"Mysteries at the Museum" Lincoln Assassination: Mysteries at the Museum Specials
| ID | 13179394 |
|---|---|
| Movie Name | "Mysteries at the Museum" Lincoln Assassination: Mysteries at the Museum Specials |
| Release Name | Mysteries.at.the.Museum.S17E30.Lincoln.Assassination.1080p.Travel.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.H.264-Absinth |
| Year | 2018 |
| Kind | tv |
| Language | English |
| IMDB ID | 7890716 |
| Format | srt |
1
00:00:01,636 --> 00:00:03,602
I'm headed back to a time
when the American dream
2
00:00:03,638 --> 00:00:07,406
hung in the balance
to investigate the killing
3
00:00:07,408 --> 00:00:10,409
of President Abraham Lincoln
4
00:00:10,545 --> 00:00:13,613
and to reexamine
the motives and schemes
5
00:00:13,748 --> 00:00:17,149
behind America's first
political assassination
6
00:00:17,151 --> 00:00:19,552
and the mastermind
behind it all,
7
00:00:19,621 --> 00:00:21,754
the infamous John Wilkes Booth.
8
00:00:21,889 --> 00:00:23,756
They can even hear
the cavalry.
9
00:00:23,891 --> 00:00:25,891
And they gotta get out.
10
00:00:25,927 --> 00:00:28,026
There we go. Wow.
11
00:00:28,062 --> 00:00:30,696
Press the trigger.
(Don)
It's an American tragedy...
12
00:00:30,831 --> 00:00:34,032
(man)
Fire again.
...filled with conspiracy...
13
00:00:34,068 --> 00:00:35,968
That's incredible.
14
00:00:35,970 --> 00:00:37,303
...and secrets...
15
00:00:37,305 --> 00:00:38,637
Where are we?
16
00:00:38,640 --> 00:00:40,305
...that continue
to haunt us today.
17
00:00:40,341 --> 00:00:42,775
And this just blows everything
out of the water.
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00:00:42,777 --> 00:00:45,711
I'm Don Wildman.
19
00:00:45,713 --> 00:00:48,514
I've explored the world's
greatest mysteries,
20
00:00:48,516 --> 00:00:51,717
examined rare artifacts
and epic monuments.
21
00:00:51,786 --> 00:00:53,586
That is unbelievable.
22
00:00:53,655 --> 00:00:56,455
Now, I'm digging deeper into
some of the most perplexing
23
00:00:56,491 --> 00:00:58,724
and famous cases in history.
24
00:00:58,859 --> 00:01:01,394
My goal? To get closer
to the truth.
25
00:01:01,529 --> 00:01:03,629
Let's burn this place down.
Let's burn it down.
26
00:01:04,999 --> 00:01:07,866
On this special episode of
"Mysteries at the Museum,"
27
00:01:07,935 --> 00:01:10,303
the Lincoln Assassination.
28
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[distant shouting]
29
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30
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There may be no more enduring
legacy in American politics
31
00:01:30,692 --> 00:01:33,960
than that of the 16th president
of the United States.
32
00:01:36,497 --> 00:01:38,898
From his humble beginnings
in Hodgenville, Kentucky,
33
00:01:39,033 --> 00:01:41,901
to his victory in America's
only Civil War,
34
00:01:41,903 --> 00:01:45,338
Abraham Lincoln was destined
to be remembered forever.
35
00:01:49,344 --> 00:01:51,309
When it comes to Lincoln,
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00:01:51,346 --> 00:01:53,979
it's not just his life
that is legendary.
37
00:01:54,015 --> 00:01:57,182
Tragically, nothing quite
captures the imagination
38
00:01:57,218 --> 00:01:59,385
more than the fact that
he was the first
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00:01:59,454 --> 00:02:01,921
U.S. President
to be assassinated.
40
00:02:01,923 --> 00:02:04,990
But what do we really know
about Lincoln's assassination,
41
00:02:04,993 --> 00:02:08,060
and why would somebody want
to shoot America's
42
00:02:08,062 --> 00:02:10,796
most beloved president?
43
00:02:10,832 --> 00:02:13,465
Was it the work of
a deranged lone wolf
44
00:02:13,501 --> 00:02:16,268
or something more?
45
00:02:16,304 --> 00:02:19,639
Part of a deeper conspiracy
to topple the U.S. government?
46
00:02:25,113 --> 00:02:27,880
On the evening of
April 14, 1865,
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President Lincoln was en route
to Ford's Theatre.
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Imagine Abe Lincoln
in a carriage
49
00:02:35,490 --> 00:02:38,424
just like this
but a much different city.
50
00:02:42,463 --> 00:02:45,164
The United States was barely
100 years old
51
00:02:45,233 --> 00:02:47,366
when it found itself
in the throes
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00:02:47,402 --> 00:02:50,702
of a bloody civil war
that divided the country.
53
00:02:50,738 --> 00:02:52,971
The Union of the North
was pitted
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00:02:53,007 --> 00:02:55,107
against the Confederate South.
55
00:02:55,242 --> 00:02:58,110
The catalyst of
this vicious battle? Slavery.
56
00:02:58,112 --> 00:03:00,512
In 1861,
57
00:03:00,581 --> 00:03:03,449
seven slave-holding states
wanted to secede
58
00:03:03,451 --> 00:03:06,118
and become independent
from the United States
59
00:03:06,120 --> 00:03:09,387
and attacked the fortress
of Sumter in South Carolina,
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00:03:09,424 --> 00:03:12,257
setting off what would become
the most violent war
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on American soil.
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00:03:14,462 --> 00:03:16,528
During four years of combat,
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00:03:16,630 --> 00:03:18,597
nearly 3 million fought,
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00:03:18,733 --> 00:03:20,966
and more than 600,000 died.
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As cities across the South
fell to the Union,
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the Confederacy lost ground.
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00:03:28,609 --> 00:03:30,809
By early spring,
the South had surrendered,
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slavery had been abolished,
and Lincoln was looking
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00:03:34,115 --> 00:03:36,481
forward to serving out
his second term.
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00:03:36,517 --> 00:03:40,686
All that changed
on April 14, 1865.
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First stop--
scene of the crime.
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[camera shutter clicks]
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The historic Ford's Theatre,
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where it all happened.
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00:04:01,976 --> 00:04:03,943
[camera shutter clicks]
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The unsuspecting president
was enjoying
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00:04:13,321 --> 00:04:15,254
a night of theater...
78
00:04:15,323 --> 00:04:17,456
[camera shutter clicks]
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00:04:17,492 --> 00:04:20,192
when a gunshot
altered history.
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[distant screaming]
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We've all heard
what happened the night
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00:04:26,133 --> 00:04:28,734
of April 14, 1865,
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[camera shutter clicks]
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00:04:30,204 --> 00:04:32,671
but do we really know
the whole story?
85
00:04:32,707 --> 00:04:35,541
Who was John Wilkes Booth,
86
00:04:35,543 --> 00:04:38,077
and how did he
even gain access
87
00:04:38,079 --> 00:04:40,479
to a United States president?
88
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Dr. Guelzo?
89
00:04:46,187 --> 00:04:49,288
Dr. Allen Guelzo is
a foremost expert
90
00:04:49,290 --> 00:04:51,089
on the Lincoln story.
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Very good.
Wow, that's the box!
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That is the box, that is where
Lincoln sat the evening
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00:04:56,297 --> 00:04:59,064
of April 14, 1865.
(Don)
Uh-huh.
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00:04:59,133 --> 00:05:02,234
That production that night was
of a British written play
95
00:05:02,236 --> 00:05:04,569
about Americans
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called Our American Cousin .
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It's sort of like
the Beverly Hillbillies
98
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but very popular.
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[distant crowd noise]
100
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(woman, reciting lines)
I don't know how you may feel
as a visitor, Mr. Buddicombe,
101
00:05:21,422 --> 00:05:24,656
but I think this is a most
uncomfortable family.
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(man, reciting lines)
Very uncomfortable.
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[laughter]
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(Dr. Guelzo)
Being able to sit
up in the box
105
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got Lincoln away
from the stress,
106
00:05:33,401 --> 00:05:35,267
and he could be alone
with his own thoughts
107
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and enjoy the play, as well,
which he did hugely.
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For him,
this was a relaxation moment.
[camera shutter clicks]
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(man, reciting lines)
Old Solomon has made
a crop of it.
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00:05:44,412 --> 00:05:46,945
Lincoln loved the theater.
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He could recite chunks
of Shakespeare off by heart.
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He loved to meet actors,
Really?
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00:05:53,020 --> 00:05:55,421
and sometimes
after a production,
he would invite actors
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to come up to the box,
and they would do
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00:05:57,558 --> 00:05:59,892
a little professional
theater chitchat.
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00:05:59,894 --> 00:06:03,362
(Don)
One Ford's Theatre regular
was stage actor,
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John Wilkes Booth.
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John Wilkes Booth,
born in 1838.
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Youngest son of one of
the great actors of his day,
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00:06:14,108 --> 00:06:16,441
Junius Brutus Booth.
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00:06:16,511 --> 00:06:20,445
So the Booths were a huge
acting family in America.
Oh, yeah. Yeah.
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00:06:20,514 --> 00:06:23,849
(Dr. Guelzo)
They were dashing,
they were handsome,
they were talented.
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00:06:23,984 --> 00:06:26,985
By the 1860s,
John Booth is pulling in
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00:06:26,988 --> 00:06:30,656
$20,000 a year as an actor,
which, in the 1860s,
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00:06:30,791 --> 00:06:33,359
that was a lot of money.
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00:06:37,064 --> 00:06:40,399
(Don)
He lives nearby here.
Yes, he lives
at the National Hotel,
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00:06:40,534 --> 00:06:43,601
and he picks up his mail
at Ford's Theatre.
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00:06:43,638 --> 00:06:46,738
It's there when he stops
on the morning
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00:06:46,807 --> 00:06:49,474
of April 14th that John Ford,
130
00:06:49,510 --> 00:06:52,011
the proprietor, seeing Booth
there for his mail,
131
00:06:52,146 --> 00:06:54,679
strikes up a little banter
and conversation, says,
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00:06:54,715 --> 00:06:56,681
"Well, you know the President
of the United States
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"is going to be here
this evening
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00:06:59,353 --> 00:07:01,420
for the performance of
Our American Cousin ."
135
00:07:01,422 --> 00:07:04,757
So that's where he gets the news
about Lincoln coming tonight
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00:07:04,759 --> 00:07:07,292
to the theater.
Exactly.
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00:07:07,361 --> 00:07:10,029
(Dr. Guelzo)
At that moment,
the powder train
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has been ignited.
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(Don)
Hearing of the president's
imminent arrival,
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00:07:14,635 --> 00:07:17,569
Booth put in motion
a series of very specific
141
00:07:17,638 --> 00:07:20,305
calculated actions
that unfolded
142
00:07:20,341 --> 00:07:22,841
into the infamous events
of that evening.
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00:07:25,413 --> 00:07:27,512
First, he returned to his room
at the National
144
00:07:27,548 --> 00:07:29,581
and packed a bag.
145
00:07:29,650 --> 00:07:31,850
He then prepares his weapons--
146
00:07:31,852 --> 00:07:35,587
his knife, his single shot
.44 caliber
147
00:07:35,656 --> 00:07:38,590
Philadelphia-made Deringer.
148
00:07:38,726 --> 00:07:40,792
It's the pocket pistol
that's right behind us.
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[camera shutter clicks]
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00:07:43,263 --> 00:07:45,264
This is the gun that killed
Abraham Lincoln.
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00:07:45,399 --> 00:07:48,333
(Dr. Guelzo)
That, all too sadly, is true.
152
00:07:51,839 --> 00:07:54,073
(Don)
That night, Lincoln was
in his box,
153
00:07:54,208 --> 00:07:56,341
enjoying the play
with his wife and friends
154
00:07:56,477 --> 00:07:58,544
while his footman,
Charles Forbes,
155
00:07:58,546 --> 00:08:01,213
kept watch on the other side
of the door.
156
00:08:01,282 --> 00:08:05,217
(Dr. Guelzo)
On the sofa
at the far end of the box
157
00:08:05,219 --> 00:08:08,020
would have been Clara Harris
and Major Rathbone,
158
00:08:08,022 --> 00:08:11,690
then Mrs. Lincoln,
and in the rocking chair
159
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right here would have been
President Lincoln.
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00:08:16,964 --> 00:08:19,498
Now, the curious thing is
in this door,
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00:08:19,567 --> 00:08:21,967
which originally, of course,
was a solid door,
162
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there was a small peephole
that had been drilled...
163
00:08:27,241 --> 00:08:30,709
...so that Charles Forbes,
Lincoln's footman,
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00:08:30,778 --> 00:08:33,979
would be able to come
to the door here, peek in,
165
00:08:34,114 --> 00:08:35,781
make sure everything
was fine in the box
166
00:08:35,850 --> 00:08:37,783
without disturbing the Lincolns.
167
00:08:37,852 --> 00:08:40,285
(woman, reciting lines)
I hate mysteries, sir,
168
00:08:40,287 --> 00:08:42,654
but you see, I have come
to the rendezvous.
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00:08:42,790 --> 00:08:45,591
(Don)
An hour into the play,
John Wilkes Booth
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00:08:45,726 --> 00:08:48,060
arrived at the theater.
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This guy was famous, I mean,
these people all recognize him.
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00:08:50,598 --> 00:08:52,464
Of course, very well known.
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00:08:52,566 --> 00:08:55,200
(Don)
People greeted Booth
as he entered the main doors
174
00:08:55,236 --> 00:08:57,870
and made his way upstairs
to Lincoln's box.
175
00:08:58,005 --> 00:09:02,006
Once there,
he encountered Lincoln's
footman standing guard.
176
00:09:02,042 --> 00:09:05,611
And Booth produces
a calling card,
177
00:09:05,746 --> 00:09:07,880
hands it to Forbes,
as if to say,
178
00:09:08,015 --> 00:09:10,882
"I'm John Wilkes Booth,
the famous actor.
179
00:09:10,951 --> 00:09:13,151
President Lincoln
has asked to see me."
180
00:09:13,220 --> 00:09:16,087
Forbes obligingly
opens the door,
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Booth enters the vestibule,
182
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and...effectively
183
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signs Lincoln's death warrant.
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There's now just one door
185
00:09:30,237 --> 00:09:33,505
between John Wilkes Booth
and Abraham Lincoln.
186
00:09:33,640 --> 00:09:37,242
(Don)
To confirm Lincoln's position,
Booth used the peephole
187
00:09:37,278 --> 00:09:39,378
designed to check
on the president
188
00:09:39,513 --> 00:09:41,446
without disturbing him.
189
00:09:41,515 --> 00:09:43,248
He can hear what's going on
in the play,
190
00:09:43,383 --> 00:09:45,984
and he knows that the big line
that he is waiting for
191
00:09:46,053 --> 00:09:48,187
is about to be delivered.
192
00:09:48,322 --> 00:09:52,123
(woman, reciting lines)
I am aware, Mr. Trenchard,
you are not
193
00:09:52,193 --> 00:09:54,459
used to the manners
of good society...
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00:09:54,495 --> 00:09:56,728
(Don)
Booth knew that one
specific line
195
00:09:56,764 --> 00:09:59,331
would cause the audience
to burst into laughter,
196
00:09:59,400 --> 00:10:01,867
masking the sound
of a gunshot.
197
00:10:01,869 --> 00:10:05,537
(man, reciting lines)
Well, I guess I know enough
to turn you inside-out, old gal,
198
00:10:05,672 --> 00:10:09,141
you sockdologizing
old man-trap.
199
00:10:09,276 --> 00:10:12,144
[laughter and cheering]
200
00:10:14,214 --> 00:10:15,814
When the punch line is given,
201
00:10:15,949 --> 00:10:19,184
he then opens the door,
steps right up behind Lincoln...
202
00:10:21,288 --> 00:10:24,422
The ball hits Lincoln,
back of the head,
203
00:10:24,491 --> 00:10:27,158
behind he left ear--
Lincoln slumps forward.
204
00:10:27,194 --> 00:10:30,161
Major Rathbone jumps up
from the sofa,
205
00:10:30,231 --> 00:10:32,363
grapples with Booth.
206
00:10:32,399 --> 00:10:35,233
Booth has his hunting knife
in his hand.
Yeah.
207
00:10:35,302 --> 00:10:38,103
He slashes Rathbone,
grabs the balustrade,
208
00:10:38,238 --> 00:10:41,306
and leaps over to jump
to the stage.
209
00:10:41,342 --> 00:10:44,375
(Don)
Booth broke his leg
in the process,
210
00:10:44,411 --> 00:10:47,913
but fueled by adrenaline,
he felt no pain.
211
00:10:47,915 --> 00:10:51,783
Stands up, brandishing
the hunting knife, and shouts,
212
00:10:51,785 --> 00:10:55,053
"Sic semper tyrannis!
213
00:10:55,189 --> 00:10:58,090
The South is avenged!"
214
00:11:02,663 --> 00:11:06,398
Sic semper tyrannis is
the state motto of Virginia.
Okay.
215
00:11:06,533 --> 00:11:10,002
Latin for
"Thus always to tyrants."
216
00:11:10,137 --> 00:11:14,072
And with that, he turns,
bolts off the stage
217
00:11:14,141 --> 00:11:17,275
to stage right,
opens the back door,
218
00:11:17,344 --> 00:11:20,478
walks out,
jumps onto his horse,
219
00:11:20,547 --> 00:11:23,682
and gallops off down
Baptist Alley
220
00:11:23,684 --> 00:11:25,550
into the night.
221
00:11:25,553 --> 00:11:27,619
(Don)
But the night's drama
was far from over.
222
00:11:27,754 --> 00:11:31,223
What would drive
a famous stage actor
223
00:11:31,358 --> 00:11:33,959
to shoot America's most
beloved president?
224
00:11:34,028 --> 00:11:37,295
Who really was
John Wilkes Booth?
225
00:11:37,364 --> 00:11:39,765
And where was he headed?
226
00:11:47,548 --> 00:11:50,516
April 14, 1865
227
00:11:50,518 --> 00:11:53,786
will forever be marked as one
of America's darkest days.
228
00:11:53,921 --> 00:11:57,656
John Wilkes Booth had shot
President Lincoln
229
00:11:57,692 --> 00:12:00,592
at point blank range
inside Ford's Theatre
230
00:12:00,628 --> 00:12:04,129
and then charged into
the back alley where
his horse was waiting
231
00:12:04,131 --> 00:12:06,866
and rode unfollowed into
the Washington night.
232
00:12:13,107 --> 00:12:15,273
The wounded president was moved
across the street
233
00:12:15,309 --> 00:12:17,876
to the Peterson house.
234
00:12:17,945 --> 00:12:20,679
As a vigil formed around
Lincoln,
235
00:12:20,748 --> 00:12:23,948
Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton,
236
00:12:23,985 --> 00:12:26,418
immediately launched a manhunt.
237
00:12:26,487 --> 00:12:29,288
He knew they were looking
for the famous American
238
00:12:29,423 --> 00:12:31,757
stage actor,
John Wilkes Booth,
239
00:12:31,759 --> 00:12:35,561
but Booth's whereabouts
were as much of a mystery
240
00:12:35,696 --> 00:12:37,763
as his motives.
241
00:12:37,765 --> 00:12:41,099
Secretary Stanton acted fast,
242
00:12:41,168 --> 00:12:43,301
closing the perimeter
of the city
243
00:12:43,337 --> 00:12:45,304
and triggering what is
considered today to be
244
00:12:45,439 --> 00:12:47,840
the largest manhunt
in American history.
245
00:12:47,975 --> 00:12:49,975
Even though Stanton
acted quickly,
246
00:12:50,011 --> 00:12:52,911
it still took several hours to
lock down the D.C. perimeter,
247
00:12:52,947 --> 00:12:56,382
and by that time,
Booth was long gone.
248
00:12:59,587 --> 00:13:01,653
To try and get
a better understanding
249
00:13:01,656 --> 00:13:03,922
of what Booth's life was like
on the run,
250
00:13:03,991 --> 00:13:06,125
I'm following
in his footsteps.
251
00:13:08,829 --> 00:13:10,996
Booth had a multi-step plan
in place
252
00:13:11,065 --> 00:13:13,732
to get from Ford's Theatre
to freedom.
253
00:13:13,867 --> 00:13:16,135
What we know is his first stop
254
00:13:16,270 --> 00:13:18,938
was 13 miles
from the crime scene,
255
00:13:19,073 --> 00:13:21,406
but why there?
256
00:13:21,475 --> 00:13:23,408
Booth's escape route
would lead him right here
257
00:13:23,477 --> 00:13:25,544
to a tavern called
Surratt House
258
00:13:25,613 --> 00:13:28,213
in what is today
Clinton, Maryland.
259
00:13:28,215 --> 00:13:30,215
[camera shutter clicks]
260
00:13:30,217 --> 00:13:32,151
The Surratt House was
a clandestine
261
00:13:32,286 --> 00:13:34,486
Confederate hideaway.
262
00:13:34,488 --> 00:13:36,154
Hey, how you doin'?
263
00:13:36,190 --> 00:13:40,092
(Don)
Historian Michael Kauffman
is a foremost expert on Booth.
264
00:13:42,296 --> 00:13:44,830
The first thing he reveals
is that when Booth arrived,
265
00:13:44,965 --> 00:13:47,232
he wasn't alone.
266
00:13:47,268 --> 00:13:49,234
On the way,
Booth hooks up
267
00:13:49,270 --> 00:13:51,704
with a guy named
David Herold.
Okay.
268
00:13:51,706 --> 00:13:55,173
(Don)
The two had met each other
years earlier
269
00:13:55,242 --> 00:13:57,243
through the proprietors
of the tavern,
270
00:13:57,378 --> 00:13:59,911
but more importantly,
271
00:13:59,947 --> 00:14:03,248
like Booth, Herold was
a known staunch supporter
272
00:14:03,384 --> 00:14:05,217
of the Confederacy.
273
00:14:12,626 --> 00:14:15,327
And from then on,
it's Booth and Herold
274
00:14:15,329 --> 00:14:17,329
throughout the escape.
275
00:14:17,331 --> 00:14:21,333
Booth had arranged for some guns
to be hidden at this tavern.
Okay.
276
00:14:21,335 --> 00:14:24,068
First thing he wanted to do
was come out here and get them.
277
00:14:24,105 --> 00:14:26,337
And they stay here
how long?
278
00:14:26,374 --> 00:14:28,473
Well, they only stay
a few minutes.
279
00:14:28,509 --> 00:14:31,743
Booth stays on his horse
outside the door.
280
00:14:31,746 --> 00:14:35,014
David Herold knocks on the door
and gets the guns.
281
00:14:35,149 --> 00:14:37,616
He's in a hurry.
282
00:14:37,618 --> 00:14:39,818
He could be pursued
by any number of people.
283
00:14:43,491 --> 00:14:45,424
(Don)
With guns in hand,
284
00:14:45,559 --> 00:14:48,227
the first step of Booth's
escape plan was a success.
285
00:14:48,362 --> 00:14:50,895
The next step was to flee South,
286
00:14:50,931 --> 00:14:53,765
but Booth had a problem--
he hadn't expected
287
00:14:53,768 --> 00:14:56,068
traveling with a broken leg.
288
00:14:58,139 --> 00:15:00,739
So instead of heading straight
to the Southern border,
289
00:15:00,808 --> 00:15:03,375
Booth needed to find
medical attention.
290
00:15:03,377 --> 00:15:06,644
Enter Dr. Samuel Mudd.
291
00:15:06,680 --> 00:15:09,247
While circumstances are unclear,
292
00:15:09,316 --> 00:15:11,850
Booth had previously
met the physician.
293
00:15:18,525 --> 00:15:20,525
Booth and Herold rode
for four more hours
294
00:15:20,561 --> 00:15:22,661
to reach Mudd's house.
295
00:15:22,796 --> 00:15:24,863
(Michael)
That's Dr. Samuel Mudd's house.
296
00:15:24,932 --> 00:15:27,599
In addition to being
a practicing doctor,
297
00:15:27,635 --> 00:15:30,202
Mudd was also
a tobacco farmer
298
00:15:30,204 --> 00:15:32,604
and an ardent supporter
of slavery.
299
00:15:32,673 --> 00:15:36,074
He believed that it was
an institution ordained by God,
300
00:15:36,143 --> 00:15:38,877
and his business suffered
greatly when the state
301
00:15:38,946 --> 00:15:41,346
of Maryland abolished
the practice.
302
00:15:44,485 --> 00:15:46,418
[door creaks]
303
00:15:46,553 --> 00:15:48,520
Wow, just as it is.
304
00:15:50,157 --> 00:15:53,558
Dr. Mudd led Booth and Herold
into his house.
305
00:15:53,627 --> 00:15:56,762
(Don)
It's 4 o'clock
in the morning
306
00:15:56,831 --> 00:15:58,964
on Saturday, April 15th,
307
00:15:59,099 --> 00:16:02,301
about six hours after
President Lincoln was shot.
308
00:16:02,436 --> 00:16:05,837
It's hard to imagine a time
before the internet
309
00:16:05,906 --> 00:16:09,308
or 24-hour media,
but in Lincoln's day,
310
00:16:09,310 --> 00:16:11,577
news only traveled so fast.
311
00:16:11,579 --> 00:16:13,712
The New York Times was only
14 years old.
312
00:16:13,781 --> 00:16:16,782
Outside of D.C.,
it would take days,
313
00:16:16,784 --> 00:16:19,784
in some cases more than a week,
for news to reach
314
00:16:19,820 --> 00:16:22,054
about Abraham Lincoln.
315
00:16:22,189 --> 00:16:24,790
This would be an enormous
advantage for Booth.
316
00:16:29,530 --> 00:16:31,529
(Don)
But the question is,
did the doctor know
317
00:16:31,565 --> 00:16:33,732
about the plan to kill Lincoln?
318
00:16:33,734 --> 00:16:35,667
Is Mudd part of this?
I mean, this is
319
00:16:35,802 --> 00:16:37,669
the first thing you wonder--
are they talking like
320
00:16:37,804 --> 00:16:40,539
co-conspirators at this point?
I don't think there is any
321
00:16:40,541 --> 00:16:43,408
single issue that is
more contentious.
322
00:16:43,544 --> 00:16:47,412
He certainly didn't know
when Booth showed up here.
323
00:16:47,548 --> 00:16:49,748
Word would not have gotten
this far down.
324
00:16:49,750 --> 00:16:51,483
No, word didn't get here
in the middle of the night.
325
00:16:51,552 --> 00:16:55,320
I mean, Mudd was probably
in bed asleep when it happened
in the first place.
326
00:17:00,761 --> 00:17:03,828
(Don)
How much Mudd may have known
is still unclear.
327
00:17:03,864 --> 00:17:06,431
But what we do know is that
the doctor treated
328
00:17:06,500 --> 00:17:09,300
the ailing Booth.
They came upstairs,
329
00:17:09,336 --> 00:17:11,970
and John Wilkes Booth
lay down on a bed,
330
00:17:12,006 --> 00:17:14,539
and then Dr. Mudd
makes up a splint
331
00:17:14,575 --> 00:17:18,143
and immobilizes the fracture.
Okay.
332
00:17:20,815 --> 00:17:22,781
(Don)
While Booth was being
tended to,
333
00:17:22,916 --> 00:17:25,049
a major new development
took place
334
00:17:25,085 --> 00:17:27,385
that changed everything.
335
00:17:27,454 --> 00:17:29,855
At 7:22 a.m.
336
00:17:29,990 --> 00:17:32,991
that same morning,
back in the nation's capital,
337
00:17:33,060 --> 00:17:37,129
President Abraham Lincoln
was pronounced dead.
338
00:17:46,941 --> 00:17:49,874
Booth was no longer
just a wanted fugitive.
339
00:17:49,910 --> 00:17:52,144
He was now an assassin.
340
00:17:54,815 --> 00:17:57,149
With his leg set,
Booth was back on the run,
341
00:17:57,151 --> 00:17:59,685
but where was he headed?
342
00:17:59,687 --> 00:18:02,287
That was the question
the U.S. cavalry
343
00:18:02,323 --> 00:18:05,290
was trying to answer.
[camera shutter clicks]
344
00:18:05,392 --> 00:18:07,893
They already interrogated
patrons of the Surratt House
345
00:18:08,028 --> 00:18:10,428
and learned that he was there
just hours before
346
00:18:10,464 --> 00:18:12,830
on the evening of
April 14th.
347
00:18:12,866 --> 00:18:16,034
And through other key
witness interviews,
348
00:18:16,169 --> 00:18:19,971
authorities uncovered Booth's
fanaticism for the Confederacy.
349
00:18:20,040 --> 00:18:23,675
This gave them a clue as to
where he might have gone.
350
00:18:28,382 --> 00:18:31,316
Armed with this information,
the cavalry figured
351
00:18:31,318 --> 00:18:33,986
he would head south
to the Potomac River,
352
00:18:33,988 --> 00:18:35,921
where he could cross
into Virginia,
353
00:18:36,056 --> 00:18:38,190
the home of the Confederacy.
354
00:18:38,325 --> 00:18:40,926
The U.S. Army assumed
355
00:18:40,928 --> 00:18:43,462
Booth and Herold would take
one of these regular routes,
356
00:18:43,464 --> 00:18:45,631
and they blocked
all of those off.
357
00:18:49,136 --> 00:18:52,204
(Don)
And they were right.
Booth was headed south.
358
00:18:52,339 --> 00:18:54,773
But Booth and Herold
were a step ahead.
359
00:18:54,875 --> 00:18:57,476
The two men rode 20 miles
360
00:18:57,478 --> 00:18:59,744
to a thicket near
the Potomac River,
361
00:18:59,813 --> 00:19:02,481
where they received assistance
from like-minded sympathizers,
362
00:19:02,616 --> 00:19:06,418
part of a vast network called
the Confederate Underground.
363
00:19:06,487 --> 00:19:10,221
So he's getting delivered
by the Confederate Underground
364
00:19:10,257 --> 00:19:13,358
through different hiding places
they've been using for years.
365
00:19:13,427 --> 00:19:15,160
Well, that's right.
366
00:19:15,295 --> 00:19:17,563
(Don)
The Confederate Underground
harbored fugitives,
367
00:19:17,698 --> 00:19:20,298
spied on the Union,
and funneled money
368
00:19:20,367 --> 00:19:22,968
into pro-Confederate causes.
369
00:19:22,970 --> 00:19:25,103
They get here about
5 o'clock in the morning
370
00:19:25,172 --> 00:19:27,873
on Easter Sunday,
April 16th.
371
00:19:27,975 --> 00:19:30,642
(Don)
Their plan was to ditch
their horses, lay low,
372
00:19:30,777 --> 00:19:33,445
and wait for the Federal troops
to pass them by,
373
00:19:33,580 --> 00:19:37,616
and for the next five days,
that's exactly what they did.
374
00:19:40,120 --> 00:19:43,522
And sure enough,
the cavalry arrived,
375
00:19:43,524 --> 00:19:46,792
but they stayed on the main road
and never entered the woods,
376
00:19:46,927 --> 00:19:49,861
not realizing that the assassin
they were hunting
377
00:19:49,897 --> 00:19:52,464
was only 200 yards away.
378
00:19:52,466 --> 00:19:54,399
And here they sit,
day after day.
379
00:19:54,534 --> 00:19:56,667
They can even hear the cavalry,
they can hear the neighing
380
00:19:56,704 --> 00:19:59,137
of the horses,
every little snap.
Wow.
381
00:19:59,139 --> 00:20:01,806
And they gotta get out.
382
00:20:01,875 --> 00:20:04,209
(Don)
After laying low for
as long as they could,
383
00:20:04,211 --> 00:20:07,946
Booth and Herold decided
to go for the final leg
of their escape.
384
00:20:07,948 --> 00:20:10,548
Where are we?
385
00:20:10,584 --> 00:20:13,351
Well, we're at a small,
unnamed creek
386
00:20:13,387 --> 00:20:16,421
that feeds into
the Potomac River.
Okay.
387
00:20:16,457 --> 00:20:19,691
And it's about two miles
from the pine thicket.
388
00:20:19,693 --> 00:20:23,695
The man who kept Booth
and Herold in the thicket,
389
00:20:23,697 --> 00:20:25,830
he owned a little rowboat.
390
00:20:25,899 --> 00:20:28,400
This is right where the boat
was hidden.
391
00:20:30,471 --> 00:20:32,504
Booth and Herold's only option
392
00:20:32,506 --> 00:20:35,107
is to cross the powerful
currents of the Potomac River.
393
00:20:35,242 --> 00:20:39,044
This is the boundary between
freedom and execution.
394
00:20:44,785 --> 00:20:46,852
[grunts]
395
00:20:49,156 --> 00:20:51,122
On April 23rd,
396
00:20:51,158 --> 00:20:53,258
seven days after arriving
in the thicket,
397
00:20:53,393 --> 00:20:57,362
Booth and Herold crossed
the river to the shores
of Virginia.
398
00:21:02,136 --> 00:21:04,803
But by the time they arrived,
the news of Lincoln's
399
00:21:04,805 --> 00:21:07,005
assassination
had already spread,
400
00:21:07,140 --> 00:21:09,474
and the reaction
from the Southerners
401
00:21:09,476 --> 00:21:11,143
wasn't what they'd expected.
402
00:21:15,816 --> 00:21:18,150
Booth assumed he would be
greeted as a hero
403
00:21:18,152 --> 00:21:20,351
for murdering Lincoln,
but instead,
404
00:21:20,387 --> 00:21:22,753
he was a pariah.
405
00:21:22,790 --> 00:21:25,089
Killing the president
in the name of the South
406
00:21:25,159 --> 00:21:29,060
was a reprehensible act
and sickened the people
of the Confederacy.
407
00:21:31,498 --> 00:21:33,297
Now on their shores,
408
00:21:33,333 --> 00:21:36,301
Booth's presence would only
bring trouble.
409
00:21:36,370 --> 00:21:39,504
Everybody he talked to
couldn't wait to get
rid of him.
410
00:21:39,506 --> 00:21:42,540
They'd unload him on some
neighbor somewhere.
Yeah.
411
00:21:42,543 --> 00:21:44,576
(Don)
For the cavalry,
the pressure was on
412
00:21:44,645 --> 00:21:47,579
to catch the assassin--
as they raided the area,
413
00:21:47,714 --> 00:21:51,383
Booth tried a different tactic,
assuming an alias.
414
00:21:51,385 --> 00:21:54,385
This time,
his plea for help worked.
415
00:21:54,421 --> 00:21:57,455
And he ended up here at the home
of Richard Garrett.
416
00:21:57,491 --> 00:21:59,391
[camera shutter clicks]
417
00:22:01,862 --> 00:22:04,195
(Don)
Garrett was always willing
to help someone in need.
418
00:22:04,264 --> 00:22:07,499
He put the men up in his barn.
419
00:22:09,636 --> 00:22:12,537
On the evening of
April 26, 1865,
420
00:22:12,573 --> 00:22:15,006
the cavalry arrived
at his doorstep.
421
00:22:15,075 --> 00:22:18,009
And they surround the house
in the middle of the night.
422
00:22:18,144 --> 00:22:21,413
The Garretts come out and say,
"They're over there
in the barn."
423
00:22:21,415 --> 00:22:24,749
(Don)
The cavalry was under
strict orders to take
424
00:22:24,818 --> 00:22:27,419
Booth alive so
he could be questioned.
425
00:22:27,421 --> 00:22:29,487
(Michael)
Herold surrenders right away.
426
00:22:29,523 --> 00:22:31,756
Booth refuses to come out.
427
00:22:31,792 --> 00:22:34,492
One of the detectives
just said, "Enough of this."
428
00:22:34,495 --> 00:22:37,295
And he sets fire to the barn.
429
00:22:37,297 --> 00:22:39,831
(Don)
The plan was to smoke
Booth out.
430
00:22:39,833 --> 00:22:42,901
(Michael)
One of the soldiers
saw Booth spin around
431
00:22:42,903 --> 00:22:45,303
like he's going to make
for the door,
432
00:22:45,305 --> 00:22:47,438
so he fired at Booth,
433
00:22:47,508 --> 00:22:49,841
and the bullet went right
through his neck
434
00:22:49,843 --> 00:22:52,110
and out the other side.
435
00:22:52,112 --> 00:22:55,180
He collapsed,
and he suffocated to death.
436
00:22:55,182 --> 00:22:57,515
(Don)
Believing in his cause
until the end,
437
00:22:57,651 --> 00:23:00,184
Booth uttered the words,
438
00:23:00,220 --> 00:23:02,821
"Tell my mother I died
for my country."
439
00:23:06,059 --> 00:23:08,860
Twelve days after
Lincoln's assassination,
440
00:23:08,995 --> 00:23:11,296
John Wilkes Booth lay dead.
441
00:23:13,200 --> 00:23:15,533
The story might
have ended there,
442
00:23:15,569 --> 00:23:18,069
but in reality,
it was just the beginning.
443
00:23:18,205 --> 00:23:20,338
Secretary Stanton had caught
his man
444
00:23:20,374 --> 00:23:23,141
and avenged Lincoln's death
just 12 days after
445
00:23:23,276 --> 00:23:25,877
that fateful night
at Ford's Theatre.
446
00:23:25,946 --> 00:23:28,680
But with Booth dead,
was the United States
447
00:23:28,682 --> 00:23:30,882
still in danger?
448
00:23:31,017 --> 00:23:33,117
Was Booth a lone wolf?
449
00:23:33,153 --> 00:23:36,321
Or was there a deeper conspiracy
behind Lincoln's killing?
450
00:23:46,326 --> 00:23:49,459
(Don)
On April 14, 1865,
451
00:23:49,495 --> 00:23:52,196
Abraham Lincoln was the first
U.S. president
452
00:23:52,265 --> 00:23:54,265
to be assassinated.
453
00:23:54,400 --> 00:23:57,535
Twelve days later, his assassin,
John Wilkes Booth,
454
00:23:57,537 --> 00:24:00,137
was shot dead
in nearby Virginia,
455
00:24:00,272 --> 00:24:03,641
but was Booth a lone wolf,
or was there a deeper
456
00:24:03,743 --> 00:24:06,844
conspiracy behind the killing
of President Lincoln?
457
00:24:12,218 --> 00:24:14,951
To fully understand
the assassination of one of
458
00:24:14,988 --> 00:24:17,220
America's most cherished
presidents,
459
00:24:17,257 --> 00:24:19,823
you have to account for
the circumstances preceding it.
460
00:24:19,893 --> 00:24:23,761
So let's rewind to one year
before Lincoln was killed.
461
00:24:23,896 --> 00:24:26,497
In the summer of 1864,
462
00:24:26,566 --> 00:24:29,633
even Abraham Lincoln thought
his reelection was unlikely.
463
00:24:29,669 --> 00:24:32,103
The Civil War was raging on,
464
00:24:32,105 --> 00:24:35,439
a body count now soaring
into the hundreds of thousands.
465
00:24:35,508 --> 00:24:38,776
The North was losing
their faith in him,
466
00:24:38,845 --> 00:24:41,178
and the South's contempt
for the president
467
00:24:41,180 --> 00:24:43,114
was unbridled,
468
00:24:43,249 --> 00:24:45,116
but on September 2nd,
469
00:24:45,251 --> 00:24:47,251
the tide seemed to
shift overnight.
470
00:24:47,386 --> 00:24:50,921
General Sherman and the Union
forces took Atlanta.
471
00:24:50,923 --> 00:24:54,725
His telegram to Lincoln--
"Atlanta is ours, fairly won."
472
00:25:00,199 --> 00:25:02,866
This win helped prove
to the American people
473
00:25:02,902 --> 00:25:05,736
that Lincoln could finally
end the war.
474
00:25:05,805 --> 00:25:08,406
Propelled by this victory,
Lincoln was reelected
475
00:25:08,408 --> 00:25:10,674
on November 8th with a promise
476
00:25:10,743 --> 00:25:13,744
to end the bloodshed
and reunite the country,
477
00:25:13,746 --> 00:25:17,682
none of which sat well
with John Wilkes Booth.
478
00:25:19,686 --> 00:25:21,618
But here's the big question--
479
00:25:21,688 --> 00:25:23,954
how and where did Booth
conceive his plan?
480
00:25:24,090 --> 00:25:26,757
Had he always intended
to kill the president?
481
00:25:26,892 --> 00:25:28,492
You must be Kate.
Yes.
482
00:25:28,528 --> 00:25:30,361
(Don)
And did he act alone?
483
00:25:30,496 --> 00:25:33,731
One person as the answers--
historian Kate Larson.
484
00:25:33,833 --> 00:25:37,568
What is now a Chinese restaurant
[camera shutter clicks]
485
00:25:37,703 --> 00:25:41,172
was once a secret meeting spot
for Confederate rebels
and spies.
486
00:25:41,307 --> 00:25:44,575
This is Mary Surratt's
boarding house.
487
00:25:44,577 --> 00:25:46,177
That's right--it was
her boarding house.
488
00:25:48,514 --> 00:25:51,048
(Don)
Surratt was a well-known
area proprietor.
489
00:25:51,084 --> 00:25:54,585
You might remember her name
as the owner of the tavern
490
00:25:54,587 --> 00:25:56,653
in Maryland where Booth stopped
491
00:25:56,689 --> 00:25:59,322
after he fled Ford's Theatre.
492
00:25:59,359 --> 00:26:02,126
Both of her establishments were
considered safe havens
493
00:26:02,261 --> 00:26:04,795
for supporters of the South.
494
00:26:04,930 --> 00:26:07,131
John Wilkes Booth had become
very close friends
495
00:26:07,200 --> 00:26:09,500
with Mary Surratt's son,
John Surratt.
496
00:26:11,637 --> 00:26:13,871
He sought John's friendship
497
00:26:14,006 --> 00:26:16,407
precisely because John Surratt
and his family were
498
00:26:16,542 --> 00:26:18,542
Confederate sympathizers.
Oh, okay.
499
00:26:18,677 --> 00:26:20,945
John Wilkes Booth became
much more passionate
500
00:26:21,080 --> 00:26:24,748
about the system of slavery
and the social structure
501
00:26:24,817 --> 00:26:27,818
that went along with it.
He really found that
502
00:26:27,820 --> 00:26:29,820
it was a system
that should be preserved.
503
00:26:34,827 --> 00:26:38,295
Booth organized
this co-conspirator crowd.
504
00:26:38,331 --> 00:26:41,165
(Don)
The core members
of Booth's group
505
00:26:41,167 --> 00:26:43,099
were Mary Surratt,
506
00:26:43,136 --> 00:26:45,435
George Atzerodt,
507
00:26:45,505 --> 00:26:49,039
and Lewis Paine,
also known as Powell,
508
00:26:49,108 --> 00:26:51,709
a former Confederate soldier.
509
00:26:51,711 --> 00:26:54,511
It was pretty clear
that the Union was going
to win the war.
510
00:26:54,580 --> 00:26:57,848
(Don)
But that didn't stop the group
from trying to devise a plan
511
00:26:57,917 --> 00:27:01,384
to help tip the war back
into the South's favor.
512
00:27:01,421 --> 00:27:04,255
There were a lot of
Confederates in prisons,
513
00:27:04,257 --> 00:27:07,524
and Booth felt that if he could
just liberate those prisoners,
514
00:27:07,560 --> 00:27:10,527
they would be rallied together
to fight back
Mmm.
515
00:27:10,596 --> 00:27:12,263
and win the war.
516
00:27:15,968 --> 00:27:18,469
(Don)
The original plan was not
to kill Lincoln
517
00:27:18,604 --> 00:27:20,804
but was equally complicated.
518
00:27:20,873 --> 00:27:23,941
John Wilkes Booth decided
that he would kidnap
519
00:27:24,076 --> 00:27:27,744
Abraham Lincoln and carry him
through southern Maryland,
520
00:27:27,814 --> 00:27:31,081
which was a friendly location,
and bring him across
521
00:27:31,083 --> 00:27:33,750
the Potomac River
into Virginia and ransom him
522
00:27:33,820 --> 00:27:37,420
for the liberation of
Confederate prisoners.
523
00:27:37,457 --> 00:27:41,424
(Don)
And two weeks after Lincoln's
second inauguration,
524
00:27:41,461 --> 00:27:44,962
the group of conspirators
got their opportunity.
525
00:27:45,031 --> 00:27:48,432
John Wilkes Booth hears that
President Lincoln is going
526
00:27:48,434 --> 00:27:51,502
to the soldiers' home
on the outskirts of
Washington, D.C.,
527
00:27:51,504 --> 00:27:54,438
so he plans to have
the conspirators located
528
00:27:54,440 --> 00:27:57,241
along the road capture
and kidnap Lincoln
529
00:27:57,243 --> 00:28:00,444
on his return,
but what Booth did not know
530
00:28:00,513 --> 00:28:03,314
was that Lincoln decided
to cancel the trip.
531
00:28:03,449 --> 00:28:07,050
So this whole conspiracy
just collapses.
It fell apart,
532
00:28:07,086 --> 00:28:10,287
and it drives Booth even
further over the edge.
Right.
533
00:28:13,993 --> 00:28:16,994
(Don)
Within a month of Lincoln's
second term inauguration,
534
00:28:17,063 --> 00:28:20,130
the city of Richmond, Virginia,
fell to the Union.
535
00:28:20,266 --> 00:28:23,400
On April 9th,
General Robert E. Lee
536
00:28:23,469 --> 00:28:25,803
surrendered at
the Appomattox Courthouse,
537
00:28:25,872 --> 00:28:28,339
bringing an end
to the Civil War,
538
00:28:28,341 --> 00:28:30,540
solidifying a victory
for the Union,
539
00:28:30,576 --> 00:28:32,676
and putting a final nail
in the coffin
540
00:28:32,811 --> 00:28:34,812
of the South's secession.
541
00:28:40,453 --> 00:28:42,419
But Booth wasn't done.
542
00:28:42,455 --> 00:28:45,755
In fact, his ambitions
only grew.
543
00:28:45,791 --> 00:28:48,158
Further enraged by the South's
surrender,
544
00:28:48,294 --> 00:28:50,160
Booth met
with his co-conspirators
545
00:28:50,296 --> 00:28:53,030
and outlined a new plan
that, if successful,
546
00:28:53,099 --> 00:28:55,533
would topple
the U.S. Government.
547
00:28:59,038 --> 00:29:02,039
George Atzerodt would murder
Vice President Andrew Johnson.
548
00:29:04,210 --> 00:29:06,443
Secretary of State
William Henry Seward
549
00:29:06,579 --> 00:29:09,179
would be executed
by Lewis Paine.
550
00:29:09,182 --> 00:29:12,683
And Booth would assassinate
President Lincoln.
551
00:29:16,455 --> 00:29:18,922
On the night of April 14th,
552
00:29:19,024 --> 00:29:21,659
this second plot was put
into action.
553
00:29:23,396 --> 00:29:25,629
The results would
alter history forever.
554
00:29:37,070 --> 00:29:39,837
John Wilkes Booth
and his co-conspirators
555
00:29:39,972 --> 00:29:42,707
wanted to bring down
the United States government.
556
00:29:42,709 --> 00:29:45,776
To make it happen,
they intended to murder
557
00:29:45,778 --> 00:29:48,245
Vice President Andrew Johnson,
558
00:29:48,281 --> 00:29:50,848
William Henry Seward,
Lincoln's Secretary of State,
559
00:29:50,917 --> 00:29:53,451
and President Lincoln.
560
00:29:58,791 --> 00:30:01,192
On April 14, 1865,
561
00:30:01,327 --> 00:30:03,593
they executed their plan.
562
00:30:03,630 --> 00:30:05,329
[gunshot blasts]
563
00:30:05,365 --> 00:30:07,331
[distant screaming]
564
00:30:07,466 --> 00:30:09,734
(Don)
While Booth is successful,
Atzerodt backs out
565
00:30:09,869 --> 00:30:11,935
of killing
Vice President Johnson,
566
00:30:12,005 --> 00:30:15,006
and Seward survives a brutal
knife attack by Paine.
567
00:30:22,281 --> 00:30:24,148
Their attempt to topple
the American Government
568
00:30:24,283 --> 00:30:26,483
that fateful night failed.
569
00:30:26,552 --> 00:30:29,954
After Booth's death,
more information emerged,
570
00:30:30,023 --> 00:30:32,757
and details of the plots
came to light.
571
00:30:32,759 --> 00:30:35,392
Eight people were brought
to trial for treason,
572
00:30:35,428 --> 00:30:37,494
including Dr. Samuel Mudd,
573
00:30:37,530 --> 00:30:39,563
Mary Surratt,
574
00:30:39,632 --> 00:30:42,099
and David Herold.
575
00:30:42,168 --> 00:30:44,568
This is rarely seen,
but this is
576
00:30:44,604 --> 00:30:46,837
the courtroom where the trial
took place.
577
00:30:46,873 --> 00:30:50,174
(Don)
In an unusual move,
the Attorney General stated
578
00:30:50,309 --> 00:30:53,310
that the assassination of
Lincoln was an act of war,
579
00:30:53,379 --> 00:30:57,181
so the civilian conspirators
would have a military trial.
580
00:30:57,183 --> 00:31:00,117
The assassination happens
on April 14th.
581
00:31:00,119 --> 00:31:02,787
When does the trial begin?
Uh, May 10th.
582
00:31:02,789 --> 00:31:04,655
The trial ends June 29th.
583
00:31:04,724 --> 00:31:06,991
(Don)
The testimony presented
was powerful.
584
00:31:07,126 --> 00:31:10,661
Atzerodt and Paine both
confessed to parts of
the assassination plan.
585
00:31:10,730 --> 00:31:14,265
Their statements combined
with other witness accounts
586
00:31:14,267 --> 00:31:15,866
were damning.
587
00:31:15,868 --> 00:31:18,669
They determined by vote
that all of them are guilty.
588
00:31:18,738 --> 00:31:21,739
Four of them will go to prison,
589
00:31:21,741 --> 00:31:24,141
and four of them will hang.
590
00:31:31,284 --> 00:31:34,018
On July 7th
at 1:22 in the afternoon,
591
00:31:34,020 --> 00:31:37,421
they hang the four conspirators
in this yard.
Wow.
592
00:31:37,556 --> 00:31:40,491
(Don)
Mary Surratt, the first
woman to be executed
593
00:31:40,626 --> 00:31:43,093
by the Federal government,
along with Lewis Paine,
594
00:31:43,162 --> 00:31:45,496
George Atzerodt,
and David Herold,
595
00:31:45,565 --> 00:31:48,565
all paid for their crime
with their lives.
596
00:31:48,634 --> 00:31:51,968
The trial of Booth's
conspirators concluded
597
00:31:52,005 --> 00:31:54,905
down here on what is today
a set of tennis courts,
598
00:31:54,941 --> 00:31:57,875
where the gallows stood,
and they were hung on this spot.
599
00:32:00,279 --> 00:32:03,046
Everyone from the group
was now dead...
600
00:32:03,082 --> 00:32:06,050
...or were they?
601
00:32:06,052 --> 00:32:09,186
Is it possible that the man
killed by a single bullet
602
00:32:09,222 --> 00:32:12,623
that night at Garrett Farm
wasn't John Wilkes Booth?
603
00:32:22,035 --> 00:32:24,335
Hey, Nate. How you doin'?
Hi, Don. Nice to see you.
604
00:32:24,337 --> 00:32:25,669
Thanks for meeting me.
605
00:32:25,672 --> 00:32:27,872
(Don)
I'm meeting historian,
Nate Orlowek,
606
00:32:28,007 --> 00:32:31,542
who believes that Booth's story
has a very different ending
607
00:32:31,611 --> 00:32:33,711
than the one
in the history books.
608
00:32:36,015 --> 00:32:39,349
So the alternative theory
about this world-famous
609
00:32:39,385 --> 00:32:40,951
incident is what?
610
00:32:41,086 --> 00:32:44,421
That John Wilkes Booth
was not the man killed
in Garrett's barn.
611
00:32:44,457 --> 00:32:47,825
That he escaped,
612
00:32:47,894 --> 00:32:50,694
and that he lived for
another 38 years
613
00:32:50,830 --> 00:32:54,698
under many different aliases
in many different places
614
00:32:54,834 --> 00:32:58,702
and died on January 13, 1903,
in Enid, Oklahoma Territory.
615
00:32:58,838 --> 00:33:00,904
No kidding.
616
00:33:00,973 --> 00:33:03,641
And this just blows everything
out of the water.
617
00:33:03,776 --> 00:33:06,977
According to Orlowek,
this theory has been around
618
00:33:07,113 --> 00:33:10,381
since the 1870s and was first
brought to light
619
00:33:10,383 --> 00:33:12,783
by a man named Finis Bates,
620
00:33:12,852 --> 00:33:15,452
who wrote a book about
his experience.
621
00:33:15,455 --> 00:33:19,323
Finis Bates was a young attorney
in the small town
622
00:33:19,392 --> 00:33:21,925
of Granbury, Texas,
in the 1870s,
623
00:33:21,961 --> 00:33:24,462
and he was friendly
with a man
624
00:33:24,597 --> 00:33:26,597
who called himself
John St. Helen.
625
00:33:30,603 --> 00:33:32,870
And John St. Helen...
626
00:33:33,005 --> 00:33:35,405
got very ill one night
627
00:33:35,441 --> 00:33:37,674
and thought he was about to die,
628
00:33:37,710 --> 00:33:40,343
and he called Bates
to his bedside,
629
00:33:40,379 --> 00:33:42,746
he said, "I want to tell you
who I really am.
630
00:33:42,782 --> 00:33:45,916
Huh.
I'm really John Wilkes Booth."
631
00:33:49,021 --> 00:33:52,355
It turns out that St. Helen
recuperated, recovered,
632
00:33:52,391 --> 00:33:54,625
and a couple weeks later,
he went to Bates,
633
00:33:54,760 --> 00:33:56,627
and he said,
"I want to tell you
the full story."
634
00:33:59,432 --> 00:34:02,232
He gave him a detailed account
of what happened
635
00:34:02,268 --> 00:34:05,835
leading up to the assassination
of President Lincoln.
Fascinating.
636
00:34:05,872 --> 00:34:08,372
One of the things he told him
about was that the original plan
637
00:34:08,507 --> 00:34:10,841
was to kidnap President Lincoln.
638
00:34:10,843 --> 00:34:13,777
Now, this was not known
till 1935
639
00:34:13,779 --> 00:34:16,313
when the United States
Government finally released
640
00:34:16,382 --> 00:34:18,782
the documents that they had.
641
00:34:18,818 --> 00:34:21,185
(Don)
The knowledge of classified
information about
642
00:34:21,320 --> 00:34:23,587
the proposed kidnapping
of Lincoln
643
00:34:23,623 --> 00:34:25,589
was not the only bombshell--
644
00:34:25,625 --> 00:34:29,593
St. Helen revealed a darker plot
than anyone could've imagined.
645
00:34:29,629 --> 00:34:32,329
He told Bates that the man
who was really behind
646
00:34:32,331 --> 00:34:35,466
the conspiracy was Vice
President Andrew Johnson.
647
00:34:35,601 --> 00:34:36,933
Wow.
648
00:34:36,969 --> 00:34:40,070
(Don)
Could Vice President
Andrew Johnson really
649
00:34:40,072 --> 00:34:43,874
be the architect of
the greatest conspiracy
in United States history,
650
00:34:44,009 --> 00:34:47,344
and why would he want
President Lincoln dead?
651
00:34:56,188 --> 00:34:59,823
(Don)
Historian, Nate Orlowek,
and I are exploring a theory
652
00:34:59,892 --> 00:35:02,759
that Vice President
Andrew Johnson was
653
00:35:02,828 --> 00:35:06,263
the mastermind behind
the assassination of
President Lincoln.
654
00:35:09,101 --> 00:35:11,501
The fact that Johnson was
the only one not harmed
655
00:35:11,537 --> 00:35:14,438
in Booth's plan adds credence
to the theory.
656
00:35:14,573 --> 00:35:17,041
Lincoln never liked him--
Andrew Johnson showed up
657
00:35:17,043 --> 00:35:19,176
drunk at his own inaugural.
Mmhm.
658
00:35:19,245 --> 00:35:22,046
President Lincoln did not
allow him to go to
cabinet meetings.
659
00:35:22,181 --> 00:35:25,315
(Don)
The two men disagreed
on how to handle the South.
660
00:35:25,351 --> 00:35:28,385
Johnson didn't like that
Lincoln wanted to heal
661
00:35:28,454 --> 00:35:30,988
the wounds by simply allowing
the Confederacy
662
00:35:31,123 --> 00:35:33,057
back into the Union.
663
00:35:33,059 --> 00:35:35,125
He wanted punitive
reconstruction,
664
00:35:35,260 --> 00:35:37,561
and according to Bates,
Booth said Johnson
665
00:35:37,663 --> 00:35:40,064
would stop at nothing
to obtain it.
666
00:35:40,199 --> 00:35:42,532
Booth told Bates
667
00:35:42,602 --> 00:35:44,868
Johnson said to him,
668
00:35:44,904 --> 00:35:47,304
"You now have to shoot
the president."
669
00:35:53,179 --> 00:35:56,013
So this is all very convincing,
Nate, but there's also
670
00:35:56,082 --> 00:35:58,815
a lot of convincing evidence
on the opposite side.
671
00:35:58,884 --> 00:36:01,418
Okay? I mean, there were
pictures taken,
672
00:36:01,553 --> 00:36:03,553
there was an autopsy done.
673
00:36:03,589 --> 00:36:05,956
According to Alexander Gardner,
a very famous photographer,
674
00:36:06,091 --> 00:36:08,659
he took one picture--
this is in the document
675
00:36:08,661 --> 00:36:10,760
in the National Archives--
he took one picture
676
00:36:10,796 --> 00:36:12,963
and handed it in
to be developed,
677
00:36:13,032 --> 00:36:15,632
and it never saw
the light of day.
Really?
678
00:36:15,635 --> 00:36:18,302
(Don)
But what about the autopsy
report that is also
679
00:36:18,304 --> 00:36:20,304
in the National Archives?
680
00:36:20,373 --> 00:36:23,640
A doctor who knew Booth
performed the post mortem.
681
00:36:23,643 --> 00:36:26,176
The very first sentence
he said,
682
00:36:26,245 --> 00:36:28,979
"There is no resemblance of
this body to that of
683
00:36:29,048 --> 00:36:31,648
John Wilkes Booth, and I do not
believe it to be he."
684
00:36:31,650 --> 00:36:35,519
He goes on to say that the body
had a broken right leg.
Okay.
685
00:36:35,588 --> 00:36:38,756
We know today, by all accounts,
that Booth broke his left leg.
686
00:36:42,061 --> 00:36:44,194
(Don)
But the story doesn't
end there.
687
00:36:44,196 --> 00:36:47,397
When John St. Helen passed away,
Bates was notified.
688
00:36:47,466 --> 00:36:50,200
So Bates came from Memphis
and identified him,
689
00:36:50,202 --> 00:36:53,937
and because he wanted to some
day be able to prove
690
00:36:53,940 --> 00:36:57,875
that this was John Wilkes Booth,
he mummified the body.
I see.
691
00:37:00,412 --> 00:37:04,414
(Don)
In 1931, six physicians
examine the mummy.
692
00:37:04,450 --> 00:37:08,418
I interviewed one of
the doctors.
693
00:37:08,454 --> 00:37:10,888
This is a sworn statement.
694
00:37:14,960 --> 00:37:16,893
(Don)
Upon their examination,
the doctors outlined
695
00:37:16,962 --> 00:37:19,463
some very specific
characteristics.
696
00:37:22,101 --> 00:37:24,201
A scar on the right eyebrow.
697
00:37:26,305 --> 00:37:28,505
A deformed right thumb.
698
00:37:28,507 --> 00:37:31,708
And damage to the left ankle.
699
00:37:31,711 --> 00:37:34,311
There was seen to be
an apparent slight thickening
700
00:37:34,446 --> 00:37:36,246
over the outside of
the left ankle.
701
00:37:36,348 --> 00:37:37,981
Which would've been
the broken leg.
Exactly.
702
00:37:38,050 --> 00:37:39,382
Huh.
Exactly.
703
00:37:39,418 --> 00:37:41,985
John Wilkes Booth today we know
had all three of those marks,
704
00:37:41,988 --> 00:37:45,455
and all three of those marks
are on the man
705
00:37:45,458 --> 00:37:47,257
who said he was John St. Helen.
706
00:37:50,596 --> 00:37:52,762
There's an easy way
to figure this out now.
707
00:37:52,898 --> 00:37:54,597
There's modern technology.
708
00:37:54,633 --> 00:37:57,000
You can exhume the body,
which is in Baltimore,
709
00:37:57,036 --> 00:37:59,203
and test the DNA.
710
00:37:59,205 --> 00:38:01,471
Well, back in the '90s,
711
00:38:01,474 --> 00:38:05,075
the Booth family became
convinced that we were
probably right.
712
00:38:05,144 --> 00:38:09,079
They partnered with us to try
to do medical tests
713
00:38:09,181 --> 00:38:12,282
to prove or to disprove
whatever the truth is,
714
00:38:12,284 --> 00:38:15,352
and it was all set to be done.
715
00:38:15,421 --> 00:38:17,754
(Don)
The president of
the cemetery board blocked
716
00:38:17,823 --> 00:38:20,423
the exhumation, stating that
only the person
717
00:38:20,493 --> 00:38:23,360
who bought the plot could
authorization such an action.
718
00:38:23,429 --> 00:38:26,830
That person was
John Wilkes Booth's mother.
719
00:38:26,899 --> 00:38:29,566
She passed away in 1885.
720
00:38:29,602 --> 00:38:32,169
A court upheld the decision.
721
00:38:35,875 --> 00:38:38,508
The Booth family has offered
DNA tests.
722
00:38:38,544 --> 00:38:40,777
They were hoping to compare
Booth's DNA
723
00:38:40,813 --> 00:38:42,846
to his brother, Edwin's.
724
00:38:42,915 --> 00:38:45,515
But the authorities responsible
for protecting this critical
725
00:38:45,518 --> 00:38:47,850
piece of American history
won't allow the body
726
00:38:47,887 --> 00:38:50,453
to be exhumed--
any tampering, they say,
727
00:38:50,523 --> 00:38:52,923
could destroy Booth's remains.
728
00:38:53,058 --> 00:38:55,725
Without more substantial claims,
729
00:38:55,761 --> 00:38:58,795
there's great reluctance
to disrupt the grave
730
00:38:58,831 --> 00:39:01,532
of one of the nation's most
notorious killers.
731
00:39:06,172 --> 00:39:08,805
One of the major contributing
factors to Lincoln's death
732
00:39:08,841 --> 00:39:11,808
was Booth's easy access
to the president.
733
00:39:11,810 --> 00:39:14,477
How has this changed today?
734
00:39:14,547 --> 00:39:17,747
And would Lincoln have survived
735
00:39:17,783 --> 00:39:20,149
if different security measures
were in place?
736
00:39:20,185 --> 00:39:21,484
Down! Police, get back!
737
00:39:21,520 --> 00:39:23,186
Get back!
[gunshots firing]
738
00:39:33,365 --> 00:39:36,032
In today's security climate,
it seems ridiculous
739
00:39:36,068 --> 00:39:38,768
to even imagine kidnapping
a U.S. president,
740
00:39:38,838 --> 00:39:41,705
but in Lincoln's day,
it was actually quite feasible.
741
00:39:41,774 --> 00:39:44,708
Lincoln was often unattended
with little or no security
742
00:39:44,843 --> 00:39:47,911
and came and went as he pleased
without fanfare.
743
00:39:48,046 --> 00:39:50,314
This, of course, would never
happen today,
744
00:39:50,449 --> 00:39:52,448
which begs the question,
745
00:39:52,484 --> 00:39:55,385
where was the Secret Service
when Abraham Lincoln
was shot?
746
00:39:55,421 --> 00:39:59,256
In an ironic twist of fate,
the Secret Service
747
00:39:59,391 --> 00:40:03,393
was not formed until 1865,
the year of Lincoln's death.
748
00:40:03,528 --> 00:40:07,397
Orders to approve this new
agency were awaiting signature
749
00:40:07,433 --> 00:40:10,400
on his desk
when he was assassinated.
750
00:40:10,469 --> 00:40:13,603
Still, the Secret Service would
not have protected Lincoln
751
00:40:13,672 --> 00:40:15,605
from John Wilkes Booth.
752
00:40:15,674 --> 00:40:18,341
The organization as originally
founded as an investigative
753
00:40:18,377 --> 00:40:20,477
unit to combat counterfeiting.
754
00:40:20,612 --> 00:40:23,480
They didn't start protecting
presidents until 1901,
755
00:40:23,482 --> 00:40:26,717
after the assassination of
President William McKinley.
756
00:40:29,488 --> 00:40:32,289
We secured rare access
to this training center
757
00:40:32,358 --> 00:40:34,691
not far from
the nation's capital.
758
00:40:34,793 --> 00:40:36,159
Hello!
How are you?
759
00:40:36,161 --> 00:40:39,096
My name's Bill Gleddy.
Welcome to the Raleigh
Training Center.
760
00:40:39,098 --> 00:40:42,633
(Don)
Recruits spend 18 weeks here,
learning and sharpening
their skills.
761
00:40:42,768 --> 00:40:46,636
The maximum age to join
is 37 years old.
762
00:40:46,672 --> 00:40:48,972
What's the criteria that
you're looking for
763
00:40:48,974 --> 00:40:50,774
as far as these recruits go?
764
00:40:50,909 --> 00:40:52,842
Out of a point score of
100, they need to get
765
00:40:52,911 --> 00:40:54,844
at least 80 percent
on the pass rates.
766
00:40:54,913 --> 00:40:57,180
That's hard to do.
Yes, that is
a very high standard.
767
00:40:57,216 --> 00:40:59,649
Down!
Police!
768
00:40:59,652 --> 00:41:01,718
(Don)
The training here is
highly specialized.
769
00:41:01,853 --> 00:41:04,854
It's as much about mental
acuity as it is prowess.
770
00:41:04,924 --> 00:41:08,458
Press the trigger.
[gunshot blasts]
771
00:41:08,527 --> 00:41:09,926
Fire again.
[gunshot blasts]
772
00:41:09,995 --> 00:41:12,261
(Don)
While the presence of
the Secret Service does not
773
00:41:12,298 --> 00:41:15,331
prevent assassination attempts
on our leaders' lives,
774
00:41:15,367 --> 00:41:17,333
they have saved several.
775
00:41:17,369 --> 00:41:20,270
Since the agency started
actively protecting presidents,
776
00:41:20,405 --> 00:41:23,406
13 have survived assassination
attempts,
777
00:41:23,475 --> 00:41:26,209
and one, John F. Kennedy, died.
778
00:41:26,278 --> 00:41:30,414
Once can only imagine that if
Lincoln had been surrounded
779
00:41:30,549 --> 00:41:33,016
by men and women who were
this well trained,
780
00:41:33,085 --> 00:41:36,286
perhaps Booth may never have
gained access to the president.
781
00:41:42,928 --> 00:41:45,228
Abraham Lincoln's life came
to a tragic end
782
00:41:45,364 --> 00:41:48,231
that night
at the Ford's Theatre.
783
00:41:48,233 --> 00:41:52,102
Lincoln was only 56 years old
when he was murdered
784
00:41:52,171 --> 00:41:55,038
for his ideology,
but his short life
785
00:41:55,040 --> 00:41:57,641
left an indelible mark
on the United States.
786
00:42:04,049 --> 00:42:05,982
It is because of his strong
leadership
787
00:42:06,051 --> 00:42:09,118
and violent death he has been
forever immortalized,
788
00:42:09,154 --> 00:42:12,856
but even more than 150 years
since his murder,
789
00:42:12,991 --> 00:42:16,159
President Abraham Lincoln's
words and principles
790
00:42:16,228 --> 00:42:19,329
still guide this country,
providing inspiration
791
00:42:19,398 --> 00:42:21,431
and solace.
791
00:42:22,305 --> 00:43:22,267
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