Stuff You Should Know - The Chowchilla Bus Kidnapping
Episode Date: February 8, 2022The largest ever kidnapping case in the United States went down in the small town of Chowchilla, CA. Learn all about it today. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.c...omSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody 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 iHeart
radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
believe. You can find in Major League Baseball, International Banks, K-pop groups, even the White
House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject, something completely unbelievable
happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive
on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey everybody, before we get started, you're very happy to announce that Josh and I are in
jeopardy tonight. That's right, we get our very own category, Stuff You Should Know.
We had a hand in shaping the clues, which are all from Stuff You Should Know episodes and that
was super fun to work with them. They were awesome by the way. And then we got to present. They
brought a video crew to Atlanta and jumped in the podcast studio. We're on camera presenting our
very own clues and our very own category. This is definitely a bucket list thing for both of us
and we're super, super excited. So it airs tonight if you are listening to this live on Tuesday,
February 8th. It is the prime time collegiate tournament. So check it out tonight on ABC,
our big, big debut on Jeopardy. Like I said, it was super fun and we're so proud of this.
After all these years, we finally got the call we've been waiting for. So check it out tonight,
everyone. All right, on with the show. Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark and there's
Charles W. Chuck Bryant and Jerry's here. And this is Stuff You Should Know.
You know what I've been singing for two days? Wheels on the bus go round and round.
No, that's pretty good guess though. Chow Chilla.
I can't get it out of my head. The Godzilla song. Now all I'm saying over and over is Chow Chilla.
That's a great song. Do you remember who played it?
Was that like Edgar winner or Johnny winner?
I don't know. I think it's one of the winners. Okay. That's my guess. Okay. The long winters?
Definitely not the long winters. Okay. So Chuck, we're talking about a piece of
Americana true crime history that I had no idea about actually. And I noted though,
because of the timing and because of the location, I hit up my beloved former hippie aunt who lived
in San Francisco at the time and was raising kids and said, do you remember this? She said,
oh yes, I remember this big time. She had kids that were about to be bus riding agents. She was
not very comfortable with this whole jam. Yeah. It provided discomfort. Yeah. Yeah. That's one
way to put it. So did you even say what the name of it was? No. It's the Chow Chilla school bus
kidnapping is what people usually refer to it as. Right. And I think this was a listener who sent
this in and I apologize because I'd usually make note of that so I can shout them out, but I did
not do so in this case. So I missed, I know, but yeah, this was in 1976 and still stands according
to the sources I saw as the largest domestic kidnapping in US history. So my aunt says.
Oh yeah. She also said she was not very into it. Right. I was not very comfortable by that.
This is very disappointing. Yeah. The largest mass kidnapping for ransom. I'm not sure why
that's a qualifier, but it is. I don't know. But yeah, I saw the same thing too that it
still stands and it was like the idea that the most of anything happened to this little town of
Chow Chilla in the San Joaquin Valley about 150 miles southeast of San Francisco in and of itself
is significant, but it was a really terrible, like most of event that happened to this poor little
town as we'll see. All right. So should we just start on July 15th, 1976? Yes. All right. We'll
paint a picture for you. You already mentioned where it was between Fresno and San Francisco
out in a part of California that had some very, very small towns at the time. It's hard to imagine
anywhere in California having 4,600 people living there, but that was the case in the mid-70s
in Chow Chilla and it was the next to the last day of summer school and a bus was being driven
after a, because it was summer school, a little fun day trip to a swimming pool driven by 55-year-old
Ed Ray. Yeah. It was a farmer there in Chow Chilla himself. Apparently, he bailed hay like nobody's
business. That's what I heard. He was married to a woman named Odessa who was a bank teller at the
Bank of America and he was apparently quite happy being a farmer and then driving kids around on
the school bus because even after this, he continued on for another dozen years as the school bus
driver. That's right. He had only dropped off a few kids at this point and there were 19 girls
and seven boys on board from 5 to 14 and notably the 14-year-old because he will factor in pretty
heavily here. His name was Mike Marshall. He wasn't even supposed to be on that bus. He usually got
picked up by his mom, but he got busted the night before with some beer and his mom said,
dear punishment, you got to ride that school bus home tomorrow and after school or after the trip,
apparently, he was like, I don't even know what bus to take because I don't do this, but he knew
who Ray was and so he went to Ed Ray and said, hey man, I don't know if this is my bus or not,
but you take me home and Ed Ray is Ed Ray. He went, sure, off the board. Thank goodness he said that.
Yeah. After that third stop, there were 26 kids and Ed Ray on board and Ed Ray was continuing along
his route and he turned on to a street called Avenue 21 and as he turned on to Avenue 21,
Ed Ray found that there is a white van blocking the road and apparently he started to go around it
and then I guess thought the better of it and wanted to stop and see if they needed any help instead
and when he did, he realized very quickly that he was actually being hijacked because
when you see a man with a long gun and pantyhose on his head, you're probably being hijacked.
That's right. The first thing he saw was this one guy who said, open the door
and then he realized there were a couple of other guys, same MO, I think they had shotguns
with the pantyhose and they said, get in the back. We'll take over the driving from here
and if you watch the movie, did you see any of that? No, no, I haven't yet.
