Morbid - Episode 599: The Kidnapping of Barbara Jane Mackle (Part 2)

Episode Date: September 9, 2024

In the early morning hours of December 17, 1968, two gunmen burst into the Atlanta motel room of Barbara Jane Mackle and her mother, Jane. After tying up and chloroforming Jane Mackle, the tw...o kidnapped Barbara, forcing her into their car at gunpoint. Later that day, a family friend received a call at the Mackle home in Florida, instructing them to look in the northwest corner of the Mackle’s yard, where they would find a ransom note with details about how to ensure their daughter’s safe return.Once the note was unearthed, the Mackle’s learned their daughter had been placed inside a box and buried in the ground in a remote location. She has enough food, water, and air to survive for a few days, but if the family doesn’t act quickly, there’s a good chance Barbara will dieThe kidnapping of Barbara Jane Mackle was an elaborately planned, well-executed crime that quickly dominated local and national headlines, which was no small feat in a year of major social upheaval. By the 1960s, kidnapping for ransom was a familiar concept, but to be kidnapped and buried alive was a terrifying thought that shook Americans to their core and left everyone wondering, what kind of person could do such a thing?Thank you to the incredible Dave White of Bring Me The Axe Podcast for research and writing support!ReferencesAssociated Press. 1968. "Kidnapped college girl found safe in box underground." Los Angeles Times, December 21: 1.—. 1968. "Mackle kidnapping suspect capturted; $480,000 recovered." Los Angeles Times, December 22: 1.—. 1968. "Kidnapped girl tells of ordeal of 83 hours entombed in box." New York Times, December 29: 44.—. 1968. "Kidnapped girl, buried alive, is freed." New York Times, December 21: 1.Atlanta Constitution. 1968. "80-hour burial ends in rescue." Atlanta Constitution, December 21: 1.—. 1968. "Motel coed kidnapped here spurs nationwide alert for 2." Atlanta Constitution, December 18: 1.Foreman, Laura. 1968. "Campus silent about the girl." Atlanta Constitution, December 18: 1.Gary Steven Krist v. State of Georgia. 1970. 227 Ga. 85 (Ga. 1970) (Supreme Court of Georgia, December 3).Markowitz, Arnold. 1969. "Plea of Innocent entered for Krist." Miami Herald, March 8: 1.Miami Herald. 1969. "Krist collapses; is being force-fed." Miami Herald, April 25: 4.—. 1969. "'Superiority' goes to jail." Miami Herald, May 28: 3.—. 1969. "Who's villain of kidnap case?" Miami Herald, March 9: 19.Miller, Gene. 1969. "Krist gets life in prison avter jury grants mercy." Miami Herald, May 27: 1.—. 1969. "'Life imprisonment worse than death'." Miami Herald, May 27: 16.Miller, Gene, and Barbara Mackle. 1971. Eighty-Three Hours till Dawn. New York, NY: Doubleday.Murray, Frank. 1968. "Researcher and 2 sought in kidnap." Atlanta Constitution, December 20: 1.New York Times. 1968. "Ransom pickup inadvertently foiled by Miami police." New York Times, December 20.Raines, Howell. 1979. "Parole of a kidnapper angers Atlanta." New York Times, May 14: A14.Sosin, Milt. 1969. "FBI hunts Ruth's 'flight pal'." Miami News, March 6: 1.—. 1969. "Ruth: Everyone is against me." Miami News, March 7: 1.United Press International. 1968. "Gunman and 'boy' kidnapp 20-year-old coed, Florida millionaire's daughter." New York Times, December 18: 25.Vissar, Steve. 2006. "The strange odyssey of Gary Krist; From kidnapper to prisoner to doctor to alleged drug smuggler." Atlanta Journal-Constitution, March 19.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Wondery Plus subscribers can listen to Morbid early and ad free. Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts. You're listening to a Morbid Network podcast. From Wondery comes a new series about a lawyer who broke all the rules. Need to launder some money? Broker a deal with a drug cartel? Take out a witness? Paul can do it.
Starting point is 00:00:24 I'm your host, Brandon Jinx Jenkins. Follow Criminal Attorney on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, you weirdos. I'm Elena. I'm Ash. And this is Morbid. It is and I'm so ready for part two. This is part two and the story just gets weirder.
Starting point is 00:00:56 The plot thickens. From here on out. It got weird at the end. It's going to get weirder. George Deacon is a wild man. Oh, goodness gracious. A wild man. And before we get into it, go pre-order the butcher game.
Starting point is 00:01:09 It's coming out September 17th. It's so close. Everybody do it. Pre-order it. It's so close. I promise you, you'll love it. It's thicker. It's, it's gnarlier.
Starting point is 00:01:18 It's looks good on a bookshelf. Looks good. It's got a nice cover. You can get one of those stands where you can display it. You can. It's so pretty. It has a bloody leaf on you. It's got a nice cover. You can get one of those stands where you can display it. You can. It's so pretty. It has a bloody leaf on it. What more could you ask for? Autumn is here. Spooky season. So it's perfect. It's aesthetically.
Starting point is 00:01:36 Understand. So go pre-order it, please. I beg of you. I love you so much if you already have. I love you if you feel like you want to. I love you even if you aren't going to, but I'll love you even more if you do. She has so much love in already have. I love you if you feel like you want to. I love you even if you aren't going to, but I'll love you even more if you do. She has so much love in her heart for all of you. So much love in my heart.
Starting point is 00:01:51 You can go to thebutchergame.com and you can see all the places you can pre-order it. And there might still be tickets left to some of the events that we mentioned in last week's episode or the other day's episode. It's true, there might be, so go take a peek, but pre-order that episode. Pre-order that episode, pre-order that book. Remember you might get it like a day early.
Starting point is 00:02:09 It's like that fun little like, who knows? Who knows? That's a fun game. You know, it's a fun game. I like that. But that's all I got to say to you before we get back into this because I know you're sitting there going, huh? That's the thing. I have nothing. I could say a million things right now, but zoop, get to it. Like, let's go. So when we last left you, we had successfully done the ransom drop. We had figured out, we'd found the car,
Starting point is 00:02:38 the car from Massachusetts. We had found that it traced back to George Deacon and we found those wild photos of George Deacon. We also found some photos of Barbara Mackle. Yeah, which are so chilling. Yeah. And it's the one you can look at. And again, she's alive. Don't worry. But she was drugged in that photo. We find out. But that's where we left off. So on the morning of December 20th, investigators learned that George Deacon had moved from Massachusetts to Florida, where he had found work as a boat driver for a Marine Science Laboratory at the University of Miami.
Starting point is 00:03:17 Now agents tracked down Deacon's boss at that university. His name was Dr. Robert Hurley. He was the head of the Marine Lab. And Robert Hurley was who the car was registered to, right? So there's all kinds of weird shit going on. So according to Hurley, George Deacon was an incredibly bright and capable man who provided field assistance to the research scientists in the field. Weird that there was science shit buried in their front yard.
Starting point is 00:03:42 Exactly. In addition to driving the boat for them, Deacon would apparently also help them build various kinds of ventilated boxes and containers that the team would use to transport their specimens, like marine specimens. So he's very well versed in this. Oh my God. Now, at the time of him being hired in, 1968, George Deacon said on his resume that he was 23 years old. Okay. And he claimed that he had attended Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts.
Starting point is 00:04:13 Hey. Under previous work experience, he had listed that he last worked as a channel charter service driver in Sitka, Alaska, and that his supervisor was Jay Christ. Now his resume looked very impressive and it reads as someone who is interested in a career in science, engineering, that kind of thing. But he was only 23 years old.
