Stuff You Should Know - The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti
Episode Date: March 12, 2019The trial of Sacco and Vanzetti, two anarchists accused of murder, was one of the first "crimes of the century." But did they do it? To this day there is speculation that they did not. Learn all about... this famous case in today's episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant,
and there's guest producer Josh over there.
So you put the three of us together,
and we're gonna get a little true crime history on ya
with the trial of Sacco and Benzetti.
Yeah, these guys, I mean, a little backstory on,
I guess the time, we're talking about the 1920s
in the United States.
We're talking about two gentlemen that were both anarchists,
that were both Italian immigrants,
and both supposedly followers of this really notable
anarchist named Luigi Galliani,
who this guy was sort of an anarchist leader.
He put out an anarchist rag.
He was called for violence.
He has a history of authorizing bombings,
assassination attempts, like really tough stuff.
And so this is who supposedly Sacco and Benzetti were,
I guess by association advocating, advocating?
Sure, advocating for this type of violence themselves
as immigrant anarchists.
Do you remember in our anarchism episode,
like during this period, in like a 10 year period,
anarchists assassinated like five or six major heads
of state around the world, including McKinley
in the United States.
It was a big deal.
It was a big deal.
And I mean, there was also a struggle going on
for the soul of America.
Were we gonna be socialists?
Were we gonna be capitalists?
Should we just go with anarchism?
There was a lot of debate over which economy
we should go with or what politics we should go with.
And there was something of a red scare
because communism was on the table too.
There was a red scare at the time too.
So it wasn't like the kind of time you would walk around
like, yeah, I'm an anarchist.
No.
Get on board, you know?
But, and at the same time, if you weren't an anarchist,
you're probably scared of anarchists
because they would bomb stuff
and they were well known for it too.
Yeah, so I mean, this is not just the United States.
Like all over the world, there were political radicals
that was violence from anarchy and riots.
And like you said, people trying to take down
like politicians or judges that were deporting
at least in the United States,
deporting immigrant anarchists back to their home countries
like as quickly as they could root them out basically.
Right, right.
So this is sort of the stage in the early 1920s.
And I guess we should hop in the way back machine.
Oh, yes, let's.
And head on over to Bastantown.
Okay.
That's Boston, by the way.
Yeah, no, I know.
It doesn't matter if I know,
just make sure the way back machine knows.
Oh, the way back machine knows.
It can read my silly accents.
So here we are.
It's 1920 around Boston.
Actually, we're not in Boston proper.
We're about 10 miles south in a little town of Braintree.
Yeah, which is no.
These days would be Boston proper.
So, I mean, you know.
Yeah, it's like the Metro Boston area, right?
Sure.
And Braintree was known as a shoe manufacturing center.
It had more than one shoe company,
which meant it was a shoe manufacturing center.
And on this particular day in April of 1920,
I think it was April 15th, right?
Correct.
In Braintree, there was a dude named Shelly Neal
who was an agent for the American Express Company.
And the function I got of Shelly Neal
was that he was kind of like a Brinks armed guard.
Yeah, like a courier for money.
And not just some money, like a lot of money.
On this day from the 918 AM train from Boston,
Shelly Neal went to the Braintree train depot
and picked up $30,000, 30 grand in cash,
which is about $427,000 in 2018 money.
Yeah, he did this every week.
Right.
He picked it up and he took it back to his office
and he opened up a metal box
and inside it had two canvas bags.
And each was the payroll for one of the two shoe companies
that he picked up money for.
One of which was called Slater and Morrell.
I'm not sure what the other one was.
Maybe it was 3K, definitely Slater and Morrell
was one of them.
The other was New Balance.
Okay.
So Slater and Morrell and New Balance
were the ones whose payroll he had on him that day.
Yeah, and it's so amazing
how that stuff used to work back then.
Like how payroll was just so lo-fi.
It would literally be a huge amount of cash
delivered in a box that he would take to an office
and someone would sit there and stuff cash
into envelopes to then go to like a factory
to pay off employees, not pay off,
but to pay them their legit check from working.
You didn't see nothing this week.
This is for all the shoe leather.
All right.
So that's how it worked back then.
And so this is what he was doing.
It's just like any other Thursday.
However, on this day, as he went in,
he noticed a car out front that he had not seen before,
this big car that had like these little curtains
on the inside windows that were pulled shut.
And other people in Braintree later on
would report seeing that car kind of tooling around
and they said, it looks like it's got like four or five
men inside that look Italian.
And they were just sort of driving around Braintree,
which I guess to raise some suspicions.
Sure, because again, if you were Italian,
you may have been associated with anarchists
who were associated with bomb throwing.
So four or five of them kind of aimlessly driving
around the town of Braintree, this little tiny town,
I'm sure aroused some suspicions and definitely did
because there were a lot of people who later on
said that they saw this car driving around
between 9 a.m. and 12 p.m.
That's right.
So about three that afternoon,
here's what happened next for payroll.
These people had to get these envelopes.
So what's known as a pay master.
And this is also sort of part of the arm guard thing
because the pay master A has a gun
and then has a guard with a gun.
This guy's name was Freddie Parmenter
and the guard was Alessandro Beradelli.
And so they stopped by, they pick up all these envelopes,
they're going down to the factory,
they're gonna pay everybody.
And all of a sudden, bam, bam, bam, bam, gunfire
and mayhem ensues.
