Stuff You Should Know - Patty Hearst: Brainwashed or Bandit?
Episode Date: November 24, 2020Patty Hearst was a young heiress living a quiet life studying art history at college when one Monday evening her home was invaded, she was kidnapped, and her life took a totally unforeseen turn that s...he would have trouble explaining for years to come. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeart radios, How Stuff Works.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, and there's Charles W.
Chuck Bryant over there.
And this is Stuff You Should Know.
Just the two of us, me and Chuck are gonna make it
if we try, just the two of us, he and I.
Man, now I wish we were doing a show on Bill Withers.
Is that a Bill Withers song?
What?
I mean, I guess I can hear his voice now that you say that,
but that's not the song I think of
when I think Bill Withers, you know?
What do you think on Lean On Me?
No, the theme song to Annie.
Oh, sure, song will come out tomorrow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's the one, right?
Good song, I love that Annie soundtrack.
It's so good, man.
Hey, have I mentioned Enola Holmes?
You have.
Well, I haven't seen it yet.
I haven't seen it yet.
It's so good, dude.
Did you see the Challenger documentary?
I have not seen that.
And that is hard to watch.
Yeah, I've been watching horror movies
because this October is kind of the month
where I get a pass to do that on my own.
Yeah, October, more like Shocktober, you know what I mean?
All right, I finally watched a Rob Zombie movie,
never seen any of those before.
Which one?
I started at the beginning
and did House of a Thousand Corpses.
Okay, what'd you think?
It was good.
It was just exactly what I thought it would be,
which is sort of a Texas Chainsaw Massacre-like story.
But you could feel as enthusiasm for filmmaking.
I liked it.
For sure.
When's the last time you saw
the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre?
I saw it last year for the very first time,
believe it or not.
Oh my, I think we talked about that, finally.
Yeah, it scared the pants off of me.
Man, it's so good.
It's weird because it keeps getting better.
I remember being a teenager
and the first time I saw it and I was like,
why, what is this?
And then the next time I saw it, I was like,
oh, this is actually pretty good.
And then the last time I saw it, I was like,
I just want to sit around and watch this all the time.
Stone Cold Classic.
So speaking of Stone Cold Classics,
I got a Stone Cold Classic,
which a what true crime question case for you, Chuck.
What's the question?
The question is this.
Was Patty Hearst a brainwashed hostage
who carried out violent crimes for fear of her life?
Or was she a spoiled rich kid
who was basically, who turned thrill seeker to the nth degree?
You know what, I don't know.
I mean, part of me thinks that she did flip
and was radicalized, but I don't know, man.
I mean, I don't think it's super clear either way.
No.
And so I'm in the same boat as you.
I feel like I lean a little more toward radicalized
than there's a couple of things that it's just like,
I can't get past that.
Yeah, I think I know one of them.
But I think that she became radicalized initially
out of fear for her life.
And it's really hard to discount what happened
to her initially, you know, that got her in that.
And I think Jimmy Carter has the most sensible take
on the whole thing.
So we'll get into all of this.
For those of you who don't know what we're talking about,
we're talking about Patty Hearst.
And Patty Hearst was the granddaughter
of William Randolph Hearst,
whose name might sound familiar.
He was the publishing magnate.
I think a radio guy too, right?
I think it was, yeah, radio, but very much well known
for his newspaper, his string of newspapers.
And he was a bit of a politico, a kingmaker,
incredibly mind-bogglingly wealthy.
He was the model for Citizen Kane, I believe, right?
And he had basically established this media empire
in the first half of the 20th century.
And he had a son, he had a son named Randy Hearst.
No joke, Randolph Hearst.
Not William Randolph Hearst, sorry, Randolph Hearst.
And they called him Randy.
And Randy had a daughter.
He was brought up like a very wealthy guy,
but he was also brought up to take over the family business.
And he had by 1954, I think,
when a daughter arrived to Randy and his wife, Katherine,
and they named their kid Patty or Patricia Hearst.
That's right, Patricia Campbell.
And she was what you would think.
She was born into an heiress, she was born a rich kid.
It's funny to think about, like in today's terms,
plenty of people to pick from,
but like, if you could imagine Paris Hilton
robbing a bank with a machine gun,
that's kind of a good analog to who Patricia Hearst was
back then.
Yeah, that's actually really good.
Although you could say she's quite a bit more low key
or she was at the time, like by the time she was 19,
she was living in San Francisco or the Bay Area,
I should say, attending UC Berkeley.
So I guess she was living in Berkeley
because that's not necessarily the Bay Area.
Yeah, she wasn't exactly Paris Hilton, if we're being honest.
But she was just like-
As far as the famous heiress in the United States.
Yeah, so yeah, but also living this quiet life.
She was 19, she was engaged to a guy named Stephen Weed,
who was like a Catholic high school teacher, I think.
He was 26 or something and studying art history
and going to school and just kind of living life.
But yeah, she really-
She really missed his calling.
She, right, especially in Berkeley in the 70s, you know?
Stevie Weed.
So she, but she was like mind-bogglingly wealthy
and she was going to inherit all this
and she was famous for being an heiress, right?
And so just a few days before her 20th birthday
on February 4th, I think, right?
1974, there was a knock on her door at like 9 p.m.
It was a Monday night.
And actually, I don't even know if they knocked
or else if they just came bursting in.
But three people who turned out to be members of what
very few people had heard of at the time,
but who had become very famous,
the Symbianese Liberation Army burst through their door,
beat up Stephen Weed, Catholic high school teacher
and dragged Patty Hearst out of her apartment to their car
where they shot off a few shots
and drove off into the night
with Patty Hearst kidnapped as hostage.