Starting point is 00:04:37 Well that's what I'm sitting here wondering about. So he listed a lot of important jobs for someone who's 23 and it's not like totally out of the realm of possibility, but like it would be a red flag for anyone. People would check on this to make sure. Cause he's very young to have all these like esteemed positions. Yeah, by 23, I think I had waitress for a couple of years
Starting point is 00:04:56 and dropped out of community college. So it's like not everybody's got like a thousand very important jobs on their resume. So Dr. Hurley later told agents, cause they were like, yeah. Did you guys check up on that? Yeah, like did you think about that at all? He said, quote, obviously our people didn't study
Starting point is 00:05:14 this thing very carefully. Ooh. Thank you, Dr. Hurley. Yeah, it seems like it. Ooh. It seems like it. And what had happened was apparently he had gotten the job based on a recommendation from a previous coworker at MIT.
Starting point is 00:05:29 So whoever was hiring him, the whole committee didn't really bother to look deeper into his resume. So he just put a bunch of bullshit. Damn. He is very smart though. That is one thing we'll find out. He's a brilliant human. Okay.
Starting point is 00:05:43 He just doesn't use it for good, evidently. No, he certainly didn't. Now, aside from providing some general information about Deacon, there was one other thing that Dr. Hurley showed the agents. He said, for the last several months, Deacon had been dating one of the younger researcher scientists, a graduate student named Ruth Iseman Shear. Okay. Now, he was asked to describe Ruth. What does she look like? Tiny, short. a graduate student named Ruth Iseman Shear. Now, he was asked to describe Ruth.
Starting point is 00:06:07 What does she look like? Tiny, short. She's a small woman. Knew it. The description, once they heard it, it made the agents think, huh, could Ruth Iseman Shear be the accomplice that Jane thought was like a teenage boy? They were wearing a ski mask, you know, like they didn't hear the voice or anything like that. Uh, it seemed very possible, uh, just because of the mask and everything.
Starting point is 00:06:34 So she could have easily passed. And there was also a call made from a young woman at the Mackel's house during all of this. And I'm not sure exactly what they said, but there was a young woman's voice that somebody detected. Okay. Now, based on the information that he provided to the human resources department at the university,
Starting point is 00:06:54 agents learned that George Deacon listed his address at the All-Real trailer park in Miami. And so they went to talk to neighbors there. And the neighbors described him as quote bitter and bright and an admirer of wealth. Huh? Now, according to that neighbor, Deacon apparently quote resented living in a trailer. And apparently he lived there with his wife and two children for the last six months for the previous six months. But two weeks earlier, his wife and his children had left. I was like, you said wife, but you also said he was dating a graduate student.
Starting point is 00:07:28 They had left. Oh, goodness. This is a mess. Yeah. So on the morning of December 20th, as the agents were starting to close in on their suspect now, investigators caught a big break because they received a call from a young man who thought they'd seen George Deacon the night before. The previous evening, this man that was calling said he bought a detachable trailer in a local parking lot from someone matching George Deacon's description.
Starting point is 00:07:56 When he read the paper that morning, he said he read about the kidnapping and the man, he was like, he really looks like this guy. Like I think it might be him. So he was worried the trailer might've been used in the kidnapping. So he called and reported it right away. Good, smart.
Starting point is 00:08:10 Now inside the trailer agents found some boxes and most of it was just junk, but one contained several letters that referenced George Deacon, as well as one as another man named Gary Christ. Okay. Now when the agents ran Gary Christ's name through their various databases, they learned that Gary Christ was, he had a criminal record. Not good.
Starting point is 00:08:33 Several car thefts. He'd been serving a prison sentence at the dual correction institution in Tracy, California until 1966. Oh shit. That was only a couple of years before. Yeah. And then he escaped from the prison. You shittin' me.
Starting point is 00:08:46 Quote, under a hail of gunfire that killed his escape companion. Oh my God. And then he went on the run. What are they called? On the yam? On the lamb. On the lamb, oh my God.
Starting point is 00:08:57 On the yam, on the sweet potato. Ah! He went out on the sweet potato, never to be seen again. I'm tired. Oh God, as soon as I said it, I said it's not the fucking yam. I said, why did you say that out loud, you big idiot? I love it so much, honey yam.
Starting point is 00:09:18 On the sweet potato. Honestly, petition to change it. Petition to change it. Go out on the sweet potato. Out on the sweet potato. That should be a t-shirt. That should be a t-shirt. I'm on the yam.
Starting point is 00:09:29 Don't bother me. I'm on the yam. That'd be a good Thanksgiving t-shirt. That would be a good one. Oh, holiday. So yeah, so Gary Christ was out on the yam. You know, he's out. As one is.
Starting point is 00:09:44 He's out on the yam. You know, he's out. As one is. He's out on the Yim. Listen, I'm in my afternoon slump. It's 3.44. Throughout his criminal career, Gary Christ had actually also gone by several aliases, including the name Arthur Horowitz, George S. Price, and Dr. Johnson Rarick. Wow, where did that one come from? Good for you. Good for you giving yourself a doctor. Dr. Johnson Rarick. And when the agents compared George
Starting point is 00:10:12 Deacon's fingerprints taken from the Volvo to those on file with the California Department of Corrections, they discovered that George Deacon was the convict, Gary Chris. Ding, ding, ding. Ding, ding, ding. Wow, this is a lot. So this is a man who is on the yam after being in prison, which escaped under hail of gunfire. Or somebody died. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:41 Like this is serious. Yeah. I know I should take, yeah, it is serious. I mean, the yam isn't, but like that that's, I mean like he's a serious motherfucker. I shouldn't be picturing him riding a sweet potato out of jail right now. Well now that's all I picture. So I can't stop. I'll never stop picturing that. And honestly, I don't want to. I never want to stop picturing that.
Starting point is 00:11:02 I don't want to. I never want to stop picturing that. Someone draw that please. I can't stop picturing it. With a lasso for some reason. So Gary Christ was definitely a criminal, definitely a sociopath at this point. Oh no, a sociopath? I mean, he buried a woman underground. Oh, I didn't know we got that far yet. Sorry, I'm focused on the end of it all.
Starting point is 00:11:24 He's pretty bad. He's pretty bad He's pretty bad. Oh my god, because he's definitely the kidnapper. He's he's George Deacon. Oh That I missed that I'm really glad that you did that didn't hit cuz I was like I thought that was gonna hit harder No, yeah, I'm so sorry Fuck Alright. Alright, I'm here. I'm here. I'm here. I don't know what's going on. You need some coffee.
Starting point is 00:11:47 I think I do, probably. Give me a Red Bull. Okay. All right. What the fuck? I don't know. I was like, yeah, he's crazy. I was like, why are you questioning them?
Starting point is 00:11:55 Yeah. Because you're like, oh shit, he is. I'm like, I feel like that's pretty safe to say that. I don't know. I was listening too, I promise. He put a whole person in a box underground. Yeah, that's fucked. Okay, I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:12:16 Yeah, but don't worry about it because now you know. George Deacon is scary. When I said it, you were like, oh, and I was like, damn, I thought that was going to hit. There was a lot of names said within that period. There was, there was. I'll give you that. And I, like I said, dropped out of community college. So here we are.
Starting point is 00:12:36 Well Gary Christ, who is George Deacon, the kidnapper. So he's the guy that had been in jail before? Yeah. Prison. He's the guy who escaped on the sweet potato. Okay, fuck. I'm with you now. All right. All right. That's him. That's George Deacon. That's our guy with the police hat on the with the beefy description. He's all though. And he has all these aliases. And he has a ton of aliases. The problem was I was really focused
Starting point is 00:12:59 on him riding out of prison on a sweet potato. He was dating Ruth Iseman, um, sheer. Okay. All right. All right. I'm here. Could be his accomplice in this because the agents are sitting there going, well, she is a small. Yeah, I got all that.
