History Daily - John Dillinger’s Jailbreak
Episode Date: March 3, 2026March 3, 1934. Notorious bank robber John Dillinger stages a daring escape from an “escape proof” jail in Crown Point, Indiana with the help of a wooden gun. This episode originally aired in 2022.... Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more. History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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Salku X,
tapam we again.
Viser number,
five vhietta,
Arvauksia,
Patheria.
Palkintone
X-Peng G-K-Sacko,
Towsin'em-Ot,
10-weekquo-a-Rotteas
Pover.P.E.
Coutta, X.
Don't jay-kidist.
It's August 14th,
1933,
at a bank in Bluffton, Ohio.
As the notorious bank robber John Dillinger approaches two bank tellers,
he flashes a thousand-watt smile.
Behind him, three of his men carrying submachine guns storm into the bank.
One of the men fires into the air to show the employees that they mean business.
Still smiling, John slaps a burlap sack on the counter and demands money from the safe.
The bank tellers have no choice but to comply.
But one of the bank employees triggers the alarm.
John frantically stuffed whatever catch he can get his hands on into the burlap sack,
and then he and his men rush out the front door.
Outside, they fire their guns into storefront windows along the street to frighten off any pursuers.
John and his men then hop into their car and speed away.
John Dillinger is the newest member of a gang led by a criminal named Harry Pierpont.
John met Harry when they were both locked up in an Indiana state prison.
But before John made parole, Harry gave him clear and
instructions to amass enough money to pull off a daring mission to break Harry out of prison.
So John robbed this bank in Bluffton to add to his war chest and move one step closer to the goal.
And in a matter of weeks, John will have the money he needs to pull off the prison break.
He will purchase guns and smuggle them inside the prison to Harry and other members of the gang.
And once Harry escapes, he and John will join forces on the outside.
Soon John Dillinger will transform from a small town bank robber.
into one of the most notorious criminals in American history.
But before long, Justice will find the man known as Public Enemy Number One,
and John Dillinger will end up behind bars himself,
scheming to make his own daring escape on March 3, 1934.
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Poweria.
Palkintona X-B-G-Q
Sacko,
Towsin'emps,
10-weekcoa
time to
write to
co-o-o-o-X.
Don't get
to-cudist.
Hey,
therelhan
are quite
never ever
never ever
never.
No,
who't you
then are?
We are
out-toos-juomia.
Yeah,
now,
what do you
do'ts?
Well,
S-Markitista,
tienties,
Tietty.
Elem is
on the one-ruged.
Sarku X,
we're again
five number,
five vietta,
arvokesia,
pouttellu,
poweria.
Palkintona X-Pengg-G-K-S
Sackco,
titherto,
10-week-a-a-a-artka
in a code-o-o-o-octeas
power.
POTT-P-F,
coutta,
don't get-kydist.
Hey, there's
Vanhoja
Muttuia
Marry ens
Uh,
I don't know
Katern't know
So,
okay, no,
who't you
see what?
We're all right
Tootus
Juomia
Yeah,
well,
where do you
know
S-market
Tieth
Elam
on Roka
S-Market
From
Noiser and
Airship
I'm
Lindsay Graham
And this
is History
Daily
History is
made every
day
On this
podcast
Every day
We tell
the true
stories
of the
people and
events
that shaped
our world
Today is
March 3
In third, 1994, John Dillinger's jailbreak.
It's October 20th, 1933, outside a police station in Peru, Indiana.
John Dillinger and Harry Pierpont sit in their car looking out at the station.
They feel confident as they run through their plan for tonight's raid.
Earlier that day, John sent one of their gang members into the station posing as an insurance agent.
The man asked the police officers on duty to show him all of their weapons
so he could give them a quote on how much it would cost to ensure them.
The officers obliged.
Now John and Harry are here to steal those weapons.
John takes a breath and nods to Harry.
They grab their guns, step out of the car, and march into the police station.
Storming inside with their weapons drawn, they take the small group of officers on duty completely by surprise.
And once they have them subdued, John and Harry make their way to the weapons arsenal.
They grab assault-off shotgun, several pistols, pump rivals,
bullet-proof vest and a Thompson submachine gun, better known as a Tommy gun. With the stolen weapons in
hand, John and Harry head for the exit. But before John leaves, he tells the police officers to
stay inside the station for 15 minutes, or he'll kill them all. John and Harry rush outside, get in the
car, and drive off. With a growing arsenal of weapons, John, Harry, and the rest of the gang are
ready to pull off large-scale bank robberies throughout the Midwest. And on October 23rd,
1933. Just three days after the raid on the Peru police station, the gang hits the central
national bank in Greencastle, Indiana. They walk away with $75,000, the equivalent of $1.6 million today.
The following month, they head to Racine, Wisconsin, to rob the American Bank and Trust Company.
John and the boys make off with $27,000, over half a million today. But the robbery comes with a
price. In Racine, things get hairy. The gang ends up taking hostages.
and wounding two people.
As a result, the law takes notice of John Dillinger.
Midwestern police departments circulate photos of John to every newspaper possible,
and the images find their way into newsreels that are shown at movie theaters
before the main feature plays.
But instead of turning the public against the violent bank robber,
this attention turns John into a celebrity.
In late 1933, America is coming out with the Great Depression,
but much of the country is still experiencing deep financial distress
and countless Americans are facing foreclosures on their homes.
Many see banks as the enemy, and they see bank robbers as heroes.
Outlaws like Babyface Nelson and Bonnie and Clyde
have already captured the public's imagination.
Now audiences cheer when John's handsome face appears on screen.
Tales of John's exploits are spreading all across the country.
One story gaining traction claims that while John robbed a bank,
he came across a farmer who was there to make a deposit.
John asked if the cash in the farmer's hands was the bank's money.
When the farmer said it was his own,
John allegedly told him, keep it.
We only want the banks.
Stories like these helped John Dillinger become a household name.
By the end of 1933,
what was known as the Pierpont gang gets a new name,
the Dillinger gang.
And John relishes his newfound fame.
Harry doesn't mind the name change either.
As far as he's concerned,
as long as the gang is successful,
and profitable. The newspapers can call them whatever they like.
But John knows the no-riety isn't all fun in games. As his legend grows, so does the police's
interest in him. John knows the authorities will do everything in their power to catch him.
In December 1933, John, Harry, and other members of the gang decide to escape the harsh Midwest
weather and head to Florida. But soon after they leave, a member of their gang who stayed behind
gets into an altercation with a Chicago police officer and kills him.
The Chicago Police Department blames the murder on the Dillinger gang as a whole
and quickly forms what will come to be known as the Dillinger Squad,
a group of highly skilled officers hell-bent on bringing John to justice.
In early 1934, as the Dillinger squad gets to work in Chicago,
John will go into hiding.
But on the way to safety, John will make a fateful decision that will land him behind bars.
We're up we're getting.
Vi-numbered.
Five-vihett.
Arvaux.
Pairnsia.
Palkintone G-G-K-6,
Sacko,
Towsin-O-Mack-E.
10-weekquo-a-a-art
in time,
to write-a-cotees
Pover.
P.
Coutta.
Don't get
to.
Hey,
herel,
here's on-con-tuttuia.
Moriens.
Uh,
he's not
not,
no,
okay,
you're still
We're
newtos
Joomie
Yeah,
ha
No,
where
you're
so much
you're
sure that's
market
tient
t
surest
Elmarkat
S-Marget
S-Market
Salku
X
we're
We're
number
five number
five
Viette
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and
Patterty
Poveria
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10-weekquo-a-a-a-raughts in a week-a-a-counter-a-cotees.
Don't jac-kydist.
Hey, there's been a manhoes-a-to-do-a-mortoia.
Eh, eh, no, who't you?
Well, we're not new-toos-juomi.
Yeah, ha.
No, where do you're newtts?
No, S-Market, tient, t'emps.
Elmarket.
It's January 15th, 1934.
inside the first national bank in East Chicago, a city in Indiana.
John and another member of the Dillinger gang head for the exit with a hall of close to $20,000,
nearly half a million today.
But as John approaches the front door, he hears police sirens closing in.
He knows his escape won't be clean, so Johnny raises his Tommy gun and gets ready for a fight.
After spending a brief time in Florida, John and Harry decide the gang needed to go into hiding.
The Dillinger squad and other Midwestern police forces were ramping up their search,
and John and Harry became too recognizable in Florida to remain undetected for long,
so they decided to head to Arizona.
But on the way, John returned to the Chicago area to pick up his girlfriend, singer Billy Frischette.
Then, on his way out of town, John decided to pull off one more robbery.
But now, as the cops close in, John is starting to regret that decision.
When John and his fellow gang members step outside of the army,
of the bank, a police officer named William Patrick O'Malley opens fire. John is wearing a bulletproof
vest, so he stands his ground. But his partner is wounded in the fight. Desperate to get away and pull
his partner to safety, John fires his Tommy gun at Officer O'Malley, who falls to the ground dead.