Yeah, they threw in the trunk, bound and she was gone.
And as far as the SLA goes, like you said,
they were not very well known at the time.
They were pretty new in an era of sort of,
I'm not gonna say there were just American terrorist
organizations all over the place in the United States,
but it was a time in our country
where there were a lot of bombings.
A lot.
Yeah, it said about a thousand a year.
That's a lot.
Yeah, that's a lot.
Compared to now where we don't have a lot of bombings.
And we should thank Julia Layton
for helping us put this together.
But no one had heard of them much
because like I said, they were new.
They formed a couple of months before her abduction.
And it wasn't like there were, you know,
a hundred of these people.
They were, you know, it kind of varied from, you know,
depending on like, I guess who had the good drugs
at the time, but there were never more than a dozen.
It seems like it varied between like seven
and 12 at a time.
And their ideology was basically just like,
anti-capitalist, we, that's kind of just it.
It wasn't super inspiring.
It wasn't well thought out.
It was just, hey, we hate, we hate the rich.
It was pretty ho-hum and yeah, not very inspiring.
And I think that's why they never had that many members.
But they were, they were extremely militant.
They were very paranoid and they were willing
to carry out violence.
Like they didn't have many qualms with violence.
They used to practice with weapons and guns
and they had a lot of guns, a lot of ammunition.
They knew how to make bombs.
They weren't messing around in that sense.
They were just kind of dolerds
when it came to political ideology.
They were just following in everybody else's wake.
But interestingly enough, Chuck,
the whole, the whole Symbianese Liberation Army
started out of a prison tutoring program
where a bunch of white students from Berkeley
went and tutored inmates on things like black history
and political science, things like that.
And that's where the SLA originally grew from
when one of those inmates, a guy named Donald DeFries,
escaped from prison and showed up in San Francisco
and said, let's get this thing started.
Yeah, he was, they all adopted different names
when they joined the SLA.
His name was General Field Marshall Sink.
Is it Matume?
Matume and it might be Chinque.
Oh, really?
Yeah, cause they were super into Che Guevara
and the Cuban Revolution.
So anything that looks even remotely Spanish
is probably pronounced like that.
Okay, well, I don't know Spanish.
So I'm going to pronounce it like Spike Lee style.
Okay.
I think that's his sister's name.
Is it?
So, yeah, Sink Lee.
I didn't know that.
C-I-N-Q-U-E, one of his sisters.
I got you, it's great.
So, yeah, he was in prison for,
well, he did a bunch of stuff.
He was well known to possess homemade bombs.
He was arrested for kidnapping, possession of explosives.
He was arrested for robbing a bank.
And that's finally in 1969,
what finally got him into prison.
But, and this pops up sort of throughout the story,
but it was way easier to get away with crime back then.
Yeah.
Like to escape from prison
and then just say like I'm gonna go live in San Francisco
and start a radical organization
and kind of not get caught.
And that's what he did.
And he ended up engineering the murder
of a man named Marcus Foster.
He was superintendent of the Oakland school system.
And he didn't actually carry out the murder,
but two SLA members shot him
and one of their signature moves,
it would turn out to be a cyanide tipped bullets,
which I didn't look into that.
I don't even know if that's a thing.
I know.
If that helps, you know, kill somebody.
I think it's overkill is what like literal overkill.
Or maybe just they thought it sounded intimidating
or something to put in letters.
I think so.
They definitely did that,
but they shot Foster to draw attention
to something they saw,
which was anti-black schooling policies.
Foster was a black man, one of the cruel ironies there.
Well, not only that,
he was also a respected black community organizer.
And when they killed them,
everybody else on the left in Berkeley was like,
what are you doing?
Are you guys morons?
And the SLA was like,
Yeah, they were kind of morons.
Yeah.
Yes, they were a little bit morons
as far as domestic terrorist groups go.
So when they, the shooters were actually in prison
when they got Patty Hearst,
and the first thought from the cops and the feds was,
here's what's gonna happen is they've kidnapped
this rich girl and they're gonna try to exchange
giving her back to get these two guys out of prison.
But they're like, no, not exactly.
We're actually gonna keep her.
No, but even before they had a chance to ask,
and I guess they never did bring it up,
Ronald Reagan, who was governor at the time said,
no, we're not doing that.
But they didn't go that way.
Instead, they said, hey, Willie Hearst,
no, sorry, Randy Hearst, Willie Hearst was dead by this time.
Randy Hearst, you're super rich.
We want you to take some of those riches
and we want you to feed the poor with it.
That was their first demand.
And they sent this demand.
First of all, they sent a communique
to a radio station in San Francisco.
And I think that's who they basically corresponded
with the public and the police through
was this radio station.
And they would send them letters
and they would eventually send like voice recordings as well.
But in this first one, they sent what was basically
an arrest warrant for Petty Hearst, Patricia Campbell Hearst,
daughter of Randolph A. Hearst, corporate enemy of the people.
And they sent her credit card as proof that they had her.
Which if you ask me, shows their hand right off the bat,
they didn't send a finger.
They didn't even send like a lock of hair.
They sent a credit card that you could pick up off the ground.
They could have just taken it off of her nightstand.
They didn't send anything vicious.
They just sent a credit card to prove that they had her.
But they didn't make any ransom demand.