Starting point is 00:13:13 I got all the same people. Oh, fuck. Um, so Happy September, my good weirdos. It is time for the fall. I'm so excited for my evening walks to not be hot as Satan's booty. And I'm also so excited for football weekends and pumpkin spice everything. So many rituals in fall. And one ritual that deserves to be added to your fall priorities is daily hydration and energy from Liquid IV. The Liquid IV Hydration Multiplier Plus Energy delivers 100mg of natural caffeine and 3x the electrolytes of the leading sports drinks so you can accomplish all the things you want
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Starting point is 00:14:32 when you go to liquidiv.com and use code morbid at checkout. That's 20% off your first order when you shop better hydration today using promo code morbid at liquidiv.com. This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. Kids are always learning and growing, but as adults, sometimes we lose that curiosity. What's something you guys would like to learn? Gardening, a new language, maybe how to finally beat your best friend in bowling? I kind of want
Starting point is 00:14:56 to learn how to play piano and I just decided that the other day. And guess what? Therapy can help you reconnect with your sense of wonder because your back-to-school era can come at any age. I'm 28 and I'm about to do it. Also, I'm 28 and I love therapy. It's so great. I love having that one time in the week where I can talk to my therapist, tell her what's going on in my life, get a little bit of feedback, kind of apply that feedback in the interim until the next time I see her and then kind of reflect on that next time I do see her. kind of reflect on that next time I do see her. If you're thinking of starting therapy, give BetterHelp a try. It's entirely online, designed to be convenient, flexible, and suited to your schedule. And all you have to do is fill out
Starting point is 00:15:33 a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist. You can switch therapists anytime for no additional charge. Rediscover your curiosity with BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com slash morbid today to get 10% off your first month. That's BetterHelp, H-E-L-P dot com slash morbid. But you know, like he's a bad person. Sociopath even. And Barbara again, like according to Barbara's instincts of saying like, why wouldn't they just kill me if they were planning to kill me? It might've been right because according to everybody, according to the people involved here, Gary Christ, George Deacon, the same guy,
Starting point is 00:16:10 and Ruth Eisenman-Sher did not intend to kill her. That was not their end game, apparently. They just wanted the money. They wanted to get the money and they wanted to get out of there. Okay. My thing is though, and I'm saying this because it's already happened. So it's like, I feel like they didn't have to put her in the ground.
Starting point is 00:16:33 They could have just held her where they were. And then claimed that they'd put her in a box underground because they didn't provide the Mackles with any proof that she was in the ground. That picture never got to them. And they said that picture was coming. Eventually they got that picture. They said something was coming. They said it was coming, some kind of proof, but they didn't get the proof and they technically
Starting point is 00:16:56 didn't have to give the proof. They could have just got proof of her being alive. So they didn't have to put her in the ground, which to me says a lot more about them. It's like they didn't have to do it. They could have just lied. The Mackles would have, I'm sure, would have gathered that money, would have done the same drop just to get her back. I don't care if she's actually in the ground or not. I want her back.
Starting point is 00:17:22 I want her out of your fucking possession. Give me my child back. That is interesting. Why'd they put her in the ground or not, I want her back. I want her out of your fucking possession. Like give me my child back. That is interesting. Why'd they put her in the ground? If they didn't intend to kill her. I'm like, you didn't care about killing her. It will be seven days should they, you didn't get that money. You were just going to leave that poor girl alone in the woods in a box to suffocate to death. So it's like, we should look at them a little more like, than just like they didn't mean to do it. Like they weren't meaning to kill her. It's like, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:17:49 It would have happened. There was a lot of intent here and there was a lot of negligence and a lot of, there's a lot of like just a- Strange pathology. Yeah, I'm trying to think of the word I'm thinking of. It's very like, but there's definitely a disinterest in what is happening to her. Indifference. Indifference, that's exactly the word I was thinking of. It's very, like, but there's definitely a disinterest in what is happening to her. It's indifference. Indifference. That's exactly the word I was thinking of.
Starting point is 00:18:09 Indifference. There is an indifference. Why the fuck can I think of that? I thought that's what you were thinking too. Thank you. But the word was not coming to me either. That's so much better. Yeah. There's a total indifference to whether this woman lived died, whatever. That's the perfect word for it. And they put her through a fucking nightmare scenario. And they laid their heads on a pillow every night knowing she's in a fucking box in the middle of the woods panicking. Like, I think, I just think it's like,
Starting point is 00:18:36 it's looked at as like they were kidnappers. I'm like, mm, a little more than that. It's like how attempted murder doesn't carry the same sentence as actual murder. It's like, you're still gonna go through with it, but something just didn't work out luckily. Yeah, you just work out what you were trying to do. Right.
Starting point is 00:18:50 Like it just bothers me. But after the second money drop, like after the second ransom drop, Christ waited nearly 15 hours and then called the FBI headquarters in Georgia and the secretary answered the call and she attempted to transfer him to one of the agents, but he cut her off. and then called the FBI headquarters in Georgia. And the secretary answered the call and she attempted to transfer him to one of the agents, but he cut her off and demanded that she take down the instructions, this poor fucking secretary.
Starting point is 00:19:14 And so, Christ gave the secretary directions to a wooded area in the small city of Norcross, Georgia, which was about 25 miles outside of Atlanta. But he gave super vague directions and he gave no indication about what the fuck they were supposed to be looking for when they got there. So he just gave them a very vague, very vast area and gave. That's the other thing. And he gave them nothing to look for. And this is where she's supposed to be. Yeah. And it's like, and she's running out of air, running out of everything. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:45 And I'm supposed to believe that you weren't intending to kill her or hurt her? I feel like there is this, I get the sense that like he's having fun making these calls. And he's in control. Yeah. And he's watching everybody run around. Exactly. And it's fucked up. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:20:01 So moments later, the information was passed on to the agents on the case and the team just rushed to the location. And when they arrived, the vastness of the area made it seem entirely unlikely that after now four days in the ground that they would find Barbara alive. And the agents fanned out across the area. They were scouring the woods. They were looking for anything. They had no idea what they were supposed to look for.
Starting point is 00:20:24 They were looking for it. They're like, maybe I were supposed to look for. They were looking for it. They're like, maybe I'm looking for like some kind of pipe. I don't know. Like what should I be looking for? And then suddenly one of the agents caught a glimpse of what appeared to be a small piece of flexible pipe sticking out of the ground. Rushed over, began digging into the earth with his hands, calling out for everyone to help him dig.
Starting point is 00:20:44 And she can probably hear him in there. Oh yeah. When they dug about 13 inches into the earth, the agents could hear light tapping coming from the earth underneath them. So they're digging faster and faster until about 18 inches down, they discovered the lid of the makeshift coffin.
Starting point is 00:21:00 And the lid was, it was airtight. It had been screwed into place so she could never have gotten out of it. Oh my God. And they had to remove the screws. Like they couldn't even rip the lid off right away. They had to like manually get the screws out. And they found Barbara Mackle very weak and very dehydrated
Starting point is 00:21:19 but still alive after 80 hours in that box. 80 hours. 80 hours in that box. 80 hours. 80 hours in that box. Four fucking days. Yep. So Barbara was quickly bundled up in blankets and taken to an ambulance where they found that she had superficial injuries, but she was otherwise pretty unharmed. That's good.
Starting point is 00:21:38 Once she was cleared by medical personnel, she was loaded into her father's plane and flown back to Florida where they retreated into their home and were like, get the fuck away from us. So she got to spend Christmas with her family. Yeah, she did. What a fucking Christmas that must have been. Talk about being like thankful. In a statement to the press, Robert Mackle's brother, Frank told reporters that Barbara was quote, in good health and good spirits, despite her deal.