I didn't realize there was gonna be special effects
in this episode.
Hey, well, you know, I tried to break it.
So you did, man, it has been brought in.
So these guys are on Pearl Street
when these shots suddenly just ring out
and the first guy's hit, Beradelli's hit,
and he goes down, I believe it was Beradelli
who was hit first.
Oh no, he wasn't hit, it was Parmenter who was hit.
Beradelli is on the ground and he has lost his gun
and he's being approached by a man with a gun on him.
And Beradelli apparently is begged for his life
to no avail.
The man shoots him in the chest at least once
and the bullet punctures his lungs.
One of his major arteries to his heart
and then lodges itself in its hip
to be fished out later on by a coroner
and used in the case against Sacco and Vanzetti.
The other guy, Parmenter, the pain master,
he gets hit a few times,
saggers across the street and collapses.
And this car, a blue touring car,
which is, you know, a big sedan that you would think of today,
like a touring, we'll call it a Lincoln Town car
even though that's not at all what it was.
That blue car that had been seen kind of driving around,
right, that's another way to put it, it was a Buick.
But the same one that had been seen driving slowly
around Braintree all morning suddenly pulls up
and the guys who had shot these two men
and taken the money, about $15,000,
hopped in and it drove off and everyone lost sight of it.
Yeah, and very importantly,
the man who shot Baradelli had a hat, a felt cap on.
Right.
So just remember that little fact.
There were eyewitnesses all over the place.
It's not like no one saw this happen.
Like dozens of people saw this.
Yeah, it was a daring daylight robbery
at three o'clock in the afternoon.
Daring do.
Right.
A man named Jimmy Bostock was one of the witnesses.
Apparently Baradelli like died in his arms
and like all people in the 1920s didn't know any better.
He immediately started messing with the crime scene,
started picking up gun shells.
Another guy came by and picked up the hat
and they just didn't know any better at the time, I guess.
Right.
So the crime scene has been totally messed up
but the cops show up.
Cause again, this is a big deal.
This is a small town and something close to $220,000
which has just been stolen
when two men murdered for it in this little tiny town.
So it was a big deal.
And the cops showed up
and probably the first thing they said was anarchists.
Maybe.
I'll bet that's kind of what they would say,
I think at the time.
Yeah.
Should we take a break?
Geez, okay, already.
Yeah, I think so.
I mean, this falls into acts and that's definitely act one.
Okay.
So dead men in the street, the cops are on the scene.
Message for you.
And scene.
And scene.
And scene.
And scene.
And scene.
On the podcast, Pay Dude, the 90s called
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["Supposition Down"]
Is it and scene or end scene, Chuck?
We've talked about this a lot.
And scene.
So not end scene.
Nope.
Because it makes sense, you know.
You do end the scene.
Right.
By saying end scene.
So the cops have shown up.
They're investigating the place.
They're not really finding anything aside
from what the witnesses have already kind of gathered up
and are now holding out to them in their outstretched palms.
Like, here's your evidence, copper.
But the car is searched for all over.
And it's not found.
It just totally disappears for a couple of days.
And it turns up a couple of days later in the woods,
I believe, south of Braintree in a place called Bridgewater,
which is a little even further south from Boston.
I think it's another like 10 or so miles down south
from Braintree.
Right.
I think Bridgewater only had seven Dunkin' Donuts.
So it was a small town.
Right.
And so remember when I said the cops were probably like anarchists.
I knew it.
There was another daylight robbery of payroll.
And I found somewhere that it said it was successful.
I found somewhere else that it was unsuccessful.
But both of them agreed there had been no loss of life
whatsoever.
But it was similar enough.
And it had happened like two years or a year before.
It was similar enough that the cops immediately
thought of the people they'd been thinking of
for this earlier crime.
They thought this is clearly the work of the same people.
Yeah.
And when they found this car in the woods, very importantly,
the license plates had been ripped off.
And there were other tire tracks nearby.
So it seemed pretty obvious that they ditched this car,
get in another one.
The officer on the scene said, Maddie,
I think this is the car from the Braintree meta.
All I can think of is Jeremy Renner in the town.
Sure.
That's what I think of when I think Boston.
Yeah.
Everyone thinks of that.
Sure.
So another thing's going on in parallel.
So we need to set this up.
Also on April 15th, which is the day of those murders,
there was a guy named Ferruccio Cochi.
And he lived in Bridgewater.
He was an anarchist.
He was being deported.
So he quits his job to be deported,
does not show up to be deported.
He calls the immigration service after that on the 16th
and said, you know, my wife is a sick.
So I have to tend to her.
And they said.
We didn't get so much email about it.
Am I going to get in trouble for that now?
No, you won't get in trouble.
Everybody loves your Italian accent.
Please tell me you can still do an Italian accent, right?
I think so.
We're going to find out after this episode.
Because I'm just doing the accent.
Sure.
I'm not saying like they're all mobsters because like, you know,
the Sopranos got in trouble for that.
Oh, yeah.
Did they say all Italians were mobsters?
No, but I mean, I remember there just being hay about
from the Italian-American community, like why is it
every time in movies we're just mobsters?
Oh, and I could see that, you know?
Sure.
I mean, I could see them.
Yeah, but these aren't even mobsters.
No, they're anarchists.
Right.
So he's being deported.
He doesn't go.
He calls them and says, my wife is sick.