We'll get to it. There's a lifetime movie that came out in the 90s. I think 93,
looks like it was made in 83 somehow, that is on YouTube and I highly recommend scrubbing through
it. I wouldn't say watch the whole thing because I don't know if you'll be able to,
but Carl Maldon. Yeah. Played Ed Ray and I don't know if it's true to the story, but
he gave them a lot of guff about getting out of that driver's seat in the movie.
Oh, really? Yeah, I'm not sure if that happened in real life or not.
It's a Maldon improv if I've ever heard one. Yes, and I'm not getting out of my seat.
Right. My feet hurt. So he eventually did though and they drove, they drove that bus
followed by the van for a bit and then eventually transferred those kids to that van
and another identical van. I think we should point out a few smart things these guys did
along the way because they mainly did dumb things, but the kidnappers did make them jump
from the school bus to the van so they wouldn't leave footprints. Yeah, and in these vans,
they had all the kids and Ed Ray in the vans now, two vans, and they had kind of like decked these
vans out. It was kind of a shoddy manner of adding plywood partitions to keep the kids from getting
out from anybody being able to see and I think they painted over the windows and then they drove
those kids around for 11 hours in the backs of those vans with no potty breaks, no food, no water,
no nothing. They just drove them around for 11 hours in July, the middle of July in the San
Joaquin Valley, pretty mercilessly before finally arriving at the destination, which ultimately was
only 100 miles away from where the kids had been kidnapped. I think they just wanted to
disorient the kids. Yeah, I think that was kind of smart as well because they could have been
11 hours away if they managed to escape or something. One of the girls years later did
say that she saw through a crack that they were up there with the AC going drinking sodas and have
a good old time and the kids and Ed Ray are back there just suffering, just terrified obviously
of what's going on. Right, that was Jennifer Brown Hyde who said that and she's not very happy with
this whole thing. It's still to this day from what I understand. Yeah, as you could imagine.
Finally, at 3.30 a.m. on Friday morning, they were hijacked around after 3.30 p.m. on Thursday.
They finally stopped driving at 3.30 in the morning, Friday morning and they arrive at a rock quarry.
They're in Livermore, California. Apparently again, it's 100 miles away from Chowchilla.
This is what the kidnappers see as the final destination for these kids until they're ransomed
off, until the authorities cough up the money. What they've done is bury a moving van line trailer,
so like a huge moving truck, the trailer part of it. They buried it a total of 12 feet underground
and have covered it with four feet of dirt and they've opened a hole, put a ladder in and told
the kids get down there and Ed Ray too. That's right and as the kids were going down and this
kind of points to the direction of how dumb these guys were and how unprepared they were,
even though it turns out they would have planned this thing for well over a year.
They wrote down their names and their phone numbers and contact and parents names, not
on a clipboard, legal pad, but on the back of a Jack in the Box wrapper.
Then they took apparently some kind of piece of clothing from each kid because the idea was,
once again, is that they have many, many kids that should bring many, many monies and dollar
bills their way. Exactly. The fact that they're kids means that people do anything to keep them
safe. Sure. These guys figure they've got a pretty good payday with 26 kids that they're now holding
hostage in a buried moving van trailer. In the trailer, they had done a little more than they
had in the van. They had peanut butter, Cheerios, some bread down there, some water, but definitely
not enough to keep all those people alive for a very long time. They'd also thought of bathrooms.
They made bathrooms in the wheel wells and they dropped ventilation tubes with some fans to force
air into the van. There was fresh air down there, but not a lot from what I understand.
Yeah, that's right. The one faithful mistake they made was that for their comfort, they included some
old box springs and mattresses and stuff for them to sit on and lay on,
which would end up being their undoing. Should we take a break?
I think we should because now you've got 26 kids buried in a buried trailer right now in
Livermore, California at 3.30 in the morning. Not a good thing to happen.
That's right. So we'll pick up with what's going on in Chalcilla right after this.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new I Heart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The
hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road. Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself,
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And so will my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yep. We know that Michael and a different
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I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was
born, it's been a part of my life. In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're
going to get secondhand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been
trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars,
if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you,
it got weird fast. Tantric curses, major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But
just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world can crash down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. All right. So in Chalcilla,
that bus doesn't come back. So obviously, everyone freaks out pretty quickly.
Yeah. An entire school bus full of kids and a very trusted man about town, like people knew,
you know, it's a small town, people knew Ed Ray. And he was a good guy by all accounts.
They were all missing. So the very first thing that happens is they locate the school bus,
which had been hidden with some bamboo and camouflage, but they did find the bus right away,
which, you know, on one hand, that's good because they have a lead. On the other hand,
that just sends this thing into the stratosphere as far as panic goes.
Sure. Because where are these kids?
Yeah. And I saw also that the bus had basically no clues on it whatsoever. So it's like,
we found the bus, but that doesn't help at all. So yeah, I'm sure they were panicked by that.
So it became pretty clear pretty early on that the Chalcilla sheriff, a guy named Ed Gates,
was going to need some help. So the FBI came to town. Apparently they booked every one of the
hotel rooms in the two hotels in town. They brought like all the state law enforcement
agencies. Like everybody just converged on this town to help out because it made national news
like almost instantaneously. I saw somewhere, Chuck, that like, this is during the bicentennial.