Starting point is 00:22:03 And she told the family her kidnappers quote, were very health and good spirits, despite her ordeal. And she told the family, her kidnappers, quote, were very considerate actually. And she was very well taken care of by a woman. Huh. And in fact, Frank Mackel told reporters that Barbara's main worry was that we would be worried. Oh. Yeah. And nobody knows if obviously that was true
Starting point is 00:22:22 or if Barbara was just sparing her family. The horrible details. Any emotional horror of dealing what she had to deal with. But Gary and Ruth technically didn't have a history of violence and both maintained that they only took Barbara for ransom. So I still don't really, I mean, I believe Barbara, what she says, but I don't believe their intention was purely
Starting point is 00:22:46 money. We get money in that. I think that was 100% the motivation. I don't think they went into this because they were like, let's hurt someone today. I don't think that was the case. I think they were like, I want the money. I don't really care if she lives or dies. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:23:00 It's not my problem. I think it's the indifference of it that bothers me. I agree. But the next morning, J. Edgar Hoover gave his own statement to the press. And he stated that arrest warrants had been issued for Gary Christ and Ruth Iseman Shear for the kidnapping and attempted ransom of Barbara Mackle. And in his statement, Hoover noted that Christ had escaped from the dual correctionist institution and the warden described him as quote, a young man of very superior intelligence.
Starting point is 00:23:25 That's scary. Very. Ruth was described as a graduate student in the Marine Biology Department and a native of El Hatillo, Honduras. I hope I said that right. Both were described as armed and dangerous with a demonstrated willingness to fire upon law enforcement if cornered. In the days after that, FBI agents tracked
Starting point is 00:23:46 Gary Christ's movements to West Palm Beach, Florida, where he stored his car at the all right West Palm Beach parking station on December 20th. This was like, as he was telling them where Barbara was, they were able to track all these movements backwards. He had told the clerk that he would return to get the car in 10 days. And from there is where he went to the Dixie market.
Starting point is 00:24:09 And that's where he used the telephone to place the call to the FBI office to tell them where Barbara was. That afternoon, they were able to track him to the D&D Marine Supply where he rented a boat in Orlando Clipper and set out along the coast in direction of the Bahamas. Oh, no. Now, again, this was them tracking his movements after the fact. Orlando Clipper and set out along the coast in the direction of the Bahamas. Oh no. Now again, this was them tracking his movements after the fact.
Starting point is 00:24:28 So he's already set out. Uh oh. Now they were like, cool, he's definitely trying to flee the country obviously. So they scrambled to capture him before he was outside of US jurisdiction. Holy shit. Is this a fucking movie?
Starting point is 00:24:41 It's wild. But did they make this a movie ever? I think they did make this into, I can't remember if it's a movie? It's wild. But did they make this a movie ever? I think they did make this into... I can't remember if it's a movie or a TV show. It might even be both. Let me look it up. 83 Hours Till Dawn. It's based on her autobiography.
Starting point is 00:24:55 It was a TV movie. Yeah, there it is. Damn. Damn. That's crazy. Okay, keep going. Now, unfortunately, by the time the sun had gone down, and without knowing exactly where he was,
Starting point is 00:25:08 there was no way to find him in the dark at that time. So the following morning, December 21st, a Coast Guard plane carrying several FBI agents spotted his boat. Shut the fuck up. It was abandoned on the coast in Fort Myers, and a local FBI helicopter was dispatched to the area And this was an area around hog island, which is a small
Starting point is 00:25:30 Alligator infested island of the southwest coast. Sorry Kwa. Who the fuck is this guy? Yeah, where they searched the boat and they found a duffel bag containing all the ransom money Minus a few thousand dollars that Christ had already spent. What? Yep. He just left the money on an alligator infested island? Well, given that he had beached the boat on an island, he had to be on the island.
Starting point is 00:25:56 Yeah. Where the fuck else was he going to go? Unless he's like fucking swimming with the alligators. And so they fanned out and searched the island and after a few hours, they located him. He was just standing around the trees. Just like in a bunch of trees. Just vibing with the trees. Taken into custody without incident.
Starting point is 00:26:12 And after all that had led up to this, it was pretty uneventful. It was like up to this point, it's like, oh my God, he's on a boat. He's on his way to the Bahamas. Holy shit, we can't even see him. It's the next morning, we have a plane. Oh my God, it's his boat. It's on an alligator infested island. Holy shit, he's on the island. He's in the trees. Like, it's just like, oh, there he is. Who is Ruth? And it's like, how does it end with like, there he is. He's just hanging. He's just in the trees. I'm just like leaning up against a tree,
Starting point is 00:26:40 like drinking a coconut. An agent literally said he was just standing there in the mangrove. What the fuck? They said he didn't even put up a fight. He had no comment. I mean, what the fuck else was he going to do? I'm on an alligator infested island. Really, what do I do? I guess he wasn't armed then, huh?
Starting point is 00:26:57 He was carrying a small gun and about $18,000 of the ransom money. All righty. Yeah. So three months later, on March 5, 1969, Ruth Eisenman Shear was arrested by agents from Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation. It took three months. And Oklahoma. After a potential employer ran her fingerprints
Starting point is 00:27:20 as part of a background check and alerted the Oklahoma SBI. Shut the fuck up. So she's trying to get a job and they were like, oh baby, you're on the FBI's most wanted list. Like what the fuck? We're going to have to apologize, but the MCs know. Yeah, sorry, you didn't get this one. We're going to pass on. Another candidate seemed to have what you don't, which is not being on the FBI's most
Starting point is 00:27:43 wanted list. Yeah, that's kind of like what we go for around here. We're neck and neck at that point, but that's really what tipped them over. The FBI list is always a tiebreaker. It's always the thing we look for, you know? And in fact, at the mo- at that time, she was the first and only woman to appear on the FBI's Most Wanted List. Wow. This woman.
Starting point is 00:28:01 That's crazy. Ruth was charged with extortion and a judge set her bond at $500,000. I'm like, can we put attempted murder in there as well? Yeah, can we do that? They buried her in a fucking box. At the time of her arrest, it appeared to agents as though Ruth was planning to flee the state. Ah.
Starting point is 00:28:18 And she told various friends and acquaintances different stories about how she was going to be taking some time off. Huh. And she left her roommates three separate notes. And later some of her friends said that she was definitely expecting to be arrested, it seemed. When asked for comment about the arrest, Barbara Mackle said, I think it's a great tribute to the efficiency of the FBI.
Starting point is 00:28:40 Barbara forever. Barbara's such a classy lady. She's a sweet queen. She really is. And by the time she sat down with agents on the afternoon of her arrest, Ruth had prepared a statement regarding her relationship with Gary Christ, whom she only knew as George Deacon.
Starting point is 00:28:55 Oh, that's fucked. According to Ruth, they met while she was studying marine science at the University of Miami, and she quickly fell in love with him. And after about a month or two of having a relationship, Chris told Ruth, you know, I have the idea for the perfect crime. Are you in? No, the answer is always no, baby.
Starting point is 00:29:16 And she was like, I'm sorry, what? And he was like, well, if we pull it off, we could take all the money and run away together. But you'll never pull off a great crime like that. And you shouldn't try. Nope. She wasn't put off at all by her new boyfriend's suggestion at all. And they began pouring over Miami social record,
Starting point is 00:29:33 which is how they came across Robert Mackle's name. And they learned that Robert Mackle had a daughter, Barbara. Oh my God. So they're pieces of shit. Yeah. And the two planned the kidnapping meticulously for weeks. Like we said, like these, this was planned. Also, I was like, they had to have done this before.
Starting point is 00:29:51 Yeah, they did. And they didn't with all the like. They just planned it for like, for weeks. Even the specifications about the suitcase though, like how would you even fucking think about that? That's his brain that he is misusing. And Christ designed and built the box that they were going to keep Barbara in. Yeah, he did that.
