"Mysteries at the Museum" Smoking Guns
ID | 13178396 |
---|---|
Movie Name | "Mysteries at the Museum" Smoking Guns |
Release Name | Mysteries.at.the.Museum.S20E13.SmokingGunsSpecial.1080p |
Year | 2020 |
Kind | tv |
Language | English |
IMDB ID | 11766704 |
Format | srt |
1
00:00:01,536 --> 00:00:03,269
Throughout the history of America,
2
00:00:03,271 --> 00:00:05,204
there have been notorious crimes
3
00:00:05,206 --> 00:00:09,609
that have captivated the nation and confounded investigators.
4
00:00:09,611 --> 00:00:12,277
A controversial assassination...
5
00:00:12,279 --> 00:00:13,745
MAN: He might not be the one
6
00:00:13,747 --> 00:00:16,815
who actually pulled the trigger on that fatal shot.
7
00:00:18,753 --> 00:00:21,020
WILDMAN: ...an epic bank heist...
8
00:00:21,022 --> 00:00:22,755
MAN: Nobody gets hurt. Nobody gets shot.
9
00:00:22,757 --> 00:00:24,156
They just take the money and run.
10
00:00:24,158 --> 00:00:27,359
Who could have done this?
11
00:00:27,361 --> 00:00:30,229
WILDMAN: ...and a bizarre kidnapping.
12
00:00:30,231 --> 00:00:33,266
MAN: It's amazing. It's a severed ear in the mail
13
00:00:33,268 --> 00:00:38,437
that belongs to the grandson of the richest man in the world.
14
00:00:38,439 --> 00:00:40,973
WILDMAN: In all these cases, there are clues,
15
00:00:40,975 --> 00:00:43,909
conclusive pieces of evidence that shed light
16
00:00:43,911 --> 00:00:45,845
on what really happened...
17
00:00:48,916 --> 00:00:50,783
"The Smoking Guns."
18
00:00:52,920 --> 00:00:54,653
The Gettys are one of the richest
19
00:00:54,655 --> 00:00:58,257
and most powerful families in the world.
20
00:00:58,259 --> 00:01:01,660
So when an heir to the Getty fortune is kidnapped,
21
00:01:01,662 --> 00:01:05,665
it instantly becomes a major global event.
22
00:01:05,667 --> 00:01:10,670
It was absolutely perfect -- perfect in terms of a story.
23
00:01:10,672 --> 00:01:14,006
It's got money, it's got family dysfunction,
24
00:01:14,008 --> 00:01:16,609
you know, you've got kidnapping,
25
00:01:16,611 --> 00:01:18,878
and you've got an oil tycoon in the middle of it.
26
00:01:21,282 --> 00:01:23,683
The abduction of John Paul Getty III
27
00:01:23,685 --> 00:01:26,552
is one of the most famous kidnappings of all time.
28
00:01:26,554 --> 00:01:29,287
There have been countless books written about it,
29
00:01:29,289 --> 00:01:32,624
a blockbuster Hollywood movie, even a TV series,
30
00:01:32,626 --> 00:01:35,761
but the real story of what occurred remains a mystery.
31
00:01:37,632 --> 00:01:40,566
Now, there's finally evidence that could reveal
32
00:01:40,568 --> 00:01:42,234
what actually happened.
33
00:01:48,376 --> 00:01:51,644
The Getty name is instantly recognizable.
34
00:01:51,646 --> 00:01:53,979
Patriarch John Paul Getty, Sr.
35
00:01:53,981 --> 00:01:57,315
took over his father's small Oklahoma oil well
36
00:01:57,317 --> 00:01:58,984
and turned it into Getty Oil,
37
00:01:58,986 --> 00:02:02,722
one of the largest petroleum companies in the world.
38
00:02:02,724 --> 00:02:03,990
I'm Colin Bertram.
39
00:02:03,992 --> 00:02:06,391
I'm a writer, a journalist,
40
00:02:06,393 --> 00:02:08,928
and I've written a number of stories on the Gettys.
41
00:02:08,930 --> 00:02:11,797
Getty Senior was very, very wealthy.
42
00:02:11,799 --> 00:02:14,066
He was a millionaire by the time he was 23,
43
00:02:14,068 --> 00:02:17,603
and we're talking about the early part of the 20th century.
44
00:02:17,605 --> 00:02:21,073
By 1957, "Fortune" magazine labeled him
45
00:02:21,075 --> 00:02:24,944
the richest man in America, and about a decade later,
46
00:02:24,946 --> 00:02:27,746
he was estimated to be worth well over a billion dollars.
47
00:02:29,751 --> 00:02:31,817
WILDMAN: At the height of his fame,
48
00:02:31,819 --> 00:02:34,420
Getty Senior emigrates to the U.K.,
49
00:02:34,422 --> 00:02:36,889
buying a sprawling mansion outside London
50
00:02:36,891 --> 00:02:39,624
called Sutton Place.
51
00:02:39,626 --> 00:02:41,560
BERTRAM: That is supposedly the place Henry VIII
52
00:02:41,562 --> 00:02:42,895
first met Anne Boleyn.
53
00:02:42,897 --> 00:02:44,230
Absolutely massive house,
54
00:02:44,232 --> 00:02:47,700
which he then completely redecorated,
55
00:02:47,702 --> 00:02:50,369
filled it with Rembrandts, lots of art,
56
00:02:50,371 --> 00:02:54,306
lots of great masterpieces.
57
00:02:54,308 --> 00:02:57,976
WILDMAN: Getty Senior has 5 sons and 15 grandchildren.
58
00:02:57,978 --> 00:03:00,780
The youngest is John Paul Getty III,
59
00:03:00,782 --> 00:03:03,182
known to the family as Paul.
60
00:03:08,322 --> 00:03:10,723
July 12, 1973 --
61
00:03:10,725 --> 00:03:13,192
Rome, Italy.
62
00:03:13,194 --> 00:03:16,528
The first person to notice Paul is missing is his mother,
63
00:03:16,530 --> 00:03:18,864
Gail Harris.
64
00:03:18,866 --> 00:03:21,801
My name's Amelia McDonell-Parry, and I am a journalist,
65
00:03:21,803 --> 00:03:23,936
and I've written about the Getty family.
66
00:03:23,938 --> 00:03:26,205
Gail didn't hear from him for a number of days.
67
00:03:26,207 --> 00:03:27,740
She started to get a little bit worried,
68
00:03:27,742 --> 00:03:29,074
so she started asking around,
69
00:03:29,076 --> 00:03:30,409
trying to track down his friends,
70
00:03:30,411 --> 00:03:32,278
see whether she could find where he was,
71
00:03:32,280 --> 00:03:34,880
and there was no sort of sign of him,
72
00:03:34,882 --> 00:03:36,215
and she started to get a little worried.
73
00:03:38,552 --> 00:03:40,619
And then she got a phone call one day from a guy
74
00:03:40,621 --> 00:03:42,487
who had, like, a kind of rough voice,
75
00:03:42,489 --> 00:03:44,823
who basically kind of made it clear to her
76
00:03:44,825 --> 00:03:47,226
that Paul had been taken.
77
00:03:47,228 --> 00:03:49,361
WILDMAN: After the mysterious phone call,
78
00:03:49,363 --> 00:03:52,297
Gail notifies the police.
79
00:03:52,299 --> 00:03:55,901
They start searching for Paul, asking around in cafes and bars
80
00:03:55,903 --> 00:03:58,637
he was known to frequent.
81
00:03:58,639 --> 00:04:00,973
But it's another week before there's finally
82
00:04:00,975 --> 00:04:03,041
a development in the case.
83
00:04:05,579 --> 00:04:10,449
Gail's lawyer receives a ransom demand for $17 million
84
00:04:10,451 --> 00:04:12,784
in exchange for Paul's release.
85
00:04:12,786 --> 00:04:13,986
And along with it,
86
00:04:13,988 --> 00:04:15,921
there's a handwritten note from Paul.
87
00:04:15,923 --> 00:04:17,590
So, to be clear, this is not the real letter,
88
00:04:17,592 --> 00:04:19,658
but it is the language.
89
00:04:19,660 --> 00:04:24,129
"Dear Mother, since Monday after midnight until 3:00 on Tuesday,
90
00:04:24,131 --> 00:04:26,465
"I have been in the hands of the kidnappers.
91
00:04:26,467 --> 00:04:29,668
"The telephone call that you received was real.
92
00:04:29,670 --> 00:04:31,470
"I beg you, do not have even
93
00:04:31,472 --> 00:04:33,138
"the most minimum intervention by the police,
94
00:04:33,140 --> 00:04:35,341
"because otherwise, they will kill me.
95
00:04:35,343 --> 00:04:37,876
I love you. "Paul."
96
00:04:43,750 --> 00:04:46,352
In any kidnapping case, the ransom note
97
00:04:46,354 --> 00:04:50,956
is the most critical piece of evidence the investigators have.