And the bicentennial just been going on and going on and going on. And there was still
bicentennial stuff going on. And this stopped it. Like this kidnapping, news of this kidnapping,
stopped the bicentennial celebration, deadness track. So it was the end of it. Not just for
this town, but for the whole country. Oh yeah. I mean, this went right up to President Ford
at the time. And obviously, Governor Jerry Brown, they threw everything they could at it.
The media descended upon Chalcilla like super fast. And because it's the media,
you start getting these, these terrible stories about like, well, maybe because, you know,
they'd never caught Zodiac. And this was just six or seven years, I think, after the final,
what would end up being the final killing. So they said, maybe it was a Zodiac because
they made reference to wiping, he made reference to wiping out a school bus at one point.
Any tip that came in, they had to follow. There's a shoe on the side of the road.
So they have to track down that tip. There was a novel in 1958 called The Day the Children Vanished,
where the, the gang of people abducted a busload of kids just to bring people out of town and
distract them while they robbed a bank. Ray's wife worked at the bank, like you said. So they
put a bank under surveillance. So there were, you know, it was, I don't know if I would describe
it as a panic because the FBI was on the scene in the state California Bureau investigation. So
they were doing good work, but there was a frenzy of activity.
Yeah. And I think the sheriff had all the help he possibly needed to chase down all these leads
and everything. But from what I saw, there was just not much to go on. They were just dead ends
left and right. And so like there was, there was a, just an enormous amount of panic and terror
in the town. Families started converging on the firehouse, the local firehouse for some reason.
I'm not sure why, but it became like the meeting place for anybody concerned about the fate of
the kids. And this is where news would first be broken. And I think the media probably hung
around there too. So you can only begin to imagine how anxious the parents were and then the town
and then apparently the whole country was, was anxious as well. And so it was really kind of
surprising when all of a sudden at about, I think about 8pm, the next night, Saturday night,
so the kids have been gone for almost the, about 30 hours, 32 hours, something like that at this
point, 32 hours of terror. When all of a sudden at that quarry, some people are working and a man
and a bunch of kids run over. And it turns out to be the kidnapping victims who just present
themselves to a security guard at the quarry in Livermore who gets on the phone and says,
we found them. That's right. Amazing. And you would think, well, pretty sensational story,
but it was very short span of time and all the kids were fine. So why is it really a story?
It's a story because as we'll see the trauma that they suffered emotionally and
how it went down and who these people were who kidnapped them. But before we get to those
dum-dums, let's talk about the escape. They were down there about 12 hours and running out of food
and water. The roof, you know, they had a lot of weight on this moving van roof and those things
aren't super strong. So this thing was, you know, kind of dented in and seemed like it might cave in.
And they were worried that they just couldn't stay there basically. And this is where the story,
I mean, I guess we'll cover both points of view. The immediate history and aftermath,
Ed Ray saved the day because he was the only adult there. So obviously he was the one that
broke those kids out of there. Years later, you know, we mentioned Mike Marshall, the 14-year-old
that wasn't supposed to be on that bus. And he was far and away the oldest kid there
and the most capable to help. Years later, after a while of the story of Ed Ray, he finally came
out and said, oh, you know, Ed Ray's a good guy. I don't want to disparage him. But like,
it was my idea. And I was the one that really led the charge to escape. And he was a big mess,
kind of crying in his hands that they were doomed and dead. And he got on board and helped me. But
it was really me. And the reason I kind of believe that after reading all the accounts is
it took many years for him to kind of come out with this. And it felt like he even felt bad
for saying so. So I think that Mike Marshall, in fact, did lead the charge to escape.
Well, his account was corroborated by another guy named Larry Park, who wrote a book called
The Chow Chilla School Bus Kidnapping, why me? And I don't know if he corroborated in that or in
an interview later on, but he was there and he said that that's true, that that's how it went down.
On the other perspective, the fact that like when Ed Ray lived the rest of his life, he stayed in
Chow Chilla. Most of those people, kids who've been kidnapped with him, stayed in Chow Chilla.
When he was dying, those same kids as adults now came and visited him at his bedside, say goodbye.
There's plenty of opportunity for, you know, little town to start talking, you know,
whispers and that kind of thing. And that doesn't seem to have happened. He seems to have died
considered a hero as well. So my take on a Chuck is that he may have been a gloom and doom about
their prospects to begin with, and maybe it really was Mike Marshall who said, no, we need to try
to get out of here. But even Mike Marshall said after a while, once Mike Marshall started to try,
Ed Ray joined in and started helping and that they might not have been able to get out had a
grown man not been helping them like push against this. Totally agree. I think we park our cars in
the same garage here. Yeah, look at them. They're both heroes. So here's how they got out. They
took those mattresses and stacked them up. And they took apart one of they kind of smashed one
of the box springs, which are framed in wood. And they started using that wood as like a sort of
makeshift crowbar to try and what these guys, kidnappers had done as they put sort of iron plate.