And they said, fine.
We're going to check out your story, though.
They found that his wife was not sick.
And that all of a sudden he's saying, OK, it's fine, actually.
I'm really ready to go like now.
Yeah, come on.
Come on.
Let's go.
Can you get me out of the country quickly?
And they're like, well, you should probably like leave
some money with your wife.
He's like, no, no, no, she's good.
So let's just go.
Yeah.
And so they're like, all right, this is a little odd.
Maybe he's involved.
Can I paint the scene a little bit, though?
I want to go back over and highlight two things
that you've mentioned so far.
Sure.
One, this was a time where to cover up a crime,
all you had to do was remove the license
plates on the car you ditched.
That was it.
You just confounded the cops forever.
Well, that helped.
And then secondly, if you were to be deported,
all you had to do was not show up,
but then call them the next day and say your wife was sick.
And immigration and naturalization would say, sure.
No problem.
Well, no, they investigated immediately.
OK.
But I'm just saying, like, this is, things have changed.
It's had, I think, is what I'm trying to say.
Hold on, let me say, Josh, what are you trying to say?
You trying to say that?
Yeah, I'm trying to say that.
OK, cool.
Yes, that's exactly what I'm trying to say.
It's weird because you looked on both of your shoulders
at the devil and the angel.
They won't shut up, Chuck.
So they summarize, you know, it's all coming together.
This guy's acting weird.
Well, he's also, he's also, Chuck, one of those people
that they liked for that robbery the year before,
which is one of the reasons why they had their intent up
about this guy in the first place.
Right.
So he's a suspect.
The cops go to specifically Michael Stewart, police chief,
said, I'm going to go back to his house.
I'm going to see what else I can find out from this guy.
He shows up and there's a dude there named Mike Boda.
He says, yeah, sure, you can look around.
You can look in the house, go back and look in the garage.
Two-car garage, shed, no problem.
I usually have my car there.
It's in Overland, but it's in the shop getting repaired.
And Stewart goes out there and it's like, all right,
so here's where the Overland parks.
But there's some really big tire tracks
next to the Overland and the second stall
that look like they would probably fit this large Buick that
was so mysteriously kind of tooling around
around the time of this murder.
Right.
And this cop, Stewart goes, hmm, I'm
going to make a mental note of that.
And that's what he did.
He asked about the other car.
I don't know if you said, Boda said that his other car was
at the garage being repaired.
Correct.
So Stewart, who's the police chief of Bridgewater,
I get the impression that he was kind of new.
There was another one who kind of factors into this case
tangentially later on, who was the former police chief.
So I get the impression that Michael Stewart was fairly new.
But he's investigating this case.
He likes Koachi.
He's now met Mike Boda, who he's suspicious of too.
He goes back to talk to Boda some more to this place where
Koachi lived as Boda's roommate.
I guess away from his wife and kids,
I'm not sure why Koachi was renting this place.
Are we going with Koachi now?
Yeah, I'm pretty sure that's it.
I took Italian in college and I'm almost 100% sure it's Koachi.
Okay.
Do you remember from our dyslexia episode
where Italian is extremely easy to learn
because there's just very few ways to write things,
to write the phonemes?
One of the reasons it is easy is because it's kind of like
Polish, it's in most cases, it's actually easier than
Polish, but it's pronounced just like it's spelled,
except for the C-I is a ch sound.
Okay.
So Koachi.
Okay.
Okay, all right.
That was your Italian lesson.
I appreciate that after all these years.
The other lesson, Chuck, not all Italians
or Italian Americans are mobsters.
That's your other Italian lesson.
No.
Okay.
I've known a bunch of Italian Americans
and none of them were mobsters.
Bam.
There you go.
So police chief Stewart goes back to talk to Boda
and things get really suspicious too, don't they?
Because he shows up and knocks on the door
and then the door just swings open onto an empty apartment.
And Stewart spends about 15 minutes going,
Boda, Mr. Boda, hello Mr. Boda.
And he finally takes a couple of steps in
and realizes Boda's gone.
That's right.
So he goes by the garage where the guy said
that his car was in the shop, goes over there,
the car's still there, so that checked out.
And he told the owner, whose name was Simon Johnson,
he said, hey, if anyone comes to get this car,
just give us a call.
And the guy says, mental note, call co-ops
if someone comes to get this car.
Jeremy Renner.
So on May 5th, this is what, a couple of weeks later,
a man comes to the door and this is it,
I believe this is, it says nine o'clock,
but that's at night, right?
Yeah, I couldn't tell at first and then-
It feels like night.
Yeah, it says also that the wife is illuminated
by a motorcycle headlight.
So I would guess at night, yeah.
All right, so unless it's very dark in the morning, right?
So at nine o'clock at night,
this guy shows up to the owners of the garage's door,
knocks on the door, his young wife answers.
The guy says that he's Mike Boda.
I'm here to pick up my car, that overland over there.
And the owner of the garage comes and tells his wife
and he says, go call the police.
We don't have a phone, go next door, call the cops.
She leaves out the back door and is caught, like you said,
there's this motorcycle sitting outside.
She also sees with a sidecar,
also sees a couple of guys that she said
were speaking Italian, kind of hanging around.
So it's all sort of adding up at this point
to something fishy.
Yeah, so I guess the fact that Simon Johnson,
the shop owner, the mechanic was stalling,
made Boda a little uneasy.