Starting point is 00:30:11 And when they were finally ready to execute the plan, they left Miami for Atlanta, stopping at the Mackle House along the way to bury the ransom note. And they had planned to kidnap Barbara from her dorm room, actually, at Emory. But when they arrived in Atlanta, they learned she'd moved to a motel room with her mother. I'm not sure how they knew that, which is like fucked up. Yeah, somebody had to have said something. Somebody must have not knowing said something. Unless they were, they may have been following her. Like they may have spotted her on the
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Starting point is 00:31:55 Have you ever felt a sense of unease when you leave your home wondering if everything's gonna be safe while you're away? I know, whoa, I know that I have and apparently Elena has too. But it wasn't until I had that little experience as kind of a big experience. You remember the snowstorm, the knocking on my door, the three in the morning of it all. That's when I realized
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Starting point is 00:32:46 Protect your home with 50% off a new SimpliSafe system plus a free indoor camera. When you sign up for Fast Protect monitoring, just visit simplisafe.com slash morbid. That's simplisafe.com slash morbid. There's no safe like SimpliSafe. So they revised their plan over lunch at a diner and while they were at the diner, they stole the hat of a local police officer in the restaurant. And that's the one they used. Are you kidding me? So in case the whole situation with the kidnapping didn't make you think like what the fuck's
Starting point is 00:33:21 going on with the police there in the sixties. Yeah, that does. One was they were able to steal one of their hats at a fucking diner. Just like whip it off his head? Just took the hat. He probably left it on the fucking table while he was going to pee or something. My goodness. What the fuck?
Starting point is 00:33:37 So in the few days leading up to the kidnapping, Ruth and Chris watched Jane and Barbara. And that's how they learned about Stuart Woodward and knew what kind of car he drove so that they could use it in that ruse. Right. Now Ruth explained that everything was going up to plan until the first night of the ransom drop when the police intervened.
Starting point is 00:33:57 Yep. And the couple became separated. And a few hours later, cause remember they went in different directions when the police came. Yeah. Ruth, a few hours later, returned remember they went in different directions when the police came. Ruth, a few hours later returned to the car that they had abandoned, but didn't and was trying to wait for him to come back, but he never showed up.
Starting point is 00:34:13 So he just fucking left her. So she thought he'd taken the money for himself and abandoned her. So she thought she was used and she went back to Atlanta, gone on a bus. She took the bus as far as her money would get her, which turned out to be Norman, Oklahoma. She found work at a drive-in restaurant and took a room at a boarding house. It was just going to be like, well. So to be clear, she helped bury a woman in a box in the middle of the fucking forest. And then just dipped.
Starting point is 00:34:42 And then she was like, well, looks like my boyfriend dumped me, so I guess I'll just go get a job somewhere and live my life. Not caring at all about what happened to Barbara. I'm going to go ahead and say it. What a fucking cunt. Like, whoa. What? Like, damn, that is cold.
Starting point is 00:35:02 That's so cold and so callous. And that makes me sit here and say, what the fuck else are you capable of? That's so cold. And so callous. And that makes me sit here and say, what the fuck else are you capable of? That's the thing. Because if you're capable of knowing, going on with your life, knowing that a girl is in a box. Yeah, and that you don't know if it's gonna end or not. Like. And the same for fucking this asshole.
Starting point is 00:35:22 Like, thank goodness they got Gary. Yeah, because Gary was just gonna take that money and, you know, off he goes. And Gary is Gary's just as bad. But Ruth, it's like, you don't even you weren't even there when Gary called the FBI to tell them where Barbara was. As far as you know, he's never told her where they are and they're never going to find her. And you didn't place the call. And you were just popping off into the rest of your life.
Starting point is 00:35:43 Exactly. At the very fucking least, Gary called and told where she was, which I'm not giving him credit for, but I'm saying like, what a different situation where it's like you were just popping off to live your life. You had no idea. Like, damn. This is mind boggling. They are such vile human beings.
Starting point is 00:36:02 Now at her arraignment on March 7th, Ruth told the judge, it's a terrible feeling to see all these people out there and you are all alone and they're all against you. She was talking to the large crowd that had assembled outside the courtroom. Hey, you know what else I said a terrible feeling is I'm very being buried in a box in the woods. Yeah, like a couple days before Christmas, or fucking ever, all alone. Yeah, it's like Ruth, you, oh, you feel alone? If I was the- You feel alone.
Starting point is 00:36:30 You wonder, like, judges do get snappy sometimes, and we always love that, but you wonder how they're not just snappy all the time. Because I would, how do you look that girl dead in the face and just be like, yeah, anyway, moving on now? If that, I can't imagine, if I was the judge, I'd literally be like, are you fucking kidding me, Ruth? Be so for real on now. If that, I can't imagine, if I was the judge, I'd literally be like, are you fucking kidding me Ruth?
Starting point is 00:36:47 Be so for real right now. Be so for real right now, Ruth. Like are you kidding me with that? I feel so alone. You feel so alone. You have to fuck up. Well, maybe we should bury you in a box in the middle of the wilderness and the animals can keep you company.
Starting point is 00:37:00 How about that? That's alone. And as far as you were concerned, Ruth, she was going to be alone forever in that box. Fucking A. But you feel alone because there's people outside that as far as you were concerned, Ruth, she was going to be alone forever in that box. Fucking A. But you feel alone because there's people outside that are mad that you buried someone in a box? Sorry. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:11 Sorry about that. So, so sad. Life's tough, huh? Yeah. Now after conferring with his client, Ruth's attorney told the judge, as you can see from her actions yesterday, the realization finally has come home to her that she is in a tough situation. I found her somewhat despondent, as you can well imagine. She certainly is not as gay as she has
Starting point is 00:37:30 been. Good. I'm sorry. I'm really not. She's found herself in a tough situation where she signed onto a plot to extort a rich man by abducting his daughter and burying her in a box in the middle of the woods. It's a tough situation, you know? That's one thing to call that, I guess. That's pretty tough. And oh no, she's not as cheerful as she has been. Good. Oh, good.
Starting point is 00:37:55 Man, I guess we should change how we're dealing with this, I suppose. You know who's probably not as cheerful as they once were? Barbara. She probably has fucking PTSD up the wazoo. Oh, when do you hear some? Yeah, we'll get there. So a few days later, Ruth was transferred back to Georgia where she was charged locally with kidnapping. Her involvement in this case made her somewhat of a local celebrity, the press frequently commenting on her beauty and fashionable attire whenever she appeared in court. I don't give a fuck what you're wearing. You buried a girl in a box.
Starting point is 00:38:27 And of course, this was one of those situations, even in the sixties, this is in the seventies. This is one of those situations where people said, no, she's too beautiful. She's too pretty for that. Pretty people do fucked up things. She knows how to put together an outfit. There's no way she was kidnapping people. Those two things are not mutually exclusive. Yeah. Like have you, what? The fuck? What do you mean somebody can't? You have to be ugly to be able to do ugly things? No babies. No. Some of the prettiest people do the ugliest shit. The ugly shit is on the inside. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:38:59 And then it comes out eventually, but the ugly shit is on the inside. Saying she's too pretty for that is absolutely buck wild. Yeah. The worst part is you look at her and you're just like, wow, girl, like really? Like, she's a very normal looking person. So I understand why some people, especially cause we look at it through like a 2024 lens.
Starting point is 00:39:23 And we're like, of course anybody can do that. But I think even back then it was still shocking to see like. Especially a woman. A woman, you know what I mean? And especially a woman that's pretty and fashionable, like being like that. So they're just like, what? People are like, no.
Starting point is 00:39:36 Can you imagine if that was your defense? I am way too pretty and I put together way too good of an outfit to be accused of this. And they're like, got it. But others really liked the femme fatale narrative because they found it more compelling. One article asked, could a woman like Ruth Iseman Sheer, the fetching hysteria prone blonde with a knack for attracting males to love and protect her, provide the motivation to drive a man to carry out a kidnap scheme?
Starting point is 00:40:00 I don't think she drove him to do it. I think she was just along for the fucking ride. Yeah, it sounds like he actually came up with the idea, but thank you for that. In fact, the article goes on to say, as a Miami Beach clinical psychologist told me Saturday, are you ready for a Miami Beach clinical psychologist and what they have to say? Probably not. In many instances, the woman is the driving force.