98
00:04:50,958 --> 00:04:53,225
Now they had a letter, they had an amount,
99
00:04:53,227 --> 00:04:56,828
so the police had to take it very seriously,
100
00:04:56,830 --> 00:05:01,166
as you would assume members of the Getty family would.
101
00:05:01,168 --> 00:05:04,236
WILDMAN: Gail doesn't have the money to pay the ransom,
102
00:05:04,238 --> 00:05:06,705
so she turns to someone who does --
103
00:05:06,707 --> 00:05:09,975
her father-in-law, John Paul Getty, Sr.
104
00:05:09,977 --> 00:05:12,978
But his reaction isn't what you might expect.
105
00:05:12,980 --> 00:05:15,113
BERTRAM: They get the ransom note.
106
00:05:15,115 --> 00:05:16,916
He says, "I am not going to pay the ransom.
107
00:05:16,918 --> 00:05:21,186
"I have 14 other grandchildren, and if I pay this one ransom,
108
00:05:21,188 --> 00:05:24,056
then I'm going to have 14 more grandchildren kidnapped."
109
00:05:24,058 --> 00:05:25,858
WILDMAN: For the next 4 months,
110
00:05:25,860 --> 00:05:30,061
the investigation into Paul's disappearance is at an impasse.
111
00:05:34,068 --> 00:05:36,735
Then, in November 1973,
112
00:05:36,737 --> 00:05:40,038
Gail is alerted to a parcel addressed to her,
113
00:05:40,040 --> 00:05:42,208
but delivered to a local newspaper.
114
00:05:42,210 --> 00:05:45,878
Here's a mother getting this package.
115
00:05:45,880 --> 00:05:50,415
She's opening it up, wondering what could possibly be in there.
116
00:05:52,353 --> 00:05:55,754
And realizing slowly
117
00:05:55,756 --> 00:05:58,424
it's an ear -- a human ear.
118
00:05:58,426 --> 00:06:02,895
And it's not just a human ear, it's the ear of her son.
119
00:06:02,897 --> 00:06:05,030
WILDMAN: In addition to the severed ear,
120
00:06:05,032 --> 00:06:07,232
a few days later, the paper receives
121
00:06:07,234 --> 00:06:11,103
a photo of Paul, bandaged and bleeding in a cave.
122
00:06:13,173 --> 00:06:16,842
The photo reportedly showing Paul in a cave
123
00:06:16,844 --> 00:06:19,844
was distributed to newspapers around the world.
124
00:06:19,846 --> 00:06:22,848
Now, many of them ran it right on the front page.
125
00:06:22,850 --> 00:06:25,517
It was a brutal act.
126
00:06:25,519 --> 00:06:29,154
But who could be capable of doing something so heinous?
127
00:06:32,727 --> 00:06:34,593
McDONELL-PARRY: Paul's kidnapping was already
128
00:06:34,595 --> 00:06:36,261
getting plenty of media attention
129
00:06:36,263 --> 00:06:38,063
for the months and months it sort of went on,
130
00:06:38,065 --> 00:06:40,465
but when the ear situation happened --
131
00:06:40,467 --> 00:06:42,201
and when the ear arrived in the mail,
132
00:06:42,203 --> 00:06:44,670
and came with it pictures of Paul in this cave,
133
00:06:44,672 --> 00:06:46,605
like, bleeding profusely --
134
00:06:46,607 --> 00:06:48,673
those were splashed all over the newspapers.
135
00:06:48,675 --> 00:06:50,208
And so all of a sudden,
136
00:06:50,210 --> 00:06:54,079
this publicity that the family was already receiving --
137
00:06:54,081 --> 00:06:57,016
that wasn't necessarily good publicity --
138
00:06:57,018 --> 00:06:59,484
was suddenly so much worse.
139
00:06:59,486 --> 00:07:01,486
WILDMAN: News of the kidnappers' demands
140
00:07:01,488 --> 00:07:04,823
and the threat to Paul reaches Getty Senior,
141
00:07:04,825 --> 00:07:07,159
and this time, he relents.
142
00:07:07,161 --> 00:07:10,763
But the oil tycoon is notoriously frugal.
143
00:07:10,765 --> 00:07:13,165
This is suddenly very real for everybody,
144
00:07:13,167 --> 00:07:14,967
including Getty Senior.
145
00:07:14,969 --> 00:07:20,572
That said, he's still not going to cough up $17 million.
146
00:07:20,574 --> 00:07:23,175
WILDMAN: Getty Senior dispatches an aide to Italy,
147
00:07:23,177 --> 00:07:25,711
who negotiates the kidnappers' demands down
148
00:07:25,713 --> 00:07:29,114
to just over $3 million.
149
00:07:29,116 --> 00:07:32,318
But Getty Senior still won't pay the full amount.
150
00:07:32,320 --> 00:07:34,920
Getty Senior put in only as much as he knew
151
00:07:34,922 --> 00:07:36,388
that he could write off on his taxes,
152
00:07:36,390 --> 00:07:38,924
and that was it, which I just think is just an amazing detail.
153
00:07:41,195 --> 00:07:43,796
WILDMAN: On December 12, 1973,
154
00:07:43,798 --> 00:07:48,733
the police carefully microfilm each note of the ransom money,
155
00:07:48,735 --> 00:07:51,803
then Getty's aide drives to a pre-arranged point
156
00:07:51,805 --> 00:07:53,472
on a rural highway,
157
00:07:53,474 --> 00:07:55,874
where a car pulls up alongside him,
158
00:07:55,876 --> 00:07:58,210
and the aide hands over the money.
159
00:07:58,212 --> 00:08:01,013
And then, in return, the kidnappers would deposit
160
00:08:01,015 --> 00:08:03,148
Paul somewhere.
161
00:08:03,150 --> 00:08:06,018
WILDMAN: On December 15, 1973,
162
00:08:06,020 --> 00:08:08,353
Paul is finally released.
163
00:08:08,355 --> 00:08:10,289
The identity of the men who kidnapped him
164
00:08:10,291 --> 00:08:11,589
is still a mystery,
165
00:08:11,591 --> 00:08:14,960
but police do have a critical piece of evidence.
166
00:08:14,962 --> 00:08:17,695
A bill from the ransom money surfaces.
167
00:08:17,697 --> 00:08:21,567
Police are able to trace it and finally make an arrest.
168
00:08:21,569 --> 00:08:24,570
Nine kidnappers were apprehended by the police.
169
00:08:24,572 --> 00:08:26,571
Amongst them there was an olive oil dealer,
170
00:08:26,573 --> 00:08:29,707
there was a carpenter, there was a hospital orderly.
171
00:08:29,709 --> 00:08:32,444
WILDMAN: Of the nine, only two men are charged,
172
00:08:32,446 --> 00:08:37,116
and neither seems capable of carrying out such a brutal plot.
173
00:08:37,118 --> 00:08:39,184
McDONELL-PARRY: So, it really sort of seems like
174
00:08:39,186 --> 00:08:41,320
whoever actually orchestrated
175
00:08:41,322 --> 00:08:43,322
this kidnapping was never caught,
176
00:08:43,324 --> 00:08:45,857
and that the people who were ultimately caught
177
00:08:45,859 --> 00:08:50,328
and held responsible were just a couple of hired hands.
178
00:08:53,700 --> 00:08:55,801
There are things about this kidnapping
179
00:08:55,803 --> 00:08:57,669
that just don't add up.
180
00:08:57,671 --> 00:09:02,407
Like, how did a bunch of small-time crooks
181
00:09:02,409 --> 00:09:07,679
keep a hostage hidden for 5 months?
182
00:09:07,681 --> 00:09:10,615
Was there something about Getty Senior's
183
00:09:10,617 --> 00:09:13,018
reluctance to pay ransom?
184
00:09:15,622 --> 00:09:20,692
And what do we really know about John Paul Getty III's life?
185
00:09:22,000 --> 00:09:28,074
Do you want subtitles for any video?
-=[ ai.OpenSubtitles.com ]=-
186
00:09:39,513 --> 00:09:42,847
WILDMAN: To investigate the kidnapping of John Paul Getty III,
187
00:09:42,849 --> 00:09:45,184
police used microfilms of the ransom money
188
00:09:45,186 --> 00:09:47,586
to track down the kidnappers.
189
00:09:47,588 --> 00:09:49,521
But could the people responsible
190
00:09:49,523 --> 00:09:52,991
and the real smoking gun actually lie elsewhere?
191
00:09:58,865 --> 00:10:01,800
Looking at the Getty family -- the money, the stately home,
192
00:10:01,802 --> 00:10:05,137
the fine art -- might give you certain expectations.
193
00:10:05,139 --> 00:10:07,539
But Paul was different.
194
00:10:07,541 --> 00:10:09,608
CATLIN: A picture begins to emerge
195
00:10:09,610 --> 00:10:12,677
about Paul's life with his friends,
196
00:10:12,679 --> 00:10:18,150
and one of partying and drug use.