Sure.
So he took off without the car, right?
Yeah, he jumped in the sidecar and was out of there.
Okay, here's where things get super critical
for a pair of guys named Sacco and Vanzetti.
There were two other,
those two other guys that Ruth Johnson,
Simon Johnson, the mechanic's wife,
said she saw hanging out,
waiting for Mike Boda to get his car.
They split too.
Now they're suddenly like on foot.
There's no motorcycle or car for them.
So they have to leave on foot.
So they walk over toward the direction
of the Bridgewater rail line.
And she says that she saw them get on the train
or at least go toward the train station.
Or no, the rail car.
So I think it might have been
like a streetcar kind of thing.
So somehow Chief Stewart gets word of this.
I think he shows up, he gets word of this
and he calls the police chief in the next town over
in Brockton and says,
hey, there's gonna be a pair of Italian guys
on the streetcar when the streetcar stops
or the rail car stops in your town, get them.
They are wanted for questioning and a murder robbery.
And so the Brockton police board the train
when it arrives in Brockton.
And there are two Italian men sitting there.
And the two men's names were Nicola Sacco
and Bartolomeo Vanzetti.
And they just happen to be Italian
and they just happen to be anarchists
and they both happen to be strapped
when the cops came on the rail car
and started asking them questions.
Yeah, Sacco had a 32 Colt in Vansity,
had a 38 Harrington and Richardson,
which very uniquely had five chambers instead of six.
It's very unusual.
It seems unique, yeah.
Yeah, I don't even know how that works.
I would have to see this kind of revolver
because six is a nice even number for a round thing.
I don't get it, but regardless.
Yeah, no one ever says like,
don't point that five-shooter at me.
It's always six-shooter, you know?
Yeah, that's weird.
Although maybe a five-shooter is what they're talking about
when they call it a P-shooter.
No, let's know what they mean.
But it was the 1920s
and there were all kinds of weird guns back then.
Right, okay, so these two Italian immigrants
who were anarchists and who were carrying guns
had one other big problem.
They were giving some pretty weak and ever-evolving stories
and answer to the questions that the cops were asking them.
They got hauled into the police station,
I believe in Bridgewater or Braintree.
Do you know which one it was?
I think it was Braintree actually.
They got taken to Braintree
because it was Stuart who was investigating them.
So they get taken to Braintree
and police chief Stuart questions them,
but then so too does the chief prosecutor for the area,
a guy named Frederick Katzman
who would play an enormous role in this case as well.
Yeah, so he was the DA
and I think the key fact that really sold him was
he found out that on April 15th
on the day of these murders,
Sokka was not at work at the 3K shoe factory.
Right.
And he said, you know what, that's enough for me.
We have no real evidence or anything else,
but you are Italian American anarchists.
You weren't at work that day,
so let's go ahead and haul you in here.
Right, because yeah, we left off the fact
that they found like anarchist pamphlets on the men
when they took them off the train.
So there was a lot against them,
going against them at this point,
just from the outside of this,
but you kind of touched on it.
All of this is very, very circumstantial.
Yeah, so right away,
the anarchists of the area come on board.
They formed the Sacco-Vinceti Defense Committee
and one of their leaders,
one of the anarchist leaders in the area named Carlo Tresca
said, all right, let's hire this lawyer from California.
This guy's a radical.
He's gonna lead our defense.
And more comes on board.
Fred Moran's like, here's the way we're gonna do this,
is let's get everyone worked up,
like not only in this area,
but all over the world,
let's get radicals and let's get anarchists
and let's get union members.
Let's paint these guys.
It's just like hard-working blue-collar union dudes.
And let's get people all over the world
paying attention to what's going on over here.
Yes, which is a very common tactic still in use today.
Just turn public sentiment against the government
and the prosecutors in their case
and basically paint it like Sacco-Vinceti
where just a couple of normal dudes
who are being railroaded for political reasons
and probably out of a certain amount of xenophobia as well.
Sure, so let's take a break.
The trial opens in May of 1921 with Judge Webster Thayer
and we'll be back with what happens next right after this.
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 gonna 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.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars,
friends and non-stop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting frosted tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper
because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
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.
Oh God.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS because
I'll be there for you.
Oh man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
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Learning stuff is fun with Josh and Chuck.
Stuff you should know.
And Chuck, before we get back into it,
I want to give a shout out to Doug Linder, Douglas Linder,
who's a law professor and historian who wrote a paper
that we used as a source that was pretty handy,
pretty good stuff.
Yeah, law professors, I mean,
there's a lot of good information out here on this,
but you get a law professor on the typewriter
and they're going to condense it
into a nice readable, workable document.
That's right.
That's what they do.
They're very good at that.
Yes.
So all right, trials underway.
Like I said before, Judge Webster Thayer
proceeds over this trial.
Katzman, that's the DA that's prosecuting.
He has got a lot of circumstantial evidence.
He has eyewitnesses, but not really
a lot of hard evidence going on.
Right.
It's sort of a tough case for him to solidly prove.
Yeah, and that was another reason
why Fred Moore was able to run around drumming up
public sentiment, not just in the United States
or even just Boston or Massachusetts, but around the world.
That Sacco and Vanzetti were being railroaded
is that the evidence against them was really, really weak.
The eyewitness testimony was super...