John and his wounded partner escape from the scene. In the future, while discussing the shootout with his
lawyer, John will say, I've always felt bad about O'Malley getting killed, but only because
of his wife and kids. He kept throwing slugs at me. What else could I do? Not long after the
first national bank robbery, John and his girlfriend, Billy, head for Arizona. The couple's
drive out west is uneventful, and John hopes that when they arrive and meet the rest of the gang,
things will calm down for a while. When they do arrive, John and Billy check into a motel.
No one seems to recognize John, and he and Billy go about their business undisturbed. But when John
meets up with Harry and the other gang members, he learns that things haven't gone according to
plan in Arizona. Harry tells John that the hotel where the gang is staying caught fire, not long
before John and Billy arrived in Tucson. The fire was an accident, the gang had nothing to do with
it, but Harry is worried the incident will bring them unwanted attention. And indeed, when police
officers responded to the blaze at the hotel, some of them recognized Harry and other members
of the Dillinger gang from photos in the press. But instead of arresting them, the police decided
to wait and see if John would show up. Then on January 25th, 1934, the cops corner John and
Billy and take them into custody, along with Harry and the rest of the gang. John is extradited
to Indiana for the murder of Officer William Patrick O'Malley, while Harry and three other gang members
are sent to Ohio for a murder of a sheriff there back in 1933. But from the moment John is
brought into custody, the whole affair turns into a media frenzy. On January 30th, 1934,
John arrives in Indiana. Robert Estel, the attorney set to prosecute John's case,
makes sure he gets a photo op with a notorious criminal. In the picture, John puts his arm on Estel's
shoulders and flashes his famous smile. That photo will cause a scandal and eventually end
Estel's future hopes of running for governor. But getting close to the prosecutor doesn't stop John
from being put behind bars. While he awaits his murder trial, John's confined to the late
County Jail in Crown Point, Indiana, a facility that many call escape-proof. But soon, John Dillinger
will shatter that myth and bolster his own legend by pulling off a daring escape. It's March 3,
1934, in the Lake County Jail in Crown Point, Indiana. John sits in his cell, his adrenaline pumping.
He's waiting for a guard to come let him out for his daily exercise. But John's not interested
in going for a walk. Today, he intends to put a well-crafted plan into motion.
Previously, John whittled a fake gun out of a block of wood and painted it black with shoe polish.
Now he's going to use the fake weapon to make his escape.
Soon he hears the sounds of footsteps approaching.
When the guard opens the cell door, John thrusts the wooden gun into the man's side and marches him down the corridor.
As other guards approach, John uses his fake weapon to force them into empty cells.
And next, John frees a fellow inmate who is in on the plan.
John knew that he and his companion would need more than a fake pistol to pull this off.
So prior to the breakout, John instructed his attorney to pay off people on the inside to help.
Soon John and his companion are rushing to a spot where he knows real weapons are waiting.
Now, with machine guns in hand, John and his companion meet with little resistance.
They head outside, steal a sheriff's car, and drive away bound for Chicago.
John's jail break will add to his already growing legend.
But in the process of pulling off his daring escape, John makes a costly mistake.
He drives the stolen sheriff's car across state lines, thus committing a federal crime.
The feds immediately go on the hunt for John, declaring him public enemy number one.
And months later, on July 22nd, 1934, federal agents catch up with John in Chicago and gun him down outside the biograph theater.
Much like the tale of Bonnie and Clyde, John Dillinger's story is a meld of feld of three.
fact and folklore. Some believe John never whittled a wooden gun and that he broke out of jail
using a real pistol that was smuggled into him. Others suggest that bribes paid by John's attorney
allowed him to just walk out of the jail unimpeded. But regardless of the truth, there is no
doubt that John Dillinger became popular at a time of great economic fear and insecurity,
a feeling of desperation that had many Americans making outlaws into folk heroes. The legend of
John Dillinger was born out of this moment and was etched into history when John busted out of the
Lake County Jail on March 3rd, 1934. Next on History Daily, March 4th, 1801, Thomas Jefferson is
elected president and America witnesses the first peaceful transfer of power between rival parties
in modern history. From Noisor and Ayrship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited, and
executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham. Audio editing and sound design by Molly.
Bob. This episode is written
in research by Michael Federico.
Executive producers are Stephen
Walters for airship,
Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