197
00:10:18,152 --> 00:10:21,086
BERTRAM: Paul was brought up amongst great wealth,
198
00:10:21,088 --> 00:10:23,088
great privilege in Rome.
199
00:10:23,090 --> 00:10:25,824
Yet, it was the '60s into the '70s,
200
00:10:25,826 --> 00:10:28,560
and as a teenager, he very much embraced
201
00:10:28,562 --> 00:10:32,030
that kind of hippie lifestyle, that very bohemian --
202
00:10:32,032 --> 00:10:33,565
I think it was the media who dubbed him --
203
00:10:33,567 --> 00:10:34,633
the Italian media --
204
00:10:34,635 --> 00:10:36,635
who dubbed him "the Golden Hippie."
205
00:10:36,637 --> 00:10:41,706
There was rumors, certainly, as the kidnapping case went on
206
00:10:41,708 --> 00:10:45,377
that he had gotten himself into debt,
207
00:10:45,379 --> 00:10:50,915
that he owed money to some not-so-savory characters.
208
00:10:50,917 --> 00:10:53,785
WILDMAN: One line of inquiry the Italian police consider
209
00:10:53,787 --> 00:10:56,788
was whether Paul was abducted by someone he knew.
210
00:10:56,790 --> 00:11:00,859
But perhaps the real mastermind is closer to home.
211
00:11:04,198 --> 00:11:06,598
I think when the police first heard from Gail
212
00:11:06,600 --> 00:11:09,735
that Paul was missing, they did start an investigation.
213
00:11:09,737 --> 00:11:12,403
They ended up speaking to his girlfriend, Martine,
214
00:11:12,405 --> 00:11:15,006
where, supposedly, she gave a statement
215
00:11:15,008 --> 00:11:17,676
where she talked about how Paul had told her in confidence
216
00:11:17,678 --> 00:11:20,945
once that he had no money, that he was basically penniless,
217
00:11:20,947 --> 00:11:23,949
and the only way to get any money out of his family
218
00:11:23,951 --> 00:11:25,951
would be to basically have --
219
00:11:25,953 --> 00:11:29,554
be kidnapped and collect the ransom money.
220
00:11:29,556 --> 00:11:33,024
WILDMAN: Could this testimony be the smoking gun?
221
00:11:34,895 --> 00:11:39,030
Italian police certainly took Martine's statement seriously,
222
00:11:39,032 --> 00:11:41,833
but what about Paul's severed ear?
223
00:11:41,835 --> 00:11:45,837
It appears to be conclusive proof the kidnapping was real.
224
00:11:45,839 --> 00:11:48,907
One intriguing theory is that after being cut off
225
00:11:48,909 --> 00:11:50,309
from the Getty fortune,
226
00:11:50,311 --> 00:11:52,810
Paul hatched a fake kidnapping plot
227
00:11:52,812 --> 00:11:55,580
to extort money from his grandfather.
228
00:11:55,582 --> 00:11:59,050
The thinking goes that at some point, his plan went awry.
229
00:11:59,052 --> 00:12:02,654
Paul was sold out, fell into the hands of the Italian Mafia,
230
00:12:02,656 --> 00:12:05,256
and what started as a money-making scheme
231
00:12:05,258 --> 00:12:09,328
became the most high-profile kidnapping case of all time.
232
00:12:13,667 --> 00:12:16,602
CATLIN: After the kidnapping, Paul's a bigger celebrity
233
00:12:16,604 --> 00:12:18,136
than he ever was, I guess,
234
00:12:18,138 --> 00:12:20,939
but manages to have a somewhat normal life.
235
00:12:20,941 --> 00:12:24,475
He goes to college, he gets married, he has a child.
236
00:12:24,477 --> 00:12:26,345
BERTRAM: Paul would then go on
237
00:12:26,347 --> 00:12:28,680
to spend a large part of the rest of his life
238
00:12:28,682 --> 00:12:31,216
trying to escape this story.
239
00:12:31,218 --> 00:12:33,918
But within a decade, he'd had a --
240
00:12:33,920 --> 00:12:35,553
due to substance abuse --
241
00:12:35,555 --> 00:12:37,789
he had a stroke, he had liver failure,
242
00:12:37,791 --> 00:12:40,292
it left him partially blind,
243
00:12:40,294 --> 00:12:42,961
he was in a wheelchair for the rest of his life,
244
00:12:42,963 --> 00:12:45,630
and Gail ended up stepping back in
245
00:12:45,632 --> 00:12:48,500
and looking after him yet again.
246
00:12:48,502 --> 00:12:51,169
CATLIN: Kind of a big reflection on the era in a way
247
00:12:51,171 --> 00:12:55,640
and its excesses, but it's also about greed
248
00:12:55,642 --> 00:13:01,046
and brutality and stubbornness, essentially.
249
00:13:12,259 --> 00:13:14,259
WILDMAN: Robert F. Kennedy
250
00:13:14,261 --> 00:13:17,929
is one of the most iconic figures in American history.
251
00:13:17,931 --> 00:13:20,666
A key member of the Kennedy political dynasty,
252
00:13:20,668 --> 00:13:24,403
Robert shared a strong bond with his older brother, John.
253
00:13:24,405 --> 00:13:26,672
And following in his brother's footsteps,
254
00:13:26,674 --> 00:13:30,742
Robert Kennedy was on the verge of becoming President
255
00:13:30,744 --> 00:13:33,412
when he was tragically gunned down.
256
00:13:33,414 --> 00:13:36,748
It's one of the most pivotal moments in our nation's history.
257
00:13:36,750 --> 00:13:38,884
It's also one of the most contentious.
258
00:13:41,422 --> 00:13:43,087
The murder of Robert Kennedy
259
00:13:43,089 --> 00:13:45,423
seemed like an open-and-shut case.
260
00:13:45,425 --> 00:13:47,358
His assassin was caught at the scene
261
00:13:47,360 --> 00:13:50,696
with what appeared to be the murder weapon in his hand.
262
00:13:50,698 --> 00:13:53,765
But, in the years since, contradictory evidence
263
00:13:53,767 --> 00:13:56,501
and inconsistent witnesses
264
00:13:56,503 --> 00:13:58,970
have left some suggesting a conspiracy.
265
00:13:58,972 --> 00:14:03,041
So what really happened, and was anyone else involved?
266
00:14:11,385 --> 00:14:15,320
June 4, 1968 -- the Ambassador Hotel,
267
00:14:15,322 --> 00:14:18,056
Los Angeles, California.
268
00:14:20,928 --> 00:14:23,528
Hundreds have gathered to hear Senator Robert F. Kennedy's
269
00:14:23,530 --> 00:14:27,299
victory speech in the California primary.
270
00:14:27,301 --> 00:14:30,602
I'm Joseph A. Palermo, and I've written two books
271
00:14:30,604 --> 00:14:34,539
and many articles on Robert F. Kennedy.
272
00:14:34,541 --> 00:14:37,075
I was always interested in the life of Kennedy,
273
00:14:37,077 --> 00:14:41,145
I think going back to when I was a child.
274
00:14:41,147 --> 00:14:45,617
He had the ability to challenge people morally,
275
00:14:45,619 --> 00:14:49,354
to make people feel guilty if they weren't living up
276
00:14:49,356 --> 00:14:52,824
to the highest standards of being an American citizen
277
00:14:52,826 --> 00:14:56,894
and being active in taking part in public life.
278
00:14:56,896 --> 00:14:58,363
Robert Kennedy's victory speech
279
00:14:58,365 --> 00:15:01,566
was really an encapsulation of everything that he stood for
280
00:15:01,568 --> 00:15:02,834
and what the campaign stood for.
281
00:15:02,836 --> 00:15:06,571
He was trying to give a message of solidarity.
282
00:15:06,573 --> 00:15:09,641
So, my thanks to all of you,
283
00:15:09,643 --> 00:15:11,843
and now it's on to Chicago, and let's win this.
284
00:15:11,845 --> 00:15:12,977
Thank you very much.
285
00:15:15,982 --> 00:15:18,517
WILDMAN: But in the moments after,
286
00:15:18,519 --> 00:15:19,918
everything changes.
287
00:15:24,858 --> 00:15:28,860
PALERMO: As the news that Robert Kennedy has been shot
288
00:15:28,862 --> 00:15:31,396
starts to spread through the crowd,
289
00:15:31,398 --> 00:15:34,265
it's like a wave of just shrieks.
290
00:15:36,269 --> 00:15:40,138
WILDMAN: Within minutes, Los Angeles police are on the scene.
291
00:15:40,140 --> 00:15:42,106
They discover Robert Kennedy
292
00:15:42,108 --> 00:15:46,211
lying stricken on the kitchen pantry floor.
293
00:15:46,213 --> 00:15:48,613
PALMERO: The crime scene is probably among
294
00:15:48,615 --> 00:15:51,283
the most chaotic you'll ever find.
295
00:15:51,285 --> 00:15:55,153
You have over 70 people in this cramped corridor.
296
00:15:55,155 --> 00:15:56,821
People are coming in and out.