I've seen manhole, but it was some kind of heavy metal plate over the thing, along with two industrial
tractor batteries, which are super heavy. And then dirt. So there's ended up being several
hundred pounds kind of weighing this thing down, this escape hatch. But they were able,
after hours and hours, to finally kind of use that wood to pry open just enough to where they see
starlight and dirt leaking in. And with the help of Ed Ray and in his, you know, manly man strength,
they were able to climb out of there. Mike Marshall was. So Mike Marshall climbed out. And
then from that moment on, and so apparently also Ed Ray was really worried. And I guess Mike Marshall
was too, but it was not a deterrent for him. But they were worried that there was at least one or
more of the kidnappers hanging around with a gun. So there was a good chance in their minds that
they were going to poke through and just be shot on sight. So they were worried about that. And
luckily when Mike Marshall poked his head up, he saw that there was no one around. There's nobody
guarding it. It turned out that they had long since left. So Mike Marshall had Ed Ray start
handing kids up to him. And they got all the kids out and then Ed Ray out. And Mike Marshall ran
into the woods to hide. So in case the kidnappers were still around, they just hadn't seen them yet.
And those kids were intercepted by him. At least Mike Marshall would be able to run away
through the woods and get help. Very smart. But it turned out the kidnappers weren't there. And
somebody luckily was still working at the quarry, I believe, including a security guard,
when Ed Ray and the kids ran up and presented themselves. So that's how, and then I guess
the guy got on the phone and within moments of that happening, the news made it back to Chowchilla
that they'd all been found safe and they were all alive and generally unharmed. And Ed Ray was
basically automatically hailed as a hero. Carl Mulden was certainly portrayed as the hero in
the Lifetime movie. They said, do you have anything you'd like to say? And he said, just that my feet
hurt. And we again want to point out this was 36 hours from beginning to end. But these kids were
didn't know what was going on above ground. They were hot. They were stripping down to their
underwear. Carl Mulden was in his underwear even in the movie. They were running out of food and
water. So as a 5 to 14 year old, I mean, Ed Ray was in hysterics. You think you're gonna die down
there. So it may not have been, you know, a kidnapping that lasted days and weeks, but
that doesn't minimize the trauma that these kids suffered down there, completely not knowing what
was going on above ground and daring to escape, not knowing if they were, all of a sudden that
van was gonna come speeding down the road after like it took a while until they felt safe, I think.
And then on top of that, Chuck, you'd said it kind of earlier, but I think it really bears
repeating, they were really worried that the roof of this thing was going to cave in.
Four feet of dirt on top of a moving van roof that had been in the perpetrator's defense had been
reinforced with lumber, but not very well. That's a lot of weight pushing down on this. And if you
see pictures of what the thing looked like from inside, I could see how they would have been
very nervous that the thing was gonna cave in on them and crush them. Oh yeah. Like the pictures
of it afterward, that roof was in the process of caving in. Yeah. It was very nerve wracking.
Of course, if that would have happened, the dirt probably would have caved in and gotten
some of them dirty and then they could crawl out. I hope so. Hopefully that's how it would have happened.
Who knows. But like I said, they didn't know what was going on down there.
No, they didn't. But now they're free. They're safe and the authorities go get them. The FBI,
the sheriff, everybody's interviewing them. This is hours, more hours for the parents back
in Chilchilla having to wait. And then there was a Greyhound bus that went and got them and brought
them back. It was pretty sweet. There was a lot of donations going on. Like apparently Pacific
Bell donated not just new phones, but new phone lines because there were so many calls being
made by the authorities and by the press, which we'll factor in in a second.
The Greyhound bus lines donated that bus ride, which is worth mentioning. I guess the FBI donated
their time. Who knows. Now they get paid. But there was a lot of banding together to support
this town as they were going through this. And I just thought it was cool. There was a Greyhound
bus that rolled up with everybody inside. And they got off and they're like, I'm never getting on
one of those again. Well, I did kind of wonder. I was like, maybe we should send like a few or
not even vans, send 12 cars. No buses, no vans. That's a good plan. Yeah, yeah, I get what you're
saying. Or just make them walk the 100 miles. And of course, the kids got to go to Disneyland.
That was a big one. They got a heroes welcome. They got a parade. They got to go to Disneyland
and it was as soon as the town went from the saddest place on earth to the happiest place
on earth in the span of 36 hours. Yeah, they had a huge feast. I saw that Ed Ray won a vacation
that he appeared on Hollywood Squares, which is that's peak, that's peak exposure in the mid-76s.
Sure. And Chuck, there's one other little fact that we have to say about this that Robert Goulet
recorded a song called The Ballad of Chowchill Array. It's so obscure, it is not on YouTube.
Some either cursed or blessed soul put it on SoundCloud. Yeah, you can find there's a cover
version on YouTube from another person. I couldn't find that. But I recommend the SoundCloud Goulet
version. It is a product of the 1970s in every way. It's un-listenable. I made it through most of it.
Did you make it through all of it? I made it through most of it and I skipped to the end.