Starting point is 00:40:22 And yet when the crime is committed, she does not bear the responsibility. I would put my life savings on the fact that a man said that. I would put my life savings on it. Okay. Unnamed Miami Beach clinic clinical psychologist. My God. But later that month, Ruth pleaded not guilty to the charges of kidnapping and extortion and a trial. Yeah. And a trial date was set for June 9th. But when her trial date came, Ruth changed her plea to guilty to one count of kidnapping and immediately began serving her seven year sentence at the Georgia state prison for women. Well, seven, back it up. Yes. Seven years. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven.
Starting point is 00:41:01 That's it. She went along with a plan to extort a father by burying his, I just gotta say it one more time, everybody, burying his daughter in a box. And then when it didn't really work out, she just moved to Oklahoma. Yeah. The fuck? Seven years?
Starting point is 00:41:18 Is everybody all right? Uh-huh. And like genuinely why was attempted murder not put on there? Cause, cause don't you get it? They never wanted to kill her. Psych. Don't you get it everyone?
Starting point is 00:41:30 Oh my god. Yeah. Because they said. Now let's believe them. In 1973, Ruth successfully petitioned for parole. That's fucking crazy. And was released from prison and she was deported back to Honduras and she receded from the public spotlight. Good for parole. That's fucking crazy. And was released from prison and she was deported back to Honduras and she receded from the public spotlight. Good for her. Get out of there, girl. After his arrest,
Starting point is 00:41:51 Gary Christ said very little to authorities and in early March 1969, he pleaded not guilty to charges of kidnapping and kidnapping for ransom. The plea was made with a special attachment that it could be changed at a certain point pending a sanity hearing. We do have to go back for just one second. She really is the normalest looking girl I've ever seen. Yeah, she really is. Wow. That's scary.
Starting point is 00:42:14 It's bonkers. That's scary. So district attorney Richard Bell told reporters the special plea means that his lawyers think Chris is unable to understand the charges against him. Now between his arraignment and his sanity hearing in April, Gary Christ began a hunger strike in his cell in Decatur, Georgia. And this is because he believes someone was trying to poison him, he said. Kind of like he poisoned multiple people with chloroform and or ether.
Starting point is 00:42:40 Yeah. I also think it's complete bullshit and so did the authorities. They believed that the hunger strike was his attempt to be moved to a more escapable place. Yeah, probably. Because remember, he escaped from prison before. But after 28 days of hunger strike, he collapsed from malnutrition and required intravenous feeding. And the sheriff told reporters, he does little now but sleep. He stopped his almost continual writing, but he still will wear nothing but a pair of underwear
Starting point is 00:43:09 shorts in his cell. He does love to be naked. He does. His attempts to convince psychiatrists of his mental illness were unsuccessful. And he went to trial in mid May. In fact, despite having been evaluated by 10 different doctors, the defense never called any one of them to testify because as one reporter said, no psychiatrist would call the defendant insane. Rather than demonstrate any symptoms of mental illness, like a lot
Starting point is 00:43:36 of these defendants do when they're being evaluated, they at least try. He didn't. He would just spend hours complaining to these psychiatrists about the justice system as a whole. He said, he was quoted as saying, the law is unjust in its conception and its application. It's mechanically unsound. It is bound to disintegrate and fall apart. It's very poorly conceived. Disagree. And when they came to his own case, he believed the system was just rigged against him and in favor of those with wealth and power. And I was like, wait, do you mean the people whose daughter you stole and put underground? I don't know if that one's rigged against you.
Starting point is 00:44:13 I'm not saying in general, I'm saying in this particular case, I don't think that one was rigged. I think you put someone's child underground in a box and then extorted money out of them. So I don't think I'm with you on that. That's good. That's wigged against you? I know. I think you did a bad, bad thing. They're even rigable.
Starting point is 00:44:34 And you happen to do it to a wealthy, powerful person, which was your problem and no one else's. Yeah, baby. Like, I'm sorry, you chose someone who is like smarter than you when it, like more powerful than you. Yeah. I don't steal their child and put them in a box underground. I don't know about all that.
Starting point is 00:44:52 It's like, dude, I don't think you're going to win with that one. I don't think that when you're going to get a lot of people being like totally totally rigged. Absolutely. Calling that rigged is wild. And he said, quote, I've offended the cartel that runs this country in case you don't know. I'm in jail simply because I was overpowered. What?
Starting point is 00:45:10 So he's calling like the rich and powerful like the cartel of this country. And he's saying I offended them. And I was like, you definitely offended some people. Yes, I'd say so. But like, the other thing is I don't see it the way you see it. You're not. He's acting like he's like Robin Hood or something. And I'm like, you robbed from the rich and gave to the poor. You were trying just to become rich. Yeah. You wanted to join that very cartel quote unquote. And it's like, you did it by taking someone's daughter and putting them in a
Starting point is 00:45:42 box underground. That's where you went wrong. Like I understand saying certain systems are rigged and like it's hard to make money and it's hard to get rich. Like 100p. And that's why I'm like, you could have just generalized that and made it a little more of like a stance. But you took someone's child and put them in a box underground. Like I can't, you have no high horse to stand from up there. He's like, eat the rich. And it's like, but you had a suitcase full of almost $4 million motherfuckers.
Starting point is 00:46:13 $4.5 million you had in a suitcase and you were flying, you were running off to the Bahamas with it. Let's bury you in a box. Because you took someone's child and put them in a box underground. It's like, that is where your problem lies, my friend. Yeah, it's the box of it all. You didn't just steal money. You didn't even extort money in any other way.
Starting point is 00:46:30 You took a whole human from somebody and put them in the fucking ground to possibly suffocate to death. You didn't know if she was still alive. You had no fucking clue. She could have died the first night. You did that with like specimen, like marine specimen. You never did that with a human.
Starting point is 00:46:46 You didn't know how the fuck that was gonna go. And you certainly never buried them under the ground. I don't see you burying marine fucking specimens underground for research. Not to my knowledge. And it's like, so you're sitting there trying to take this like passion stance. And it's like, nope, not in your case, buddy.
Starting point is 00:47:01 Like, let's be real. To sum it all up, that ain't it. That ain't it. That ain't it. That ain't it. And so despite his statements about a rigged system and trying to appeal to the greater thought of that, people do look at the justice system. Yeah, of course. And we've looked at it before as like being unfair and being broken and all that stuff. Instead, it like, you know, it does work. And the jury did seem to take pity on him a little bit from that.
Starting point is 00:47:29 That's absolutely insane. They deliberated. Not in this case. Yeah, they deliberated for a little over four hours and then returned a guilty verdict with the recommendation of mercy. Why? Meaning they spared him the death penalty.
Starting point is 00:47:42 Okay. Instead, he was given a life sentence. That was the mandatory sentence in the state of Georgia. That's crazy that he got a life sentence and she got seven years. Yeah, that's wild. That's where the problem with the justice system in life. Yeah, that's a problem.