297
00:15:56,823 --> 00:15:58,890
The crime scene was not sealed off.
298
00:16:02,695 --> 00:16:05,030
WILDMAN: Kennedy has been shot multiple times,
299
00:16:05,032 --> 00:16:08,099
including a mortal wound to his head.
300
00:16:08,101 --> 00:16:09,834
He's rushed to the hospital,
301
00:16:09,836 --> 00:16:12,837
but the next day, June 6th, he dies.
302
00:16:17,978 --> 00:16:21,046
At the crime scene, police arrest the gunman.
303
00:16:21,048 --> 00:16:24,249
He's later identified as Sirhan B. Sirhan,
304
00:16:24,251 --> 00:16:26,784
a Palestinian who emigrated to the U.S.
305
00:16:26,786 --> 00:16:29,721
with his family when he was 12 years old.
306
00:16:29,723 --> 00:16:32,990
Inside Sirhan's house, the police find notebooks
307
00:16:32,992 --> 00:16:37,796
filled with the phrase "RFK must die."
308
00:16:37,798 --> 00:16:39,130
Local law enforcement
309
00:16:39,132 --> 00:16:42,199
saw this as a completely open-and-shut case
310
00:16:42,201 --> 00:16:46,471
where you have a young man who fired his weapon,
311
00:16:46,473 --> 00:16:47,872
everybody saw him.
312
00:16:52,546 --> 00:16:54,613
WILDMAN: In April 1969,
313
00:16:54,615 --> 00:16:59,083
Sirhan Sirhan is found guilty of the murder of Robert Kennedy.
314
00:16:59,085 --> 00:17:02,687
The evidence is stacked against him.
315
00:17:02,689 --> 00:17:05,490
But is any of it really the smoking gun?
316
00:17:22,910 --> 00:17:24,976
WILDMAN: The assassination of Robert F. Kennedy
317
00:17:24,978 --> 00:17:27,779
looked like an open-and-shut case,
318
00:17:27,781 --> 00:17:31,382
but in the years since, new evidence has come to light.
319
00:17:31,384 --> 00:17:32,984
So, what really happened?
320
00:17:36,523 --> 00:17:38,122
The first puzzling detail
321
00:17:38,124 --> 00:17:42,994
emerges in the minutes after Kennedy is shot.
322
00:17:42,996 --> 00:17:44,662
PALERMO: This young woman, Sandra Serrano --
323
00:17:44,664 --> 00:17:46,598
I believe she was 19 at the time --
324
00:17:46,600 --> 00:17:48,799
she was sitting, getting some fresh air
325
00:17:48,801 --> 00:17:50,801
on the -- on one of the exits,
326
00:17:50,803 --> 00:17:53,805
and where she saw this woman
327
00:17:53,807 --> 00:17:57,475
in a polka-dot dress and accompanied by a male,
328
00:17:57,477 --> 00:18:00,612
and they were fleeing out the back exit right past her
329
00:18:00,614 --> 00:18:02,279
and they said, "We shot him."
330
00:18:02,281 --> 00:18:03,615
And she said, "Who did you shot?"
331
00:18:03,617 --> 00:18:06,283
"We shot Kennedy."
332
00:18:06,285 --> 00:18:08,086
Now, there are other people that saw that same woman
333
00:18:08,088 --> 00:18:10,221
with Sirhan earlier in the evening,
334
00:18:10,223 --> 00:18:12,624
not just Sandra Serrano.
335
00:18:12,626 --> 00:18:16,428
And she was identified -- dark brunette hair
336
00:18:16,430 --> 00:18:19,430
and wearing a white dress with polka dots.
337
00:18:19,432 --> 00:18:21,766
Her story was considered credible enough
338
00:18:21,768 --> 00:18:24,769
to put out an all-points bulletin for this young woman
339
00:18:24,771 --> 00:18:26,972
in the polka-dot dress at the time,
340
00:18:26,974 --> 00:18:29,574
so that's just a historical fact.
341
00:18:29,576 --> 00:18:32,510
WILDMAN: Taken at face value, Serrano's testimony
342
00:18:32,512 --> 00:18:37,048
is evidence that Sirhan had help.
343
00:18:37,050 --> 00:18:38,449
One of the central mysteries
344
00:18:38,451 --> 00:18:40,986
of the assassination of Robert Kennedy
345
00:18:40,988 --> 00:18:44,455
is the identity of the woman in the polka-dot dress.
346
00:18:44,457 --> 00:18:45,990
Who was she?
347
00:18:45,992 --> 00:18:48,393
Was she with Sirhan before he shot Kennedy?
348
00:18:48,395 --> 00:18:51,195
And if so, why?
349
00:18:55,802 --> 00:18:58,870
Sandra Serrano is interviewed by the Los Angeles Police,
350
00:18:58,872 --> 00:19:01,272
but then drops her statement.
351
00:19:01,274 --> 00:19:02,807
Years later, however,
352
00:19:02,809 --> 00:19:06,277
Serrano claims she was intimidated by the police,
353
00:19:06,279 --> 00:19:11,216
and reiterates her original version of events.
354
00:19:11,218 --> 00:19:13,751
I think Sandra Serrano was kind of browbeaten
355
00:19:13,753 --> 00:19:16,688
as a young woman by the police, and here she was in this --
356
00:19:16,690 --> 00:19:19,624
a high-profile witness in the most high-profile,
357
00:19:19,626 --> 00:19:23,828
you know, assassination in her lifetime.
358
00:19:23,830 --> 00:19:26,431
WILDMAN: To this day, no one has identified
359
00:19:26,433 --> 00:19:28,099
the woman Sandra Serrano saw
360
00:19:28,101 --> 00:19:31,636
on the night of Kennedy's assassination.
361
00:19:31,638 --> 00:19:36,107
I'm curious, 50 years later, who is this woman?
362
00:19:36,109 --> 00:19:37,909
Maybe we should have a new investigation,
363
00:19:37,911 --> 00:19:40,778
just to find out who that woman is or if she's alive.
364
00:19:42,249 --> 00:19:44,315
WILDMAN: Sandra Serrano's testimony contradicts
365
00:19:44,317 --> 00:19:47,118
the official police version of events,
366
00:19:47,120 --> 00:19:51,522
which is that Sirhan Sirhan acted alone.
367
00:19:51,524 --> 00:19:53,591
But digging deeper into the evidence,
368
00:19:53,593 --> 00:19:57,929
there are clues that point to a second gunman.
369
00:19:57,931 --> 00:20:02,200
Karl Uecker is the maître d' of the Ambassador Hotel.
370
00:20:02,202 --> 00:20:05,136
He is leading Kennedy by the arm through the pantry
371
00:20:05,138 --> 00:20:08,740
when Sirhan appears in front of them.
372
00:20:08,742 --> 00:20:12,309
Uecker describes Sirhan as being directly in front
373
00:20:12,311 --> 00:20:15,346
of Robert F. Kennedy, maybe 2 or 3 feet away.
374
00:20:15,348 --> 00:20:18,282
He sees Sirhan get off a couple shots,
375
00:20:18,284 --> 00:20:21,419
but Uecker will testify repeatedly,
376
00:20:21,421 --> 00:20:22,887
without his story changing,
377
00:20:22,889 --> 00:20:25,489
that Sirhan was always shooting from the front.
378
00:20:28,961 --> 00:20:33,031
So, this is a section of the Ambassador Hotel floor plan.
379
00:20:33,033 --> 00:20:34,232
And you can see right off the bat,
380
00:20:34,234 --> 00:20:35,500
this is the Embassy Room,
381
00:20:35,502 --> 00:20:39,237
where Robert Kennedy is speaking right on the stage here.
382
00:20:39,239 --> 00:20:41,840
So, after he's finished speaking,
383
00:20:41,842 --> 00:20:44,375
he exits the stage and heads to the right.
384
00:20:44,377 --> 00:20:47,645
He's following Uecker into the kitchen pantry.
385
00:20:47,647 --> 00:20:50,248
Now, at this point, Uecker is adamant --
386
00:20:50,250 --> 00:20:53,050
and he's backed up by several witnesses --
387
00:20:53,052 --> 00:20:57,288
that this is when Sirhan appears beside the ice machine
388
00:20:57,290 --> 00:21:00,324
in front of them and starts firing.
389
00:21:00,326 --> 00:21:03,661
At that point, Uecker and several others restrain Sirhan
390
00:21:03,663 --> 00:21:07,732
and wrestle him to the steam table to the side.
391
00:21:07,734 --> 00:21:10,535
Uecker's statement that Sirhan is in front of Kennedy
392
00:21:10,537 --> 00:21:14,205
when he fires is backed up by over 20 witnesses
393
00:21:14,207 --> 00:21:16,407
who were in the pantry at the time.