Okay. It was something else because it's sort of like disco, but it's also that very 70s thing
when they wrote these story songs like about the kid jumping off of the Tatchahatchee Bridge or
whatever, not Tatchahatchee, what was it? Billy Joe McAllister. They wrote these songs in the
70s, these weird sort of folk story songs. A ballad. Yeah, but not, I mean a ballad can be
like a love song. These were like folk stories. I thought a ballad meant it was like told a story.
Maybe, but I think of ballads as love songs generally. Sure, but a love story.
Like the Air Supply wrote ballads. They didn't write songs about folk heroes
jumping off of bridges. They should have. Sure. Well, I don't know. There's really nothing Air
Supply could have done to have improved their game. They were pretty much perfect. They still sound
great. One of the best concerts I ever saw in my life was Air Supply in Jacksonville, Florida.
It was amazing. It was amazing. I said it before and I'll say it again. It was like the fabric of
reality was coming apart at the seams and we were right there to witness it. It was so cool.
I didn't know you took ecstasy at that show. That's amazing. I didn't. That was what's so
significant about it. We were totally sober. Yeah. What was it about? Was it just songs
from your childhood or something? No. That was part of it. It was great to hear all those songs
and see them live. It was the chemistry between the two dudes. They still got it after all these
years is really neat to see. What really made it unreal was it almost had the same feeling as a
really energetic tent revival. People were wandering down the aisles. Wow. You could tell
they were moving not necessarily of their own will. They were being drawn toward the stage.
It was bizarre. It was so cool to see people were just out of their minds at this Air Supply
show. I don't think any of them were on Next to See either. I think everybody was like people
were with their moms or with their kids. Sure. It was just a neat, neat show. I'll never forget it
ever. Amazing. Go see Air Supply. I'm sure they're playing a third-rate casino near you.
Probably. They definitely do the work for sure. They supply you with more than air though,
it sounds like. Dude. The guy's voice still is 100% as good as it was in the 70s,
which is pretty significant. I was watching some vids the other day,
live vids of them recently. It's a good thing to do. Sit around. Definitely check out the song
on SoundCloud and listen to as much of it as you can. You won't make it all the way through.
The Ballad of Chow Chilareg. It's so bad. Now I understand why Elvis would shoot the TV whenever
Robert Goulet came on. It was because of that song. Robert Goulet. Is that why he shot the TVs?
Yeah. Apparently no one knows why, but whenever Robert Goulet would come on,
he would shoot his TV. Sometimes he'd get really mad and shoot his toaster or his oven
or whatever. Wow. But he would shoot the TV. That's pretty good. All right. So these kidnappers,
getting back to the story of the Chow Chila school bus kidnapping, these guys were three real
low-rent scumbags who didn't have a penny to their name and were desperate for cash, right?
Right. In some ways, kind of, but they were also all three rich kids if you can put those two
things together. Yeah. They were three rich white kids, one specifically. Uber rich. A literal
trust fund kid. Yeah. He was the ringleader. We're talking about Fred Woods, James, Schoenfeld,
who were 24 and then James's younger brother, Richard, who was 22. But Fred Woods,
Frederick Newhall Woods IV was the ringleader. And I guess you could call it the brains if
there was a brain behind this. But he came from a long line of California money. One of his ancestors
was Henry Mayo Newell, who came in the 1850s to California, part of Santa Clarita's Newell,
California name for him. They made a ton of money in real estate speculation and railroads and then
eventually oil and ranching and had a several hundred million dollar family fortune. Yeah.
I read that they made about 350 million a year in the 70s, a year, just that family doing nothing.
And by the time this guy, Fred Woods IV came along, there were generations of this family
that had never worked a day in their life. So it's not like his parents struck it rich and
they remembered their roots. Like their roots were just gobsmackingly wealthy. That's what they
knew. And apparently, Fred was not particularly paid attention to by his parents and it had
some effects on him. And I saw also that he had trouble living up to his father's expectations for
him. But do nothing blue blood? Yeah. But that his dad's approval meant a lot to him. Yeah.
That's a terrible position for any person to be in. And I feel for him in that respect. And I also
think from what I saw, there's a New York Times article about him while I believe he was still
at large where he said that he's described as a loser in the headline. Yeah. The New York Times
calls him a loser, at least says other people call them a loser in their headline. He was that kind
of person. And again, it was the 70s, but he was also that kind of person. He was the product of
wealthy neglectful parents from what I can tell and also an education system that seems to have
failed them, at least in the grammar portion. Yeah, we'll get to that. He was didn't have a lot of
friends. He never really had a ton of girlfriends. He, which is ironic because he ended up being
married four times, which we'll get to. He lived in a converted apartment in an outbuilding on
the nearly 80 acre estate in Portala Valley where his grandmother lived and his parents lived,
even though they were traveling by themselves usually. He got a job at that rock quarry,
your first indication that they may not have had the smartest plan because his dad owned it.
And he was into cars. He collected cars with his money that the ringleader did. He had dozens
and dozens of cars. His buddy James, who helped him, he was rich too, not that kind of rich,
but his parent, his dad was a podiatrist. So they had doctor money. So they were doing pretty well
as well. And they got into various businesses together. They had a used car business together.
They never did super well. It seemed like any of their business ventures because it seemed like
they weren't super smart. Right. Another good descriptor is that Fred in particular loved his
cars and he loved to shoot the windows out of his cars with his guns, which he also loved.
Yeah, they had a lot of guns between them as well. I mean, it's sort of what you think. There
were these rich kids who weren't paid attention to that could do whatever they wanted and ended up
getting into trouble. Fred had designs on being a film producer and part of the concept for this
kidnapping was the school bus kidnapping in the movie Dirty Harry. And he said, hey, this would
make a great movie too, which we'll get to sort of the bow tie on that later on. But he and James
ended up losing some money, about 30 grand on a housing deal. And depending on the reports you
read, some people say they were desperate for money. But if you talk to James, he said, I wanted
to buy a Ferrari with it because my neighbors had Ferraris and it was to keep up with the Jones
situation. Yeah, that's exactly right. You know, Fred was born into it and I think took money
largely for granted. But James and Richard, but James in particular, really kind of felt
new to the area and didn't fit in because they didn't have as much money. I think their dad was
punching above his weight class socioeconomically in the area that they moved to and his sons kind
of suffered for it because they fell out of place because they just did not have anywhere near the
kind of wealth that their peers had where they now lived. And that seems to have gotten to James
and that was his big motivation. I never saw Fred Woods' motivation, did you?
I mean, I think part of it had to do with that 30 grand in debt, but I think part of it, dude,
is he was a board rich kid in some ways. Right. Like that may have been the reason.
So, yeah. And dumb. I also, yeah, and dumb. Also, I have the impression that
James and Rick Schoenfeld were a lot more moral than Fred Wood was. Oh, yeah.
Apparently in his journal, James wrote at the time that he was worried he was becoming immoral
as they were like really planning this. And he and his brother were both Eagle scouts. So,
I guess it is fair to say that they kind of fell under the influence of Fred Woods,
who had no qualms about this whole thing. He convinced them to give up their qualms as well.
Yeah. I think the last time I'll say the word smart thing that they did was when they were
initially hatching the idea, they said, we saw in the news, California, state of California,
has a $5 billion budget surplus. And we're not going to get money kidnapping a kid or even 26
kids from their parents for their parents to pay ransom. But if they were on a school bus,
then it's the responsibility of the state of California. And they've got all this dough. So,
$5 million is chump change to them. Right. So, if we get them on a school bus,
then they're liable and that's how we're going to get the most money.
Yeah. And so, the calculation that they made was that nobody was going to get hurt. They knew
that they weren't going to physically hurt those kids. Yeah. They knew that California had a budget
surplus, but even more than that, that their insurance company, whoever insured the state,
would end up actually paying that $5 million. And that they were just basically taking $5
million from the state that the state didn't really need and that nobody was going to get hurt.
And then that calculation, it really kind of reveals like how much they did lose any kind
of morality, which is they did, they utterly failed to take into account like the psychological
and emotional damage they were going to inflict on these kids and their parents and the town in
general. Yeah. And I think that's one of the things that, because I think even in the end,
they saw it as like not the biggest deal because no one was hurt and it was really quick. But like
when I saw an eventually spoiler, we'll go ahead and say that the two brothers were eventually
paroled and we'll get to all that. But the news teams in 2015 were like following this guy around
in a parking lot asking him questions and he's just trying to avoid it. And one of them was like,
you do realize that trauma, these kids have still suffered into adulthood. And he just went,
you know, I've heard, so I've heard, and then just like quickly ran away. So even to this day,
they're trying to get them to realize that there was a real impact and the end result was trauma
and PTSD. Yeah. And the reason it did, and it had the impact and part of the problem for
Chowchilla, apparently Chowchilla was just transformed immediately. Like, you know, when,
if you're the victim of a crime, you wonder like, why, why me, especially a random crime?
And this is a random crime perpetrated on a whole town. Yeah. Like Chowchilla was a possible town
among a number of towns in the area that those three traveled to and staked out and just kind
of tried to figure out what the best, the best victim would be for this crime. And they just
settled on Chowchilla. They had no grudges against Chowchilla. They had no ties to Chowchilla.
What the problem was, they didn't care about the people of Chowchilla or how they felt about
their children or what they were going to do to them. It was just a random, they chose them
basically randomly. And Chowchilla is the kind of rural farming town where people don't talk
about their feelings. I think I get the impression that they still think that that's weak. It shows
a sign of weakness. And so I don't really have the impression that the town has ever really
processed this and that they've tried to forget. And then there's a lot of problems among the
victims who are now in their like fifties that have never really been resolved or worked out
because the town just tried to carry on as if it never happened, basically from the get-go.
Oh yeah. I mean, some of them had very hard luck stories getting into drugs, eventually getting
better and going through rehab and treatment and writing books about it. Others say they
don't trust people. They suffered nightmares for years. Some continue to. Others have said that
they don't even really remember much of what happened. I imagine if you're five years old,
you're not going to remember as much as a 12-year-old, obviously. So depending on your age
group, you may have suffered some more obvious lasting damage, but they were all damaged.
The way these guys got caught is, well, I guess let's tell a little bit of that story.
During the investigation, one thing they found, and we'll put this in the dumb column,
on the property of where Fred lived, they found a plan written out that said, at the top, plan.
