Stuff You Should Know - 10 - Yes, 10! - Dumb Criminals

Episode Date: May 9, 2024

Sometimes you just have to turn it off for a while – all the thinking, and overthinking, analyzing, and figuring out. Sometimes it’s nice to just breathe through your mouth and talk about dumb thi...ngs criminals do for an episode.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, girlfriends. It's me, Carol Fisher, back with another season of the global number one podcast The Girlfriends. Last time we investigated the murder of Gail Katz. This time we're uncovering the identity of the woman who was buried in Gail's grave for a decade before she disappeared. Join me and the rest of the club as we tell her story. Listen to season two of The Girlfriends, our lost sister on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Get emotional with me, Radhita Vlukya, in my new podcast, A Really Good Cry. We're going to be talking with some of my best friends. I didn't know we were going to go there on this. People that I admire. When we say listen to your body, really tune in to what's going on.
Starting point is 00:00:45 Authors of books that have changed my life. Now you're talking about sympathy, which is different than empathy, right? Never forget, it's okay to cry as long as you make it a really good one. Listen to A Really Good Cry with Radhidhav Luchia on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey everybody, we are coming to a town ostensibly near you, so putatively see us. That's right. May 29th we'll be in Boston, really Medford, Massachusetts.
Starting point is 00:01:13 The next night we're going to go down to Washington DC and then scooch back up to New York City at Town Hall on May 31st. Yeah, and if you're one of those people who likes to plan way far in advance, then you can go ahead and get tickets for our shows in August. We're going to start out where, Chuck? We're going to be in Chicago August 7th, Minneapolis August 8th, then Indianapolis for the very first time on August 9th, and then we're going to wrap it up in Durham, North Carolina and right here in Atlanta on September 5th and September 7th.
Starting point is 00:01:40 Yep, so you can get all the info you need and all the ticket links you need by going to StuffYouShouldKnow.com and hitting that tour button, or you can also go to Linktree slash SYSK Live. We'll see you guys this year. Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio. Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too. And we'd like to welcome you to what will certainly be the greatest episode of stuff you should know ever produced. Oh boy. This one. I love it. Let's do it. This one harkens back to the old days when I feel like we weren't very good at this.
Starting point is 00:02:29 Full stop. Yeah, I mean it really does. Yeah, I had nothing to add, because it does, dude. I can't make heads or tails of this. I'm like, what bothers me about this episode, this topic? Is that what you're doing?
Starting point is 00:02:43 I even selected it. And it still bothers me. So I started doing like a search to try to be like, okay, maybe there is something like inherently wrong with lists of dumb criminals. And I looked up, I searched every way I could to try to find even just the dumbest think piece on what's wrong with dumb criminal lists.
Starting point is 00:03:01 No one in the history of the internet has apparently ever even had that thought. So I finally just decided to mellow out and go with the flow and just share some dumb criminal stories for face value, basically. Yeah, I'm fine with that. I think we both had a tough week, so let's just make fun of ourselves.
Starting point is 00:03:21 Okay, and some criminals. Hey you, hey dummy. That's right Alright, so this is a top 10. It's on the other side. We usually do like eight you actually have 11 I know well one of them is zero. I started counting as a Mayan would I know I was like, what are you doing? I didn't want to go back and read number everything else. That's fine. So I just added zero I thought it was rather clever. All right. Let's just breeze through these then, eh?
Starting point is 00:03:49 Oh yeah, there's not a seven though. This is like the blotter episode of Stuff You Should Know. Yes, so first up on our police blotter. Do do do, do do do, do do do do do do do do do do do. We've got the story of Maganga Maganga out of Omaha, Nebraska. Maganga was a 17 year old boy who back in 2014, attempted a carjacking, which seemed to be a step
Starting point is 00:04:10 up from his usual MO, which was to rob stores with a knife. This time he carjacked a woman in a car with a gun. And he thought it was going- Taking your kid to school, right? Yes. Reprehensible. Yeah. It was like 7 AM I saw something like that. in a car with a gun and he thought it was going- Taking your kid to school, right? Yes. Reprehensible.
Starting point is 00:04:26 Yeah, it was like 7 a.m. I saw something like that. A 7 a.m. carjacking, either you got up way too early or you never went to bed. 7 a.m. is too early for a carjacking, frankly. But he did and it started out kind of successfully for him. Well, yeah, because mom did what mom should do, which is get out of that car, I assume, grabbed her son. And dude jumps in and realizes it's a stick shift,
Starting point is 00:04:55 a manual transmission, could not drive a stick shift, and for evidently about seven minutes, this nitwit, we can say stuff like that, right? I think so, I think this kid definitely proved himself a nitwit. A nitwit who had a lot of stick-to-itiveness, how about that? Okay, a nitwit with spunk.
Starting point is 00:05:15 Yeah. About seven minutes of trying to get this car to move, just moved a few yards, which I imagine was just lurching forward while he's popping that clutch, finally gives up after just a few minutes of that, and then leaves on foot and is nabbed by the cops. Yeah. They said some witnesses said that like he turned the lights on.
Starting point is 00:05:38 He turned the windshield wipers on, just trying to figure out how to make this thing work, right? And I saw a video of it. trying to figure out how to make this thing work, right? And I saw a video of it, and he somehow the car ended up on the sidewalk perpendicular to the street. Oh, well. I have no idea how he got up there.
Starting point is 00:05:53 Progress. Yeah. So he had just gotten out of jail like two weeks earlier from his robbery spree before that he'd been caught for. And I could not find out what happened to this kid. Um, like I, I just saw he was charged, no sentencing. Usually in stories like this, there's more often than not a followup story, like two years later about what happened to them when they're finally sentenced or something like that. Couldn't find anything about this kid, but I did find out his name means in Swahili. It means essentially healer, um, or like doctor, like Bush doctor,
Starting point is 00:06:30 essentially as a McGanga. Okay. And as a last name, it's the 16,301st most common last name in the world. Boy, you really, that's what I got. Really? That's this kind of episode. All right. Let's move on to number nine. Okay.
Starting point is 00:06:47 With Mr. Derek Mosley. This is a Sean Connery kind of crime because that great line from The Untouchables, you brought a knife to a gunfight. Derek Mosley brought a baseball bat and a knife to the robbery of a gun store. Right. And this was discount gun sales in Washington County, Oregon, near Portland.