394
00:21:16,409 --> 00:21:17,876
GRAWL: Everybody puts their hand in front,
395
00:21:17,878 --> 00:21:20,477
and those eyewitness accounts come from football player
396
00:21:20,479 --> 00:21:22,814
Rosey Grier and author George Plimpton --
397
00:21:22,816 --> 00:21:24,882
all of these people who are in the room
398
00:21:24,884 --> 00:21:27,284
and helped tackle Sirhan down.
399
00:21:27,286 --> 00:21:29,954
WILDMAN: But the testimony of the eyewitnesses contradicts
400
00:21:29,956 --> 00:21:34,826
one of the major pieces of scientific evidence in the case.
401
00:21:34,828 --> 00:21:38,162
So, this is a copy of the autopsy report.
402
00:21:38,164 --> 00:21:43,033
And you can see, it shows that Kennedy was shot 3 times.
403
00:21:43,035 --> 00:21:45,770
Now, two of the bullets actually entered
404
00:21:45,772 --> 00:21:50,107
into the right armpit area, one of them exiting the chest,
405
00:21:50,109 --> 00:21:52,043
and the other lodging in his neck.
406
00:21:52,045 --> 00:21:54,378
The fatal bullet -- the one that killed him --
407
00:21:54,380 --> 00:21:56,648
entered from behind the right ear,
408
00:21:56,650 --> 00:21:59,651
and was fired at point-blank range.
409
00:21:59,653 --> 00:22:01,118
Now, that's the weird thing.
410
00:22:01,120 --> 00:22:04,656
All the witnesses saw Sirhan standing in front of Kennedy
411
00:22:04,658 --> 00:22:07,124
when he was firing.
412
00:22:07,126 --> 00:22:10,662
The facts just don't add up.
413
00:22:10,664 --> 00:22:12,997
Taken together, the eyewitness statements
414
00:22:12,999 --> 00:22:14,531
and the autopsy suggest
415
00:22:14,533 --> 00:22:18,336
Sirhan may not have fired the shot that killed Kennedy.
416
00:22:18,338 --> 00:22:22,473
It leads to one obvious question -- who did?
417
00:22:38,424 --> 00:22:40,892
WILDMAN: On June 4, 1968,
418
00:22:40,894 --> 00:22:44,629
Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated.
419
00:22:44,631 --> 00:22:47,364
His attacker, Sirhan B. Sirhan,
420
00:22:47,366 --> 00:22:49,967
was arrested a few feet away.
421
00:22:49,969 --> 00:22:52,336
It seemed like a straightforward case,
422
00:22:52,338 --> 00:22:54,772
but now scientific evidence suggests
423
00:22:54,774 --> 00:22:57,976
Sirhan may not have fired the fatal shot.
424
00:23:01,715 --> 00:23:04,582
One of the puzzling aspects of this case
425
00:23:04,584 --> 00:23:07,986
was where the fatal shot that hit Kennedy came from.
426
00:23:07,988 --> 00:23:10,187
The autopsy revealed that Kennedy was killed
427
00:23:10,189 --> 00:23:11,922
by a shot to the head.
428
00:23:11,924 --> 00:23:16,127
The gun that fired that shot was a .22 caliber.
429
00:23:16,129 --> 00:23:19,730
It's a fact that on the night Robert Kennedy is assassinated,
430
00:23:19,732 --> 00:23:24,268
Sirhan Sirhan is carrying a .22-caliber revolver.
431
00:23:24,270 --> 00:23:26,671
But what many people don't realize
432
00:23:26,673 --> 00:23:28,806
is that he may not have been the only one.
433
00:23:32,345 --> 00:23:35,346
A local TV news assistant named Don Schulman
434
00:23:35,348 --> 00:23:38,215
claims that immediately after Sirhan fires,
435
00:23:38,217 --> 00:23:40,618
he sees a security guard pull a gun.
436
00:23:40,620 --> 00:23:42,286
Don Schulman potentially could have been
437
00:23:42,288 --> 00:23:47,691
a very important witness because he claimed that he saw
438
00:23:47,693 --> 00:23:50,695
the security guard draw his weapon and fire back.
439
00:23:50,697 --> 00:23:52,964
It was like a shoot-out is how he described it.
440
00:23:52,966 --> 00:23:56,367
What makes that so important is that that security guard
441
00:23:56,369 --> 00:24:00,705
was standing exactly in the spot where the fatal wound
442
00:24:00,707 --> 00:24:03,307
could have been delivered to Robert Kennedy.
443
00:24:03,309 --> 00:24:06,377
WILDMAN: The Los Angeles Police interview the guard.
444
00:24:06,379 --> 00:24:08,312
PALERMO: He says he drew his weapon,
445
00:24:08,314 --> 00:24:11,516
but he fell down in the crush of the crowd,
446
00:24:11,518 --> 00:24:13,384
and that he had a .38 anyway.
447
00:24:13,386 --> 00:24:17,789
WILDMAN: But as it happens, the security guard is mistaken.
448
00:24:17,791 --> 00:24:22,593
It turned out that he also owned a .22-caliber weapon, pistol.
449
00:24:22,595 --> 00:24:24,862
If there's a shooting in a room
450
00:24:24,864 --> 00:24:27,065
and there's somebody else in the room that has a gun,
451
00:24:27,067 --> 00:24:28,866
law enforcement's supposed to take that gun
452
00:24:28,868 --> 00:24:32,737
and look at it and process it and make sure that this gun
453
00:24:32,739 --> 00:24:35,206
wasn't also discharged or whatnot, you know?
454
00:24:35,208 --> 00:24:37,074
And so, I mean, that's something to look at.
455
00:24:37,076 --> 00:24:41,078
Don Schulman might have been a key witness of the person
456
00:24:41,080 --> 00:24:43,414
who actually leveled the fatal shot
457
00:24:43,416 --> 00:24:46,350
against Robert F. Kennedy.
458
00:24:46,352 --> 00:24:47,952
WILDMAN: If it can ever be proven
459
00:24:47,954 --> 00:24:50,488
that there was a second .22-caliber weapon
460
00:24:50,490 --> 00:24:52,223
in the pantry that night,
461
00:24:52,225 --> 00:24:56,094
it could be the smoking gun that breaks this case wide open.
462
00:24:56,096 --> 00:24:59,897
But for now, investigators have been unable to track it down.
463
00:24:59,899 --> 00:25:03,101
And to make matters worse, months after Kennedy's murder,
464
00:25:03,103 --> 00:25:05,970
the Los Angeles Police destroy key evidence
465
00:25:05,972 --> 00:25:09,106
that might have proved the second gunman theory.
466
00:25:09,108 --> 00:25:12,910
PALERMO: The other problem the LAPD really kind of made for itself
467
00:25:12,912 --> 00:25:16,713
was somebody decided to destroy the door jambs
468
00:25:16,715 --> 00:25:19,317
and the ceiling tiles in the case.
469
00:25:19,319 --> 00:25:22,653
There are photographs of police officers holding
470
00:25:22,655 --> 00:25:25,390
rulers up to these holes in the door jambs
471
00:25:25,392 --> 00:25:26,791
and pointing to them
472
00:25:26,793 --> 00:25:29,593
and identifying them as bullet holes.
473
00:25:29,595 --> 00:25:31,863
And the problem would be if there are more bullets
474
00:25:31,865 --> 00:25:34,332
retrieved at the scene than 8,
475
00:25:34,334 --> 00:25:38,402
which is all Sirhan could fire and did fire,
476
00:25:38,404 --> 00:25:40,805
then that would be evidence of a second gunman.
477
00:25:40,807 --> 00:25:42,339
It would be evidence that LAPD
478
00:25:42,341 --> 00:25:43,941
didn't follow up on all the leads.
479
00:25:43,943 --> 00:25:48,612
It would be evidence that would make LAPD look bad.
480
00:25:48,614 --> 00:25:51,949
WILDMAN: In recent years, an independent investigator
481
00:25:51,951 --> 00:25:55,018
has given the security guard a polygraph test,
482
00:25:55,020 --> 00:25:57,088
which he passed.
483
00:25:57,090 --> 00:25:59,490
But because evidence was destroyed,
484
00:25:59,492 --> 00:26:03,361
we may never know how many guns were fired that night.
485
00:26:06,966 --> 00:26:08,932
While the search for answers continues,
486
00:26:08,934 --> 00:26:13,571
there is one new idea that could explain away the controversy
487
00:26:13,573 --> 00:26:16,507
and support the idea that Sirhan Sirhan
488
00:26:16,509 --> 00:26:19,376
was the lone shooter.
489
00:26:19,378 --> 00:26:23,914
Now, there is a theory that somehow, in all the struggle,
490
00:26:23,916 --> 00:26:27,185
Sirhan worked himself into a position behind RFK
491
00:26:27,187 --> 00:26:30,588
and started firing from that direction.
492
00:26:30,590 --> 00:26:34,525
Perhaps reexamining the circumstances of Kennedy's death
493
00:26:34,527 --> 00:26:36,661
might solve the mystery.