It didn't say kidnapping plan. It didn't even capitalize the P.
Yeah, they wrote it out in pen and they had a lot of ideas. They wanted to buy an x-ray machine.
I think they did.
Yeah, to x-ray in case the ransom money was bugged. They had a larger plan.
They had one plan about them, the state dropping the money from a plane in the Santa Cruz Mountains
at a specific drop site indicated by a series of lights, but they also had this larger plan of
putting dummies in a plane with parachutes. It was all over the map this plan over the
course of a year and a half. Yeah. This really reveals, I think, a lot about them as well,
that on that plan sheet, it said one of the line items was burn the plan.
They just didn't get around to that. Yeah, it was a ransom note, I think too.
Yeah, and they had a lot of scratch outs and misspellings. Apparently, it referred to Fred
by name in the ransom note that they were planning to give to the authorities, really dumb stuff.
They were trying to sniff the authorities off the case, I guess,
by posing or presenting themselves as a satanic group. They said that their name was Beelzebub,
but they misspelled Beelzebub. Yeah. They spelled B-E-L-S-A-B-U-B,
which is just offensive to anybody who knows how to spell that word.
It's just like, if you misspell things in your ransom note, you're not going to do very well
for yourself, most likely. That's right. In the aftermath of the kidnapping from when they buried
the kids to when they left, the plan was call the Chalchilla Police Department, demand your $5
million ransom, but the Chalchilla phone system was very small. Obviously, when you
kidnapped 26 kids and the media is descending, every phone line was busy. They literally could
not get through with their ransom demand. The kids escaped before they even got through with
their ransom demand. Yeah. I think you said the donation from the phone company, they literally
had to go in and install dozens of phone lines just so the FBI could operate effectively.
Yeah. So they never... What did these guys do right afterward when they couldn't get through?
They decided they needed to scram that the jig was up and they needed to part ways and they did.
Fred Woods was wily enough to have come up with a passport with the name Ralph Snyder
and he traveled successfully to British Columbia, I think Vancouver, under that fake passport.
But then when he was there, he started writing to people. He had a friend who was, I think,
in film school and said, hey, you should turn this into a whole movie.
Kidnapping that I did. Right. Just give me some of the box office, I guess, but he said,
but be fair. He wanted a piece. He said, be fair, but he spelled the F-A-R-E.
I'm sorry, this is just annoying me to no end. The misspellings.
Yeah. But then he signed the letter or sent it as Ralph Snyder. He sent it as his alias.
So the cops, the FBI tracked him within days to Vancouver and got the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police to arrest him. I wonder if he knew the guy, though, in film school. I wonder if this
guy was like, who is this? Who's Ralph Snyder? Or if he put in parentheses, that's my alias.
This is Fred. Don't tell the FBI, but he misspelled FBI.
So Rick, the younger Schoenfeld, for his part, almost immediately confessed. He got home after
the three of them met up and then split up, went home and told his dad what he did. His dad, because
they had money, again, his pediatrist, got him a lawyer, too sweet. And so that's why we don't
know exactly... That's one reason we don't know exactly what happened in those first hours afterward
is because the lawyer kind of kept that all quiet. Although, I did see a news report that said they
took naps. I don't know if that's true or not, but I did see that. It sounds right. It holds up if
you put it up against everything else. And keep in mind, once again, they took these kids to a
quarry that Fred Woods' dad owned and where Fred Woods worked. And the quarry security guards said,
when they were interviewed, said, well, yeah, last week, Fred and two other guys dug a big hole out
there a few months before this happened, like a, I don't know, like a moving van size hole.
But the hole's gone now, so who cares? Right, exactly.
So, Rick turned himself in. Fred got caught. James made attempts to cross the border into Canada
himself, but apparently the Canadian authorities considered him, A, way too nervous, B, way too
vague about what he planned to do in Canada, and C, in possession of way too many guns to be led in
the country. And apparently he tried two or three times using his own name to get in and finally
gave up and turned around. And I guess he had decided he was going to turn himself into authorities,
but because of an all-points bulletin on his license plate, he was picked up before he could
turn himself in. Right, so they're all collected less than two weeks after it happened. Yes.
All right, well, let's take our last break and then we will kind of quickly go over
the sentencing and what happened afterward right after this.
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All right. So they were collected. Yeah, they were collected. And of course,
had their day in court. And the big thing that happened in court was whether or not
these guys committed bodily harm on these children. Because if you committed bodily harm,
then you have a sentence of life without or possible sentence of life without parole. If there
was no bodily harm, then you could have life with parole. They ruled that they did suffer
bodily harm. So they had stomach trouble. They had nosebleeds. Some of the kids fainted.
And that that counted. But in 1980, an appeals court reversed that ruling, said that is not
bodily harm. And that made them eligible for parole. And since then, like I said earlier,
the two Schoenfeld brothers have been released in I think 2012 and 2015.
Right. Like long after some observers who are involved in the case
can think that they should have been paroled, like especially Richard Schoenfeld. He was 22
at the time. He was basically there. I saw it described as a long for the ride. Again,
an Eagle Scout. He probably became an Eagle Scout three, four years before this happened.
And he spent 39 years in prison.