Starting point is 00:48:00 But he had the potential for parole after... Don't even. Seven years. Are you fucking kidding me? Yeah. How, why, who, what, when, where? Not sure. But when the verdict was read aloud in court,
Starting point is 00:48:15 you wanna know what he did? No, do I? He yawned, grasping his wrist and glancing at the clock. Yeah, like stretch yawned. What a waste. What an absolute pompous waste. Before he was let out of the courtroom by armed guards, that's what he did. He just did like the stretch. Like, oh boy, life must be so tiring for you. Yeah. In its statement to the press,
Starting point is 00:48:42 prosecutor Richard Bell told reporters, naturally we're disappointed. We thought the circumstances of the crime demanded the death penalty. Imagine you're walking through the park one day and you see a suspicious backpack sitting underneath a bench. You report it to the police and upon investigating they discover two live pipe bombs inside. You rush to clear the area before they explode saving countless lives and preventing injury. Everyone declares you a hero for a fleeting moment until everything changes and you are declared the prime suspect. This was the story of security guard Richard Jewell. After the centennial park bombing killed one person and wounded more than 100, public pressure
Starting point is 00:49:27 and a media witch hunt pushed a desperate FBI to find a suspect. Despite obvious holes in the case and unethical tactics used by the FBI, security guard Richard Jewell was under pressure to confess. I'm Aaron Habel. And I'm Justin Evans. Join us as we explore the aftermath of the 1996 centennial Olympic Park bombing in the newest season of our podcast, Generation Y, the Olympic Park bombing. Follow Generation Y on the Wondry app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:49:54 You can listen to Generation Y ad free right now by joining Wondry Plus. The trial was the first time the public got any insight into Gary Christ's psyche and personality and for many, they didn't like what they saw. No. In an editorial in the Miami Herald, one journalist wrote, the kidnapper is a brilliant man, but we do not agree with his view that he is a superior human being. We will not accept that definition of a man who put the mackerel girl in a crude grave and left her there in torturing darkness. The superiority of Gary Christ is one of cruelty.
Starting point is 00:50:31 We believe that behind bars is where he belongs and where he should stay. You're here. And we said, yes, yes. Chin chin. You're here. And it turned out the Supreme Court of Georgia agreed with the wider public with respect to his freedom. In 1970, his lawyers filed an appeal with the court arguing like a bunch of stuff, but also that the, you know,
Starting point is 00:50:50 to sum it up like a bunch of stuff. The court argued like a bunch of shit. It's giving me the LeBlanc. I love that. They argued a bunch of shit, but the lower court, but the one thing I wanted to talk about was that the lower court,
Starting point is 00:51:03 they said that the lower court erred in overruling the defense's motion to dismiss the charge of kidnapping for ransom on the grounds that the offense was not defined by the statute. And in their summary, the justices noted the offense for which the defendant was indicted, tried and convicted, kidnapping for ransom, was designated a crime by necessary implication by the general Assembly and requires no definition. Also, the justices pointed out that the evidence supported the indictment and thus the verdict was just. Yeah. Resulting in the lower court's ruling being upheld.
Starting point is 00:51:35 Good. Now, in the wake of her rescue, Barbara spent a few days in the hospital before, you know, going back home to her parents, like I said. And I had said, like, they just kind of were like, get the fuck away from us. And they just kind of said, like, please respect our privacy. But once a short amount of time had passed, Barbara did grant a small amount of interviews where she talked about the experience. After being abducted from the motel, she said she was injected with a tranquilizer by her kidnappers. Where the fuck did they get a tranquilizer by her kidnappers. Where the fuck did they get a tranquilizer?
Starting point is 00:52:06 I don't know. But Barbara said she was out in the woods and taken to the area where Christ had dug the pit. And she said, I was woozy, but I knew what was happening. And she said, I tried to talk them out of it, but they paid her no attention. They didn't care about her please to please don't do this. And instead they forced her to take that photograph
Starting point is 00:52:24 of her holding the kidnapped sign. So that's why she looks that way because she's on tranquilizer. Yeah, no, it makes sense. Throughout her ordeal, Barbara said she tried to keep her mind off of the terrifying potential of how the situation could end by thinking of her friends, her family, like we said, singing to herself, singing Christmas carols, trying to make herself laugh, she said. But the reality of being in the box was unavoidable. She said it was cold, it leaked, it kept dripping from above. 83 hours.
Starting point is 00:52:53 83 hours. And she said on the fourth day when she was rescued by FBI agents, she said, I could hear footsteps. I thought it was the kidnappers coming back for me. I had been there so long, I really didn't care. And when she was pulled from the coffin, the first thing she asked the agents was, how are my parents? Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:11 And they, they said that was the first thing she cared about was how are my parents. That's amazing. And she said it was only after she looked around at their faces that she realized like how relieved she could be. And she said they were all crying, like all the agents were bawling their eyes out. I can't imagine. And after giving a few interviews, Barbara was determined to put the entire experience behind her and just move forward.
Starting point is 00:53:31 I don't blame her. But two years later, she partnered with Miami Herald writer, Jean Harrell on a book about her kidnapping. And following its publication, she vowed that I'm not revisiting this story again. Yeah. And that book is called 83 Hours Till Dawn. You can find it still today. That's what the movie must be named after. I don't know how many there are, but yeah. In 1971, this is my favorite part of the story. Barbara married her best friend Stuart Woodward.
Starting point is 00:54:01 Yes! And I was so happy. I love that! I was like, that's her man! I love that. I love it. And just the fact that he like sat with her mom and who even knows how well he knew her mom.
Starting point is 00:54:13 What a good dude. Oh my God. Wow. And they moved back to Florida where they started a family. Shut the fuck up. And they made a concerted effort to stay out of the public eye. Yeah. Unfortunately, Stuart passed away in 2013.
Starting point is 00:54:24 Oh. But they did have like a lovely life together. And I love that she married him. That's my favorite part too. 1971, they got married. I was so fucking happy when I read that. I was like, that's what I need for my Barbara. That's what I need. Barbara deserves a Stuart. She did. Stuart was the guy, man. Hanging out all day, studying with her, going to her dorm to get her notes. The whole time I was reading this for the first time, I was like, what a good guy. I love this guy. There seemed like a stand up fella. And then at the end, I'm like, they got married. And they have a family. They had kids. It's great. I'm so happy that she fucking queen to say, I'm going to write this book,
Starting point is 00:55:03 because this is a story that's got to be told. And then I'm done. I'm going to move on. Like, she's a strong individual. Yes. That's crazy. Good for her. Good for her. Wow. What a fucking story. Oh, I'm not even done.
Starting point is 00:55:17 What? You thought I was done? I sure did. You thought it just ended there? I mean, yeah, kind of. So that was in 1971. They got married. Like, she's off. She's happy.
Starting point is 00:55:27 Yeah. In the summer of 1973, Gary Criss tried to escape from the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Center by crawling through the air conditioning ducts and hiding inside a large garbage bin where he was then loaded onto a truck to be removed from the grounds. Gary. The attempt earned him. He did get caught and he got an additional two years on his mandatory minimum.
Starting point is 00:55:48 So he had to do nine instead of seven. In May, 1979, he was paroled. That's fucking nuts. From Georgia's Reedsville State Prison, much to the disappointment of Atlanta residents. Yeah. Yeah. Superior court judge H.O. Hubert said, I just don't think he'll ever change.
Starting point is 00:56:07 Giving the nature of the case, burying the girl in the ground. Like he was like, what the fuck? Regardless of how the public felt or the judge felt, the state's parole board felt justified in their decision. That's very interesting. They said, there is nothing in our files to indicate Gary Steven Christ is violent or dangerous. How about the part where he buried a girl in a box underneath the ground?
Starting point is 00:56:28 Is that in your guys' files? You guys are just forgetting that part? You guys are not very demure. You're not very mindful. No, not at all. And they said if he does commit a crime, it won't be a crime of violence. How do you know? And they went on to further justify their decision by minimizing his original crime. Ready? Ready for what
Starting point is 00:56:47 the parole board said? Never. Mrs. Woodward suffers no lasting trauma from the ordeal. Mrs. Woodward, meaning our girl Barbara, because she's married to Stuart now, she doesn't give a fuck about you guys, but fuck you guys. And also, how do you know? Who the fuck do you think you are? Did you contact her? They're literally like, he's not violent and she's fine. So. Wow.