Then six days later after that first communique
with the arrest warrant, that's when they said
the Hearst need to figure out how to feed
any single person in California
that can prove that they are not beneficiaries
of the corporate capitalist state
with at least $70 worth of high quality food per person.
Yeah, and they were like,
we're gonna get it together, not we,
but you need to arrange it through the grocery stores
in California to distribute this stuff.
They included an audio tape from Patty
where she says, mom, dad, I'm okay.
I'm with a combat unit with automatic weapons
and these people aren't just a bunch of nuts or morons
like Josh and Chuck will say in the future.
I want to get out of here,
but the only way I'm going to do it is if we do it their way
and I just hope that you'll do what they say, dad,
and do it quickly.
Randy Hearst got this and he was like,
these people are morons.
How do they expect me to give everyone in California
that proves they're in need $70 worth of high quality food?
What is high quality food anyway?
And they're like, that's what you eat every day, sir.
He's like, oh, that's actually pretty good.
Okay, I gotcha.
And so he said, you know,
I don't even think I can pull this off,
which followed another back and forth
in which Patty said, hey, stop acting like I'm dead.
He needs a good faith gesture from you.
And so just a few days after that,
the Hearst Foundation formed,
I guess they looked in probably the best way
to get a tax benefit out of this,
informed an actual program called People in Need,
which would feed 100,000 people for a year,
$2 million worth of food,
which sounds fairly high quality to me.
Yeah, and apparently they had a rough start at first
because they didn't know what they were doing.
There were food riots at the distribution site
and they finally managed to get it figured out.
So in that sense, and it's kind of overlooked, I think,
in a lot of histories because everything they did
after that was just so stupid and terrible.
But the SLA had a genuine impact right out of the gate
that they used their hostage for,
which was to feed poor and hungry people.
So clearly they were at least partially dedicated to that.
And Cinque Matume, is it Matume?
Donald DeFries, the Field Marshal, General Field Marshal.
He had said in a statement, he said, you know,
Mr. and Mrs. Hearst, I will,
I have no qualms about executing your daughter
if it will save the lives of any starving poor people.
So that was like a real big initial thing.
So yeah, I was kind of surprised
that they formed this program, People in Need,
which obviously was going to take a lot of work
to make into sort of a legit charity.
And they were like, just for one year though,
I'm like, after that, I'm surprised they didn't say,
you know, maybe this is worthwhile.
I mean, I didn't get the impression they were those types.
Well, and they probably,
it probably wasn't a great look to be inspired
by these terrorists.
That's true.
That's true too.
But I just find it significant that that was like,
that that was their first demand was that,
and then it actually had a real effect.
But yeah, they asked for more money though.
I think they said two million is not enough.
We want eight million total.
And the Hearst said, Randy said, no go.
You gotta release Patty Hearst
if you want that extra six mil.
Yeah, so they, this I think is another
kind of overlooked thing that when you look at what,
you know, the process of changing our mind
that Patty Hearst eventually is said to have gone through.
I think that this is really where the seeds started
because she said later on that she felt like
her parents were trying to,
they were debating how much I was worth.
Yeah.
And they were focusing on dollars and cents,
you know, in the balance of her daughter's life.
And she, you know, like she had said before,
stop acting like I'm dead.
She apparently felt very, if not left behind,
definitely gambled with, her life was gambled with
by her parents who were basically publicly negotiating
the cost down for the release of their daughter.
And I think that that really may have set up a 19 year old
to be more open to whatever the opposite of their parents
thought processes and ideology might be.
Yeah, there's another really good movie
about the J. Paul Getty kidnapping called
All the Money in the World, directed by Ridley Scott.
And that's sort of one of the threads in that movie is,
you know, is the granddad trying to like negotiate
down this money, like somebody that's like one
of the richest human beings on the planet,
trying to bargain with the life of a family member.
Like no genie, no money.
Really, really interesting.
Yeah.
Nice Fargo, Ruff, by the way.
Thank you.
Should we take a break?
Yeah, sure, why not?
All right, we'll take a break.
And we're gonna come back right for this
and talk about what happens on April 3rd.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher
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So Chuck, you mentioned April 3rd.
And here is about the time when things really
start to turn as far as the public's perception of what
exactly is going on.
Because 59 days earlier, Patty Hearst, poor little Patty
Hearst, never harmed a flea, just wanted to study art history
and be super amazingly rich, was abducted from her house
and then forced into the public spotlight
as a hostage who was used to negotiate
between the SLA and her parents, the Hearsts.
But then that changed on April 3rd.
Yeah, she sent another tape that said,
I have been given the choice of, one,
being released in a safe area, or two, joining the forces
of the Symbionnes Liberation Army and fighting
for my freedom and the freedom of all oppressed people.
I have chosen to stay and fight.
And then she revealed that she had taken on an SLA name,
Tania, or is it Tania?
I think, I don't know, let's go with Tania.
OK, Tania, T-A-N-I-A.
And they sent a little visual aid, too.
And this became a very, very famous picture.
One of the most famous pictures of the 1970s
was this photo, this Polaroid of Patty.
We've all seen it holding that machine gun, wearing the beret
in front of the SLA flag in their emblem, which
was a seven-headed cobra.
Very famous picture.
Extremely famous.
And that beret was significant in that she adopted the nom
de guerre Tania from another woman who
adopted the nom de guerre of Tania back in the 60s,
about a decade earlier, when she was fighting alongside
Che Guevara and Bolivia.
Her name was Tamara Buenke, I believe.
She was Argentinian.
And she was a revolutionary.
And I guess Patty Hurst admired her and adopted that name.