If you had the luxury, like historians like Douglas Linder
have had to compare the original notes
or the original statements made by eyewitnesses
against the types of statements they made in court.
The statements they made in court
were much more certain, much more sure.
And this was after a year of reading the newspaper
and being exposed to pictures of Sacco and Vanzetti.
So when they see Sacco and Vanzetti in the courtroom,
they're like, yes, I saw that man holding that gun.
And he was the one that pulled the trigger.
The thing is there was not one witness,
but there were witnesses who placed both of them
at the crime scene or at least in the Buick
around town on that day.
But there was not one single witness
who placed both of them there.
That's just the eyewitnesses.
They also had the other big piece of circumstantial evidence
were the guns that they were found with.
And they used ballistic experts to come in and say,
yes, this bullet came from this gun.
But again, looking at it with history,
the benefit of history, this was at a time
when ballistics comparison was just beginning to come around.
And the people that they employed as ballistics experts
were self-taught amateurs who just basically
had an interest in this field.
We're in no way, shape, or form, genuine experts.
Because you could make a case, there was no such thing
as a genuine ballistics comparison expert at the time.
It was too new as far as forensic goes.
Yeah, so on the defense side, immediately they say,
those guys weren't even in brain tree.
Saka was in Boston, Vincetti was in Plymouth.
The both sides, it's interesting to look back on this trial
because both the prosecution and the defense
were like being very hinky with the truth themselves,
influencing people on both sides to testify
kind of behind the scenes.
Fred Moore, the defense attorney trotted out
a bunch of witnesses that say,
no, like Vincetti was definitely in Plymouth.
He's a fishmonger, bought fish from him.
And then later on, it was found out that some of these people,
well, all of them basically were friends of his.
And then some of the people came out even later and said,
yeah, he kind of told me to say this.
But that happened on the prosecution side too.
Yeah, supposedly later on, they would allege
that the prosecutor Ketzman and the chief,
or the lead ballistics or the star ballistics witness
had kind of coordinated the answer
that the ballistics witness would give at trial
and that it would be much more stronger
and much more certain than the actual conclusion
he came to prior to the trial
based on his original ballistics tests.
Yeah, so there's hinkiness on both sides.
Ketzman has this hat and I remember one of the gunmen
definitely had on a gray cap.
So he has this gray cap.
He said, this is Sokko's.
He gets together with an expert behind the scenes
and says, and again with this, like you were saying,
sort of the beginnings of not ballistics in this case,
but just forensics, any kind of forensics.
Yeah, he looked at the hairs in the hat,
got a hair from Sokko and Sokko was like, ow, that hurt.
And he compared him and he said,
yeah, these hairs are identical.
I'm telling you, they're the same hairs.
But Ketzman was like, you know what?
I don't wanna go to court and present this
because this stuff is all new.
They're gonna paint you as unreliable
because no one knows anything about hair comparison yet.
So instead of doing that, he goes to the boss
of the shoe factory, George Kelly, and was like,
have you seen this hat before?
And Kelly said, yes, that's Sokko's hat.
I've seen him wear that hat
and the hole in it is from the nail
that he hangs it on every day
when in fact that was definitely not the case.
No, the previous police chief later testified
that he had actually accidentally punched the hole
in the hat while he was examining it
for any kind of identifying marks.
Which is weird.
He also testified that the hat
had a very questionable provenance,
that it hadn't come into police custody
for 30 hours after the crime.
So he couldn't say, as far as he knew,
it was not found at the crime scene
that it hadn't been secured by the police.
He didn't know exactly where it came from.
And then finally, I read elsewhere in a final twist
and stop me if this sounds familiar.
But they asked Sokko to put the hat on in court
and it was too small for his head.
It didn't fit.
You must have quit.
They did not have quit though.
Well, you just ruined it.
Oh, I'm sorry.
That's okay.
Sorry, everybody.
There's probably a lot of people out there
who have no idea how this is gonna turn out
because if you search on Google, just Sokko and Vanzetti,
one of the suggested questions is,
what is Sokko and Vanzetti?
Not who, what?
It's a nice upper teeth.
Right.
So, I don't know if we mentioned,
but like Sokko had definitely much more evidence against him,
even if it was circumstantial than Vanzetti did.
Yeah, a lot more eyewitnesses, yeah.
For sure.
So, Vanzetti has the thinnest case against him,
but he lied to the cops.
He had that gun, remember?
And on the stand, he said, yeah, actually,
I got that gun just a few days ago,
bought it for four or five bucks.
And they were like, well, you told us
that you bought it four or five years ago for $18.
You said there were six chambers in it and only had five.
And what's going on here?
You're lying to me, Vanzetti.
The whole thing with the gun,
I don't know if we've said or not yet.
The reason why the gun was so suspicious
and was basically like the central piece of evidence
used against Vanzetti is that it was supposedly
the exact same kind of gun that Alessandro Baradelli
had on him when he was killed.
So, the whole idea was that Vanzetti had been
at least at the crime scene, if not one of the killers
who had taken Baradelli's gun after he had killed him
and made off with it,
which would explain why he wasn't very familiar
with the gun and how many chambers it had
and didn't have a very solid story
about where he'd gotten it and how long he'd owned it too.
That was the implication of the whole thing.
And that was basically the, that was it.
That was the crux of the prosecution's case
against Vanzetti.
Vanzetti's big problem was he was sitting next to Sacco
when Sacco got taken off the train
and they had a lot more on Sacco
and they were tried together rather than separately.