Starting point is 00:57:10 Wow. Gross. Gross. To everyone's surprise, Gary Christ did make an effort in the beginning to show the world that he had turned around. Yeah. The conditions of his parole required him
Starting point is 00:57:22 to initially move back to Alaska. Bye. And in 1983, he was accepted into medical school at the University of Washington. After completing his program and earning a medical degree, he struggled to find a state that would grant him a license. Because like, I'm sorry, I just have to ask the charge that he served time for, that's a felony, right? Yep. Can you, can your that's a felony, right? Yep.
Starting point is 00:57:45 Can you, can your doctor be a fucking felon? That's what I was a little concerned about. That's why he was struggling, I think, to find somebody that would give him a license. And then in December 2001, the state of Indiana granted him a probationary license to practice medicine. You said what state? Indiana. Let's not go there. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:09 And he opened a private practice in the tiny town of Chrisney. Already? Yeah. Yeah. It's, yep. So, um, now in the months leading up to and immediately following his parole period, he found a number of people that were willing to vouch for him and assure his critics that he had changed for the better. And in fact, it was because of these people that the parole board even considered releasing
Starting point is 00:58:33 him. Like they were really part of it. But for every one person that was insisting he was a better person, there was twice as many who were like, no, no, no, no. Incorrect. Sorry, I just hit my microphone. I'm so mad. No, no, no, no, no, no. Incorrect. Sorry, I just hit my microphone. I'm so mad. She said, no, no, no, no.
Starting point is 00:58:45 I slapped my microphone. No, that's the end. It was twice as many that would say, no, no, no, no. He's a narcissistic con man and like it's going to turn out bad. It turned out bad didn't it? Within a year of opening his practice, he kind of proved the critics a little right. In the fall of 2002, after less than a year after receiving his probationary license to practice medicine, the licensing board pulled his license for failure to comply
Starting point is 00:59:10 with the supervisory requirements, writing his own supervisory reports and forging his supervisor's name. In addition to the lies and fraud related to his license. There were other incidences that also led to this. In one, he reportedly told a 13 year old patient with an eating disorder that she quote, had a big butt. And on another occasion, records show that he told a woman who'd recently been diagnosed with HIV that quote, her boyfriend must be thrilled. Oh my God. That's why doctors probably shouldn't be felons. No. And during this period, he was also accused of sexual assault by a patient and he fled
Starting point is 00:59:52 the state before facing prosecution. Wow. So he was stripped of his license. He returned to Alaska now and began finding various other means of making money, both legal and illegal. I'm sure. In March, 2006, US customs agents raided his boat in Point Clear, Alaska and found 37 pounds of cocaine on board. That's a lot of cocaine.
Starting point is 01:00:16 That's a lot of cocaine. That's like all of the cocaine. All the cocaine. Okay, Pablo Escobar, the fuck. They also found four South Americans who had paid Christ $6,000 each to illegally smuggle them into the country. Who the fuck is this guy? I don't know.
Starting point is 01:00:37 I just got to know. I'm not even done. Oh God. How do you get a life and do that with it? Yeah. You're out here with a life doing this. I don't understand. I don't understand. It's really, it's cool that we all got lives.
Starting point is 01:00:55 I'm excited about it. I don't know how it happened. I mean, I do, but we don't need to get into the skinny of it all, but that's what you do with it? I'm just out here trying to have a good time legally, make some fucking yummy treats every now and again, and like, I don't know, enjoy shit. I mean, really, he was out there trying to enjoy shit too,
Starting point is 01:01:19 but like- But like work smarter, not harder. Like, what do you do? He's doing so much. Just chill out. He's doing so much. Just chill out. He's doing so much. Just chill the fuck out. Chill the fuck out and go the fuck away.
Starting point is 01:01:29 Don't be like, go away. Like, sir. Well, I feel like he's just somebody that should live on a boat by himself. Just go live on an island. Yeah. Yeah, right, on a boat. No one needs to see you.
Starting point is 01:01:39 That's just vibe. Just do your, you know, go on a boat. You know, like. Here's 10 bucks. See you later. 10 bucks, all right. Go ahead. Do whatever you will, go on a boat. You know, like. Here's 10 bucks. See you later. 10 bucks, all right. Go ahead.
Starting point is 01:01:47 Do whatever you will. Anyway, keep going. Now when they caught him with the, uh. With all the cocaine. 38 pounds of cocaine on his boat. Uh, they served a warrant at his Georgia residence that he had kind of just up and abandoned. Sure. Uh, they found a giant underground drug lab.
Starting point is 01:02:03 What? Like a meth lab? Like a huge one. Or like just like all the drugs. Just drugs. Just manufacturing it all. Devin Murray Cogod, I think his name is, was quoted as saying, basically there was a trap door.
Starting point is 01:02:15 It was wood covered with linoleum. Unless you knew you were looking for something, you wouldn't notice it. There was an eight foot ladder that led down to a 27 foot long lab underground. It had a countertop at one end, there was ventilation, it was glass enclosed things, it was fully equipped with light, electricity, water, and it had an escape tunnel that led into a covered barrel about 50 feet from the lab. What? You can't make that shit up. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:02:45 Who the f... I mean, I get... Wow. They said he was like... Mega mind. He was like mega like crime lord at this point. Like just... He's a drug lord now, isn't he? I don't really know what makes one a drug lord, to be honest. It sounds like it fits though.
Starting point is 01:03:00 Like I feel like 30 something pounds of cocaine will do it. He's doing it all. He's doing it all. He's doing it all. He's doing all the things. The new charges earned him an almost five year sentence. That's it. But not long after being released in 2010, he violated the terms of his probation and was sent back to prison in 2012 and stayed there until he was released until in July 2015. How old is this motherfucker at this point? He's 79 right now. Okay.
Starting point is 01:03:29 Wow. What? And he's probably still out here, huh? He's still out here. He's still alive. Um, yeah. And I know he's just, you know, apparently got tired at that point. 2015 he was let out and nobody's really heard from him since then.
Starting point is 01:03:44 You guys better keep your fucking eyes peeled into the newspapers. Yeah, he's 79. I'm like damn. You build a fucking eight foot down, 27 feet wide or long, whatever the fuck you want to call it, drug lab. You're not, I mean. Yeah. You're not just chilling out after that.
Starting point is 01:04:03 And that's the case of the kidnapping of Barbara Jane Mackle. I got to say, you really popped the fuck off with that one. Dave was so correct when he was like, yeah, you got to take a look at this. He texted us one day and I was like, oh yeah, that sounds interesting. I was like, yeah, look into it. And I looked, I was like, whoa. Hello? I'd like to report several crimes throughout the span of 60, 70, 80, 90.
Starting point is 01:04:30 Like he, that's like a career criminal. Oh, 100%. Literally like 50 years of crime. The only good thing is in the end, Barbara just came out, got married with Stewart, wrote a book and off she went, had her family. Wow. Yeah. That's really crazy. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:53 Wow. What a tale. That's why it had to be told in two episodes because it's just like, you think that the most action is happening, like the kidnapping and the ransom and all that. Like, there's just so much happening. And then it's like, oh, wait, we haven't even scratched the surface of what happens here. Wow.
Starting point is 01:05:16 Yeah. Wow. So that's a tale. What a fucking tale. What a tale. We, you better keep, we don't even hope at this point. You heard that. You're not going to keep listening. Keep a tale. We, you better keep, we don't even hope at this point. You heard that, you're not gonna keep listening. Keep listening.
Starting point is 01:05:27 And we hope you. Do I even say that? You don't. What is going on? Keep it weird. Keep it so weird that you forget your own outro. It's been a long time, I don't know. I'm riding out on a yam.
Starting point is 01:05:40 It's been a long time, we did it the same day. Bye. No, I said it's been a long time like doing this I mean. You know you do something so much and then you're just like, how do I do this? Yeah, you know. We're six years in. Bye. Bye.
Starting point is 01:05:54 Yams. Yams. Thank you. If you like morbid, you can listen early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts. Prime members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music. Before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey at Wondery.com slash survey.

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