Starting point is 00:07:14 He is, I guess, smart enough to go in and at least smash a display case and get a gun. But because it's a gun store, I would say 99 out of a hundred gun shops, the owner has a gun on, I would say 99 out of 100 gun shops The owner has a gun on their person with actual bullets in it, right? That seems to be his failing that he Assumed that the guns were going to be loaded He didn't account for the people having their own personal loaded guns on them one was loaded But that seems to have been like the whole reason he
Starting point is 00:07:45 attacked the gun store was to get a gun. Yeah. Like that was the purpose. Um, but yeah, it didn't go very well. The manager pulled his gun and said, get on the ground. And he got on the ground until the police came. And that was that he got five years probation, uh, for it and had to pay $350 to fix the display case.
Starting point is 00:08:04 That's right. Yeah. Wow. We're really cruising through these, aren't we? We're cruising through. for it and had to pay $350 to fix the display case. That's right. Yeah, wow, we're really cruising through these, aren't we? We're cruising through. Hey, we get off early today. Yeah, that's right. Okay, Chuck, well, let's do number eight. I guess number eight A and B, because this is two guys.
Starting point is 00:08:19 And I sent you the photo. You saw the photo, right? I did, that was very kind of you to include that because it really paints a picture. I would like very much for everybody to look up the photo of Joey Miller and Matthew McNeely and while we talk about them. How about that?
Starting point is 00:08:35 Yeah, and maybe we could throw this on the Instagram page, too. This was from a crime in October 2009, or I guess sort of a near crime. And these guys put on their hoodies They went to break into a guy's house in Carroll, Iowa because one of the guys Suspected that his girlfriend was cheating on him basically with a guy who lived there
Starting point is 00:08:57 right, but their disguise was their hoodie sweatshirts and then what can only be described as toddler esque hoodie sweatshirts and then what can only be described as a toddler-esque scribbling of Sharpie on their face. You totally nailed it. It is like a toddler did it. Like the lines aren't filled in. Like it's just terrible. It doesn't disguise them at all. No. And ironically it's Sharpie or some kind of permanent marker. I don't want to you to necessarily say that they were using the name brand, but what it ended up doing was it made them obviously prime suspects for the cop who pulled them over. Yeah, because permanent marker is pretty permanent. I'm sure they're still not walking around.
Starting point is 00:09:40 This is 2009. I'm sure it's washed off by now. But certainly that same night it hadn't washed off. And so when they were pulled over in their car, which matched the description a witness gave them, um, they were, they, they matched the description of the assailants who had permanent marker all over their face. It's toddler-esque scribbles.
Starting point is 00:10:00 Yeah. I saw the cops described as stunned when they pulled the, the car over. Yeah. It's, it described as stunned when they pulled the car over. Yeah, it's so interesting when you read about these things and these decisions people make. And interesting, you know, I'm filling that word in for a lot of terrible things I could say, but it's almost like they were like, hey, let's think of a way that we'll be sure to get caught. Right. When they thought it was a disguise in fact.
Starting point is 00:10:27 I saw a reference in more than one place that they may have been drunk when they did this. Better. At the very least, the judge who saw them, I think like less than a week later, was like, I'm just dismissing these charges because there's no evidence. They actually made it into that man's apartment.
Starting point is 00:10:48 Yeah, they didn't break in. They didn't have a weapon on them and nobody got hurt. So they're like these guys, their mugshot staying on the internet forever is probably punishment enough. So there's no charge for nitwittery. No, no. So that's a Joey Miller and Matthew McNally. And while you're looking at that photo of them,
Starting point is 00:11:09 we're going to go ahead and take an ad break. All right, we'll be right back with more nitwittery. Hey, girlfriends, it's me, Carol Fisher. I'm so excited to tell you about the brand new series of The Girlfriends. In season one, we told you about the murder of Gail Katz at the hands of my ex-boyfriend Bob. At one point, a woman's torso washed up on Staten Island and was misidentified as Gail. She spent nine years in Gail's grave and then she just disappeared. It's almost like it's become this moral obligation to find
Starting point is 00:11:56 her. And that's what we're going to do, find this missing girlfriend and tell her story. With the help of some of your favorite girlfriends from season one like my producer Anna Oh my god, my friend. Dr. Mindy Shapiro. Hi, it's dr Shapiro and I'd like to speak with the deputy medical examiner and of course Gail's sister Elaine Katz Having no closure it kills you Having no closure, it kills you. Join us as we try to solve a 35-year-old cold case. It's not going to be easy, but it's going to be one hell of a ride. What?
Starting point is 00:12:35 I can't believe this. Listen to Season 2 of The Girlfriends, Our Lost Sister on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Get emotional with me, Radhita Vlukya, in my new podcast, A Really Good Cry. We're going to talk about and go through all the things that are sometimes difficult to process alone. We're going to go over how to regulate your emotions, diving deep into holistic personal development, and just building your mindset to have a happier, healthier life. We're gonna be talking with some of my best friends. I didn't know we were gonna go there on this!
Starting point is 00:13:11 People that I admire. When we say listen to your body, really tune in to what's going on. Authors of books that have changed my life. Now you're talking about sympathy, which is different than empathy, right? And basically have conversations that can help us get through this crazy thing we call life. I already believe in myself. I already see myself. And so when people give me an opportunity, I'm just like, oh, great, you see me too. We'll laugh together, we'll cry together and find a way through all of our emotions.
Starting point is 00:13:36 Never forget, it's okay to cry as long as you make it a really good one. Listen to A Really Good Cry with Radhidhavlukia on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Elliot Coney and this is Family Therapy. In my best hopes, I guess identify the life that I want and work towards it. I've never seen a man take care of my mother the way she needed to be taken care of. I get the impression that you don't feel like you've done everything right as a father. Is that true?
Starting point is 00:14:12 That's true. And I'm not offended by that. Thank you for going through those things and thank you for overcoming them. Thank God for deliverance. Every time I have one of our sessions, our sessions be positive. It just keeps me going. I feel like my focus is redirected in a different aspect of my life now. So how'd we do today?
Starting point is 00:14:32 We did good. The Black Effect presents Family Therapy. Listen now on the Black Effect Podcast Network, iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. ["Learning Stuff with Joshua and Charles"] So Chuck, I want to add this one in because I think it's a good example of, like you should be skeptical even when you're sitting back and enjoying reading lists of dumb criminals, right? Okay.