494
00:26:36,663 --> 00:26:39,863
PALERMO: I don't think that having a new investigation
495
00:26:39,865 --> 00:26:42,333
into the Kennedy assassination,
496
00:26:42,335 --> 00:26:44,869
even 50 years later, is necessarily a bad thing.
497
00:26:44,871 --> 00:26:47,204
I don't see the downside to it at all.
498
00:26:47,206 --> 00:26:49,473
I'd like to learn why the autopsy report
499
00:26:49,475 --> 00:26:51,209
really doesn't match a lot of the eyewitnesses,
500
00:26:51,211 --> 00:26:52,676
particularly Karl Uecker,
501
00:26:52,678 --> 00:26:56,280
who was the one closest to Kennedy at the time.
502
00:26:56,282 --> 00:26:59,750
Why not open up that can of worms and give it a look?
503
00:27:09,162 --> 00:27:11,429
WILDMAN: The Great Brink's Robbery.
504
00:27:11,431 --> 00:27:14,565
It was the largest bank heist in American history.
505
00:27:14,567 --> 00:27:17,968
Thieves broke into the Brink's Armored Car depot in Boston,
506
00:27:17,970 --> 00:27:20,638
a building that was supposedly impregnable,
507
00:27:20,640 --> 00:27:23,708
and then, under the noses of heavily-armed guards,
508
00:27:23,710 --> 00:27:25,909
stole more than $2 million
509
00:27:25,911 --> 00:27:28,779
from one of the world's most secure vaults.
510
00:27:28,781 --> 00:27:32,850
In the 1950s, Brink's was the company you could count on
511
00:27:32,852 --> 00:27:35,519
to keep your money and valuables safe.
512
00:27:35,521 --> 00:27:41,058
No one could crack the Brink's, until someone did.
513
00:27:41,060 --> 00:27:44,795
The Great Brink's Robbery seems like the perfect crime,
514
00:27:44,797 --> 00:27:47,064
but digging deeper, there are clues,
515
00:27:47,066 --> 00:27:51,202
pieces of evidence that could crack the case,
516
00:27:51,204 --> 00:27:53,404
and one of them is the smoking gun.
517
00:27:59,412 --> 00:28:02,879
On January 17th, 1950,
518
00:28:02,881 --> 00:28:06,617
Boston Police are alerted to a commotion at the Brink's depot.
519
00:28:06,619 --> 00:28:10,287
Something that no one would have predicted has happened --
520
00:28:10,289 --> 00:28:12,190
the Brink's has been robbed.
521
00:28:14,227 --> 00:28:19,429
Since 1859, Brink's has safely transported vast sums of cash
522
00:28:19,431 --> 00:28:21,899
in heavily armored vehicles.
523
00:28:21,901 --> 00:28:23,768
By the 1950s, the company
524
00:28:23,770 --> 00:28:27,572
is moving around $1 billion every day.
525
00:28:27,574 --> 00:28:31,375
The Brink's brand is synonymous with safety and security.
526
00:28:35,180 --> 00:28:36,780
My name is Stephanie Schorow,
527
00:28:36,782 --> 00:28:38,716
and I've written a number of books about Boston history,
528
00:28:38,718 --> 00:28:43,854
and one of them was about the famous Brink's Robbery of 1950.
529
00:28:43,856 --> 00:28:45,856
WILDMAN: As soon as police learn about the break-in,
530
00:28:45,858 --> 00:28:48,325
they rush to the Brink's.
531
00:28:48,327 --> 00:28:52,196
When they got up into the vault room,
532
00:28:52,198 --> 00:28:54,665
they found a scene of chaos.
533
00:28:54,667 --> 00:28:57,200
There was money all over the floor everywhere.
534
00:28:57,202 --> 00:29:00,071
The guards were frantic.
535
00:29:00,073 --> 00:29:03,807
WILDMAN: Curiously, the robbers struck at exactly 7:00 PM,
536
00:29:03,809 --> 00:29:05,876
the precise moment that guards were counting
537
00:29:05,878 --> 00:29:08,479
the last load of money from the armored trucks.
538
00:29:08,481 --> 00:29:11,415
The guards heard a sound, and when they looked around,
539
00:29:11,417 --> 00:29:13,951
there were 5, 6, 7 -- they couldn't tell --
540
00:29:13,953 --> 00:29:16,020
men, dressed all alike.
541
00:29:16,022 --> 00:29:21,692
They had Navy-style peacoats on, they had chauffeur's caps on,
542
00:29:21,694 --> 00:29:23,894
and they had these grotesque masks
543
00:29:23,896 --> 00:29:25,696
that covered their entire face.
544
00:29:25,698 --> 00:29:28,299
One guy said, "I thought it was a Halloween prank."
545
00:29:28,301 --> 00:29:31,435
But these guys were deadly serious, and they had guns.
546
00:29:31,437 --> 00:29:32,703
WILDMAN: The guards explain
547
00:29:32,705 --> 00:29:34,304
they were forced to lie on the floor
548
00:29:34,306 --> 00:29:36,374
while the robbers tied them up.
549
00:29:36,376 --> 00:29:39,577
The men, very methodically, taped up their mouths,
550
00:29:39,579 --> 00:29:41,312
took their glasses, took their guns,
551
00:29:41,314 --> 00:29:44,315
and then proceeded to take the money.
552
00:29:44,317 --> 00:29:47,384
15, 20 minutes, and they were out of there.
553
00:29:50,055 --> 00:29:52,790
WILDMAN: The Brink's Robbery is the biggest cash heist
554
00:29:52,792 --> 00:29:54,525
in U.S. history.
555
00:29:54,527 --> 00:29:58,462
Over $2 million has been stolen,
556
00:29:58,464 --> 00:30:02,866
and the press quickly dubs it "the perfect crime."
557
00:30:02,868 --> 00:30:05,202
My name is Michael Pingree.
558
00:30:05,204 --> 00:30:08,272
I was an editor at the "Boston Herald" for 30 years.
559
00:30:08,274 --> 00:30:10,474
The thing that would stand out to me as a newspaper man
560
00:30:10,476 --> 00:30:14,278
about this story is precision and the lightning speed
561
00:30:14,280 --> 00:30:15,879
with which they carried this off.
562
00:30:15,881 --> 00:30:18,782
And, in addition, nobody gets hurt, nobody gets shot.
563
00:30:18,784 --> 00:30:21,485
They tie these guys up, they take the money and run.
564
00:30:21,487 --> 00:30:23,954
Who could have done this?
565
00:30:23,956 --> 00:30:25,889
WILDMAN: The pressure is on the Boston Police
566
00:30:25,891 --> 00:30:27,824
to crack the case,
567
00:30:27,826 --> 00:30:30,027
and one of the first puzzles facing them
568
00:30:30,029 --> 00:30:33,563
is the ease with which the thieves access the vault.
569
00:30:33,565 --> 00:30:35,900
SCHOROW: I mean, the Brink's was supposed to be impregnable,
570
00:30:35,902 --> 00:30:38,302
and it was, you know, more than a hundred years old.
571
00:30:38,304 --> 00:30:42,039
The idea was that it was the best.
572
00:30:42,041 --> 00:30:43,974
It was the Brink's.
573
00:30:47,714 --> 00:30:50,848
This is so interesting. Take a look at this.
574
00:30:50,850 --> 00:30:54,384
This is a sketch of the interior of the Brink's Building,
575
00:30:54,386 --> 00:30:57,254
and you can see that's the vault right here.
576
00:30:57,256 --> 00:30:59,123
Now, look. This is key.
577
00:30:59,125 --> 00:31:03,861
There are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 locked doors
578
00:31:03,863 --> 00:31:08,132
the thieves had to pass through to access the vault.
579
00:31:08,134 --> 00:31:09,734
Now, how did they get in there,
580
00:31:09,736 --> 00:31:12,603
and why was there no sign of any break-in?
581
00:31:12,605 --> 00:31:15,206
And how did they know exactly when to strike
582
00:31:15,208 --> 00:31:17,475
when the vault was open?
583
00:31:22,081 --> 00:31:23,747
My name is Margaret Sullivan.
584
00:31:23,749 --> 00:31:25,216
I'm the records manager and archivist
585
00:31:25,218 --> 00:31:26,817
for the Boston Police Department.
586
00:31:26,819 --> 00:31:31,222
The police were trying to figure out how the thieves
587
00:31:31,224 --> 00:31:33,157
gained entry to the money area,
588
00:31:33,159 --> 00:31:36,693
the counting area on the second floor at the Brink's Building.
589
00:31:36,695 --> 00:31:38,896
Did somebody cooperate with them?
590
00:31:38,898 --> 00:31:40,698
Had they used a file?
591
00:31:40,700 --> 00:31:43,099
But there were no tool marks on the locks.
592
00:31:43,101 --> 00:31:46,437
So that was a big mystery, was, "How did these thieves get in?"
593
00:31:46,439 --> 00:31:49,306
WILDMAN: Boston Police interview the Brink's employees,
594
00:31:49,308 --> 00:31:52,843
but find nothing to suggest any of them was in on the robbery.
595
00:31:54,714 --> 00:31:57,181
The investigation is back to square one.
596
00:32:00,653 --> 00:32:04,454
So, police turn their attention to the physical clues.
597
00:32:04,456 --> 00:32:07,858
There was very little evidence left at the scene,
598
00:32:07,860 --> 00:32:09,393
and this is it basically.
599
00:32:09,395 --> 00:32:11,928
You got the rope
600
00:32:11,930 --> 00:32:15,732
with the tape used to gag the guards' mouths,
601
00:32:15,734 --> 00:32:18,335
and this single chauffeur's cap.
602
00:32:22,275 --> 00:32:26,143
For police, the cap is a critical piece of evidence --
603
00:32:26,145 --> 00:32:29,480
a potential smoking gun that could solve the case.
604
00:32:31,417 --> 00:32:35,219
SCHOROW: And this was an object of great interest
605
00:32:35,221 --> 00:32:37,354
to the police and to the public.
606
00:32:37,356 --> 00:32:40,624
Why was this hat left at the scene?
607
00:32:40,626 --> 00:32:42,293
Was it left as a sign?
608
00:32:42,295 --> 00:32:44,428
Was it an accident?
609
00:32:44,430 --> 00:32:46,096
What did it mean?
610
00:33:03,382 --> 00:33:04,982
WILDMAN: The Great Brink's Robbery
611
00:33:04,984 --> 00:33:07,451
was almost the perfect crime.
612
00:33:07,453 --> 00:33:11,856
Thieves stole millions in cash and left little evidence behind.
613
00:33:11,858 --> 00:33:14,258
But police do have one clue to go on.
614
00:33:18,597 --> 00:33:20,464
Stephanie Schorow has spent years
615
00:33:20,466 --> 00:33:21,932
studying the Brink's Robbery,
616
00:33:21,934 --> 00:33:25,735
and has built up an extensive collection of artifacts.
617
00:33:25,737 --> 00:33:27,671
There's very little evidence that's left at the scene,
618
00:33:27,673 --> 00:33:29,873
and this is it, basically.
619
00:33:29,875 --> 00:33:34,544
The rope, the tape that was used to tape up the mouths
620
00:33:34,546 --> 00:33:38,549
of the guards, and the one chauffeur's hat.
621
00:33:38,551 --> 00:33:41,351
The police looked into where the rope was purchased,
622
00:33:41,353 --> 00:33:43,354
and they could not find anything.
623
00:33:43,356 --> 00:33:45,088
This is not the hat at the scene,
624
00:33:45,090 --> 00:33:47,758
but it would have been something like this that they wore --
625
00:33:47,760 --> 00:33:49,960
just a basic chauffeur's cap.
626
00:33:49,962 --> 00:33:52,029
They really did some work trying to figure out
627
00:33:52,031 --> 00:33:53,497
where this came from,
628
00:33:53,499 --> 00:33:55,833
but they really didn't get very far with that.
629
00:33:55,835 --> 00:33:58,636
WILDMAN: The police comb through local stores in hopes
630
00:33:58,638 --> 00:34:01,838
the hat was bought in Boston, but they find nothing.
631
00:34:01,840 --> 00:34:05,508
The robbers had been really good to buy the stuff in ways
632
00:34:05,510 --> 00:34:08,245
that could not be traced and not be noticed.
633
00:34:08,247 --> 00:34:10,648
WILDMAN: However, the investigators do make
634
00:34:10,650 --> 00:34:12,182
one small breakthrough.
635
00:34:12,184 --> 00:34:17,253
The police were able to figure out fairly quickly
636
00:34:17,255 --> 00:34:21,525
what were the grotesque masks that the robbers were using.
637
00:34:21,527 --> 00:34:25,062
And they figured out that -- and this is from the FBI --
638
00:34:25,064 --> 00:34:28,699
picture of Captain Marvel and Captain Marvel, Jr.
639
00:34:28,701 --> 00:34:30,267
were these masks.
640
00:34:34,874 --> 00:34:37,807
WILDMAN: In an attempt to find out where the masks were bought,
641
00:34:37,809 --> 00:34:42,613
a police officer poses in one outside the Brink's Building.
642
00:34:42,615 --> 00:34:46,550
But it doesn't generate any leads.
643
00:34:46,552 --> 00:34:49,153
Hitting a dead end with the physical evidence,
644
00:34:49,155 --> 00:34:52,823
police start drawing up a list of possible suspects --
645
00:34:52,825 --> 00:34:55,626
some well-known local criminals,
646
00:34:55,628 --> 00:34:58,628
but others from as far away as New York.
647
00:34:58,630 --> 00:35:01,565
There was some theory that it couldn't have been someone local
648
00:35:01,567 --> 00:35:03,500
because it was too sophisticated.
649
00:35:05,037 --> 00:35:06,437
WILDMAN: Then, on March 4th,
650
00:35:06,439 --> 00:35:09,306
police make a discovery.
651
00:35:09,308 --> 00:35:13,644
In a dump in Stoughton, on the outskirts of Boston,
652
00:35:13,646 --> 00:35:16,046
they find pieces of a chopped-up truck,
653
00:35:16,048 --> 00:35:21,318
later identified as a 1949 green Ford pickup.
654
00:35:21,320 --> 00:35:23,787
The truck matches the description of a vehicle
655
00:35:23,789 --> 00:35:26,190
last seen near the Brink's Building
656
00:35:26,192 --> 00:35:28,192
on the night of the robbery.
657
00:35:28,194 --> 00:35:30,727
They had one witness that saw the truck drive away,
658
00:35:30,729 --> 00:35:32,729
and they were able to determine, this is probably the truck
659
00:35:32,731 --> 00:35:35,065
that was used as the getaway.
660
00:35:35,067 --> 00:35:36,133
Basically, they found it,
661
00:35:36,135 --> 00:35:37,801
but there were no fingerprints on it.
662
00:35:37,803 --> 00:35:40,337
They couldn't trace it to anyone who owned it,
663
00:35:40,339 --> 00:35:41,872
who bought it, 'cause it had been stolen
664
00:35:41,874 --> 00:35:44,074
and then modified and then taken apart.
665
00:35:49,281 --> 00:35:54,218
This is a map of the Boston area at the time of the robbery.
666
00:35:54,220 --> 00:35:57,221
So the Brink's Building is right about here,
667
00:35:57,223 --> 00:36:00,024
and Stoughton is down here.
668
00:36:00,026 --> 00:36:02,425
And so, you got to think like the Boston Police.
669
00:36:02,427 --> 00:36:05,829
I mean, they have hit a series of dead-ends
670
00:36:05,831 --> 00:36:07,231
with the physical evidence,
671
00:36:07,233 --> 00:36:10,100
and it doesn't look like this was an inside job.
672
00:36:10,102 --> 00:36:14,704
So, with little else to go on, could the pieces of the truck
673
00:36:14,706 --> 00:36:17,373
found in the dump
674
00:36:17,375 --> 00:36:19,776
be the big break they're looking for?
675
00:36:28,120 --> 00:36:31,387
The Boston Police aren't able to pull prints from the truck,
676
00:36:31,389 --> 00:36:34,191
but they do make an important connection.
677
00:36:34,193 --> 00:36:37,060
They return to their list of known local criminals,
678
00:36:37,062 --> 00:36:39,796
and notice that two of them live near the dump.
679
00:36:39,798 --> 00:36:42,733
Their names are Joseph "Specky" O'Keefe
680
00:36:42,735 --> 00:36:45,936
and Stanley Albert Gusciora.
681
00:36:45,938 --> 00:36:48,738
SCHOROW: Specky O'Keefe had served time in jail.
682
00:36:48,740 --> 00:36:50,607
He was known for a lot of robberies.
683
00:36:50,609 --> 00:36:52,476
And then when they found the truck in Stoughton --
684
00:36:52,478 --> 00:36:54,878
he lives in Stoughton, so did Gusciora --
685
00:36:54,880 --> 00:36:57,414
there was this feeling that they must be involved.
686
00:36:59,485 --> 00:37:02,553
WILDMAN: Police bring O'Keefe in for questioning,
687
00:37:02,555 --> 00:37:04,688
and while they doubt he's the mastermind
688
00:37:04,690 --> 00:37:07,491
of the biggest heist in American history,
689
00:37:07,493 --> 00:37:10,560
they push him to reveal what he knows.
690
00:37:10,562 --> 00:37:13,096
And the question was, "Could any of these small-time hoods
691
00:37:13,098 --> 00:37:14,898
have pulled this off?"
692
00:37:14,900 --> 00:37:17,634
WILDMAN: Initially, O'Keefe refuses to talk.
693
00:37:17,636 --> 00:37:19,436
But police keep pressuring him,
694
00:37:19,438 --> 00:37:22,239
and eventually, he cracks.
695
00:37:22,241 --> 00:37:25,576
Finally, he said, "Okay, guys, what do you want to know?"
696
00:37:25,578 --> 00:37:28,712
WILDMAN: Quickly, the police suspicions are confirmed.
697
00:37:28,714 --> 00:37:31,447
O'Keefe does know something about the robbery.
698
00:37:31,449 --> 00:37:34,451
In fact, he knows everything.
699
00:37:34,453 --> 00:37:36,453
It turns out that what the small-time,
700
00:37:36,455 --> 00:37:39,122
low-level crook says next
701
00:37:39,124 --> 00:37:41,058
will unlock the criminal masterpiece
702
00:37:41,060 --> 00:37:43,260
that is the Brink's heist.
703
00:37:59,344 --> 00:38:01,744
WILDMAN: Boston Police have been struggling to crack
704
00:38:01,746 --> 00:38:04,814
the largest robbery ever on U.S. soil.
705
00:38:04,816 --> 00:38:07,618
But known local criminal Joseph O'Keefe
706
00:38:07,620 --> 00:38:10,153
is about to explain what went down
707
00:38:10,155 --> 00:38:12,555
and the identities of the men responsible.
708
00:38:15,094 --> 00:38:18,428
SCHOROW: You had Tony Pino.
709
00:38:18,430 --> 00:38:21,631
Tony Pino planned -- or is reputed to have planned --
710
00:38:21,633 --> 00:38:23,099
most of this robbery.
711
00:38:23,101 --> 00:38:25,769
You had his brother-in-law, Vinnie Costa.
712
00:38:25,771 --> 00:38:28,572
Stanley Gusciora, who was the youngest member of the gang.
713
00:38:28,574 --> 00:38:30,840
And, of course, Specky O'Keefe,
714
00:38:30,842 --> 00:38:34,444
who was the guy who brought the entire gang down.
715
00:38:34,446 --> 00:38:36,379
They couldn't figure out how these crooks they knew
716
00:38:36,381 --> 00:38:38,715
to be kind of bumblers, kind of small-time --
717
00:38:38,717 --> 00:38:40,383
how did they pull this off?
718
00:38:40,385 --> 00:38:42,853
And here's where Specs was able to fill them in.
719
00:38:46,591 --> 00:38:49,192
WILDMAN: O'Keefe explains that the plot to rob Brink's
720
00:38:49,194 --> 00:38:50,994
started 2 years earlier,
721
00:38:50,996 --> 00:38:54,397
with the gang meticulously staking out the building,
722
00:38:54,399 --> 00:38:56,600
which is still standing today.
723
00:38:56,602 --> 00:39:00,737
Now, you can see that the building still looks pretty much
724
00:39:00,739 --> 00:39:03,407
as it did at the time of the robbery.
725
00:39:03,409 --> 00:39:05,075
For example, we can count in --
726
00:39:05,077 --> 00:39:07,944
There's the vault room, so that's on the second floor,
727
00:39:07,946 --> 00:39:09,479
kind of straight ahead, it's kind of hidden
728
00:39:09,481 --> 00:39:10,948
by those trees now.
729
00:39:10,950 --> 00:39:13,951
WILDMAN: The Brink's Building was supposedly impregnable,
730
00:39:13,953 --> 00:39:17,287
but in reality, it had one fatal flaw.
731
00:39:17,289 --> 00:39:20,023
SCHOROW: They were kind of stupid...
732
00:39:20,025 --> 00:39:21,692
...in the way that they set it up
733
00:39:21,694 --> 00:39:23,293
right near these big windows.
734
00:39:23,295 --> 00:39:25,228
I guess they weren't thinking of someone looking in,
735
00:39:25,230 --> 00:39:27,163
but really, you have a bird's-eye view
736
00:39:27,165 --> 00:39:30,099
right into their entire office space.
737
00:39:30,101 --> 00:39:32,569
WILDMAN: Realizing the vault was on display,
738
00:39:32,571 --> 00:39:33,904
for the next few months,
739
00:39:33,906 --> 00:39:37,107
Tony Pino posted regular lookouts to monitor
740
00:39:37,109 --> 00:39:40,043
when money was being moved in and out of the building.
741
00:39:40,045 --> 00:39:42,312
So, the lookouts were over this way,
742
00:39:42,314 --> 00:39:44,581
at the top of that building right there.
743
00:39:48,720 --> 00:39:50,921
WILDMAN: One puzzling detail of the crime
744
00:39:50,923 --> 00:39:55,859
was how the robbers got through five locked doors undetected.
745
00:39:55,861 --> 00:39:58,328
Tony Pino, on successive nights,
746
00:39:58,330 --> 00:40:01,264
had taken out the whole cylinder of the lock,
747
00:40:01,266 --> 00:40:05,068
put in a dummy, rushed over to the key shop,
748
00:40:05,070 --> 00:40:07,337
had a key made for the cylinder,
749
00:40:07,339 --> 00:40:11,008
then he rushed back and he reinstalled the cylinder.
750
00:40:11,010 --> 00:40:14,945
So he had a key to the door, but nobody knew that.
751
00:40:14,947 --> 00:40:16,413
He could get in and out.
752
00:40:16,415 --> 00:40:18,215
And he did this for this door right here,
753
00:40:18,217 --> 00:40:21,952
and he did it for two, three, four more doors.
754
00:40:21,954 --> 00:40:23,286
WILDMAN: On the night of the robbery,
755
00:40:23,288 --> 00:40:25,689
Pino gave each of the robbers a chauffeur's cap
756
00:40:25,691 --> 00:40:28,158
to disguise themselves
757
00:40:28,160 --> 00:40:31,094
and masks to hide their faces.
758
00:40:31,096 --> 00:40:34,097
Then, armed with rope and tape,
759
00:40:34,099 --> 00:40:37,233
the robbers piled into the pickup truck
760
00:40:37,235 --> 00:40:39,102
and headed to the Brink's.
761
00:40:39,104 --> 00:40:40,704
So, the robbers started out --
762
00:40:40,706 --> 00:40:42,505
Well, they were dropped off in the truck
763
00:40:42,507 --> 00:40:44,374
right at the top of that hill there,
764
00:40:44,376 --> 00:40:47,778
and then they slowly made their way down the stairs --
765
00:40:47,780 --> 00:40:49,779
which were still there in those days --
766
00:40:49,781 --> 00:40:54,584
and then came down and stopped right about
767
00:40:54,586 --> 00:40:58,388
in the white part of the flag over there.
768
00:40:58,390 --> 00:41:00,524
WILDMAN: When the gang got the signal
769
00:41:00,526 --> 00:41:03,126
from the lookouts, they made their move.
770
00:41:03,128 --> 00:41:05,462
So, this is the door that the robbers
771
00:41:05,464 --> 00:41:07,597
went through the night of the robbery.
772
00:41:07,599 --> 00:41:10,600
WILDMAN: Using Tony Pino's secret set of keys,
773
00:41:10,602 --> 00:41:13,603
the gang snuck into the Brink's Building,
774
00:41:13,605 --> 00:41:16,540
crept up the stairs to the second floor,
775
00:41:16,542 --> 00:41:19,409
opened the four remaining locked doors,
776
00:41:19,411 --> 00:41:22,212
and made their way into the vault.
777
00:41:22,214 --> 00:41:25,015
SCHOROW: It was right about in this area here.
778
00:41:25,017 --> 00:41:26,816
Now, you can see something here.
779
00:41:26,818 --> 00:41:28,552
If you look straight out the window,
780
00:41:28,554 --> 00:41:31,822
you have a straight line of sight to the lookout,
781
00:41:31,824 --> 00:41:34,424
which is on top of that building straight ahead.
782
00:41:39,097 --> 00:41:41,431
WILDMAN: In August 1956,
783
00:41:41,433 --> 00:41:44,835
the Brink's gang stands trial.
784
00:41:44,837 --> 00:41:46,770
In court, the prosecution presents
785
00:41:46,772 --> 00:41:48,972
all the evidence against them.
786
00:41:48,974 --> 00:41:53,910
The clue that seals their guilt is the chopped-up truck.
787
00:41:53,912 --> 00:41:57,380
The chauffeur's cap that was so much speculation --
788
00:41:57,382 --> 00:42:00,183
it turns out it was Specky O'Keefe's hat,
789
00:42:00,185 --> 00:42:02,319
and he accidentally dropped it.
790
00:42:02,321 --> 00:42:04,388
What people thought was a smoking gun
791
00:42:04,390 --> 00:42:07,524
was actually just something dropped by accident.
792
00:42:08,994 --> 00:42:12,395
WILDMAN: Whether it's pieces of a getaway vehicle,
793
00:42:12,397 --> 00:42:15,398
a key witness,
794
00:42:15,400 --> 00:42:18,134
or a second gun,
795
00:42:18,136 --> 00:42:21,271
in every crime, there's always a clue --
796
00:42:21,273 --> 00:42:23,006
one that, above all others,
797
00:42:23,008 --> 00:42:25,542
sheds light on what really happened.
797
00:42:26,305 --> 00:43:26,900
Watch Online Movies and Series for FREE
www.osdb.link/lm