But imagine, put it yourself in the position of just
the average person in the public who's following this story.
It's like poor little Patty Hurst, poor little Patty Hurst.
And then, oh my god, what is this?
There's a picture of Patty Hurst looking like a total BA
holding a machine gun and a beret.
Yeah, a total BA berrakis.
Yeah, and she said, they said that they would let me go.
And I could go free, or I could stay and fight.
And I'm choosing to fight.
And not only that, I have a new name of war.
Yeah, I think this started a lot of confusion.
I don't think it was immediately everyone was like,
oh my god, the future parasilton of our times
is now radicalized and wants to kill people.
That's true.
I think it just really confused a lot of people.
They were like, wait a minute, what's going on here?
I thought she was kidnapped.
And now she says she's not.
And it really gripped the nation.
I mean, obviously, I was just a wee toddler
when this is going on.
But I remember when I was a little kid,
this sort of still reverberating in the public sphere
a little bit.
I remember hearing the name Patty Hurst when I was like six
or seven.
Well, she also, I mean, she came out with her memoirs
about when you were probably 10.
So I'm sure that that really brought her to your attention
as well, too.
Well, sure.
We read that in whatever, fifth grade.
All right.
So yeah, you're right.
You're right.
That wasn't necessarily a turning point
because a picture like that, if you're somebody's hostage,
your captors can dress you up however they want
and take a picture of you and put it out there.
It was still shocking, but it was confusing,
like you said, too.
And then people generally knew if somebody had a gun
to your head, you could say, yeah, I'm going to stay and fight.
And here's my new name.
The turning point, the real turning point,
that came about two weeks after that, almost two weeks
after that.
And that is when Tanya made her real world debut.
And at this point, there was very little question
about whether she was actually involved in the SLA
or just a hostage in a lot of people's mind.
This is where that turning point came.
Yeah.
So the high Bernia Bank in San Francisco
was robbed by the SLA, including Tanya.
And they shot two people.
Like we said earlier, it wasn't one of these things
where they were just espousing radicalism
and threatening violence.
They killed people.
They didn't kill these two people, but they did shoot them.
They made off with about 10 grand
to help fund their group.
On the surveillance footage, you see
Patty right there pointing an assault rifle machine gun
and screaming at people to get down on the floor,
announcing her, I am Tanya.
And the footage played on the news.
And this is when, like you said, everyone was like, man,
this is getting really, really interesting.
I think the FBI wasn't fully convinced she still
wasn't being forced to do this, though,
because it's not like they didn't issue a warrant for her arrest
for robbing a bank.
She was wanted as a material witness at this point still.
Yeah, still.
I mean, don't forget she's white and she's rich.
So you can't just go around saying that she's a bank robber
just because she robbed a bank and plain view of everybody
on security footage that's on TV, you know?
So she's a material witness.
Another tape comes along.
And this time she called her family the pig hearsts.
And she said, I mean, this is sort of the ideas,
like has she been brainwashed or not?
And she said in no uncertain terms,
as for being brainwashed, the idea is ridiculous
beyond belief, I am a soldier in the people's army.
See, this is one of those things where people are like,
if you had a time machine, what's something you would do?
I would go back to the beginning of 1975
so that I could watch this whole thing unfold in real time,
like on the nightly news and in the newspaper.
It must have just been totally mind blowing
because everything I have ever known about Patty Hearst
was all in retrospect.
And I knew the whole story from beginning to end all at once.
To watch the sun fold must have just been just nuts, you know?
No, you wouldn't go back and kill Hitler and his cradle.
Fine, whatever, that's fine.
No, I just want to see what happens with Patty Hearst.
Yeah, I want to sit on a couch in 1975, 74.
Well, I'd be a Woodstock, so what can I say?
Okay, we could kill Hitler too, that's fine.
All right, can we do that first?
And then go watch the Patty Hearst thing and go to Woodstock?
Well, I think the order of operation is we kill Hitler,
we go to Woodstock together, we avoid the purple acid.
It's brown acid.
Brown acid, and then we wind up in 1975 eating TV dinners,
watching this on TV.
Okay, that sounds pretty nice actually.
Yeah, let's do it.
Let's do it.
So, Patty Hearst, just to recap,
has said that she is a member of the SLA by choice,
that she has a new war name, that she is not brainwashed,
and now she's been out in public on video,
caught on camera, holding a machine gun
during a bank robbery, shouting at people
to get on the floor.
And witnesses are saying like, she shouted, I am Tanya.
And apparently on her way out of the bank,
she dropped the clip out of her submachine gun,
an M1 carbine submachine gun, like an assault rifle.
And the clip dropped out and it fell to the floor
and two bullets were knocked out of the clip.
She stopped and picked them up, put them back in the clip
and then jammed the clip back in her machine gun
and strode it out the door, like from witnesses' accounts,
like she sounds like she was not some meek, timid thing
who was taking orders, that she seemed to be
like a warrior princess.
Yeah, and you gotta go back in time to 1975 and 74,
when, you know, we did a great episode on brainwashing,
I encourage you to go back and listen to that.
But briefly, we should just say that in 1974,
Stockholm syndrome and brainwashing,
this stuff wasn't as part of the, you know,
just regular conversation like it is today.
No, the bank that created the Stockholm syndrome idea
had just taken place like a year or less before this.
Yeah, so if someone would have said
Stockholm syndrome on the news,
yeah, people might not have know
what they were talking about it.
So it would have been not out of the realm
for people to not even understand
that someone could be brainwashed like this,
as far as just, you know, an average American goes.