I guess so. 2015 is when or he got out in 2012. Yeah.
Okay. Yeah. So yeah, about 37 years in prison of his life from age 22. He spent the next 37
years in prison for basically hanging out with his brother and his brother's goofy friend,
doing something really stupid. And a lot of other people said, yeah, and if you're gonna
let Richard Schoenfeld out, you should really probably take another look at James Schoenfeld
too. Because yeah, he was more involved than his brother, but he was still no Fred Woods.
And then you get to Fred Woods and people say, yeah, you probably just,
he doesn't really deserve to be parole. Yeah. I mean, the other two were model prisoners.
And they also had, I mean, people that were active. I don't know if it was a prosecutor
or investigator. I think the investigator for the case eventually advocated for parole.
Both did. Yeah. So, you know, some of the towns people felt betrayed by that, but they did get
out. Fred Woods was not a model prisoner. He was still a shady as ever. You know, you're not
supposed to run businesses from prison, but he ran a gold mine. He ran a used car business.
He ran a Christmas tree farm. He got married a few times. The reason he was finally outed was he
was running the Christmas tree farm. And Michael Bianchi, he was managing that business, got injured
on the job. And Woods said, I'm not going to help pay for the surgery. So Bianchi said, all right.
And he filed an estate workers comp claim and they got on the investigation and found out that
Woods was behind the operation. So he's not, when that comes time for parole, that doesn't look good.
No. And I guess he's been denied parole 17 times so far.
Yes. And he's up next in 2024. And a lot of people think he might not, he might never be
paroled actually. Well, he bought a mansion in Nepomo, California, 30 miles from the prison
that no one lives at. He did have a civil lawsuit in 2016 where he had to pay out money to the victims
that was described as, quote, enough to pay for some serious therapy, but not enough to buy a house.
Which is significant too, because they did rule an appeals court rule in 1980 that they didn't
inflict bodily harm. But I wonder if that same appeals court would come to that conclusion in
2021 based on interviews with some of the people who were abducted, like Jennifer Brown High,
who I mentioned earlier, who's not. I think emotional harm would play in these days.
Right. And there was definitely emotional harm inflicted. You talked about Larry Park,
who was addicted to meth and crack before he finally found forgiveness and actually went and
met with all three of the perpetrators and shook their hands and told them he forgave them and
apparently changed his own life like that. If you haven't listened to it.
Fred Ward said, hey, I can make you a heck of a deal on a used van.
Yeah. No, Fred Ward took his watch when he shook his hand.
Well, I was kidding, but my final little factoid is that that used car lat had those two vans,
and he held on to those because he thought they would be worth a lot of money as the kidnapped
vans. Yeah, which they might be worth an extra few hundred bucks. I could see that, but I don't
know if that, if that's the crown jewel of your inventory, oh no.
Nick Cage bought them. Right. And then you can go watch that movie from Lifetime in 1993
called They've Taken Our Children, if you want to see Carl Maldon in his underwear, apparently.
Bad movie, bad song. I read also that Chow Chilla residents do not care for that movie, Chuck,
because it was shot in Kansas, and anyone who knows anything about the San Joaquin Valley
knows that Kansas is a poor stand-in for that. So they're a little turned off by that movie from
what I understand. That's right. And then last thing I want to shout out, Caleb Horton, who wrote
an article on Vox, very in-depth one called The Ballad of the Chow Chilla Bus Kidnapping. It's
pretty good. Oh, that's a good one? Yeah, it is. All right. All right. The article, not the song. No,
no. Oh, okay. It's an article, an article. I got you. Okay. Well, since we had, we worked out
them as understanding everybody, that means it's time for Listener Mail. I'm gonna call this, let
me see. How about racist ticketing in our episode on J-Walking? We talked about people of the Black
and Hispanic communities are ticketed more for J-Walking, and this is from Valerie Mates in Ann
Arbor, Michigan. Hey, guys, you mentioned that Black and Hispanic drivers are issued more traffic
tickets than white drivers. This is an interesting issue. In Chicago, when they installed traffic
cameras, they found that the cameras, despite being race neutral, still gave more tickets to Black
and Hispanic drivers. So, of course, they wanted to study that. The experts found that more affluent
neighborhoods are built with more features that would naturally slow down traffic, more sidewalks,
more stop signs, more crosswalks, while poorer neighborhoods had fewer of those, fewer of those
things, and the result would cars would be naturally, would tend to drive faster in poorer
neighborhoods. Since Black and Hispanic drivers are more likely to live and be driving in less
wealthy neighborhoods in Chicago, they were more likely to be speeding and caught by traffic
cameras, or so says the evidence, at least. It's not just prejudice on the part of police officers
that causes this discrepancy. It's actually a difference in how the neighborhoods are built
systematically. I thought it was really interesting, and I agree. Valerie, thanks for sending that in.
Who was it again? Valerie Mates of Ann Arbor. Thanks a lot, Valerie. That's a great one.
If you got a great one like Valerie does, we love little brainbusters like that.
So, you can wrap them up, spank them on the bottom, and send them off via email to
StuffPodcast at iHeartRadio.com. Stuff you should know is a production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts on my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app,
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