Starting point is 00:15:14 Klaus Schmidt is one you might come across fairly frequently. He was on a lot of lists that I saw. And Klaus Schmidt may not have existed as far as I can tell. Oh. I did some research. I won't say it's the deepest research has ever been done to try to find somebody, but I did look extensively, went on to newspapers.com, did a few searches, nothing. DNA database.
Starting point is 00:15:38 Nothing came up about this guy. Yeah. I traveled to Berlin and interviewed some potential family members. No one had ever heard of him. But his story is all over the internet because it's just such a whopper of a story. And I wanted to include it, but I also think it definitely deserves to be pointed out as probably not true. Apocryphal, as they say in the Bible.
Starting point is 00:16:01 Yeah, now that you've mentioned this, it very much smacks of an urban legend. It does, it does, because he's described as a man in Berlin who went to rob a bank in August of 1995. That's right. Well, I want you to tell the story though. Why me? Because you picked this stupid topic. Okay.
Starting point is 00:16:31 So Klaus Schmidt is said to have gone into a bank, pretend like he exists, in August of 1995 to rob it with a handgun. And he, everything's going rather smoothly like a bank robbery would be if it's successful. And apparently one of the tellers asked him, like, do you need a bag? And Klaus Schmidt supposedly said you're damn right it's a real gun. I don't know how you would say that in German, do you? Uh, no. And the tellers apparently were like oh, obviously this man is deaf. Not that he misheard, not that he's super high strong and anxious right now because he's robbing a bank. He's clearly deaf so we're going to go ahead and press the now because he's robbing a bank. He's clearly deaf, so we're gonna go ahead
Starting point is 00:17:05 and press the alarm that everybody else can hear, except him. Right. I think we should write a new version where they're like, do you need a bag? And he says, what has this got to do with Schnitzel? That's a good one. And they're like, oh, he's clearly deaf.
Starting point is 00:17:24 Right, but yeah, so the alarm he wouldn't have heard is, oh, he's clearly deaf. Right. But yeah, so the alarm he wouldn't have heard is, I guess, if this story is true. So they're like, hey, this guy can't hear anything. Let's just sound this loud alarm. Yeah, because that's what banks have, or loud alarms that would totally alert any other bank robber. You just have to hope that once in a while, somebody who can't
Starting point is 00:17:43 hear comes in and robs the bank and that's exactly what allegedly happened with Klaus Schmidt. But it gets even better Chuck because here's the twist that effectively proves that this is an urban legend. That's right. Apparently according to internet lore Klaus Schmidt sued the bank for abusing his disability. Yeah because they... There's no way this is real. Essentially tricked him by pressing an alarm that he couldn't hear, which led to him being caught by the police.
Starting point is 00:18:10 Yeah. I'm glad we CO8ed it, but it was kind of fun to pick apart. It's so, it's great because you go on the internet and you read stuff like this, and if you're not like looking out for it, you could just be like, wow, I got to tell you this story of this Klaus Schmidt, it's amazing. They used to call it Hey Martha stories,
Starting point is 00:18:29 I think in the Inquirer or the World Weekly News. Oh, really? Yep, because you wanted the, whoever was reading the paper, the husband, to be like, hey Martha, get a load of this one. I like that. Yeah. All right, we'll go on to number five here
Starting point is 00:18:43 with James Blankenship in Willoughby, Ohio This is in June 2013 James was trying to rob his own mother's house During the day and this very key it was in broad daylight Apparently got a little rattled and went and hid in a crawlspace nearby the police got there. They caught him and he his big sort of problem with getting arrested was you can't get arrested for burglary during the day. That's what he thought.
Starting point is 00:19:15 Burglary is a nighttime crime. You cannot take me away. Yeah, essentially when the cops grabbed him, they were like, what do you mean? You can't charge me with burglary. It's daytime. And everybody's like, that guy's the dumbest criminal of all time.
Starting point is 00:19:30 He thought that you couldn't get arrested for burglary because it was daylight out. And here's the great twist to this, which I found. This is a good twist. Apparently the old common law definition of burglary says that it only occurs during the nighttime. It's breaking and entering in someone else's dwelling at night with an intent to commit a felony therein and that if you commit the same act during the
Starting point is 00:19:54 daytime, it's a lesser crime of trespass. So it seems that James Blankenship, had he been living in the 18th century, would have had quite a case for himself. I have a question for you. What? I meant to look this up, but is burglary specifically when there's somebody there, or does that matter? Oh, I think it definitely matters.
Starting point is 00:20:15 I think if somebody's there, it's considered home invasion. Oh, okay. And that's like a whole other level. Like you can, in some states, you can get life in prison or death penalty for a home invasion, depending on what happens and what your intent was. But burglary means you have to take something, otherwise it could just be B&E, right? Because I was just wondering, because the nighttime thing, I mean, obviously I knew
Starting point is 00:20:35 that wasn't a thing, but whenever I, when I was a kid and I heard cat burglar, you always thought it was something that happened at night while you slept, right? Absolutely. Yeah. But of course a burglary can happen during the day, but it's just the legal system in the United States said, we're going to get rid of that distinction between trespassing burglary, and it's all burglary no matter when it happens. Just the mind-blowing part is that somewhere along the line, James Blankenship, that old common law definition was passed along to him
Starting point is 00:21:07 and he went with it. Yeah, well actually here we go. I looked it up, burglary, the official definition is entering into a building illegally with the intent to commit a crime, especially theft, but not necessarily theft. Gotcha, so especially theft. I wonder what else it could be too. Well, I mean, there's necessarily theft. Gotcha. So especially theft. I wonder what else it could be too.
Starting point is 00:21:27 Well, I mean, there's all kinds of crimes. You could set someone's bathroom on fire, not metaphorically. So I guess you would be charged with arson and burglary then in that case. I guess, I don't know. Maybe burglary is one of those crimes they can just kind of tack on just because you're in someone's house.
Starting point is 00:21:44 Man, we would make super lawyers, wouldn't we? I think so. We'd just hash it out in open court. Yeah. The thing I also love most about James Blankenship's story is that his mother's house was the one he was trying to break into, like you said. I just love that.