Yeah, but at the same time, I mean,
there had been a real newsworthy
and like celebrated case of POWs taken in the Korean War,
you know, 20 years before this that had said, you know,
they signed confessions that they'd engaged
in germ warfare when they hadn't.
There was evidence that they colluded with the enemy.
Some of them 21 Air Force officers that had been captured
refused to return home when they had the ability
to be returned home.
And so the idea of brainwashing was out there,
but it was still very,
it was nothing like our conception of it now.
And it was still very much in the beginnings
of being studied and understood.
Yeah, so 1974, May 16th is when things really, really change.
And this was the incident,
I don't know if you were referring to,
but this is the one that really made me go,
oh, okay, I'm really not so sure about this
being brainwashed or trying to just save our own bacon thing.
They were, it was Patty and then Bill and Emily Harris,
a couple of other SLA members went to,
Bill and Emily went to a sporting goods store
for some supplies.
Bill shoplifted bullets, got caught,
and then tried to bolt out of there
and an employee tackled them as he was leaving.
They got Emily and captured her.
And then Patty's across the street,
sort of waiting in the getaway car.
She jumps out, she points that submachine gun at the store
and empties the clip and then gets another rifle
and keeps shooting.
She fires about 30 shots total on a public street
into a store by the grace of God didn't hit anybody.
I can't believe it.
Yeah, I mean, that's the most remarkable part
of this whole thing.
And the Harris's got out of there, I mean, it worked.
They got out of there, jumped in the van,
and they all got away.
And this is the point,
and this is the one that would really haunt her
in court later on, which we'll get to.
But it's like, it's really hard to believe.
I mean, she could have left, she was out there by herself.
She could have, once the S went down, she could have left.
But now she jumped out and she just, she fired 30 shots,
trying to help them get out of there.
She was left alone in the van with the keys
reading a newspaper while they were there.
And like, you don't even have to be a hostage.
You could just be an accomplice.
And there's a good chance that if somebody's getting busted
inside, you might just drive off and save your own bacon.
Like you said, it's just such a great term.
But yeah, she did the opposite.
She went and fought to free her comrades.
So that, yes, that's definitely one of the things that I,
I and basically anybody else familiar with the case points
to is like, this makes basically everything else questionable.
Yeah, this is just not nice.
So here's the thing.
That was, I think, May 16th, you said?
Yeah.
So Patty's been kidnapped for, you know,
just a few months from February 4th to May 16th.
And she's already engaged in a bank robbery
and shot up a Los Angeles street in storefront.
And just the very next day, like the SLA is all over the news,
like the cops are looking for them.
They started out in Berkeley and they moved their way down
to LA at some point, but they are, again,
more ironic in a lot of their actions
and a lot of their judgment is just really insensible.
But one of the things they did was they,
I guess, identified somebody's house in Compton.
I don't know if somebody knew them or not,
or if it just looked like a good place to hide out
in South Central Los Angeles.
And they said, hey, you, can we give you $100?
I think there's just some middle-aged woman
who was running a house.
If we give you $100, can we all stay here?
And she said, okay.
And they said, great, let's go get all of our guns,
like several dozen guns, 6,000 rounds of ammunition,
a few bombs and move them in.
And that lady started to get freaked out.
And apparently her daughter went and flagged down
a traffic cop and said, hey, are you looking
for a bunch of white people who have a bunch of guns
that seem to be hiding out?
And that led to this convergence of the LAPD
on this house in Compton.
And a firefight, a shootout,
with most of the members of the SLA in this house.
Yeah, so there is a firefight that goes down.
They lobbed some tear gas in there.
That starts a fire and it burns the house to the ground
and kills all six of the SLA members inside.
Patty and the Harris's are not there.
They were on the land at this point,
waiting it out in a hotel room
after the shoplifting thing.
And then three weeks after this, the few remaining,
I mean, you gotta think, if they killed six,
there were another three hiding out
and there were never more than 12.
There could only be just a few more remaining,
but the remaining members released another message
that Patty had a real hard time with at the trial,
explaining it away because she was clearly upset
about these deaths.
She talked about the fascist pig media
and her brothers and sisters dying.
And then talked about member Willie Wolf in particular
as the gentlest, most beautiful man I've ever known
and said that neither she nor Wolf had ever loved
an individual the way we loved each other.
I read an interview with Willie Wolf's father,
who was a doctor back east.
Willie Wolf was just raised this upper middle class
son of a doctor, pretty privileged,
but also not spoiled bratty, that kind of thing.
Love the outdoors and he apparently just,
his father still was just like, I don't get it at all.
Like that guy, he really was just super gentle and sweet
and kind and not very political,
but something happened to him out in Berkeley
and he became extremely concerned,
I think a natural propensity toward caring about
what happened to other people,
became radicalized by the SLA.
He was a founding member of the SLA.
It's not like he was some lamb led to the slaughter.
Like he was one of the guys who founded the SLA
with Donald DeFries and I think the couple
that were shoplifting the heresies.
But his father really struggled to explain it,
but what was remarkable to me about the interviews,
his father wasn't like over explaining,
it wasn't like me thinks he doth protest too much
kind of thing, like he just seemed genuinely baffled
and like he just didn't understand it.
And I was reading an article in the L.A. Times
on like the 20th anniversary of that shootout in Compton.
And the owner of the house that had been burned down
that the SLA was in,
he said that every year Willie Wolf's mother would come
and the anniversary of her son's death
and leave this wreath on a palm tree
at the vacant lot where the burned out house had been
and would just stand there in silence for hours.
