how did it get this bad?
Like you plan this out.
How did you get this bad?
The brain is a very fragile organ.
Yeah.
So CA Whitman had to sign off on the autopsy for Charles Whitman, his father, because
they wanted to determine whether he had a neurological condition or some other biological
impairment that could even somewhat explain how something like this could happen. But
the problem was the shotgun blast had obliterated a big chunk of his brain. And according to the medical report presented
to the governor's office, quote, all of the pieces
of the brain were not recovered for the examination.
The doctors who performed the autopsy
did identify a malignant glioblastoma
in the right temporal lobe that they believe
could have accounted for some abnormal aggressive behavior, I'll say. But that being said, the
consulting neurologists did acknowledge pretty quickly that, yes, there was a presence of
a tumor, but they said the application of existing knowledge of organic brain function
does not enable us to explain the actions of Whitman on August 1st. So basically they're
saying like, yeah, he has a brain tumor that we found.
Everybody with a brain tumor is gonna do this.
And like he aggressive behavior.
Absolutely. Like that can happen for sure.
But like this, they're like,
we don't have any precedent that says that this is what happens
when you have this kind of brain tumor.
You know what I mean?
Like they're like, take it and add it into all the other things
that are going on and the different
injuries to the head, like the different, you know, the, the history of abuse, the,
the G back stuff.
Yeah.
Sure.
Take all that into consideration, but this alone is just this alone, you know?
In the years that followed, people continued to struggle to understand why women had done
all this.
Um, but just as many were happy to put the whole thing completely behind them, they didn't
even want to talk about it anymore.
Reporter Robert Heard told the Austin Statesman in 1996, quote, it's worn out.
It's welcome as something to talk about.
If ever it had one in the first place.
So he, you know, he thinks like we should stop talking about it.
I don't think disagree in a big
way. Still haven't figured out why he did it. So I feel like that's like a pretty important thing
to talk about. Absolutely. And Gary Laverne, who wrote the book that we will cite in the show notes.
He disagrees with that. He can understand the sentiment, but he was like, you need to talk
about it. You can't just not talk about tragedies and expect them to disappear.
Yeah.
He said, superficially, you could say the city and the university are in a state of
denial.
People don't want to go back over it.
And the university actually shut down access to the tower immediately after this.
And it was closed to the public for nearly a year before the Board of Regents voted to
open it June 1967.
It wasn't long though, and this is really tragic, that before a number of students committed
suicide by jumping from the observation deck in the years after that.
So the top floor was once again closed to the public for decades, literally.
You can understand why.
A former student, Larry Faulkner said in 2006, the university stance has always seemed to
be to try to erase what had happened.
It was like an injury that would never heal.
And honestly, he's pretty right because the University of Texas and nearly all of Austin,
for that matter, seemed to just want it to go away, disappear.
They wanted everyone to move on, which I can understand that sentiment for sure.
Like nobody wants to relive a tragedy in your, especially in your hometown for, but you can't
erase it.
Well, you have to acknowledge it.
Yeah, you have to acknowledge it.
And you have to acknowledge everybody that lost their lives.
Exactly.
You can't just pretend that didn't happen.
Unfortunately, that's not fair.
You got to learn from it is what you need to do and move forward.
It wasn't until 2016 that the university
formally acknowledged the tragedy. They hadn't even acknowledged it really. That's when they
placed the plaque about a half block away from the tower. Took a long time. That's ridiculous.
And the plaque says the university of Texas at Austin remembers with profound sorrow,
the tragedy of August 1st, 1966. This space is
dedicated as the Tower Garden, a memorial to those who died, to those who were wounded,
and to the countless other victims who are measurably affected by the tragedy.
That should have been there long time ago.
In 1967, 68 at the latest.
But as for why, he decided and chose to murder 16 people that day, that day of all days,
nobody has figured it out to, we can speculate, like we can say all these things put together,
but like a lot of people go through things. Yeah, but some people do just break. Yeah.
And there's got to be something to it.
And I think someday we'll find something in the brain that disconnects from another area of the brain.
Yeah. But it's like now that it's so common, unfortunately,
there's got to be some kind of shared piece of disruption internally that people are going through.
Because even now, we can't pinpoint why this happens. And why is it happening so much now?
None of us can say that.
It's like, are we spending enough time studying this area?
I know. Are we looking at the right things? It's so hard to... I don't know.
Wow.
Yeah.
Wow. What a case.
Yeah. It's What a case. Yeah.
It's a tough one.
It is a tough one.
And I definitely think it's important to kind of end on a note of if you or someone you
know is suicidal or in emotional distress, you guys should consider using the 988 suicide
and crisis lifeline.
You can call or text 988 or even chat online to connect with a trained crisis counselor.
And the lifeline provides 24 hour confidential support to anybody in suicidal crisis or emotional
distress.
And there's also the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, that national
helpline.
You can call 1-800-662-HELP, which is 4357.
Again, that's 1-800-662-4357.
Or you can text HELP4 to 435-748.
Yeah, and we love ya.
And we love you.
And we hope you keep listening.
And we hope you keep it weird.
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Yeah.
Yeah.
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Divorced, beheaded, died. Divorced, beheaded, survived. We know the six wives of Henry VIII
as pawns in his hunt for a son, but their lives were so much more than just being the
king's wives.
I'm Arisha Skidmore-Williams.
And I'm Brooke Zifferin. And we're the hosts of Wondery's podcast, Even the Royals.
In each episode, we'll pull back the curtain on royal families, past and present, from
all over the world to show you the darker side of what it means to be royalty.
We rarely see Henry VIII's wives in their own light as women who use the tools available to them to hold on to power.
Some women won the game, others lost, but they were all unexpected agents in their own stories.