Starting point is 00:21:58 And apparently she found him and he went eek and ran off. Now I'm just picturing us as attorneys, co-attorneys in court, looking up definitions on our phone. And the judge is being like, do you guys have licenses to practice law? No sir, we don't, but we did a podcast for 16 years where we dabbled in legally.
Starting point is 00:22:18 And then I'd pipe up and be like, and we stated a holiday in express lesson. I was like, this sounds like something. That's exactly what I was like, this sounds like something. That's exactly what I was thinking. I think I would look a lot like Gill from The Simpsons in court as a lawyer. Who was Gill?
Starting point is 00:22:33 The guy, like the hard luck guy from Jack Lemon from Glengarry Glen Ross. Oh. But was that, he was on The Simpsons? He was a recurring character. Yeah, he was just- Gil Fenders, oh, okay, yeah, yeah, I see him now. Gil.
Starting point is 00:22:48 I remember Gil now. Something like, luck's gotta come for old Gil. Right. Poor Gil. Oh, man. That would be me in court as your lawyer. All right, Esquire, should we take a break or keep going, let's keep going.
Starting point is 00:23:02 Let's do one more and then we'll take another break. All right. So let's talk about the story of Darren Kimpton. Uh, this fellow was in England in 2013 and Abington England specifically. Yeah. And this is a pretty interesting one because, uh, not only had Darren Kimpton, um, already broken into a house earlier that day. So this was Darren's second attempt at a break in that same day.
Starting point is 00:23:30 But the house that Darren chose to broke into the second time, it was that house's second break in of the day. Because when Darren showed up to break in, found there was already a window busted out, it was like, this is perfect. And when inside there were police there inside, still dealing with the details of the previous break-in case earlier that day. That's Gill. Darren Kimpton is Gill.
Starting point is 00:23:54 He is. He apparently said in court that he was trying to steal so that he could buy presents for his elderly parents, Christmas presents. He was apparently also addicted to heroin and his lawyer described him as clumsy and pathetic. Yeah, and so obviously if this guy's got a serious drug addiction,
Starting point is 00:24:16 maybe he was buying stuff for his parents, maybe not. I have a little bit more empathy here and don't wanna make too fun of the guy, but he did leave a trail of blood from his first break-in leading to the second. So that then connected him to that first crime as well. Right. So there was just no way that Darren Kimpton was ever going to get away with these, these crimes, either one of them.
Starting point is 00:24:38 He had a bad day basically. He broke into a house full of cops. Yeah. Like you don't do that very often. I've seen other stories too. Um, I didn't research them, so I'm not sure how true they are. People like holding up, there was one where somebody like tried to rob a Walmart during the shop with a cop day for like the local orphanage or something like that.
Starting point is 00:24:58 Yeah. And it was a place was just full of cops. There's plenty of times where it's just been like bad timing. Um, or yeah, you just broke into the wrong place at the wrong time or tried to rob the wrong place at the wrong time. So it's not like Darren Kimpton's alone. Hunter S. Thompson.
Starting point is 00:25:12 Remember when he, uh, with a head full of drugs, stumbled into the police convention? That's right. And then he stole the briefcase with the drug samples in him. Yeah. I want to go back and read some of his. I read, you know, Fear and Loathing, of course, and which other one did I read? Rum Diaries? Or maybe it was Fear and Loathing on the campaign trail. But there were a couple of more that I always meant to get back to, but I kind of went through
Starting point is 00:25:39 my Hunter S. Thompson phase and quit reading him. But he's such a great writer. I mean, I know everyone always just sort of, if you weren't a reader, actual reader of his, you might think that he was just that crazy guy that did drugs and made a name doing that. But he was a fantastic writer. Just absolutely, like one of the better journalists
Starting point is 00:25:57 who ever walked the earth for sure. Just amazing stuff. I think that going back to him might be Folly though. I think he's like Bukowski. Like there is a specific set of years, typically in like your early twenties. You're listening to the doors. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:11 Where you're reading Hunter Thompson and reading Bukowski and yeah, doing all sorts of other things. And that as you age it, that you might find that you don't appreciate him quite as much as you used to. I have an admission. Let's hear it.
Starting point is 00:26:24 Since we're just having fun with this episode. In my 20s, I actually bought a, one of Jim Morrison's poetry books. I used to listen to American Prayer like ceaselessly. That was really good. Yeah. Did you like American Prayer? It's fine.
Starting point is 00:26:40 I mean, I kind of, I can, like, there's some real bangers that the doors did and I can go back and listen to that now and appreciate some of those songs, but it definitely, I kind of, I can, like, there's some real bangers that The Doors did and I can go back and listen to that now and appreciate some of those songs, but it definitely, for some reason, just feels like a time and place in your life when you thought he was, like, the most amazing, deep soul on planet Earth. Now I'm a little older, I'm like,
Starting point is 00:26:58 ah, Jim Morrison, come on. Yeah, it's weird. For some reason, that same period with Bukowski and Hunter Thompson and Jim Morrison is also like upon reflection very cringy. It seems like a lot of times. Yeah. Yeah, I'm cringing right now Whatever that means these days What cringy? Did you say like me right now? Yeah, I'm cringing right now. Just thinking about it All right, but American prayer was good. I'll stand by that. Was that the, the song, the book?
Starting point is 00:27:27 What was that? It was a, it was essentially like a sonic book of his poetry. Oh, the doors I think put together after his death years and years later. And it was like, they played snippets of some of their other songs. It was like stuff mixed in. And it's like the whole thing from like start to finish is essentially one long thing. And there's obviously like discrete, like red
Starting point is 00:27:51 poems that Jim Morrison's reading. Yeah. Um, but the whole thing, like as a single package was really well done, if I remember correctly, I don't want to go back and listen to it again. Cause I just want to, I just want to keep it as is in my memory. No, totally. I mean, why ruin that for yourself?
Starting point is 00:28:08 Exactly. That's why I urge you not to go back and read Hunter Thompson. Okay. Okay. He's dead to me. Well, he really is dead. Yeah. You want to take a break now?
Starting point is 00:28:20 Yeah, let's take a break and we'll do our, or should we, no, let's take a break and we'll do our top three because we, no, let's take a break and we'll do our top three, because they're a little more robust. Hey, girlfriends. It's me, Carol Fisher. I'm so excited to tell you about the brand new series of The Girlfriends. In season one, we told you about the murder of Gail Katz at the hands of my ex-boyfriend Bob.