Just once a year and he said
she was the only person who ever came.
Wow. Yeah.
Very sad.
And I'm sure, yeah, the parents of these kids were just,
yeah, they were like,
it's sort of like being the parents
of like one of the Manson family or something.
Right, yeah.
And then here's the other thing too,
like this is a really complicated thing,
like Donald DeFries,
he was an escaped convict from prison,
but I also read that his stepfather
on three different occasions broke both of his arms
to punish him.
So, I mean, like there's,
and then Willie Wolf,
it was accused of raping Patty Hearst too.
So just how gentle and sweet could he be?
Like it's a really murky, messy case,
and appropriately so,
because even still today,
we're, you know, in 2020,
we're trying to suss out exactly what happened
with Patty Hearst in her mind back in 1974.
Yeah, it's really, I mean, it's hard to figure out.
And I think that's what makes this such an enduring case,
you know?
Yeah.
So the, that eulogy tape was released
while she was on the run with the Hearst's
and they stayed on the run,
driving across the country sort of bad land style.
I don't think they were killing people,
that they were committing crimes,
they were stealing stuff.
And they did this for 18 months,
which is another example of like,
it was just a lot easier to get away with crimes back then
before there were cameras everywhere
and obviously camera phones everywhere.
And the internet, they remained on the land for 18 months,
about a year into that,
they robbed another bank in San Francisco
and actually killed a customer in the process.
Myrna Opsol.
Yeah, and, you know,
this would come up later at the trial,
Patty Hearst was not the trigger person,
but she was involved, she was one of the three,
and the person lost their life, you know?
It's very sad.
Yeah.
She was apparently a church lady
who was there depositing like that week's collection
into the bank, the church's bank account.
And she was in the wrong place at the wrong time
and apparently made a fast move
because she was freaked out and got shot
and died pretty quickly from what I understand.
All right, should we take another break?
Yeah, sure.
All right, this is our last break
and then we'll talk about the arrest
and the trial of Patty Hearst right after this.
Here we go.
Here we go.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
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We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
we are going to unpack and dive back
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We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
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It's a podcast packed with interviews,
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Each episode will rival the feeling
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blowing on it and popping it back in
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
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I'm Mangesha Tickler and to be honest,
I don't believe in astrology,
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All right.
So she gets arrested,
and this is where things get really weird
because you've got two stories playing out in court.
One is that she says,
One is that I'm Patty Hearst and I was brainwashed.
I was kept in a closet for 57 days when they abducted me.
I was blindfolded and bound.
I was raped by Donald DeFries and Willie Wolf.
I was abused and lectured about how righteous they were.
And then after 57 days, I was told,
hey, you can either join up with us or we can kill you.
And she said, I joined up.
So story number one is that.
Story number two is the other.
Yeah, story number two is we have video evidence
of you robbing a bank.
Witnesses say that you're involved in another bank robbery
or a woman was killed.
We have you on tape talking about how you're not brainwashed
and how you joined this by your own free will
and your parents are pigs.
So it was a pretty airtight case
as far as the prosecution goes, wore it not for one thing.
And that is that she was initially kidnapped.
She didn't run off and do this.
Like she didn't get bored and like go to a community center
and end up falling in with the SLA.
Like she was kidnapped.
And our understanding of psychology
was still kind of gelling around the idea of brainwashing,
but it wasn't just completely unheard of.
The thing is it had never been tried
in a criminal case before.
And the Hearst hired the very famous,
I think already he was a very famous attorney,
F. Lee Bailey, who defended the Boston Strangler.
He was also an OJ's team.
He was just a super famous lawyer and he tried it.
And I think in retrospect,
that's the only thing he possibly could have tried
was to say she was brainwashed, like you said.
Yeah, and they had psychiatrists that came in
to back that up and say, this is very possible
that brought up the stuff about the POWs.
They had multiple psychiatrists come in
and kind of take their side.
And then as far as the tapes go,
Patty said, you know what, those were scripted.
And I had no choice.
I had to read them as they said.
And if you think they're believable,
it's because I believe that my life depended
on how well of a job I did reading these things.
Right.
And that those tapes were,
I mean, that was the big, big evidence in the trial
was how passionate she was
and how she talked about her love of Willie Wolf
and other psychiatrists for the prosecution came in
and they were like, you know what,
I've listened to these things over and over
and I don't know an actress on earth who could pull this off.
Like she was, if she was reading scripted stuff,
it surely doesn't sound that way to me.
Right.
And she also did not,
she literally did not help her case.
When she was arrested,
she put down as her occupation, Urban Guerrilla.
She was, you know, she was like throwing like,
fight the power fists.
Anytime somebody took a picture of her,
she was very much like not the, oh my God,
I'm glad to be freed kind of thing that you would expect.
And I think that the public wanted to see.
And then also when she took the stand,
I can't believe.
I can't believe she did that.
I cannot believe it either.
But she took the stand on cross-examination.
She pled the fifth 42 times.
Yeah.
The public does not really trust people
who plead the fifth, especially 42 times,
especially if they're supposed to be a kidnapped victim.
So there was a lot that the prosecution
had going for them in that sense.
And then the defense just basically had brainwashed,
she's brainwashed.
One of the things they said was like she was raped.
She was raped by these men.
So of course, like she feared them.
They threatened her life.
Of course she feared them.
And apparently, I guess the prosecution got her to say
that no, she didn't love Willie Wolf.
By the way, she never saw Steven Wheat again
as far as I could tell.
