Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Hollow Nickel Case
Episode Date: November 18, 2025In 1953, a newspaper delivery boy in Brooklyn, New York, made an odd discovery. One of his customers gave him a nickel that seemed lighter than the others. When he dropped it, it popped open, expos...ing a small piece of microfilm. It was the bizarre beginning of the exposure and discovery of a spy ring in the United States that ultimately contributed to one of the most notable events in the entire Cold War. Learn more about the Hollow Nickel Case and how a random discovery led to the discovery of a spy ring on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Stash Go to get.stash.com/EVERYTHING to see how you can receive $25 towards your first stock purchase. Newspaper.com Go to Newspapers.com to get a gift subscription for the family historian in your life! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In 1953, a newspaper delivery boy in Brooklyn, New York made an odd discovery.
One of his customers gave him a nickel that seemed lighter than the others.
When he dropped it, it popped open, exposing a small piece of microfilm.
It was the bizarre beginning of the exposure and discovery of aspiring in the United States
that ultimately contributed to one of the most notable events in the entire Cold War.
Learn more about the hollow nickel case and how random discovery led to the uncovering of aspiring
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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The event which became known as the hollow nickel case
began in a very unusual manner.
The story starts on June 22nd, 1953,
when 14-year-old Jimmy Bozart was collecting subscription money
for the Brooklyn Eagle newspaper
at an apartment building at 3403 Foster Avenue in Brooklyn.
One customer paid him with the United States five-cent piece
that felt too light.
As Bozart fiddled with it, he dropped the coin on the floor.
The nickels split apart
and inside he found a tiny piece of microfilm bearing columns of five-digit numbers.
Not knowing what to do, he mentioned the odd coin to a schoolmate, whose father was a New York City police officer.
That officer passed the information to a detective who in turn told an FBI agent.
Within days, the strange nickel and its microfilm were in the FBI laboratory in Washington, D.C.
The coin itself was a clever concealment device.
The headside was taken from a normal 1948.
Jefferson nickel, while the tail side had been taken from an earlier wartime nickel struck in a
silver-rich alloy. The two halves had been machines so that they could be snapped together,
turning the coin into a hollow container. Inside, the microfilm carried 207 groups of five-digit
numbers, arranged in rows and columns with no obvious key or text and no indication of who had
sent it or to whom it was addressed. It was clearly a cipher of some sort, but the FBI had no
context, no matching codebook, and no link to any known suspects. The Bureau opened a formal
investigation, but at first all they had was what they called the hollow nickel case, a mysterious
hollow coin, a safer text, and no leads. The microfilm's numerical message was almost certainly
written in an unbreakable code system known as a one-time pad. This encryption method, when used
correctly is theoretically unbreakable, because each message uses a unique random key that's
never reused. Without the corresponding key sheet, the message is impossible to decrypt.
In this case, the content of the message was secondary to the fact that it was a secret message
that was being transmitted using rather sophisticated techniques, which were typically reserved
for espionage. For nearly four years, the hollow nickel case went unresolved. Agents tried to trace the
origin of the coin by interviewing tenants in the building, following financial trails, and
even analyzing the dyes and minting characteristics to see if it might suggest an origin,
all without success.
Cryptographers struggled with the five-digit group numbers, but without any known
codebook, the cipher resisted the reference. The nickel itself was publicized in internal
FBI circles as a curiosity, but there was no way to connect it all to a larger espionage
operation. During the same period, totally unknown to the FBI,
the man for whom the message was intended, an ethnically finished KGB agent named Renio Hohanan
was living and working in the United States under the alias Eugene Nikolai Maki as part of a Soviet
illegal residency network. The breakthrough came from abroad rather than from the coin. In May of
1957, Howanin, facing a recall to Moscow when fearing punishment for poor performance and heavy
drinking, traveled to Paris and went to the United States Embassy. There he announced,
that he was an officer of Soviet intelligence
who had operated in America for several years
and that he wished to defect.
His debriefing provided a cascade of information
about KGB operatives in North America,
including the existence of concealment devices
such as hollow coins
and other trick containers used in dead drops.
At one point, he actually produced a hollow Finnish 50 mark coin
that had been prepared in the same way as the mysterious nickel,
even marked with a tiny identifying puncture.
That detail allowed the FBI investigators to connect his story to the unsolved case of the hollow nickel from Brooklyn.
Once the FBI realized that Hohanan was the intended recipient of the hollow nickel message,
he was able to supply crucial cryptographic information.
He explained that Soviet intelligence used a sophisticated system known as the VIX cipher,
based on one-time pads and elaborate bookkeeping techniques.
With his help and that of the FBI cryptanalysts, the micro-referraised,
the microfilm text was finally read.
Some modern sources note that the decrypted message written in Russian was not a trove
of secrets, but rather a mundane set of instructions from Moscow.
It welcomed how Hannain to the United States, confirmed the receipt of earlier communications,
authorized the provision of $3,000 in local currency to cover arrangements, and provided
procedural guidance on how he was to send encrypted reports.
Yet even a routine administrative message proved invaluable, because it confirmed
the cipher system tied the message back to a specific agent and validated Howanin as a genuine
defector rather than as a plant. Howhenan also described his colleagues and superiors. He identified
a Soviet operative named Mikhail Sphirin who had been attached to the United Nations as one of his
contacts. However, Svirin had already returned to the Soviet Union and was thus beyond the reach
of American authorities. More importantly, he described another key figure in the network, a middle-aged man
working undercover in New York, who went by the name Emil R. Goldfuss, but was in fact a Soviet
officer codename Mark. That man was Wilhelm August Fisher, better known under the name he later
gave authorities, Rudolph Ivanovich Abel. Howan and also provided information other Soviet
operatives and collaborators, such as Canadian and American targets, including U.S. Army Master
Sergeant Roy Rhodes, who was eventually court-martialed and convicted of conspiracy
to commit espionage.
With Howan and as their guide, the FBI began intensive surveillance of Fisher in New York.
Fisher lived a seemingly modest life, working as an artist and operating a photography studio.
In June of 1957, Fisher was arrested in a New York hotel after an FBI tale determined
that he might be preparing to flee.
When questioned, he then provided the name, Rudolf Ivanovich Abel, which was the name
under which he was charged and which stuck in the public's memory, although Abel, in fact,
had been a deceased Soviet colleague. FBI searches after his arrest found a treasure trove
of classic espionage equipment, including cameras and devices for producing microdots, shortwave radios,
cipher pads, hollowed out objects such as a shaving brush and cuff links used as concealment
containers, and other spycraft tools that matched Howanin's descriptions.
These fines, combined with the decoded hollow nickel message and the defector's testimony,
gave the Bureau a solid espionage case.
The United States government decided not to charge him with formal treason since he was not an American
citizen, but instead indicted him on counts of conspiracy to transmit defense information
to the Soviet Union, conspiracy to obtain such information, and acting as an unregistered
agent of a foreign power.
His trial in federal court in Brooklyn in the autumn of 1957 drew in
tense media attention as one of the first major spy cases of the Cold War on American soil.
At the trial, Howenden gave key testimony for the prosecution, though the defense attempted to undermine
his credibility by depicting him as a chronic liar, drunk, bigamist, and thief.
All of which were technically true, but it also didn't mean he was wrong and didn't have corroborating
evidence to back up his story. Crypt analysts who had work on the hollow nickel message were not
permitted to testify in detail for security reasons. Still, the prosecution was able to show the
connection between the microfilm, the cipher, the concealment devices found in Abel's possession,
and the broader network described by the defector. On October 25, 1957, the jury found
able guilty on all counts. Judge Mortimer Myers sentenced him to a 30-year prison term,
plus additional concurrent terms and fines. The relatively restrained sentence reflected in part a belief
that Abel might one day be helpful in a prisoner exchange,
a point argued by his lawyer, James Donovan.
The hollow nickel case did not end with Abel's conviction.
The information that emerged helped the FBI and other agencies map aspects of Soviet spycraft,
including the use of hollow coins, microfilm, dead drops, and other advanced cipher systems,
and it led to the disruption of related espionage activities.
The case also exposed vulnerabilities around American installations abroad,
such as the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, where Roy Rhodes had been compromised.
For four more years, Abel remained in U.S. custody at the federal prison in Atlantic, Georgia,
while Cold War tensions continued to rise through events such as the launch of Sputnik
and the formation of new military alliances.
The final dramatic chapter in the hollow nickel story came in 1962.
In May of 1960, American U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers had been shot down over the Soviet Union and convicted of espionage.
Negotiations eventually produced a prisoner swap.
On February 10, 1962, at the Gleinica Bridge in Berlin,
Abel was exchanged for powers in a carefully choreographed handoff
that became one of the iconic images of Cold War diplomacy and espionage.
The public story of that exchange, and Donovan's role in it,
later inspired the 2015 film, Bridge of Spies,
starring Tom Hanks and Mark Rylance,
which dramatized both the Abel trial and the later swap with the hollow nymphs,
nickel case referenced as the initial path by which the FBI discovers its man.
Rainio Haohanan struggled with alcoholism and personal instability and died in a car wreck in
1961 in Pennsylvania, which was widely believed to be accidental, but you never know.
Rudolph Abel returned to the Soviet Union and was quietly honored by the KGB and lived as an
artist and lecturer before dying in Moscow in 1971. Abel's defense attorney James Donovan later
conducted additional Cold War negotiations, including helping secure the release of prisoners in Cuba
after the Bay of Pigs operation and died in 1970. As for Jimmy Bozart, the kid who started everything,
an anonymous donor gave Jimmy an Oldsmobile 98 automobile. Jimmy sold the car one year later
and reportedly used the proceeds to invest in stocks, notably the Texas Gulf Sulfur Company,
which marked the beginning of his successful entrepreneurial career. In 1950s,
Jimmy was one of 69 witnesses who were called to testify in the trial of Rudolph Abel.
And as far as I can tell, he is still alive as of the time of this recording.
The hollow nickel case had several profound implications for the Cold War.
It strengthened U.S. anti-espionage efforts by giving investigators their first clear, tangible window into the spycraft of deep-cover Soviet illegal agents.
The discovery of the hollow coin exposed how the KGB used microfoniales.
film, coded dead drops, disguised techniques, and the highly advanced Vic Seifer.
This allowed the FBI to refine its training, update its manuals, and recognize similar
concealment devices in future cases. It also revealed weaknesses in U.S. security practices,
particularly how American personnel abroad, such as embassy staff, could be compromised,
leading to tighter counterintelligence screening and oversight.
By successfully identifying and dismantling, one of Moscow's most sophisticated net
works. The case boosted the FBI's confidence, provided a blueprint for unraveling illegal
residency operations, and signaled to the Soviets that even their most secret operatives were
vulnerable to detection. And all of this came about because of the accidental discovery by a 14-year-old
paper boy who was collecting money from his route. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere
Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
Today's review comes from listener Nathan Boundy over on the Facebook group.
They're right.
Hi guys, I now have the honor of being a completionist club member, chapter of Queensland, Australia.
I started listening with the Planet X episode and then just jumped around listening to
episodes I was interested in.
A couple of months ago, I decided to start from the very beginning and it's been amazing.
It's great to view everything around me through a more educated and thought-filled lens.
My top interest would have to be space.
Cheers, Gary.
Well, thanks, Nathan.
Always glad to see.
the Queensland chapter of the completionist club growing, one of my favorite states in Australia.
I've literally driven from the southern border all the way up to Port Douglas and I've visited
Fraser Island, the Wits Sundays, several national parks, and of course the Great Barrier Reef.
Remember, if you leave a review or send me a boostogram, you too can have it read on the show.