Starting point is 00:28:56 At one point, a woman's torso washed up on Staten Island and was misidentified as Gail. She spent nine years in Gail's grave and then she just disappeared. It's almost like it's become this moral obligation to find her. And that's what we're going to do, find this missing girlfriend and tell her story. With the help of some of your favorite girlfriends from season one, like my producer Anna. Oh my god. My friend Dr. Mindy Shapiro. Hi, it's Dr. Shapiro and I'd like to speak with the deputy medical examiner.
Starting point is 00:29:31 And of course, Gail's sister Elaine Katz. Having no closure, it kills you. Join us as we try to solve a 35-year-old cold case. It's not going to be easy, but it's going to be one hell of a ride. What? I can't believe this. Listen to season two of The Girlfriends, Our Lost Sister on the iHeartRadio app,
Starting point is 00:29:56 Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Get emotional with me, Radhita Vleukya, in my new podcast, A Really Good Cry. We're going to talk about and go through all the things that are sometimes difficult to process alone. We're going to go over how to regulate your emotions, diving deep into holistic personal development and just building your mindset to have a happier, healthier life. We're going to be talking with some of my best friends.
Starting point is 00:30:22 I didn't know we were going to go there on this. People that I admire. When we say listen to your body, really tune in to what's going on. Authors of books that have changed my life. Now you're talking about sympathy, which is different than empathy, right? And basically have conversations that can help us get through this crazy thing we call life. I already believe in myself. I already see myself. And so when people give me an opportunity, I'm just like, oh great, you see me too.
Starting point is 00:30:46 We'll laugh together, we'll cry together and find a way through all of our emotions. Never forget, it's okay to cry as long as you make it a really good one. Listen to A Really Good Cry with Raleigh de Blucca on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Oh, hi, I'm Rachel Zoe,
Starting point is 00:31:04 and I'm back for another season of my podcast, Climbing in Heels. You, hi, I'm Rachel Zoe, and I'm back for another season of my podcast, Climbing in Heels. You might know me from the Rachel Zoe project, or perhaps from my work as a celebrity stylist. And guess what? I'm still just as fully obsessed with all things fashion, beauty, and business. My podcast, Climbing in Heels,
Starting point is 00:31:19 is all about celebrating the stories of extraordinary women, and this season, we're taking things up a notch. I'll be talking to some incredible women across so many industries, from models and beauty industry stars to doctors, entrepreneurs and tv personalities. Climbing in Heels is here to bring you a weekly dose of glamour, inspiration and fun. Every week listeners will be able to ask me any questions. I'm answering it all. My life is absolutely crazy with so much going on and I'm so beyond excited to bring you along for the ride. Whether we're talking red carpet looks, current trends or products I'm obsessed with, I'm here to
Starting point is 00:31:53 be your fashion fairy godmother. Listen to Climbing in Heels every Friday on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcast. All right. Next up on the list at number three, we have one Ruben. Uh, I'm going to say is Zerate. Yeah, that's how I took it. Or Zerate. Yeah, this is in 2008. Uh, he was 18 years old at the time.
Starting point is 00:32:26 And he tried to rob a muffler shop. It's like bribing and robbing at the same time. A muffler shop in Chicago. But here's the hook is that when he got there, the person working, and this was the manager, Jose Sida, S-I-D-A, he said the cash is here, but the cash is actually in a safe, and only the opener knows the safe code combination.
Starting point is 00:32:54 And he's not gonna be here for a few hours, and hey, let's stick it to this guy. You come back, I'll let you know when he's here, if you give me your number, and you give me a cut of this thing. Brilliant plan to think of on the fly. It really is. So Zerati is like, oh, okay, well, cool. I'm in cahoots with this guy.
Starting point is 00:33:14 Here's my number. Call me when the owner comes in and then I'll come back and rob the muffler shop. Just amazing. I'll give you a taste of the money that I take from it. Right. So he did, he left and then, uh, Jose Sita called the, um, the cops and told him what was going on. He waited 25 minutes for some reason, but he did call the cops.
Starting point is 00:33:35 And, um, the story starts taking some dark turns around now because the cops are like, this is great. We're going to use you as bait, as decoy and you call the guy, but let us get there first and hide in the back and like the garage, the, this is great. We're gonna use you as bait, as decoy, and you call the guy, but let us get there first and hide in the back in the garage, the workshop of the garage. He said, it'll be so great. You're gonna love it.
Starting point is 00:33:52 Yeah, he's gonna be so surprised. He's like, you got like an engine block I can hide behind? Oh yeah, okay, perfect. He's like, I'm gonna pretend like I'm changing oil. I've always wanted to do that. Right. Do you have a jumpsuit for me? So Ruben Zarate or Jose Sita
Starting point is 00:34:06 calls Ruben Zarate, he's like, Hey, the owner's here, come on back and rob the muffler store that I'm the manager of. And so Ruben Zarate comes back to rob the store. And apparently he said, because he sued the city of Chicago after this, he said that he got to the door and opened it. And before anything, before anyone said anything,
Starting point is 00:34:26 the cops just started shooting at him. So he turned and ran, they shot him in the back, inflicted a life, life threatening injury that apparently only surgery would have, would have saved his life with. He did have the life saving surgery and then lived to sue the city. I could not find out what happened, but, um, he,
Starting point is 00:34:44 his story was actually backed up by one of the, uh, the people who worked at the shop too. Yeah. Basically they sort of choir, oh God, I always, they agreed and said that, uh, I was like my porky pig moment, um, that the cops didn't even announce themselves that they were cops before they started shooting. Right. So yeah, this is a world-class Ruben Zarate story, everybody,
Starting point is 00:35:12 that you just heard. Yeah. Like, this was real research. If you read the Ruben Zarate story, all you hear is about a criminal who was dumb enough to leave his number. Yeah. So he could be called to come back and rob the place. And now it makes a little more sense and you find out that Ruben's ride was shot in the
Starting point is 00:35:29 back by the cops. Nat Malkus It also featured, for my money, one of your best jokes in a long, long time that was very under the radar. Jared Liesveld Which one? Nat Malkus The one he said the cops said, I want to pretend like I'm changing oil. I always wanted to do that. Jared Liesveld I'm glad you like that.
Starting point is 00:35:43 Nat Malkus Oh, that was good. Oh, man. Okay, so that was number three, and we're going two, one, zero. So this is our top four. I forgot that was a zero. All right. You really are mad about the zero, aren't you? Well, it's just really threw me.
Starting point is 00:36:04 Hey, man, we've gotten 28 minutes out of this so far. I'm amazed. All right, let's talk about Albert Bailey. This was in 2010. Bailey, and this had an accomplice, but it was a juvenile, so we don't know the name of the accomplice. Said, all right, let's rob this bank.
Starting point is 00:36:18 It's Fairfield, Connecticut. It's a good place to rob a bank. And to make this happen quicker, what Bailey did was call the bank ahead of time and said, I'm coming to rob this thing. So get all that money together so it doesn't take us very long while we're in there. Like this is one of the stories that, no, this is legit. It happened. Like this legitimately happened just like this.
Starting point is 00:36:43 CT Insider, which I'm guessing is short for Connecticut insider. I think so. They did a story on it, uh, after, I think shortly after it, and that's exactly what happened. Like, like Bailey, Albert Bailey called the bank and said, get the money together. He said some other things too, that made the bank
Starting point is 00:37:03 really worried. He's like, we're not afraid to take hostages other things too that made the bank really worry. He's like, we're not afraid to take hostages and turn the place into a bloodbath. So the bank's like, okay, well, we're just gonna hang up now and call the cops. Well, also said, this is key, don't call the cops because we're gonna be monitoring the police scanner.
Starting point is 00:37:19 Yeah, typically banks don't listen to you when you call them ahead of time, but also tell them not to call the cops. Yeah. So they did. They called the cops immediately. And as they were calling the cops, they went to go lock the doors, which is another thing that you
Starting point is 00:37:31 would do as a bank. But Albert Bailey was one step ahead of them because his, uh, unnamed juvenile accomplice turned out to be a 16 year old cousin was already in the bank and happened to be carrying a briefcase. And when they locked the doors, he said, do you see my little accomplice over there? Give him the money. So it kind of takes a turn.
Starting point is 00:37:52 This guy's calling the bank ahead of time, but he's, he's thought a little further along than you might give him credit for initially. Totally. Yeah. When I got to that point in the story, I was like, okay, all right. All right. I may have misjudged you over Bailey. Yeah, a little bit.
Starting point is 00:38:04 So the cousin's already in there because immediately when the bank was like, well, all right. All right. I may have misjudged you over Bailey. Yeah, a little bit. So the cousin's already in there because immediately when the bank was like, let's just go lock the door, but like that kind of solves the problem right there. Right. Uh, but, um, now they've locked themselves in with the bank robber. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:17 So the bank robbers in there, which is the 16 year or the, the accomplish or whatever is in there, I guess bank robber. Sure. And, um, the teller actually puts money in the briefcase and the, the kid left the bank, the 16 year old left with this money, uh, cause I guess it just, it still took the cops a little bit of time to get there. Uh, police said that they, uh, when they got there, he was walking out to the car, uh, outside, uh, to where, uh, Bailey was waiting and, was waiting in his car in a nearby apartment or condominium
Starting point is 00:38:49 complex. But they really did have a police scanner. They surrendered, but they had walkie talkies, they had a robbery list of things to do. Right, to do. And they had a working police scanner tuned into that frequency, so that was not a bluff. There was something else that stood out to me. The CT insider story says that the 16 year old cousin wordlessly put the briefcase on the teller's counter.
Starting point is 00:39:15 And I suspect it is weird. I'll bet it was creepy, but I suspect that I guess Albert Bailey was maybe looking out for his cousin because first of all, he's a juvenile, so he's underage. So don't say anything. Yes. Don't say, put the money in the bank. Don't say I'm robbing the bank. Don't say anything.
Starting point is 00:39:32 And essentially as far as a judge is concerned, this kid was basically a tool, an extension of Albert Bailey, who you could argue as being used against his own will. That stood out to me. I'm, I'm supposing here, but it seems like that might have been the the idea behind Yes, his cousin not saying anything in the bank I wonder if they said do you want large bills and he said damn right? It's a gun They're like, oh, let's press the alarm They're like this seems uncannily familiar to a story. I've heard around the campfire making s'mores one
Starting point is 00:40:05 So there was one more little point to this one that you found though that was pretty good. First of all, Bailey had just gotten out of prison, seven year stint for robbing another people's bank in Bridgeport, Connecticut. But Bailey said this time, he said, you know, I was kidnapped earlier and some guy kidnapped me But Bailey said this time, he said, I was kidnapped earlier and some guy kidnapped me
Starting point is 00:40:28 and he put a bomb in my pocket and said that he was, unless I robbed this bank for him, he was gonna blow me up. Which sounds very strangely familiar compared to, remember the Brian Wells story, the pizza man, the pizza delivery man who really did have a collar bomb put around him and forced to rob a bank? Yeah, the pizza man, the pizza delivery man who really did have a collar bomb put around him and forced to rob a bank.
Starting point is 00:40:46 Yeah, the collar bomb heist episode. Exactly. That happened the same year that Ronald Bailey said it happened to him, 2003. That was not a widely known story, I think, at the time, was it? It sort of was. I mean, I don't know if it was national.
Starting point is 00:41:04 Where was that? You remember? Erie, Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania, Connecticut, same side of was. I mean, I don't know if it was national. Where was that? You remember? Erie, Pennsylvania? Pennsylvania, Connecticut, same side of the country. Yeah, I guess so. People talk between those two states, right? Sure. Okay.
Starting point is 00:41:13 But I just thought that was very odd. Same year. So I guess he was either inspired by the story or it's just coincidence he came up with the same idea. Yeah, man, that was a good one. It was. Poor Brian Wells, man. Good Lord. Like, the whole thing, that whole,
Starting point is 00:41:28 if I remember correctly, that whole story, the way it's going, it's just so madcap and nuts that there's no way he's actually gonna die, and then he dies. Yeah. And it's just so sad. He's just such a hapless dude that just, that happened to.
Starting point is 00:41:42 He's another Gil. He is, very much so. And then, um, did you, did you see, I think it was called Mastermind, the Netflix special on the woman who, who devised that plan? Yeah, I saw it back then, I think, when we recorded it. That was good. It was good. And while we're talking about it, I just want to shout out, I don't remember
Starting point is 00:42:03 the director's name well enough to try to pronounce it, but the guy who directed The Lobster. Oh yeah sure. I finally saw The Lobster Chuck and I asked you about it and you're like yeah like eight years ago. But you did agree it's a good movie right? Yeah that's a Yorgos Lanthimos I think. I think so yes that sounds right. He's great. Yeah, he is. And the thing that turned me on to him was I just took a chance and watched the killing of a sacred deer.
Starting point is 00:42:30 Whew, boy. And it is really good. Disturbing. It's definitely different than the lobster, but Colin Farrell is just perfect as this just deadpan, bone dry character that he plays in both of those. Yeah, he's great. He also did the favorite in the Academy Award winning
Starting point is 00:42:48 Poor Things from last year. Oh, I didn't see that, I didn't know about that. Oh, hang on to your hats and watch Poor Things. Okay, great, yeah, I want everything that guy's doing. Yeah, I won't even tell you anything about it, but you should also go back and watch his early foreign language film Dog Tooth. Okay, I started Alps, which is another one.
Starting point is 00:43:10 I have not seen Alps, but from his early work, the only one I've seen is Dog Tooth, which was also disturbing. And he's great. He's one of the sort of brilliant directors working today, I think. I think brilliant is an excellent word to describe him. You were bagging on Colin.
Starting point is 00:43:29 Farrell. Colin Farrell a little bit. I think he's great. You need to see some more of his good stuff. What's his good stuff? Well, did you see In Bruges or? I couldn't make it through In Bruges. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 00:43:44 Yeah. Well, wow. Yeah. Well, then you probably didn't watch the recent one, the, um, with Brendan Gleason, the same one, uh, the same guy he was in Bruges with. Sure. Uh, the Banshees of Inisheeran. No, but I saw that served up to me on whatever streaming service I was watching it on. No. I mean, I think it's great. And it's actually got, uh, Barry got Barry, I don't know how you pronounce
Starting point is 00:44:06 his name, Keegan, I guess, or Kogan. That kid is good. He's in Killing of a Sacred Deer. Yeah, yeah, so you'd probably like this, I think. Okay, all right, well, I'll give it a shot. Very quirky Irish movie, yeah. And then I also went back and watched Black Swan again last night, and it is- Oh, boy.
Starting point is 00:44:23 That is such a good movie, it's crazy. I saw that in the theater and I haven't seen it since. I saw it because you and I went to go see Swan Lake at Kennedy Center in DC. It was amazing. How was that? We stayed at the Watergate and then walked over to the Kennedy Center and watched Swan Lake.
Starting point is 00:44:39 It was, I was like, this is probably the most cultured thing I've ever done in my entire life. It was great. It was a great trip. Well, also staying at the Watergate and going to see Swan Lake, that was a very 70s-esque experience. Super, for sure. But having seen it now and then watching Black Swan, it just makes you appreciate it that much more.
Starting point is 00:44:58 It's a good movie. All right, here's what I say we do. I'm gonna have a quick recommendation of something I've been watching. Okay. And I say that in that time, you pick one of these say we do. I'm going to have a quick recommendation of something I've been watching. And I say that in that time, you pick one of these two to do. Oh, it's like picking between my two children. Do we have to do them both?
Starting point is 00:45:12 No, we can just do one. I already know. I already know which child I'm going with. I know. But before we get to that, since this is just sort of a freewheeling episode, I'm going to recommend the great, great show, RIPLEY. Oh really? That is on Netflix right now.
Starting point is 00:45:28 The Tom Ripley stuff? Yeah, it's the talented Mr. Ripley, the Tom Ripley story, but it is told over eight episodes. It is in the most gorgeous black and white that I may have ever seen. And I wanna shout out the DP, the cinematographer. Brendan Gleason. That's very funny, but no,
Starting point is 00:45:49 it was the legendary cinematographer, Robert Ellswit, who besides shooting all of PT Anderson's movies, he's shot another 40 other major movies you've heard of. Oh, cool. But he did the great black and white work in Good Night and Good Luck. Ah, But he did the great black and white work in, uh, good night and good luck. Ah, yeah, that was good black and white stuff. And it's just stunning photography and, um, the guy who plays Ripley, uh, what's
Starting point is 00:46:13 his name? He was in, uh, he was in fleabag. Uh, what's his name? Emily has a real crush on him. Uh, Brendan Gleason. No, it's a good one though. Andrew Scott. Andrew Scott's in it and Dakota Fanning is in it
Starting point is 00:46:28 and it's just really, really, really well done. And I think fans of the book, or maybe more than one book, is it more than one book? Yeah, it's a series. Yeah, I think fans of the book series are, I think it's a lot more true to that. So they seem to be pretty happy about it. But the other guy that's in it is Sting's son.
Starting point is 00:46:46 Jeff? No. Elliot Sumner, Sting's son. This guy, he plays Freddy. And I was like, who is this guy? Where have I seen him? I was like, oh, it's Young Sting, basically. Oh, cool.
Starting point is 00:46:57 They're good, huh? Yeah. Nice. Pretty good. And looks like Young Sting. OK, well, I will check it out. I do have a question though Did you watch all eight episodes yet?
Starting point is 00:47:08 No, i'm on uh, I think We finished six last night. So I got a couple more. So that's my problem with uh, uh, like limited series is they start out Like like like gangbusters basically um, and then they just peter out like a episode four or five, six sometimes. And like, it's just, almost all of them do. They're so rare that they make it through all eight episodes or 10 episodes or whatever, where you're not like,
Starting point is 00:47:37 yep, didn't need two of those episodes easily. This doesn't feel padded to me. It's really, really good so far. And I don't think it'll peter out, because it's just getting sort of climax-y in here toward the end. I have to say, Chuck, it just struck me as ridiculously audacious for me to be complaining
Starting point is 00:47:53 about people padding their series in the middle of this episode. That's pretty, pretty rich. All right, so we'll finish up, but I also should recommend Fallout, the TV show about the video game Fallout, one of the few video games I've played on Amazon Prime with the great, great, great,
Starting point is 00:48:11 Walton Goggins, one of my favorites. Yeah. You snuck one more in, huh? Well, that means we're doing the last two of these. No, no, no, don't punish me. Let's talk about Dennis Hawkins, hey? No. Oh, you wanted to do the last guy?
Starting point is 00:48:23 Yeah, you didn't like the last guy? Yeah. You didn't like the last guy. Oh, okay. I thought you were going to go with Dennis Hawkins. No, I thought the last guy was, had a great twist to it, but. All right. Let's, let's do it. James Washington. Everyone can look up Dennis Hawkins if they want to know about him. Yeah, there you go.
Starting point is 00:48:36 Great idea. Look up Dennis Hawkins and you'll pretty much get the whole, the whole thing just from looking at a picture of them. All right. Hit me. So James Washington is this guy who was doing 15, 15 in the clink in Nashville back in 2009. I don't know how far he was into his 15-year sentence,
Starting point is 00:48:55 but he was definitely in there for attempted murder. And he was pretty young, age 47, when he suffered a heart attack in prison, and was taken to the hospital and he was like, I don't think I'm going to make it. And I guess his conscience was bothering him because he had to get something off of his chest, he decided. That's right.
Starting point is 00:49:16 As happens sometimes, you hear about this in prison, when someone is dying or something in jail or in prison, they will admit to other crimes. And that's exactly what happened in this case when he told the prison guard, hey, come over here. And the guy came over there and he was like, I actually murdered Joyce Goodner back in 1995. I'm dying and I just had to get this off my chest. Yeah, he said, I killed somebody, I beat her to death.
Starting point is 00:49:43 The guard said that was James Tomlinson who was the guard. He just happened to be the closest person. And that would have probably been that had James Washington died, but he actually took a turn for the better and recovered. And when it became clear to him that he wasn't going to die, he said, you remember that thing that I confessed to you? I want to go ahead and recant that. Yeah. And they said, no takesies, backsees.
Starting point is 00:50:07 No. We suspected you to begin with. Apparently this was in Nashville, and they knew that he had met with Goodner on the day of her murder. He was a person of interest in the case, but they just didn't have enough to press charges against. And it was an unsolved case, but he confessed.
Starting point is 00:50:26 And they said, all right, I'm glad you're feeling better. Let's just add a life sentence to your already long sentence. Yeah, so he got convicted of it for his own confession that he couldn't take back and he didn't die. So yeah, it was pretty ironic. He didn't die, so he got life in prison. That's right. You got anything else? So, yeah, it's pretty ironic. He didn't die, so he got life in prison.
Starting point is 00:50:45 That's right. You got anything else? Wanna do like three or four more of these? You know what's funny is when we were about a third of the way through and it was, not much was happening, I was like, you know what we'll do, maybe at the end we'll just do some recommendations.
Starting point is 00:51:00 Like so many podcasts do that, like what they've been reading or watching. I said, maybe we'll just throw that in there for fun. And then we ended up organically doing it, kind of, in the last third. Yeah. If you introduce the thought of doing recommendations in the first act, you have to shoot it off in the third act. That's what they say.
Starting point is 00:51:18 Well done. Thanks. Well, Chuck said, well done, everybody. And that means I want to finish on a high note, which means it's time for Listener Mail. All right, I'm going to call everybody, and that means I want to finish on a high note, which means it's time for listener mail. Alright, I'm going to call this, I don't know, this is just sort of a funny email from one of our listeners. Alright.
Starting point is 00:51:32 About the white dog poop. Hey guys, my son is a regular listener. He tells me about your podcast he thinks I would like. And what guy do you know that doesn't like to joke about poop? Not many. Not many. And what guy do you know that doesn't like to joke about poop? But not many Not many. I never thought about the change in the color of dog poop and the hardness until you pointed it out But I do remember when I was in the fifth grade in 1955. This is one of our you know, elder states persons. Mm-hmm Getting in a white dog poop fight with one of our neighbors Jerry
Starting point is 00:52:03 He had a big black dog and his next-door neighbors had a big boxer so there were massive amounts of white dog poop in both yards. I had an advantage because I wasn't wearing... Oh, because I was wearing gloves and Jerry wasn't. The dog poop we were throwing was white and hard. I don't remember who won. It stopped when we ran out of white poop. The fight probably resulted in a tie, laughing, crying emoji. And that is from Dear Listener Alan White. And Alan, this just struck me as very cute and funny
Starting point is 00:52:35 and kind of perfect for this episode. That is a great, great, great email. Thank you very much. Who was it? That was Alan. Alan, that's a great one, Alan. That's the great thing about growing up at that age That's right
Starting point is 00:52:47 You used to be able to throw poop at one another and some some kids wouldn't even wear gloves when they did it Like that was it was just that kind of loosey goosey time, you know Yeah, not like these coddled kid these days with their poop gloves. No, they were two pairs of gloves when they throw poop Well, thanks a lot. If you want to be like Alan and reminisce with us, we love that kind of stuff. You can do it via email to stuffpodcast at iHeartRadio.com. Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Starting point is 00:53:25 Hey, girlfriends. It's me, Carol Fisher, back with another season of the global number one podcast, The Girlfriends. Last time we investigated the murder of Gail Katz. This time we're uncovering the identity of the woman who was buried in Gail's grave for a decade before she disappeared. Join me and the rest of the club as we tell her story. Listen to season two of The Girlfriends, Our Lost Sister on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Get emotional with me, Radhita Vlukya, in my new podcast, A Really Good Cry.
Starting point is 00:54:06 We're going to be talking with some of my best friends. I didn't know we were going to go there on this! People that I admire. When we say listen to your body, really tune in to what's going on. Authors of books that have changed my life. Now you're talking about sympathy, which is different than empathy, right? Never forget, it's okay to cry as long as you make it a really good one. Listen to A Really Good Cry with Raleigh de Vlucca on the iHeart
Starting point is 00:54:30 radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. I am the fairy man. In the shadows of the afterlife the fairymen of souls guides America's most influential spirits to their eternal rest. Where are you taking me? Are you Death? This road is not on any map. How much for a ticket? All I ask for in payment is a tail. I don't know who got to Kennedy first.
Starting point is 00:54:59 And the devastation those first bombs caused. I've never been to hell, but I know intimately the hymns of the damned. Binge the season of the passage now. Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.

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