She didn't want to see him.
She didn't get back together with him.
And I don't think they ever saw each other again,
even though he was speaking to the press
the whole time and being very supportive.
But she was like, now I'm moving on.
But the prosecution got her to say,
you said you love Willie Wolf, did you love him?
And she said, no, I hated him.
And then they produced this thing that is another,
I think another mark that really stands against her
in the mind of a lot of people,
which is little statue that she'd gotten
from Willie Wolf, right?
Yeah, they pull this out and they're like,
then what is this?
Is this not in fact a gift from your supposed captor
and supposed rapist Willie Wolf?
Why would you keep this gift still?
And her reply was the opposite of my famous saying.
She said, I like art.
Yeah.
Instead of I hate art.
Yeah.
And she said, you know, I'm an art history student
and I like art.
And you know, if you're trying to move the needle
for a jury, that's not the way to do it.
Well, one of the women jurors on the case said
like no woman would carry around a love trinket
from a man who raped her
and that that really ruined her credibility.
At the same time though,
Jeffrey Tubin, who wrote a book on this, American heiress.
Yes, but he still had a legitimate book,
this is probably what he's done since then.
I know, I just, it's hard not to.
I know, I know, I know.
He made a really good point though
that I think it is worth repeating here.
And that is that regardless of, you know,
maybe how she ended up feeling about Willie Wolf
or anybody that were her captors,
she was kept in a closet for 57 days.
And anyone who had sex with her in that closet raped her
that there's no chance for that to have been consensual.
No matter how she behaved during that was, that was rape.
And then she was raped and that should be, you know,
it shouldn't be brushed aside,
no matter, you know, how she came to feel about Willie Wolf.
And I think that's definitely a good point to remember.
Yeah, I mean, if that entire story is true
about being kept in the closet and, you know,
most of this testimony comes from her.
And there are still people that think
she cooked up this entire thing.
And you know what?
She just wanted to get out of her engagement
to Steve Weed to begin with.
And that's what she orchestrated.
Oh, that's such a conspiracy theory.
Are people saying that?
I'm sure they are, but really you came, oh, okay.
No, I was literally making a joke.
If you see, if you see though, like footage of Steve Weed,
he's the kind that somebody would do that
to get out of a relationship with them.
Stay to kidnapping?
I'm sorry, Steve and Weed.
I'm sure you're super nice, but yeah.
Just to get out of an engagement with Steve.
I'm just breaking off the engagement.
Cause he seems like such a nice guy.
It'll only take a few years.
Right.
One person has to die, I'm sorry, but.
Oh boy.
So she, on March 20th, 1976, 22 years old, by the way,
I don't think that has really, you know,
may have hit home to our listeners.
She's still just a kid.
Yeah.
She was sentenced to seven years in prison
for robbing that bank.
She served 22 months of that,
near San Francisco at Pleasanton Prison.
And you mentioned Jimmy Carter earlier,
and we put a pin in that, and I'm sure people are like,
what does Jimmy Carter have to do with any of this?
He commuted her sentence.
It was very controversial at the time.
He said that he fully believed her that she was a victim
and would not have done any of this
had she not been brainwashed and kidnapped and brainwashed.
And they said, what about Stevie Weed?
And he was like, I don't know who that is.
And he was just a big supporter of her.
And he eventually actually helped persuade Bill Clinton
to pardon her in 2001.
He did.
He granted her, he commuted her sentence.
So she was let out after 22 months,
but it was Clinton who pardoned her.
And I said earlier that, you know,
Carter I think had the most sensible opinion
of the whole thing and it was simply
that had she not been kidnapped by the SLA
and forced into these, you know, a life of crime basically,
she otherwise would never have engaged
in any of those criminal acts.
Like she was, her life was not in any way,
shape, or form on a trajectory to robbing banks.
She was just going to end up being kind of
a rich art history person.
Yeah.
So you're going to collect in by expensive art probably.
But yeah, basically, which, you know,
like that was going to be your contribution to the world,
have some kids and be very, very wealthy.
She was not going to go rob banks.
And the SLA forced her to do that,
forced her into that life,
even if they didn't force her to rob banks.
The thing is though, is that still leaves dangling.
There's a big blank space after that sentence.
And that is, but she still robbed the banks.
And it does seem like she did it from her own volition.
And I mean, anybody who was 19 can imagine
what it must have been like to be a 19 or early 20 year old.
Shooting up a storefront to free a couple of friends.
You know, as reckless, as dangerous, as murderous,
as unjustifiable and indefensible as that is,
it also must have been probably the most thrilling moment
of Patty Hurst's entire life to this day.
Well, of course it was because
shockingly she led a pretty low key life
for many, many years after this.
She got out of prison.
She married a former cop.
His name was Bernard Shaw, not the composer,
but he was her bodyguard.
He was moonlighting once he was out on bail as a bodyguard.
Had a couple of kids, raised their kids in Connecticut
and lived a really quiet life until 1981.
Couple of years after that,
she published her memoir, like you said,
which we read in our fifth grade reading class.
Mrs. Shallow's Clive. Every secret thing.
And then she kind of was very public,
but not, she was public in the way that,
I'm not saying she should have shame,
but shamelessly public, going on TV shows,
plugging her book, talking about her memoirs,
talking about what happened,
budding up with maybe the weirdest thing
in this whole story, budding up with John Waters
and starring in four of his movies.
Including Cry Baby.
Yeah, I mean, she was in a bunch of them.
She was in Serial Mom.