Yeah, and Sacco, that ballistics evidence
made a big, big difference in the trial
because they found out for sure that that bullet
that killed Baradelli was definitely fired
from a Colt automatic and your Colt automatic
is what they alleged.
Right.
And well, we'll hold on to that last bit till later
but about what was found out later about that.
But I think even some of the jurors said
that that was really some of the most compelling evidence
against Sacco for us in deciding this case.
Yeah, and again, like they're listening
to forensic evidence from a field that's still in the very,
in its cradle from testimony given by people
who are not experts, but that was, like you said,
the jurors said, this was, that was it for me.
That was what convinced me
was the ballistics evidence basically.
So they go to a jury and they go to deliberations
and just five and a half hours later,
the jury said, guilty is charged.
About six weeks after the trial started, I believe.
Yeah, so it was a big deal, you know,
like Sacco's crying out, I'm innocent
and Italian in the court.
There were like protests all over the world,
like South America, France, Lisbon,
it's just crazy how much this at the time
in the 1920s became an international thing.
And basically they were due for the electric chair.
So people all over the world were protesting,
there were bombings, it was nuts.
Yeah, this is, I mean, this is a time
when labor was unionized.
So you could arouse the sympathy of a lot of people at once
by going to the union hall and saying like, hey,
your brothers in arms over there in America
are being railroaded into a murder rap.
They're gonna be electrocuting the electric chair
for something they didn't commit
simply because of their political beliefs.
How messed up is that?
And you could arouse some people pretty quickly back then
by saying that as opposed to today.
Yeah, for sure.
More immediately starts, the defense attorney
immediately starts filing motions, trying to get
like new trials, he had an assistant named Eugene Lyons
who later would come out and say, man,
like this guy basically would do anything.
He was framing evidence, he was telling witnesses
what to say, like once he had it up in his mind,
that, and keep in mind,
this was like a radical lawyer from California.
He said once he had in mind that these guys were innocent,
he was like, he basically would do anything
to try and get them off.
Yeah, he'd suborn perjury, he'd intimidate witnesses,
he'd do whatever.
If he thought that somebody was being innocently prosecuted,
Fred Moore would stop at nothing to say, yeah,
to get them off.
And this article I think kind of paints
an incomplete picture of Eugene Lyons
and Fred Moore's relationship.
Like Eugene Lyons was also very much an admirer
of Fred Moore too.
Like he considered Fred Moore to have the heart of an artist,
but he had dedicated his life to getting people
who were being steamrolled by the system
or unfairly treated by the courts
out from under these charges.
He was an early civil liberties lawyer basically
is what he was.
Yeah, so none of these motions work,
he files a bunch of them.
We're not gonna detail them all,
but none of them worked.
They were basically all turned down,
Thayer was still the presiding judge,
he was turning down all these things,
then they went to like federal court,
they were turning down motions,
eventually they went to the Supreme Court
and the Supreme Court was like,
why are you asking us about this?
Like this is a state case,
like we don't even do this kind of thing.
Yeah, the court at the time was very much against,
or the majority I should say,
was against applying the federal constitution to state issues,
so they wouldn't get involved.
But I mean, it did go all the way to,
at least petitioning the Supreme Court,
they wouldn't hear it
and they wouldn't stay the execution either.
But he, as much as a lawyer can exhaust petitions
and appeals for clemency and the stay of execution,
Fred Moore did, and then later on,
another defense lawyer named William Thompson
who took over for Fred Moore
after Sacco fired Fred Moore, did the same thing,
like up to the eve, the eve of the execution,
they were relentless in filing appeals with anything,
anything they could get their hands on,
they filed an entire motion for a new trial
based strictly on Judge Thayer's perceived prejudice
against anarchists.
Apparently he did not like anarchists
and he treated Sacco and Vanzetti as such throughout the trial.
And as you're, if you're just watching,
watching this from the outside,
if you're reading about this in the press
and you're already on Sacco and Vanzetti's side,
Judge Thayer turning down motion after motion
after motion after motion looks really bad.
It looks very much like this judge
is bent on railroading these two immigrant anarchists
into an early and unjust death by electric chair.
So the public's sympathies were aroused even further
for Sacco and Vanzetti and that would last for decades
after this trial, a century almost now.
Yeah, so Sacco's in jail and another weird thing happens
while he's in jail in Dedham, D-E-D-H-A-M,
there was another prisoner there
who passed a note on and said,
basically, I'm confessing to this crime.
My name is Celestino Medeiros.
And they were like, all right,
well, let's talk to this guy.
He's confessing to this crime
and saying that Sacco and Vanzetti are innocent.
He said, I was there.
I was with four other guys.
So that kinda checks out as far as the five Italians.
He said we met in Providence at a bar
and we just came up with this plan.
He said there was a guy named Mike, a guy named Bill.
I don't know the other guys.
I was scared.
We switched cars in the woods.
Like all this stuff was sort of making sense.
But it really didn't like, in the end,
there were too many other things that were wrong.
Like he said that they didn't get there till afternoon
and everyone was like, no, that car was there
like maybe between nine a.m. and noon.
He also said that the payroll money was in a bag
when it was in a metal box.
And so there were enough inconsistencies basically
where he wasn't really a major suspect.
Like they considered it.
Thompson tried to use it as the basis for a new trial.
But none of this worked
because Thayer was still kinda calling the shots.
This is before they ran it up the flagpole.
Yeah, but again, news made its way out
into the international press that someone had confessed
and not only confessed,
said that Sacco and Vanzetti weren't there.
And this judge who headed out for Sacco and Vanzetti
refused to even hear this motion to have a new trial.
So it looked bad as well too.
It did.
So it looked bad enough that the governor at the time,
Alvin Fuller said, you know what?
We have to do something here.
There's just too much public pressure going on
from around the world.
He said, so here's what we'll do.
We'll get a three-person advisory committee.
They're gonna investigate this.
He said, hey, you, Lawrence Lowell,
you're the president of Harvard.
You had this thing up.
And then what was known as the Lowell Commission
finally issued a report which said basically,
beyond a reasonable doubt, Sacco is guilty.
And Vanzetti said, on the whole,
it's our opinion that he's also guilty
beyond a reasonable doubt and everyone was like,
well, why'd you say all those other words then?
And they're like, what other words?
Yeah, really kind of a strange final report.
What's funny is in the Boston area,
if they're like, we need somebody smart,
get me the president of Harvard.
Well, yeah, and in the end,
he's like, you are definitely guilty
beyond a reasonable doubt.
And so are you more or less, in our opinion.
Right, no, I know, it's weird and it remains weird,
but apparently years later,
when Lowell was asked about that,
he was saying like, no, that wasn't any indication
that we thought Vanzetti had any kind of innocence to him
or that he wasn't guilty.
I'm not sure exactly how he explained it,
but he basically said, no, that's not what that was.
How interesting.
I don't know what he thought it was.
There was a weird way to put it,
but that was, I think the other thing
that kind of arouses people's interest
in that or suspicion maybe even,
is that that's what a lot of people think,
that Sacco was definitely guilty,
I shouldn't say a lot, but some people,
that Sacco was definitely guilty,
and if anyone was innocent, it was Vanzetti.
So the idea that this Lowell commission
came up with this back in the 20s even is significant,
but yeah, Lowell was like,
no, that's not what we meant by that.
So none of these stays of execution go through.
So they're reunited, they were split up in jail
for many, many years, six years,
and then they were finally reunited
at Charlestown State Prison for execution in April,
and they had like, you wouldn't believe
how many cops they have in this town to cover this thing,
because it was sort of one of the first crimes
of the century, I think,
and people were mad all over the country
and all over the world like we've been talking about.
They didn't know if there were gonna be more bombings.
People were gonna like literally storm the prison
and try and overtake them and free them.
So they had tons and tons of cops everywhere.
Sacco is first to go, and as they are strapping him in,
he's crying out in Italian, long live anarchy,
and then in English, very quietly,
he says, farewell my wife and child and all my friends,
and right when they finally threw the switch,
he screamed out, mama.
And I don't think like that.
No, no.
I'm not making light of it.
I don't think he was like, whoa, mama.
No, I don't think so either.
I think he was calling for his mother.
Yes. Just pretty sad, but also kind of sweet.
Yes.
And then Vanzetti comes in and he's like,
oh, it's my turn, huh?
All right, well, okay.
I want to make sure everybody knows that I am innocent.
So I think it's significant that Sacco was the one
that shouted in the courtroom that he was innocent,
but didn't during his execution,
and Vanzetti didn't say anything in the courtroom,
but during his execution, he's like, I'm innocent.
And not only that, he really turned the screwdriver.
He said, I want to make it known that I forgive all of you
who are about to do this to me.
And he started crying.
Well, the warden started crying when he gave the switch,
he gave the nod to throw the switch
on the electric chair and kill Vanzetti.
Tears flowing everywhere.
Yeah, high drama.
Yes. I'm surprised.
But there's been a movie?
Surely it has been,
but I'll bet it was in like the 70s or something.
We just aren't aware of it.
Like Warren Beatty played Sacco and Vanzetti
in some weird casting.
And somehow Jeremy Renner played all the cops.
Right, exactly.
It's a very strange movie.
So Sacco and Vanzetti are dead.
Like they're dead, the state took their lives,
they executed them.
These conceivably innocent men who were railroaded
to the electric chair on circumstantial evidence
and the testimony of some ballistic experts
who were not experts by anyone's measure.
These men are now dead and the world reacts predictably.
There were riots, six people died in a riot in Germany.
The American Embassy in Paris had already been bombed.
So they brought tanks out on the night of the execution
and surrounded it this time and there were no bombings.
There were riots in Geneva, Switzerland.
This may have been the only time anyone ever
rioted in Geneva, Switzerland.
There were like 5,000 protesters who destroyed everything
that was even passingly American.
And Sacco and Vanzetti went into the history books as
a couple of innocent men who were executed wrongfully
by the state because of their political beliefs.
They were political prisoners who were executed
for their beliefs basically is how most people have come
to see Sacco and Vanzetti.
Yeah, but many years later, a couple of,
a few notable things happened.
In 1941, that gentleman I mentioned earlier,
the Carlo Tresca, the anarchist leader,
a couple of years before he died in the 1940s,
basically said, you know what, Sacco was guilty.
He was a trigger man, but Vanzetti was not guilty.
Other people had heard this same thing from Tresca.
And then in 1961, they had actual ballistics tests done.
And it was concluded that that was in fact a bullet
from Sacco's gun, but people still were saying,
no, you know what, I think that bullet was planted.
So we render that inconclusive.
But I think Doug Linder does a pretty good job
of taking the planted bullet theory, fatal bullet
or bullet number three is what it's called in the trial.
And basically saying, no, this is why
that doesn't really hold up.
And probably the biggest one is
when those ballistics witnesses gave their testimony,
both of the prosecution's star ballistic witnesses said,
yes, I would conclude probably that it came out of this gun
or yes, it's probable or possible or something like that.
They couched their expert opinions
when they gave their testimony.
And if they were part of a conspiracy to frame Sacco
in the planting of this bullet,
they would have given much more forceful testimony,
which in and of itself is a circumstantial evidence
against this planted bullet theory,
but it draws so closely on common sense
that I think it makes sense to me,
it undermines the idea that the bullet was planted.
Yeah, there was another gentleman named Giovanni Gimbera
who said, you know what?
My dad, before he died in 1982,
he told me he was on this team of anarchists
that met after their arrest to get their defense mounted.
And he told me and everyone said basically
that Sacco was guilty and Vanzetti was innocent.
And then weirdly, in 2005, Upton Sinclair,
the very famous author said that he was researching a book
and he was gonna write it,
he was writing a book about this whole thing.
And he met with Fred Moore,
that the radical defense attorney
that mounted the defense for basically most of the case.
And he said, he met with him in a hotel room
and was like, dude, give me the real story.
And he said that Moore told him, yeah, Sacco was guilty
and Vanzetti was innocent.
And I basically came up with this whole defense on my own,
like made all this stuff up.
Yeah, years later it came out that the seven eyewitnesses
for the defense who said that they saw Sacco eating lunch
in Boston at the time of the robbery and brain tree
had all been set up by the defense
or at least by an anarchist group
who had asked them to go perjure themselves.
And yeah, I think that kind of jibes
with the Eugene Lyons quote that like,
if he thought these guys were innocent,
they would do anything to get them off,
including putting witnesses on the stand,
knowing that they were going to lie and telling them to lie.
And this was a letter from Upton Sinclair
based on an interview with Fred Moore.
So it has a lot of teeth,
but the thing, there was another letter
from Upton Sinclair, another quote from Upton Sinclair,
where he said that Fred Moore had confessed to him
that Vanzetti was innocent and he knew he was innocent,
but he was pretty sure Sacco wasn't.
But all he had to do was go to the jury and say,
hey, we all know that you don't have anything on Vanzetti.
There's no reason for you to prosecute this man.
But he knew that if he did that, the jury would be like,
well, you're probably right,
but we're going to come down really hard on Sacco.
So he had this dilemma and he took it to Vanzetti, he said.
And Vanzetti said, you know what?
Try to save Nick, Nicholas Sacco.
He has the wife, he has the child, I don't.
Try to get him off.
So Vanzetti in this retelling by Fred Moore
gave his life on the chance
that Fred Moore could get Sacco off.
Because if he got Sacco off, he'd get Vanzetti off.
If he got Vanzetti off, he would almost surely sink Sacco.
And Vanzetti wouldn't take the opportunity
to be acquitted at the expense of Sacco,
which is pretty amazing.
Amazing.
Yep.
So that's Sacco and Vanzetti, everybody.
That's what a Sacco and Vanzetti is.
Now you know.
I guess one guilty and one innocent.
That's what it sounds like.
That's what it sounds like.
If you want to know more about Sacco and Vanzetti,
go look up Doug Linder.
I believe he has a whole site on True Crime.
And there's plenty of other stuff out there
that we found too on the internet
about Sacco and Vanzetti in their famous trial.
And since I said Sacco and Vanzetti like 80 times,
it's time for Listener Mail.
I'm going to call this response to a short stuff.
Oh boy.
Yeah, right.
Hey guys, your show's one of my favorite podcasts,
so much so that I've taken to listening to it
while I get ready for work.
Whoa, we know that is your sacred time, Nadine.
I just finished the episode on Black Loyalist
and immediately started to write the email.
I'm a Rhode Islander in Nova Scotia for work
and got so excited to hear a little piece
of Nova Scotia's history on there.
I looked into the Loyalist Heritage Museum,
but it only has weekday operation,
so I don't think I'll be able to make it there.
I'll definitely do some exploring of Halifax
though in the coming weeks,
and we'll be on the lookout for more information.
Just wanted to mention on the show
that it was Josh said that Rhode Island
may not have ever had slaves.
Actually, we were the first state to abolish slavery in 1652,
but the law was mostly ignored,
and we ended up with the most slaves
per capita of any colony.
I did not know that.
We also had a pretty booming slave trade
in Newport, Rhode Island,
now known for their gilded aged splendor.
A piece of Rhode Island history,
I'm sure most don't learn in history class
that I wanted to shed light on.
Thanks for always putting out a funny
and informative and entertaining show.
That is from Nadine Greig.
Thanks a lot, Nadine, that was great.
Thanks for listening while you get ready for work.
Hope work's going well up there in Nova Scotia.
Just think spring to you and everybody
up there in Nova Scotia, frankly.
If you wanna get in touch with us,
you can join us on stuffyoushouldknow.com,
check out our social links there,
and you can just send us a good old-fashioned email.
Wrap it up, spank it on the bottom,
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On the podcast, hey dude, the 90s called,
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