Yeah, I remember when I saw her in these movies thinking,
is that Patty Hearst, Patty Hearst?
And it totally was.
I think this was before the internet when I saw these.
So I read a newspaper article or something confirming that.
I was like, all right, I guess that's what she's doing now.
Were you in a van waiting for your accomplices
while you read that newspaper article?
No, it was a very strange time though.
And then there were a couple of more cases in the late 90s.
The FBI captured this woman.
She was a SLA fugitive named Kathleen Solia.
She was living, she managed to get out
and live a very quiet life with Sarah Jane Olson.
She's basically like Homer Simpson's mom.
Yeah, also a wife and mother in Connecticut.
And she was arrested for a car bombing carried out in 75.
Actually, I think the weirdest part of the story is,
is that her daughter ended up
being a contestant on American Idol.
Is that right?
That's a little weird.
I don't know if that's starring in John Waters movies,
level weird, but it's definitely,
that's a great little lanyard.
It's a nice little tidbit.
Her daughters though, when they were questioned about this,
were like, you know, this was Berkeley in the 70s.
Like it was kind of not a big deal.
Everybody was blowing stuff up.
That was kind of their attitude, it was interesting.
It is interesting.
I've got a little detail I turned up
that I hadn't seen anywhere else,
but it was from the recollections of one of the FBI agents
who arrested Patty Hearst finally.
And they said, get this man.
She was on the run with another SLA member,
Wendy Yoshimura.
And when the agents came up these back stairs
to this house where she and Wendy were hiding out,
they were sitting at the kitchen table.
And the agents came in with their guns drawn
and Wendy Yoshimura had both hands on the table
and did everything those FBI agents said.
Patty Hearst jumped up and ran to the front room.
And apparently the FBI agent said, you know,
get back here, we're gonna shoot Wendy or something like that.
They said that they couldn't guarantee Wendy's safety
unless Patty came back.
So Patty reluctantly came back into the kitchen
where she was arrested.
But when they went back and searched the house,
in the front room, they found her M1 carbine
and a 12 gauge shotgun.
Wow.
Which really, it's very difficult not to imagine
that she was jumping up to go get her gun
to engage in a gun battle.
Interesting.
That's nuts, man.
Wow, well, so Leah gets found out
as Sarah Jane Olson, like I said, that trial
and then another one.
Remember that bank robbery that we mentioned earlier
when they were on the lamb?
That comes back to haunt her as well.
And there are these two kind of trials popping up
where she has immunity.
If she's gonna come in and testify
and say who the shooter was,
she was gonna say it was Emily Harris.
She was all prepared to testify against them.
And they both, everyone ended up pleading guilty.
And so she didn't have to go to court again.
And she kind of just went back to her life
as Patty Hearst the mom.
In Connecticut.
That's right, very interesting story.
And like we said, we look back now
and I don't think anyone has the clearest picture still
of exactly what happened.
My guess is it might have been a little bit of both.
Yeah, I think there was an initial
brainwashing hostage thing.
But, you know, William Harris later said,
we inadvertently kidnapped a revolutionary freak.
Like she was just, she had a real propensity for it.
Yeah, and they were astounded
by how eagerly she took it on, so.
Well, and this is coming, you gotta remember too,
this is a 19 year old coming off the heels
of being a middle schooler in the late 60s
when all of that's going on.
And, you know, so that was in the public sphere
as in her whole life growing up really,
this radical revolutionary kind of thing
growing up in Northern California near San Francisco.
So yes, she may have been like, hey, this is my chance.
Yeah, and she took it.
Well, that's Patty Hearst everybody.
If you want to know more about it,
there's a lot of ink that's been spilled on her story
and just go down that rabbit hole as deep as you like.
And since I said that, it's time for Listener Man.
I'm curious to read her, or I guess reread her memoir.
Yeah, it's been years, right?
Yeah, it's been many years.
Let me see here.
I'm gonna call this Bavarian Beavers.
Hey guys, wanna take the opportunity
to talk about your recent show on Beavers
to tell you what I have been doing for a few years now.
Between finishing school and starting university,
I did nine months of civil service
in my regional environmental authority.
My main focus besides cleaning up local forest
was taking care of Beavers.
I basically had to maintain live traps
and had to perform sabotage on dams of Beavers,
which flooded fields of local farmers.
I did so on a daily basis since overnight,
the dams were of course restored
by their respective constructors.
This was done in order to softly,
softly force the Beavers to find a new place to live,
which mostly worked after a few months.
Also, two Beavers were caught alive
during my period of service
and were moved to the UK as far as I know
in order to reintroduce them there.
As far as I know, they went to go live on a farm.
They told me. In England.
I learned a lot about these animals during this time
and I was stoked when I saw this episode title pop up.
As usual, he did a great job gathering
and summarizing all the facts and interesting good to knows,
including the weird classification as fish
for religious reasons.
Keep up the great work.
This is from Bavaria, Germany.
And that is from Nico.
Thanks, Nico.
And Nico says, Chuck hats off to you
and your German skills.
So Nico's being very kind.
Yeah, what about me, Nico?
What about Josh?
Well, you own Japanese and Spanish.
All right, but Nico didn't say anything about it.
No, she did. That was the PSS.
Okay, good. There you go.
So thanks a lot, Nico, for complimenting both of us.
I appreciate you finally getting to it.
And if you want to be like Nico
and compliment both of us, we love that kind of thing.
You can send us an email to stuffpodcast.ihartradio.com.
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to your favorite shows.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the I Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
About my new podcast and make sure to listen
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the I Heart
Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts.