Morbid - Albert Fish Part 3
Episode Date: March 6, 2022Wel well well, you’ve made it to part three and are probably thinking, ok we’re almost done. We regret to inform you that you’re wrong. This just had to become 4 parts because THERE IS SO MUCH a...bout this foul ghoulish man we just have to tell you or else Alaina would be kicking herself in the butt for years to come. Luckily, in this part we’re going to reach the point in time where Albert is apprehended by authorities, but somehow it only gets weirder. Are you holding on? To ya butts? A couple great and fascinating sources used for this episode! Deranged by Harold Shechter Confessions of a Cannibal by Robert Keller As always, thank you to our sponsors: Peloton: Visit onepeloton.com to learn more Pretty Litter: Go to PrettyLitter.com and use code morbid to save twenty percent on your first order. Curology: Get started with Curology just like I did with a free 30-day trial at Curology.com/MORBID. Cowritten by Alaina Urquhart, Ash Kelley & Dave White (Since 10/2022)Produced & Edited by Mikie Sirois (Since 2023)Research by Dave White (Since 10/2022), Alaina Urquhart & Ash KelleyListener Correspondence & Collaboration by Debra LallyListener Tale Video Edited by Aidan McElman (Since 6/2025) Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, weirdos, I'm Ash.
And I'm Elena.
And this is morbid.
Yep, here we are.
It only gets morbider and morbidder.
This is actually going to turn into like a month of Albert Fish.
Okay, so here's the thing, everybody.
Well, not a month, but you know what I mean.
Here's the thing.
I literally never for one second intended this to be more than maybe two episodes.
Yeah, that's what she said.
That's what she tricked me into this.
I tricked myself into this, honestly.
You all tricked me into this because you requested this case so highly that I was like,
all right, I got to do it.
Yeah.
And then I was like, if I'm going to do it, I got to do it right.
It's a lot of information.
Here I thought I was going to get into.
I was like, you know what, two episodes.
I'm thinking we get through everything.
We do the trial for the second episode.
It's kind of wild.
But here we are.
We're at part three.
And we had to do this late because I just kept, I couldn't.
stop because I can't stop. Like literally can't stop, won't stop, will stop, need to stop. Get the guac.
Yeah, I got to stop because I was like, okay, I'm going to edit this down. I'm going too hard.
Yeah. I'm getting too crazy with it. I was at like 40 pages of notes. My God. And I was like,
I got to stop. I got to end this somewhere. I think I'm writing a dissertation. For like your mental health.
And I never meant to write a dissertation. No. On Albert Fish.
I never meant to get my PhD in Fish.
I just never meant to do this.
Nobody did.
But here we are.
So we pushed this to today to release because I was like, okay, I got to edit this down.
I don't want to make it four parts.
Guys, I'm sorry.
It's going to be four parts.
I can't, I can't edit it down.
I can't do it.
I feel like I'm going to be taking out things that are important or things that like shocked me or
made me think more about it.
I just have to talk to you about it.
I'm sorry.
But it looks like from the reaction.
you guys want four parts.
So everybody said yesterday, like I saw on like Twitter and Instagram,
everybody was like, oh my God, make it four parts.
Like we want it.
Which I appreciate.
I appreciate guys allowing me to like really go ham on this.
Yeah.
As much as I don't want to, I have to.
It is going to end at four parts.
Four parts is it's already done.
You got to do what you got to do.
Yeah, it's already done.
It's ended.
I have vowed to my husband.
Oh my God.
To all of the, you know, to every goddess that ever.
existed that I am stopping. I am no longer looking through old newspapers. I have been banned from
newspapers.com for a while. Self banned. Self banned and my husband's like, please stop. He's like,
stop it. Stop it now. Close it. Get rid of it. Get rid of the subscription to newspapers.org
throw the whole computer away. But I have to stop. So we are done. Okay. But there is going to be
four parts because otherwise this particular episode would end up being.
hours long. And I don't think anybody really has the time or patience to sit through that. So I'd
like to break it up for you. But luckily, you're getting the fourth one tomorrow. Yay. You're only going to
have to wait like 12 hours. You're getting a 12 hour reprieve, which you'll probably need.
You definitely will. The fourth episode is going to be mostly trial in his execution,
everything that happened during that. Because it is important. The trial was wild. So I feel like
it's an important one to really take the time on.
And I wanted to make sure that, like, I could talk about him, his confessions that he gave
and things that he talked about, how he went back and forth, the psychiatrist's point of
you and all this.
They had tons of what they called alienists, as I'm sure you've heard of.
But, yeah, this one's going to be mainly talking about the lead up to the trial because,
holy shit, a lot led up to this trial.
This was not just arrest, put him on trial, put him in jail.
Not just poop-poo carrots arrest trial.
So, no, not just poop carrots and jugs of teeth.
It was...
L-O-L.
But here we are.
Again, I'm sorry.
But it seems like you're not upset about it.
So I'm always apologizing because I want to make sure that you guys are happy.
Yeah.
So four times, four times, four episodes.
And then we end.
Sorry, my brain is much.
Her brain's like...
And you're getting it tomorrow.
So that's the end of my rant.
All right.
Here we are.
So when we left you at the last episode where we needed to pause, the buds have received a terrible letter.
And this is six years after Grace has gone missing.
They have suffered through this.
And it is now, now they're getting a letter that says, I'm not going to read you the whole letter.
I didn't in the last episode, but I'm just going to refresh you on what I did read.
it says on and it said like my dearest mrs budd like get the fuck out of here like fuck right off um it says
on sunday june the third 1928 i called on you at 406 west 15th street brought you pot cheese
strawberries we had lunch grace sat in my lap and kissed me i made up my mind to eat her on the pretense of
taking her to a party you said yes she could go i took her to an empty house in westchester i had already
picked out. He then explained that he waited in a room naked while she picked wildflowers outside.
He called her in. He attacked her when she tried to run. She yelled at him, I'm telling Mama.
He strangled her with his knee to her chest on the floor. He cut her to pieces according to him.
He cooked and ate the pieces for days. He also made sure to tell her mother that he never raped her.
He stated she died a virgin. I don't understand why he's saying he, like maybe that's true.
but why was he naked?
That's, well, that's the thing.
Why are he standing naked in a room?
Exactly.
Like, that's not the true.
I don't believe it.
As we're going to see, he's, I don't know what to believe when it comes to him.
Right.
He's a monster.
He's a child torturer.
He's a child killer.
He's a rapist.
He's a weird as fuck dude who has every kind of parapheria you can ever even conceive of.
Yeah.
But I don't know what is true.
in what isn't when he goes into these graphic details.
Right.
Because I also think that he just, that's part of his thing.
Part of his kinks are that he likes to write these letters.
Write these obscene letters.
He gets things out of getting people like upset and shocked.
It's written word.
So I feel like some of it is just bullshit.
Yeah.
And some of it is just for him to get off on the idea that you think he did that.
Yep.
Or that.
And it's also what he wants to do, but he might just not have done it.
I think.
Who knows?
I think he did.
Because there's no way for us to know with her because there's nothing left.
Oh, that's horrific.
All we do know is that he did dismember her and we'll get into that afterwards.
But again, I'm going to be as careful as I possibly can.
I know this one is like a really hard one.
And I know that it's being dragged out, but I'm trying to be as careful as possible.
Because I don't like talking about these things.
No.
But this was definitely a real letter.
Because as we've said before, the buds had gotten a ton of.
of like fake letters of shitheads that just decided that they wanted to fuck with a grieving family
who lost their child. I don't really know who those people are, but like get fucked if you're that
person. And we know this was a real thing. And Detective King, who was the lead detective,
Detective William King, he was the lead detective on this. And he knew that this was real.
Because he, like I said in the last episode, I put a bunch of fake details in the press to try to
draw the real people out, like the strawberries and cheese bit.
That was not in the press for him to mention that.
That was a pretty big detail.
So they knew it was.
And so they took this handwritten note and they compared it to the handwritten
telegram that was sent the day that Grace was taken.
And the handwriting match perfectly.
So this was already like, okay, what the fuck can we do?
They knew this was the real, quote unquote, Frank Howard.
Because remember, they think his name is Frank Howard at this point.
Right.
So let's get into it.
I'm going to start off by giving you a couple of little quotes from Albert Fish himself,
because I want to start it off with me saying we were just talking about how we think he may have
exaggerated some things and just wanted to do certain things but didn't actually.
And he almost confirms that himself in a way.
Or he at least makes us think about it with these.
Okay.
So this is a quote directly from him.
He said, quote, what has Albert H. Fish done?
sometimes I myself am not sure what is real and what is not.
What I've really done and what are things I wanted to do and thought about doing,
so long that it got to be as if I had done them so that I, quote, remember them just as clearly as the real things,
just as clearly as that hot Sunday in June when I went to the window and whistled to that little girl,
Grace Bud, and she stopped picking daisies and came in.
Oh, God.
And then he said, but some of the other things are just as real, though I can see that.
that people don't believe me when I tell about them to when I tell about them. That makes me mad.
I mean, not being believed makes me mad. What's the matter with these people? Don't they want to
believe the truth about me? No. Do they want to just close their eyes and ears and make believe to
themselves that this sort of thing I can tell about doesn't exist? Well, it does and plenty.
There are lots of us. We know how to find each other and get together and have fun. We use the
matrimonial agencies and the want ads and there are hundreds of other ways.
ways. We have our own language, a sort of code. I'll tell you all about that when I get to it.
No, thank you. Not only does this make me think that he doesn't even know what he's really done.
Right. Or he does, but he's also so delusional. He's so like intertwined it with his fantasies that I think
he can't tell what he's done and what he just wants to do. It's like when somebody lies so often that they
just start to believe their own lies. Like pathological liars and chronic like chronic liars just
start to believe they're like, wait, did I do that? Or did I just say that I did that?
It's one of the scariest things on planet Earth. The mind is a crazy thing. Yeah. And then on top of that,
he's sitting there and saying, there are lots of us. We know how to find each other.
Fucker, I know you had help. Yeah. I'm telling you, there are more people here. For him to say there's
lots of us and we know how to find each other and have fun. We use these certain agencies and
want ads to get victims. We have our own language, a sort of code. That's so fucked.
To me, there's other people here that just haven't been involved in.
Maybe those, like, two instances, too, were different.
Like, the person waiting in the car, maybe that was one person that he was working with.
Yeah.
And then I think it was, like, the same week that he was walking along the road with an older woman and a younger gentleman.
Exactly.
Totally different people.
Who knows?
Maybe he could have been working with both of those people.
That's just, to me, I cannot discount this idea that I'm not saying he definitely had help.
He could have.
Who knows?
Maybe it was just him.
Right.
But I'm saying we.
just can't discount the idea that somebody else was involved here. I don't know why he wouldn't give
this person up, but then again, he's a weird fuck. And I, who knows, he might have just
taken the blame for it. Yeah. Just because. Maybe it's part of his whole thing that he gets to
get all the credit for this and he doesn't want to give it to someone else. Yeah. I don't know.
It's so, this case is like, so much more bizarre than I ever realized. Me too. And that's why it's
taken so long to get through it because I'm like so many things have popped out that just made me
think too much. And I feel like if I just glossed over it or I didn't think it through or I didn't go
down that avenue enough, I would be like I would finish this out and I would feel like I didn't
cover the whole case. So that it just needs to be at least looked at. Do it.
So now it was pretty intricate how they were able to tie this letter that was sent to the buds to
fish. On the envelope he used, so they had the handwriting, but of course they don't know who
Albert Fish is. No. And they think it's Frank Howard. So on the envelope that was used to send this,
on the back of it, there was this little like stamp thing and it had a bit of writing on this
stamp. But that's, that writing was scribbled over. Like he had meant he tried to like conceal it.
Yeah. He didn't do a good job. Okay. So with very little effort, they could see that it's actually
set under there, NYPCBA, which stood.
for the New York private chauffeurs benevolent association.
So this is like a union of sorts of chauffeurs.
Okay.
So of course, now King is ready to nail this guy.
And he runs down there and he asks, do you have a Frank Howard who works for you?
And the people working there look through all the files and they're like, no, we don't have
any Frank Howard.
We've never heard of a Frank Howard.
So he was like, okay.
So he was like, you know what?
Can I look through the files of these members and look at the handwriting?
for anything they've signed or written, there was 400 members.
He looked through every single one.
Yeah.
To see if he could match the handwriting anywhere, not one of them matched.
Are you kidding?
So not wanting to settle, though, because he was like, there's a connection here,
and I'm not just discounting this.
So he's not going to be deterred at this.
He begins setting out to investigate every single one of these members,
because he was like, maybe they changed their handwriting.
Right.
We got to look through this.
none of them were fitting the bill
and none of them were lacking alibis for that day
like all of them were like
none of them had like there was no
records associated with them it just didn't make sense
so a dead end but no
while he's doing this interviewing
that isn't panning out in the way he's thinking it's going to
one member heard the story of grace bud
and he was like a lower member that was like
kind of an assistant
in a way like he wasn't one of the higher ranking members
and I think he also did like maintenance
and he had heard the story
of Grace Budd, and he heard Detective King talking about how this was his aim, like, trying to find the guy who did this.
So he was like, I got to come clean about something, and I don't even know if it helps you.
But he said, so this man was Lee Sikowsky.
And like I said, he was a maintenance guy, did a little bit of like, you know, errand work for them.
And he said, I took home some stationary from the NY Bop-Bad-Dap-Daw.
And he said, I brought it home to the rooming house.
where I was staying. And he said this rooming house was at 200 East 52nd Street and I was in room seven.
And he said, I didn't end up using all of the stationery or envelopes. And the remaining ones,
I just put on a shelf in that room. And when I left, I vacated, I just left them there.
Right. And he said, I never went back for them and they probably were there when the next tenant moved in.
Oh, shit. So he said, maybe you should look at the next tenant. What a like spider web of. Yeah, way to get there.
And he was like, I don't know if this helps, but I just got to tell you, I can't.
And they were like, that will help.
And they were like, all right.
So Off King went to that building and he talked to the landlady.
And she said there's no Frank Howard who lived here ever.
Yeah.
He's not a Frank Howard living here now.
But she was like, can you describe, you know, what this, you know, Frank Howard guy is supposed to look like?
So he had the buds description of them.
Right.
So he was like, okay, here's what he looks like.
He's an older guy.
He's frail.
He's got a gray mustache.
He's got like super sunken in cheeks.
He looks like the boogeyman.
And she was like, actually, and she was like, that sounds exactly like someone who is, had been rooming here in room seven.
Yeah.
And he was like, oh.
And she says, yeah, he only left a couple of days ago.
He had a gray mustache, thin, older.
So he asked, he was like, can I see where he signed to rent this room?
She shows him.
And the name Albert H. Fish is written in script.
That is the exact same as the letter to the buds.
Stop.
So King told the Brooklyn Daily Eagle that, quote,
this was the first time that the suspect was identified by another name other than Frank Howard.
Oh, shit.
So she said, the landlady, she said, this guy, Albert Fish,
has been receiving checks from his son, John, who is actually working in North Carolina right now.
Every month, John sends his father a $25 paycheck that he's working for.
But he's like supporting it.
father. And she told him there was one check that had not been collected yet. He said it's actually
on the way. So she said he hasn't collected that check. And he told me that I need to hold that check
and tell him when it comes and he will come back and get it. So she was like, he's going to be back.
I can get him back here. Right. Oh shit. This is like perfect. So they stake out the place like 24-7.
But days and days go by and nothing. He's not calling about the check. The check isn't coming.
yet they were thinking he was kind of, he was either a bullshitter or he was aware the cops
were surrounding the place. So they started dispersing. They were like, we can't. We got to make this
less obvious. But they kept an eye. And Mrs. Schneider, the landlady was like, I will call if something
changed. I said, I promise you the second I find out. So they were disheartened. They were thinking
the chance was gone. They were like, I don't think he's coming back. Maybe we went too hard. Maybe he
saw. And he's now, who knows where. Oh, shit. But then.
And then December 13th comes around.
Yeah, it does.
This was weeks after this whole thing.
And Mrs. Schneider calls Detective King at the station and says, I have one Albert H. Fish here right now.
And he is asking about the check.
She must have been shitting herself.
Oh yeah.
And he's like, girl just vamp real quick for me.
And I'm going to be there right.
I'm going to be there so soon, but just like, do a little soft shoe, keep them entertained.
I'm just like picturing this in my head as a scene in a movie.
And like she's like quickly like,
in the back, like, then she has to go back and talk to him and she's probably sweating fucking bullets.
And she's like, yeah, about that check. And he's like, you look a little pale.
And he's like, you all right, Mr. Schneider? And she's like, oh, I'm totally fine. How are your kids?
And the thing is, this seems like it's going to be so climatic and like crazy. It's not.
It's not. And it's like, King gets there. Detective King gets there. And she's like, he's in that room.
I had him. I made him some tea. I told him I was going to dig out the check. Like, he's just in there sitting at a table.
Uh-huh. And so.
He walks in, Albert Fish is sitting at a desk, drinking some tea.
And when King comes in, he goes, Albert Fish, and Fish nods, stands up, reaches into his pocket, slowly takes out a razor, and holds it in front of him.
Uh-huh.
Detective King literally walked up to him, grabbed his tiny little wrist, twisted it, the razor fell,
and that's it.
What?
There was no like attack.
There was no wrestling to the ground.
He walked up to this little man, grabbed his wrist, and flicked it.
Boop.
He said.
Twisted it.
Razor falls.
But he looks him right in the eye and goes, I've got you now.
Oh my God.
That's it.
He just said, look at the fligg of that wrist.
He just, boop.
And I love that.
Like Albert Fish just, whoop.
takes a razor out and it's just like, I'ma get you.
And this guy literally doesn't run up to him, doesn't attack it, just walks up to him and goes,
like, who the fuck are you?
No, you're not.
And then just licks and drop it.
Just like, who are you?
You stupid guy.
I also think there were more people involved.
This guy walked up to him and went boop and you dropped the razor.
Yeah.
No.
He was also 5 foot 6 and 118 pounds when he was arrested.
He's my height.
And he's 118 pounds.
Not my weight.
Like he's like, it's.
it's that's like very that's a tiny man a tiny like body mass life that's very tiny for sure so detective
william king was actually credited by many sources as doing this almost single-handedly like he was
he was promoted for this like everyone credits him as like the guy who wouldn't give up on this case and
the one who was the one who caught him in the end but that's how he got him disarmed him even
and disarmed him with a flick of the wrist no off to the police station
where they sit down, King shows him the letter and says, did you write this? And Fish looked at it and goes,
yes, I did. Wow, this is anti-climatic. So anti-climatic. And he told him he had also sent the
telegram that day. He was like, yeah, that's me too. Okay. And so he's like, okay. And then he's like,
so you're the man who kidnapped Grace Budd. And he goes, no, I'm not. What? And he goes, I've never been
there. I've never met her. I've never met her parents. Why are you lying about that? So King was over it at this
point because it is fucked. It's been close to a decade that this guy has been doing this.
He's done. He's over it. You are Frank Howard. You are Albert Fish. Get the fuck out of here.
So he goes, all right. Well, you're an asshole. And I'm just going to go get the people from Western
Union to confirm you were the telegram writer. I'll also get every fucking person you
talked to that day, including Ruben Rosoff, who sold you that cheese in the strawberries that day.
I'm going to get the storekeeper who unknowingly held your torture tools for you. I'll also get
every single land person and every single rooming house you've ever lived in. And I will also get the
entire Bud family down here. If that helps jog anybody's memories. And so he's like, be our
motherfucking bee. His last name is King for a reason. He turns around to leave and Fish goes,
don't get any of those people. I'm lying. I'm the guy who kidnapped Grace Bud. Okay. And he goes,
I took Grace Bud from her home on the third day of June and brought her to Westchester and I killed her
that same afternoon. Oh, I hate that. So he literally, I love that detective PM. I was like,
all right, fucker. I'm just going to literally get every single person you've ever met in your
entire life down here. Just down here for a quick second. And they're all just going to take a
fucking look at you and tell me who you are as a person, like BRB. Right. If you want to play that
game. And Albert's like, I don't want to play. So you know what? Forget it. I get it.
Actually. So he has been taken down by a flick of the fucking wrist and a threat of taking, of getting
people in there to look at his face. Yeah, and he's like, you know what? And he's like,
oh, fuck, never mind. I'm tired. I'm over it. So confession time. He just, whoop, I'm going to let
you know everything. And King wrote it all down as he spouted it out. And it was when it was time to take
his mugshot, because they had to pause to like take a mugshot of him, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle
reported that he was very nervous and slouched over. He had to be pushed onto the lineup plate
where, quote, under the bright lights there, he blinked, winced and shook his head from side to
side. Are you kidding me? And he had no real reasoning for why he did any of this aside from what he
called bloodthirst that he started to get, according to him, the summer of 1928. Yeah, right, Albert.
Yeah, fucking right. Now, he explained that he had originally intended to kill Edward, which was a shock
to everyone, obviously. Imagine being Edward? Yeah, because he was looking for a male, he said,
and he said that when he saw him, he was not really happy because he did not look like a
child, and he was looking for a man that looked like a child, apparently.
Great.
He looked like a strong young man, and that wasn't his thing.
But he was like, all right.
And he said his whole plan was to bring him to that same house where he killed Grace,
but he was going to overpower him, he said, which I say, L-O-Fucking L.
And it makes you think, obviously, there were somebody there that was going to house.
There's no way he looked at Edward Budd and thought he was going to overpower him.
There's no way.
And his friend was.
supposed to go as well. And he was like, I figured I could just overpower them.
He's just not ratting. It wasn't happening. He was going to tie him up. This was his original
plan and cut off his penis. Oh my God. And then he said his plan was to leave town and leave
Edward to bleed to death alone. What the fuck? Imagine Edward hearing that later. No.
That he was this close to bleeding out, to being left alone castrated to bleed to
death. And probably his friend that do like the same thing. And then and then to know that that was the
plan also and then your baby sister is taken instead and like knowing that like I can't imagine what
he was thinking. No. And he probably felt like some kind of survivor guilt. And because like I'm not
saying like it's his fault by any stretch of the imagination, but he like put that out of the paper.
Of course. So he probably feels this crazy survivor skills. That he brought that this man came into
their lives because of that. Well, Albert told King one detail that, like,
like really hurt my heart when I read it.
No, thank you.
They, so he said that when he took Grace, he took, they took a train to this cottage, which
locals called Wisteria cottage.
And he had actually lived there at one point.
He took the train with her and he said, like, she was looking out the window at like the
country and she hadn't been there for very often and blah, blah, blah.
And he said he had bought himself a ticket there and back, but only purchased her a one-way
ticket.
Uh-huh.
So it's just like that was so chilling, but then there's another thing.
When they got off the train, he left the package, the one with his implements of hell in it,
on the train.
And Grace pulled on his pants and said, you left your package, ran on the train herself,
grabbed it for him, and gave it to him.
Oh, my God.
She handed him the package containing the tools he would use to kill her.
Oh, my God.
Do you think that's true?
I feel like it was.
You think so?
That one I feel like is true because it feels like Grace was just that kind of little girl.
Like she was just a helpful, trusting.
Yeah.
We can't do one of these for a long time.
No, we got to get out of kids and we got to get out of like these heavy ones for a little while.
We're going to take a little break.
Not a break from recording, but like a break from these kind of cases for a little bit.
He told King that he killed her in the fashion.
He mentioned the letter, which whatever.
I don't want to go through it again.
But what is weird.
is he didn't talk about cannibalism.
Interesting.
He explained everything, the whole thing.
He's a sack of shit.
I'm not going to go over it again.
But the thing that was like 30% of that letter was cannibalism.
He didn't bring it up.
And King didn't ask about it.
No one asked about it, which is weird to me.
Right.
Like why didn't anyone be like, oh, about that whole thing you said, can we talk about that?
Yeah.
That didn't come until like way later.
It's like, why didn't anyone ask him, though?
I'd be like, you need to explain this.
Yeah, you would think so.
He did, however, and this is like pretty intense.
He did, however, tell them that he had dismembered her.
And the first thing he did was decapitate her.
He said he had taken her head and her shoes to an outhouse up the hill from the cottage.
And he thought about dropping the head in the toilet, but thought that was wrong to do to her.
Oh, that's where you drew the line.
That's where he drew the line.
Okay.
You're such a great guy.
Yeah.
So he put it in the corner of the outhouse and covered it with old newspapers and leaves,
and he put the shoes in the toilet.
He placed her other body parts in the bedroom, in the cottage, and then he left for the night.
He returned the next day to place them outside, and weirdly he put them all back together,
like literally reassembled her dismembered body.
What?
And he had cut, like dismembered her, like completely.
he said he had come back a few more times with his son, but not to see the body.
It was for different reasons because he had hidden her in the hell.
But obviously he was thinking about it the whole time he was there.
He liked knowing that she was back there.
And probably liked knowing, like, oh, I'm here with my son.
Like how fucked up is that?
Like this is so fucked up.
And when they asked him, why did you do this?
What was the reason for doing this?
He answered, you know, I never could account for it.
Are you kidding me?
And they asked him several times, why the fuck did you do this?
There's no reason for you to do this.
Why?
Not that you would give a valid reason, but like we need something.
And he said, quote, it occurred to me.
That's all I have to say.
It occurred to me that I should literally hunt down a 10-year-old girl.
10-year-old girl.
In her own house.
Assault her.
God only knows how.
Literally decapitate her, cut her into little pieces and discard her.
Yeah.
It just occurred.
That just occurred to you.
Yeah.
Cool.
You should just accept that.
It just occurred to me.
Why do you need any more information?
I don't understand.
Yeah.
Detective King was quoted as saying, quote, this is one of the most shocking crimes ever committed,
one of the most shocking in the annals of the New York Police Department.
Yeah.
Still to this day.
Would say so.
He was also thoroughly questioned about a ton of missing kids cases and murdered kids' cases
that were unsolved because they were immediately like, well, you're a fucking monster.
Right.
He denied all of them.
These included, but were not limited to Billy Gaffney.
Francis McDonnell and the Lindbergberg baby.
Oh.
But I remember that and then like I forgot and then I just remembered that that happened.
Which I was like, wow, I didn't even think of that at the same time period or anything.
And he said, quote, I have nothing to do with those other murders.
I am admitting to one murder.
Why shouldn't I have admitted to more if I had done them?
You couldn't do any more to me.
Oh, my God.
Fucking cry me a river.
Like, oh, I'm sorry.
He's like, I'm admitting to one child's murder.
Okay.
What a dick.
He's the worst.
The police also found out, according to the Times Union, that he had been arrested and in their custody no less than three times in the 12 weeks after abducting and killing grace.
Wow.
So they had him in their custody three different times.
They had no idea.
Do you know for what?
It was things like larceny or like, excuse me, petty theft, sending obscene letters.
And I think that was mainly like sending obscene letters.
Yeah.
But his MO, his whole pastime.
But they took him to the cottage that day because they were like, now you're going to show us where she is, fucker.
And he was asked to show them every single place where all of the horrific nightmares had occurred to poor grace six years before.
He showed them everything.
He even showed them where he stood in the bedroom naked waiting for her.
He showed them the outhouse.
And he like made motions to show them exactly how he did things.
I can't imagine just standing witness to.
that. Yeah. He showed them the wild flower patch where she picked a bouquet. Oh my God. He told them how
she dropped the bouquet when she went to run from him when he grabbed her. Then he took them outside and
pointed up at a spot up a hill behind the house where a stone wall was lining the perimeter.
And he said, that's where she is. And they began digging where he showed them and he remembered
burying her. And it was Sergeant Thomas J. Hamill who first struck something solid and pulled it
from the earth. And he held in his hands a child's skull without a mandible, a lower jaw.
They kept digging for more, and soon more and more bones were exhumed, all disarticulated.
They did find the mandible. It just had come off the skull. They were all very small and very
delicate like a child. A couple of them had shown signs of being, like there was clear cut marks
into the bone, like in the spine and stuff, there was cut marks where clearly he had dismembered.
Yeah.
The Westchester County Emmy Dr. Amos O. Squire was called to the scene to take a look at the skeleton and just like to confirm that this is a child.
He concluded at the scene that it was a child and a prepubescent child at that.
And she was brought back to the morgue in a cardboard box.
Investigators took fish back to the station and they began another interrogation because they're
like, wow, holy shit.
He admitted the same confession, repeated the whole thing again.
Apparently, he talked about how much work it was to cut through the spine because his
cleaver was dull.
Oh.
A real, am I right moment, you know?
Oh, my God.
Like, and that's how he was telling them, like, you know, like when your cleaver is dull?
Yeah, like, relatable content.
Exactly.
It's like, shut the fuck up, Albert.
And he said he did it again because of bloodthirst.
And that he, and then he said, I immediately.
regretted it, which I don't believe.
I also don't care.
It's already done.
Yeah, it's done.
And you immediately regretted it after you went through all the trouble of like hacking her to pieces.
Not immediately.
Then you regretted it.
Right.
Nowhere in there.
Did you regret it?
No, I don't believe that for a second.
Yeah.
He said within a half an hour he would have given his own life to restore hers.
Oh, boo.
I would just like.
So much more offensive to me.
So much more offensive to me.
Like for that poor family to hear that like, get fucked.
I hate that.
Because people say all the time.
Like, if I could give my own life, well, guess what?
You can't.
It's nothing is going to bring her back because you took her.
You took it.
That's the thing.
It's like you took their life.
You could have not taken it.
Yeah.
At any point.
That's the only remedy here.
At any point, you took, he took like a 40-minute train ride with this little girl talking to her.
Go stop to any point.
You watched her pick wildflowers and daisies.
You watched her pick wildflowers.
She trustingly took your hand.
He held her hand.
I can't.
At any, so for him to sit there.
and pretend.
And like, he goes through this religious shit because he's like a religious maniac.
Like he takes it to a dark place.
But he tries to use it too to excuse his shit and to like claim insanity and all that.
And it's like, no, no.
At no point does religious mania excuse you sitting on a train?
Talking to this 10 year old girl who's so excited to go to a birthday party and hang out with
other kids.
Excited to see other kids.
excited to go to the country, you take her hand and walk her up this lane to this path,
watch her pick wildflowers. Fuck you using, like, God told me to do. Get fucked, dude. Like, no.
You don't get a pass. You don't get a pass. That didn't happen. Get out of here, you piece of
shit. Like, he's so horrible. It's also just like, I don't know if we've even said it,
but like the fact that this went down at like a little cottage with a wildflower patch and daisy,
like just so fucking bleak. Oh yeah. And at one point,
when he walked up with her, he passed a neighbor who was out, like an elderly neighbor who was out
fixing her fence.
Oh my God.
And tipped his hat to her.
Of course he loves to tip his dumbass hat.
And she had no idea.
Just like the most serene place you could probably go.
And this poor lady isn't thinking anything of it.
Who would ever think this like seemingly like kind old gentleman is just walking hand in hand with this happy little girl?
who would ever think that something monstrous was about to happen?
No, of course not.
Of course now we do.
But it's like even now.
Like that wouldn't be your first idea.
No, I mean, now it might be, but.
And after these episodes, it will be.
I'm going to be like the village people and be mad at all the grandpas.
Well, and then he said all the grandpas.
He said that assaulting her or raping her had never entered his head.
Doubted it.
Inderanged the book that I'll link again because again, it's so crazy.
they talk about how strange it was that it seems that police never pushed those questions about
cannibalism. It is weird. And they never even brought it up. And he never brought it up either.
But it was, again, in the letter, and he said bloodthirst. Right. He kept seeing blood thirst.
No one thought to be like, clarify that for me. What does that mean? Right. Blood thirst as in you want to
kill someone or blood thirst isn't you want to kill someone and then drink their blood?
Yeah. At least clarify it. Do you think that at that point they were like,
we have him and this family has already gone through so much and they already think that that's
what the case was. Well, and I wonder if they, if it's partially that and then partially
they were worried that people would automatically take that as insane. Uh-huh. And maybe not
like that. Like, you're just evil. Yeah. And like, because when had, when had anybody heard about that? Yeah,
I'm sure it wasn't a huge, you know, so I wonder if that was partially them being worried. It was going to
allow him to claim that insanity thing a little easier.
Get like a lesser sentence or even a hospital term instead of present term.
Because they do eventually, his lawyer does say like, how can you ever say that somebody
would, that would cook and eat a child is sane? And it's like, well, no one's saying it's like
a normal thing to do. And no one's saying that like, right, but it's clinically insane and
criminally insane are two very different things. And that's when things get blurry and get hairy.
And this is definitely a case of that.
Morbid.
But that evening reporters actually showed up at the Bud home and broke the news to them
that the man who stole Grace had been caught.
Get out of there.
And it was literally midnight when they knocked on their door.
Leave them alone.
So they were woken out of sleep to hear this news.
Like they haven't gone through enough.
They need to find this out at midnight.
And they were just stunned into like complete numbness.
Yeah.
Especially Delia Bud.
She was just at that point just drained of everything.
It's been 10 years.
Her baby would have been 16 years old.
Yeah.
She's like, this is just I had to move forward.
Yeah.
And at 1 a.m. Detective King came and drove them to the station to identify him, which must have been truly surreal.
So Delia stayed home because, like, she had been through enough and she was also, like, not super reliable when it came to identifying.
So they were like, let's let her stay.
Yeah.
And in Edward, so her brother Edward came and her father, Albert, they came.
So they walk and Albert Fish is just sitting at a desk.
the interrogation room.
And Edward, the brother, walks in first.
And he takes one look at him and screams.
It's him, you old bastard, you dirty son of a bitch.
And then he jumps at him and turn like lunged at him.
Kill him.
And the police all had to wrestle him down.
He almost made it to fish.
They then brought Mr. Bud in.
And he walked right up to Albert Fish, right up to him.
And he just stared him right in the eyes, like silently.
And he said, don't you know me?
And Fish said, yes.
And he said, you're Mr. Bud.
And they stayed that way for a bit just staring at each other.
And then Mr. Bud just exhausted in every way that one could be exhausted.
And Albert Fish just fucking checked out, just sitting there looking at him like, I don't give a shit.
It's so wild that, because we talk about these deranged ass people all the time.
But it's like in that moment, it's like you see two humans sitting there.
Yeah.
You're like human to human.
Looking at each other in the eyes.
and he says, you're Mr. Bud, and the Mr. Bud responds with, and you're the man who came to my home as a guest and took my little girl away.
And then he just broke down, sobbing.
Of course he didn't even try to attack him.
He just broke down.
He literally, they said, put his hands over his face and just wept in front of the man who had abducted and brutally murdered and discembered and claimed to eat his baby girl.
His little 10-year-old.
He had to be taken away from fish by Detective King, who literally was like comforting him, like hugging him.
And he was just sobbing into him.
How does one human do that to another human?
And I think he just had like nothing left at that point.
No.
I'm sure he didn't even have like the anger was there, but the exhaustion and the emotion.
Well, and it's been 10 years, the anger might not even be there anymore.
It was probably it was just sorrow.
Exactly.
It was just sorrow.
Like finally seeing this.
And seeing this guy.
And seeing this guy.
again and being like you came into my home i had lunch with you well to look at like i watched you walk away
with her six years ago and here you are sitting in front of me a totally different man and to look at the
face that like your daughter's like the last face your daughter saw this disgusting hollow
fucked up ghoul face is the last thing my kids saw right before having the life choked out of her
at 10 years old like how do you how do you come to terms with that how do you do it how do you
move on.
It's truly wild.
And so after that whole thing, after he was positively identified now, because Edward and
Mr. Bud had never been that chore.
Like, they were like, this is, that's Frank Howard.
They tracked down Fish's kids because they were like, he has six kids.
We should bring, and they're all adults.
So it's like we should talk to them.
First, they spoke to Albert Jr.
Who had actually been living with Albert Fish for like months at a time.
He was the one that was like around him the most.
And when he found it.
out what happened. His response was the old skunk. I knew something like this would happen sooner or later.
Oh. And they were like, oh. Something like this? And he said he mentioned that they had been living together in
recent months, but he said his behavior had always been pretty worrisome, but in recent months,
or in recent years, too, he said it had really become worrisome. And he was beginning to get more
and more brazen with his strangeness. He was like, he wasn't violent. He was just strange.
He was just weird. And he was like, he was violent to himself. And it was getting weirder and
weirder. He would openly whip himself in front of his child, like his adult child, but still.
Yeah.
The nightmares, he said that Albert Fish was having to. He said they were getting crazy.
And I was going to say we talked about it last episode, he would wake up screaming. And it was
because Grace was not letting him fucking rest.
Apparently, he asked reporters, Albert Jr. He said, what's the name of the girl he murdered?
And he said, they said, Grace Budd. And he literally stopped. And they said he gasped and
said, my God, that's the name he used to scream in his sleep. Oh, that is bone-chilling. He said he would
scream grace in his sleep. And he said, when I first heard it, I know, I literally have goosebumps
just saying it. I'm not even fucking with you. He said he would scream grace. And he said,
at first I thought he was screaming it in a religious way. Oh, okay. He said, he's a very religious
man, and he, like, talks about it a lot. And he said, so I thought he was screaming grace in some way.
He's like, I didn't know what that meant.
For them to hear, he's a very religious man.
Yeah.
I would never stop laughing.
I'd be like, yeah, no.
I would never stop laughing.
What he thinks is a very religious man.
But yeah, he would wake up in the middle of the night screaming, grace.
Oh, good.
I'm glad she haunted the shit out of him.
And just like to.
I hope it happened forever.
Everywhere that described it is like that exact thing that Albert Jr.
like gasped and then said, my God.
Like was taken aback.
Like it was literally like, holy shit.
It was like, um, in how I met your mother, like the glass shattering moment.
The glass shatter moment.
It really was.
Now, his daughter Gertrude was, um, he was very, his daughters, they, nobody supported him.
Like, none of his kids were like, no, he didn't do that.
Yeah.
They were like shocked.
But they were also like, he was weird and he did weird things to himself.
But he was a good dad.
And like, we loved him.
And he supported us and like comforted us.
and like comforted us. He never hit us. He never yelled at us.
Like our mom left us and he took care of us. And they were like, and they all said he acted as a mom and a dad to
them. Like he took over the fucking bonkers. Yes. And Gertrude, his daughters specifically were very upset when this
happened. Like his sons were upset, but a lot of them were like this fuck, like fuck him. Like they literally were like just outwardly. But the
daughters really were like sobbing throughout the trial and were like so upset. But they never once said
he didn't do it or said, I support him.
It was like they accepted it, but they were, but also couldn't.
But they could not reconcile it with who they knew as a father.
Can you imagine?
I won't even try to.
No.
Now, Gertrude, who had a very close relationship with him, said when the Lindberg
baby kidnapping happened, he said she remembered that he specifically was reading it and said
to her, anybody who harms a child deserves to be terribly punished.
Yeah.
And she was like, what the fuck?
Like, and she was like, I believed him.
He's never heard a child.
He's so good with the grandkids.
He's like, oh, my God.
This would not.
Yeah, she was like, nothing about him would ever.
Like, he was so good with kids.
Now, meanwhile, they were able to gather the rest of Grace's skeleton from the crime scene.
And they also found in the mud, the pearls that she had been wearing, the costume pearls.
And it was her favorite necklace.
Oh.
They also found the shoes that he had thrown in the old hout house.
They found staining in the upstairs bedroom on the wood and on the walls, which they scraped for testing.
And it was later determined to match Grace's blood type.
The media went insane as soon as this leaked.
It was like everywhere.
And of course, he got all the nicknames, the ogre of murder lodge, the vampire man, because he talked about bloodthirst.
The fiend, the modern blue beard, the aged thrill killer.
and the werewolf of wisteria.
Wow.
Which are all way too cool names for this fuck.
Why do we do that?
I know we've talked about it.
It's like, why do we do that?
Because it's, it's, his name's Hamilton.
Okay.
Okay, Hamilton.
His name is ham and eggs.
Yeah, Hammond eggs.
And yeah, I think it's just like it sells papers, basically.
It gets people.
It's really gross when you like break it down.
Yeah, like giving them like cool, like, you know.
It's literally giving them villain.
Villain names.
Yeah.
And it's like, they're not cool.
Just, we've said it before.
Call it, like, the nightstocker.
Stanky breath.
Yeah.
Nasty ass motherfucker.
Like, BTK.
Like, fucking Dennis.
I would call him like hollowed grandpa.
Just fucking Dennis, man.
And like, don't call him the hollowed grandpa.
I like that.
That's a good one.
The hollowed grandpa.
Hollowed grandpa.
But, yeah, so they, it was going crazy.
Everybody was reading about this.
Of course, there was a lot of, like,
you know, rumors being spread and all this craziness.
Now, and they would let things out into the press too quick.
Like, the press would jump with things.
Like, they were, you know, they found some bones in that cottage like under floorboards.
And immediately the press was like, more bodies.
Like, he's a mom.
They ended up being like animal bones.
Of course.
But they just had to like collect them and test.
Yeah.
But he was interrogated again.
And this time he went through because every time they were finding new stuff and new stuff was coming out and new people were doing
talked to, they had to keep talking about this story. So this time he went through the whole story again,
but when he got to the part where he agreed that he was initially there to get Edward, he said when
Grace walked into the room, everything changed, which he had said before. Yeah. But he said it now,
he said, I thought it was a boy for a moment. Uh-huh. And no one asked anything else about
this. Like, no one followed up on this. And I'm like, way, way, way, way, way, wait.
No one was like, you thought this little girl in full Sunday dress was a boy?
Was a boy?
What?
Right.
Explain.
And you have said to us, you initially came there for Edward, you wanted a boy, you saw the girl.
And we're like, this little girl is who I want.
You never once said you thought she was a boy.
No, no, no, no, no.
Why would you say that?
And there was this whole thing where, and I'll talk about it later, but he talks about like the Abraham and Isaac's story from the
Bible and he's like, well, I had to kill a little boy. And if an angel came to stop me, then it was divine
intervention. It's like, I see what you're doing now. You're going to claim this whole story where you're
like, oh, I thought she was a boy. And that's why, you know, God told me to do it. So it starts helping him
with that stupid fucking insanity defense. I'm going to say, I don't know the Abraham story.
It's like, it's like somebody intervened before like God was like, hey, kill your kid, like your son.
And before he does it, like an angel is going to come and stop. I don't know.
the whole thing. I'm going to be honest with you. But I know like pretty generally that it's something
like that. Okay. And I know that he claimed something about that later that he was just following that.
The Bible. And that's why he killed Grace because he figured an angel would intervene if it was not right.
I'm leaving. But it's like to me, this shows me right there. Yeah. He's changing the story now because he knows.
He's a smart guy. I feel like you'd be like a weirdly good detective. Thank you. You'd be like, no, actually, this is what's going on here.
because I'm like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, right?
You're like, that's what he's doing.
The background past tells me that.
He's a smart guy.
And he's sitting there and he knows he reveals several times, and we'll mention it a few more times.
He reveals several times that he was aware of the legal shit involved in this.
He was aware that it was wrong.
He was aware what he did.
He was aware that he was trying to escape capture.
He was aware of all of it.
And he was very cunning with it.
He was very planned.
he was very meticulous. He points out that he could have gotten away with this for a lot longer,
had something not happened.
Thank God he didn't.
None of that to me says insane.
None of it.
No.
And it's like, no, that doesn't, and you're not going to sit here and claim some religious thing now
to try to pretend that you're this maniac.
No.
Who is using religion as like a crutch here?
Like that doesn't work.
No.
You did not think she was a boy.
You knew that girl in the white dress, white tights and white dress shoes with a little bonnet on a
little flower in her hair and a little bob haircut you knew that was a girl right get out of here like don't even
oh i got so angry that's unreal but whatever so while going through the um they had to go through
arraignments and they were trying to figure out what he was going to be tried for and when yeah because
he abducted grace in manhattan but he killed her in westchester oh so while he was waiting in jail for
that whole thing to be organized they were trying to figure out do we try
him for both at once? Do we try him for, you know, kidnapping in Manhattan? Do we move him to
Westchester and do the whole murder trial? What do we do? So while he is in jail waiting for that to be
organized, investigators were questioning him about a ton of those other missing kids cases and
murdered kids. They'd start talking about the Billy Gaffney case, the Francis O'Donnell case,
but he's still denying, denying, denying at this point. And he wrote a letter to King while he was in jail
because he was only allowed to write letters to his family, like his kids and the investigators on the case.
And they would give him like a blunt pencil because they were worried he was going to try to like shove it up its ass or something like that.
He probably still did anyway.
And while he was in jail, he wrote King a letter and he outed himself again as knowing the difference between right and wrong.
Like he's outing himself left and right.
It's like you're not criminally insane.
The insanity defense doesn't work for him.
Spoiler alert.
But they tried to later.
And I'm like, honey's.
You did yourself no favors.
He fucked it up from the beginning.
Like no lawyer was going to be able to like talk over his bullshit.
So he said, quote, you know as well as I do that I had not, if I had not written to Mrs. Budd, I would not be in jail now.
And had I not led you to the spot, no bones would have been ever found.
And I could have only been tried for kidnapping.
So this asshole is sitting there going, you know as well as I do that if I didn't do any of this shit, I could have still gotten away from.
it. And even if I had been caught, I led you to those bones. You never would have found those bones
without me. And I would have just gone for kidnapping. I would have got out and I would have done it again. So
fuck off. And then he's going to sit there later and be like, about the, I'm insane. What? No, you're not. You're a
cunning motherfucker. Exactly. And we got proof of it. And you're just, you're just further proving it.
You're proving it left and right because you can't stop right. Like, it's like in Hamilton.
He's nonstop. Why are you right? Like you're running out of time. Like,
What is your name?
Like what?
It just fits.
It fits.
Oh, it does.
If the shoe fits.
I don't want, I don't want to, I don't want to put him in the same vein.
I know.
I know.
I'm just saying.
He needs to put down the fucking pencil or actually keep writing because you're fucking
yourself over.
But it's like, dude, you like, stop.
Right.
Now, it was soon discovered, and this was wild, that he randomly, all of a sudden,
they're digging into his, like, background.
They're seeing that he randomly and pretty.
secretly married three widowed women in one year.
What?
Between 1930 and 1931, he didn't even divorce these women.
He would just marry them in sequence and leave them within weeks.
What did he just do it, like under different names?
Yeah.
And he was also still married to his original wife, Anna, who had left him.
Why was he married these women?
He was literally married to four women when he was arrested.
At the same time.
Four women.
Why?
Just kept, he kept finding them and he would have, because he was trying to,
to use them, one for stepchildren and two to see if he could go like, you know, money and, you know,
just for stepchildren to like abuse?
I stepchildren to either abuse or use as bait to abuse.
He would use these women.
He would see if they were like into some like dark shit, some like dark shit a little bit.
And then once he, they were like, yeah, sure.
Like I'm into like, you know, a light.
A light something or other.
A light but a boom boom.
Like once he would get them in there, he would try to get them.
them into more and more.
And then he figured he could use them to pick up kids.
Kids will, like, trust a woman, usually.
Oh, and, like, if he had kids with him.
If he had kids with him, it'd be easy.
Didn't work out for him at all because these women were, like, he was wild.
So, but he was really weird as fuck to his stepkids as well.
I bet.
And he was never blatantly incestuous with his biological children.
Like I said, he never assaulted them in any way.
He never did anything weird or incestuous with them or talked to them incestuously.
He treated them as children, his biological kids.
But those not related to him was a different story.
So one of these stepchildren was a teenage stepdaughter named Mary Nichols, and he wrote her a letter from prison.
I'm going to read that letter.
Why was he allowed to write her a letter?
Because she's technically one of his kids.
Oh, fuck. Okay. Yeah. He never divorced her mother. Okay. Now, I was like, what? This is weird. No, thank you.
It's like rambling. It's weird. But I just want to read it because I want you to see that although he's talking to his own kids, like very fatherly and very normally, this is how he treats kids outside of it. And she was a teenager at this point. So she's a child. I'm scared.
Dearest, sweetest Mary, Daddy's Stepkitty. I got your dear loving sweet letter. I would.
have answered you long before this, but between x-rays, doctors, and my lawyer, I have been busy.
Then you know I am 65 and my eyes are not so good as they were when you last saw me.
So my sweet little big girlie will be 18 on the 28th. I wish I could be there. You know what you
would get from your daddy? I would wait until you were in bed, then give you 18 good hard smacks on your
bear behind. Now, dear Mary, I will get a check from the U.S. government in a few days. As soon as it comes,
I will send you $20.
I'm not able to get you a watch,
but you can get one that you like.
I hope, dear mama, who I loved and still love,
and all of you are well.
And then he goes into this whole thing,
which I'm not going to read, it's just weird,
where he talks about, like,
she should go to the YMCA
because they have big swimming pools,
and if boys go there,
they get naked to swim,
and you can look at boys.
And he, like, tells her this whole thing.
I'm literally so done with this key.
Like, I'm leaving.
It's very weird.
And then he says, so he goes through all that.
And then he says, be careful all of you, my sweet kitties.
Don't go outdoors in the snow unless you have on rubber boots.
Now listen, my little miss, don't you keep me waiting so long for another of your sweet dear letters?
If you do someday, I shall come out there again and give you another sound spanking.
You know where?
I'm vomiting everywhere profusely.
So he is, oh, what the?
I need to like go take a shower.
And he oscillates between heinous, like, just blatant assaults.
And then being like, don't go outside in that snow without your rubber boots on.
And it's like, what the fuck are you?
It's so, that's his stepchild.
Does it seem to you like they were like involved in some kind of strange relationship together?
But that's the thing.
She testifies on the stand later and says, yeah, and I'll get into it.
Trust me in part four.
No thanks.
She says he never physically touched me in any inappropriate ways.
He would speak weirdly sometimes, but she said she never felt like that he would violently hurt her in any way.
And she said they were not in like any kind of weird relationship.
She was like, I didn't even see him that often.
Like I saw him every once in a while.
Like it wasn't even like we were.
And she was like, and he really was my stepfather, quote unquote, for only like a few weeks.
What? And she was like, and then he left my mom. What did she say about receiving this letter?
And she had written him a letter, I guess, and been like, because I think he had written her a letter and she wrote him back, but it was like a normal one. And then it came to this. Like he would. No.
And she was like, yeah, it was weird. Like he's weird. And then she said also that she was like, I am like, I don't get out often. I'm like a poor kid. Yeah. And she was like, and I don't see a lot of. She was like, I thought all men were like this. Like I thought all city men were like.
this. This is what I thought. No, no, no, no. And it's like, no. And that's even sadder.
Oh. So like, you, that was horrific and so heinous. And that's so like later when we discuss how nice he was to
his kids and his kids try to say, you know, he never beat them. He never hurt them physically.
Never even yelled at them. Did he talk to you like this though? Remember that's only because he
had some kind of weird code that didn't allow him to commit that specific type of atrocity to his
biological children? Right. But it was a thin line.
Let me tell you.
Now, one of the widows that he had married in 1930 for only two months was a woman named Estelle Wilcox.
A stelle.
A stelle.
They met through a dating slash marriage agency, which was like big back then.
A marriage agency.
This was the thing in the 30s.
It was like early dating sites basically.
Get married right now.
This is where he was looking for his victims.
Things got real weird, real fast with them.
He was placing ads in the paper.
She said for young girls.
to come and work for him.
And she was like, what do you need young girls for?
And that's when she was like, no.
I'm out.
And then he would just leave for weeks.
And they basically, he left and just never came back one time.
Bye.
And she said they just never communicated.
And like, that was it.
And she said he never came back.
And she said, I was glad he was gone.
What?
It's just so bizarre.
Yeah.
And at this point, he did admit to the police finally once they were like really
hammering him about the other kids cases.
he wouldn't admit he did anything,
but he did admit that he was working as a painter
at a real estate law firm only a few miles away
the day that Billy Gaffney was abducted.
Oh, no.
But he's like, I didn't do it.
But they're getting closer.
Okay.
Because they're, as soon as he said that,
they were like, all right, we're going to get you.
Like, you definitely did it.
Now, once the news and his name and photo began to circulate,
people came forward to say,
I got something to say about him.
Like, I've met that fucker.
There were a lot of people he had harmed,
attempted to harm or had just fucking traumatized.
Yeah.
Now, the first of these people is a woman named Helen Carlson.
She was a widow who in 1927 rented her upstairs rooms to Albert and two of his sons.
She said he was so sweet, so kind, very attentive to her youngest son, who was seven years old.
He always wanted to take him to the movies, but she kept saying no, because the Billy Gaffney disappearance had had.
happened close by and like near that time. And she said, no, she was too worried about any of that.
Right. But she said it wasn't because she had any feelings that he was dangerous. It was literally
just that case that scared her. Okay. And she said she felt like Fish was a grandfather type and she was
like nothing would have sent me anywhere with him. Like I was very normal. But then one morning she woke up
and there was a letter under her bedroom door. Yeah. Just thrown under her bedroom door. It was a letter
written and signed by Albert Fish.
And she said it was the most vile shit she could have ever imagined on paper.
I'm sure.
I mean, yeah.
Like anything that I, I've never heard anything as vile.
No.
And he loves to write vile shit down.
That's for sure.
She destroyed the letter.
And she was like, I don't know what this is.
And I'm going to pretend it didn't happen.
Yeah.
And but then he wrote two more.
And she finally was like, listen, you sick little shit.
Like I will fuck him up.
She goes, I want you.
your son's gone. Like, this is weird. You got to get out. And she said he got super angry,
like super violent. And she said, he shook his fist at me and shouted that he would put a curse on me
for life. What? But then they left. So she was like, cool, bye. Like, like curse, whatever.
I'll deal with it. I'll deal with it. I just don't want you. And so she went up to clean the room for
the next borders. And she found the paddle with nails in it wrapped in a sheet and it was covered in
blood. Oh my God. And she said she also found that he had left a pile of his own shit in the
middle of the floor. Ew. Yep. So then an 11-year-old girl named Mary Little came to the station with
her mother and said she saw his picture in the paper. And she said when she was five years old,
she was standing with her mother outside of a candy store. And Albert Fish had walked up to her and
just taken her hand and started walking.
with her because she was like a little bit away from her mom. Yeah. And he asked her if she was alone and
she said she like wrestled her hand away and ran to her mother and grabbed her. And her mother was
with her while she told this story to police and she said that Mary kept looking at this man.
And when she asked what happened, she was like, what went down? She goes, Mary kept staring at him.
And I asked her, what was the matter? Then I noticed him all hunched up with his hands buried in his
pockets. He was. He looked at us and started laughing.
It was a horrible cackling sound.
Oh.
So he looked at this mother being like, I almost just walked away with your kid.
What the, ew.
He's so creepy.
Yep.
And so scary.
And she was 11 telling them this.
Even though, even through all of this, he insisted he did not kill another child.
Only grace.
He was not going to cop to any other crimes, but readily admitted to the Grace Budd story in all of its horror.
He told reporters, quote,
They've asked me about a lot of other crimes.
I told Detective King and the others that I don't know anything about him.
I can't tell what I don't know.
I can't lie.
My conscience is clear.
And then they asked...
Is it?
And then he went, in cannibalism, the very thought sickens me.
Oh, that's so crazy, though, because you wrote an entire fucking explicit letter about it,
you piece of shit.
It's like...
So why did you write...
Like a full-ass novel about it?
if the very thought sickens you.
Like you wrote fan fiction about cannibalism.
And why is no one asking him this?
Like someone hold his fucking feet to the fire and be like, explain.
I think you're right.
I think you're right though.
I think it was that they didn't want to get too far into it with the insanity.
But it's like killing me.
And he also loved to make it seem like he was a sympathetic character because of his childhood.
And he knew he looked like an old man.
He looked like a little old man.
And he played that up.
He had like the watery eyes.
And he would just sit there like, me.
I'm just grandpa.
Okay.
And he also told the media, like I said before, he told Detective King, you never would have found her if it wasn't for me.
And he also told the media, the police never would have found her if it wasn't for me.
He said, I was kind enough to lead them to it.
He literally said, like, basically, like, let's not forget.
Like, let us not forget who did the right thing here.
Yeah?
Basically.
And it's like, no, honey, you don't get paths on the back because you led police to the body.
of a 10-year-old that you butchered.
You don't get the snaps for that.
And the fact that you thought you were going to, he's a, I genuinely can't.
So as he's trying to get sympathy from the press, and to be honest, the press was
describing him at some points as like, you know, this gentlemanly old man or this frail old
man.
He was definitely giving that off and it was working.
But as this is happening, another guy comes forward to the police.
police with a horrific tale.
It's Benjamin Eisman, and he came to the police and said in July 1924, he was 16 years old.
He was sitting on a bench in a park, and he was approached by Albert Fish.
Yeah.
He said Fish offered him a job painting in Staten Island.
He was like, we need workers over in Staten Island on a job.
And he was like, cool.
He said he had just gotten here from overseas.
And he was like, I needed a job.
And I was like, wow, this is great.
And he said this guy was so nice, so kind.
He looks like this kind old man.
And he's like, so I agreed.
And he's like, cool, like, let's get on the ferry.
You can come over and meet the guys.
So he's like, cool.
He gets on the ferry to Staten Island with him.
And then Fish took him to a shack that was run down.
And he was like, okay.
And he's like, just wait, wait here.
I just have to go get my tools.
And then we'll go meet up with everybody.
No.
So suddenly Benjamin says, and I'm like, was this an angel?
Benjamin says out of nowhere
He's standing next to this abandoned shack
Doesn't know where he is
And he goes, an older black fellow came out of nowhere
And said to him, listen son
You better get out of here
A lot of kids have gone in there and never come out
Bro
Who was that man
Whose man's is this?
Whose man's is that?
That's
that's an angel i was just that is a fucking angel that's a straight up angel and he said he he he was like
you know what i said thank you sir and i ran the fuck out of there he was like i wasn't questioning i wasn't
going to ask anything i got out of there he goes i got home he had to like bum money for the fairy fair
and everything like he had to like make his way back home he got home told his parents they called the
police the police actually wanted him to act as a decoy the next day and sit on that
same bench. And they said they were going to give him money to do it. And he was in desperate
need of money, but he wouldn't because he said he was so scared. He was so upset and traumatized by
the whole thing. He was like, I can't do it. I don't want to see him again. And sorry, how old was he?
16. Wow. Now, one thing. Can you imagine knowing what he knew then, like,
when knowing now as like a 20 something, like a 26 year old man or 24 year old man. I would have died that day.
You're just like. Roodle death.
That man saying to him, a lot of kids go in there and then never come out.
That also tells me, like, who the fuck else is connected to him.
And what other kids?
And it's like, oh, that's the thing.
Like, who, what other cases are connected here?
Now, one thing almost every single person who saw him before could point to was that he
walked like he had something in his pants, basically.
Like, he walked like really, like, wonky.
We know why.
And he also sat very slowly and deliberately, like something was painful.
And this wasn't lost on authorities either who had been monitoring it themselves,
but weren't really sure how they could, like, approach this problem.
And it was definitely a defining feature, though, because his penchant for harming himself
was eventually going to be part of his undoing because it connected a lot of the stories.
Right.
A lot of people would say he walked with this weird gate.
He had this weird, you know, he would sit very gingerly.
And that's not everybody.
So there are a lot of stories that he was so whatever about dying and he was so excited about it.
Like that's the thing, the lore with him was that he was like, I don't give a fuck.
Like, kill me.
Like, I love pain.
He was scared shitless.
Yeah.
He was scared shitless.
He asked all the time about whether he could get second degree murder.
He was like, you think I can get second degree?
Can I get the insanity?
He didn't want to die.
No.
And although he was prepared to die for what he did, he said he didn't want to.
He kept trying to get used as an experiment.
And he said, humanity will profit more by a study of my brain and body than by sending me to the electric chair, which I, part of me believes.
I was going to say that is weirdly, like, true.
But at the same time, I'm like, let's stop the lore that he was like, I don't give a fuck.
Like, this is going to be, because he does say later something.
And it's like a famous quote by him that it's going to be like the most supreme thrill is dying in that.
He did say that.
That is something he said.
He's being fucking theatrical.
But it was at the last fucking second.
and he had nothing else to say. He wasn't excited about it.
Everybody who said they saw him in those last moments, he was shitting his pants.
Yeah.
So I just don't want him to be this like, this like, you know, tale of like, I don't care.
Like, I love pain. I'm not worried. No, he was shitting his pants.
Exactly.
Now, while gathering evidence for the trial of the murder, for the murder of Grace Budd,
Jimmy Meyon, you might remember that name.
I was going to say that sounds familiar.
The train conductor, one of the train conductors who saw.
a boy that looked like Billy Gaffney
with an old man the day he went missing
on that train. He saw
Albert's face in the paper and he
said, that's the guy.
So he called authorities who brought
him and Anthony Barone, the
other conductor. They brought
him into the police station to look at fish.
When Meehan saw him, he said,
I am 100% sure. That is the
man that was with Billy Gaffney on that
train. Dude. And Anthony
Barone said he thought it was him,
but he said, I'm not positive.
because he said he was wearing different clothes.
He had an overcoat.
He's a lot older by this point.
He's like, I don't know.
I'm not sure.
But Jimmy Mian was like, that's him.
That's him. 100%.
And again, Fish denied it.
But then he almost admitted it and then simultaneously tried to act like he was just being a decent person.
He said he didn't do it.
He said, I didn't do it.
But he said, I would have given myself up anyways because I feel my days are about over.
but I would not have given myself up to police unless I learned that an innocent man was about
to be convicted for my crime.
Okay.
And it's like, wait a second.
So you are not going to admit it unless somebody else is being put up for that.
And why would somebody else be put up for that?
So did you do it or not?
Because it's like you're telling me, you're simultaneously saying, of course I would, why wouldn't
I give myself up for it?
Of course I would have.
I would have said that I did it.
Right. But I wouldn't have done that unless somebody else was going up for it. And it's like, so you just told me you would have said it already. So like, why is no one believing you? Yep. And you're also saying you wouldn't have said it already unless someone else was going up for that crime. Unless you felt guilty about somebody else going up for a crime that you committed. Thank you and good night. Because if somebody else is going up for that crime, didn't they do it? Right. Why would that bother you unless you did it? Right. Why would that even be a thing? Because you did it. I'm like, what?
Survey says. So the indictment of Grace for Grace Bud's murder began and ended very quickly
with the Westchester grand jury coming back in only two hours to announce that they were indeed
indicting Albert Fish of murder in the first degree with malice of forethought. Yeah. So before he went to
Westchester County jail, he had another visitor. Oh my God. Somebody to come in. Oh, thank you. A man
walked in, looked at him, didn't say anything except for that's him. This man was Hans
Keel. Okay. It might sound familiar, might not, because we've gone through a lot here. He was the
father of Beatrice Keel, who Albert fucking Fish had approached 10 years prior and asked her while she was
in her field outside of her house if she could help him find wild rhubarb. Oh my God. But her mother
had chased him off. Yep. And her father, Hans Keel, found him sleeping in their barn that night and almost
fucking killed him.
The fact that I forgot about this, and you told me days ago.
It's, and then Hans saw his paper in the newspaper with all of this and was sure,
that's the guy.
So Fish said, I've never seen him in my life.
Lies.
Then said, well, yeah, I had this job painting in Staten Island at the time, but like, no,
that wasn't me.
So he's now being like, well, I guess I wasn't.
Yeah, I guess.
Yeah.
This was huge.
Because they were going to bring the mom and Beatrice.
Keele in to ID him too.
And if they did, he was going to be indicted on the murder charges for Francis
McDonald.
Because Francis McDonnell was found in the woods between the keel house and where he was
abducted.
Wow.
Now, they came Beatrice and the mom.
And Fish literally wouldn't let them see his face.
What?
He essentially did a physical comedy bit routine covering his face with a newspaper.
He would bend over his knees and like,
hide his face in his knees.
Why didn't they just like restrain him?
Well, and they kept, so they kept having them leave and then pretending for them to be gone
and having them like sneak back in to look at him without him knowing.
At one point, he knelt on the cot that he had in the room and just hid his face in the
cot.
Sir.
But Beatrice caught his face one of those times because she snuck around and looked at him.
So why is nobody just holding him fucking down so they can look at him?
You think somebody would literally just hold his head up and be like, that's his face.
Smack of a cross.
his stupid face. Well, Beatrice saw him and said that's 100% him.
Yeah.
100%. She probably was like, I will literally never forget that face until the day I die.
Yeah. That was the man who would have killed me.
Yeah. Putting this together with the Benjamin Eisman story, which was confirmed by his mother
and police reports at the time, they were going to attempt to indict Fish for the murder of Francis
McDonald. Boom. Now, as this trial, this trial for Grace Budd became a certainty,
Fish decided he needed to have James Dempsey as his lawyer, who was one of the assistant district
attorneys of Westchester County at one point. He was widely regarded as an amazing defense lawyer
by other inmates. He was able to get him as a lawyer through some kind of connection he had.
I think it was through his kids somehow. And he seems like he was a very decent defense lawyer,
but man, me and James Dempsey have different thoughts on Albert Fish.
would have thrown hands.
We might throw hands.
Now, this entire time, Fish has been trying to convince everybody that he is insane, obviously.
He kept talking to reporters and authorities and saying things like, well, I must be insane, I suppose.
Oh, yeah.
Just planting that seed right in there.
And he would make sure to at least say that.
And he didn't want to die, I'm telling you.
So he was trying to get out of that mandatory death sentence if he got this first-degree murder charge.
Yeah.
So at the end of December, they had Dr. Charles Lambert from Scarsdale, New York, and Dr. James Vavasour from Amityville, Long Island, come in.
They were two alienists, quote unquote.
They were going to observe his mental state.
After observations and tests and interviews, all that stuff, they both came to the same conclusion that he was legally sane.
They said he was weird as fuck, but sane.
In fact, another alienist later said that his case was one.
of quote, unparalleled perversity.
Perversity.
Now, another doctor, Dr. Frederick Wortham, was brought in.
He had evaluated fish before all of this and had a trust thing with him, like fish trusted
him and would tell him things that he wouldn't tell other people.
Right.
So they brought him in, and he was the only one that fish mentioned the cannibalism to,
finally.
He explained how he had, he had decapitated gracebus.
and he had put a paint pan under her neck to catch the blood as he did it.
He said he had tried to drink some of that blood once he had decapitated her,
but he had gagged on it.
He said, however, that he had cut pieces of meat from the body and wrapped them in paper,
and he had ridden the train ride home holding those wrapped pieces of paper on his lap, and no one knew.
Unreal.
He also said the entire thing sexually aroused him,
and he talked about cooking and eating it and how much.
he liked it. He told him all of this.
Okay.
But with King and the authorities, he did not say he ate any of his victims, and he said he had thrown
that blood in the paint bucket out the window. He never said he drank it.
So he's just saying this to these people because he knows who they are.
Yeah. One thing that was heavily concentrated on was the amount of pain that fish liked to
inflict on himself. Never mind everybody else. It was a totally different thing that he wanted
to inflict pain and suffering on children. But he told a second.
psychologist while awaiting trial, I always had a desire to inflict pain on others and to have
others inflict pain on me. And he told Dr. Wortham, I always seemed to enjoy everything that hurt.
The desire to inflict pain, that is all that is utmost. And at one point, he got, in prison,
he got a, I think it was a chicken bone out of his meal and he kept it. Yeah. And then he sharpened it
on the floor of his cell.
Ew.
And he sharpened it to a fine point and started ripping the skin on his chest until he was,
it was like wrestled away from him.
What the fuck?
And another time, he managed to get, I don't know if it was the same bone or a different
bone from a meal, but he was able to jam it into his pelvis and groin and they caught
him.
And according to the Kingston Daily Freeman paper, it reported that the warden said he did this,
he thought he did this in an attempt to cut.
cut out some of the needles that he had shoved inside of his body.
Oh.
And they were giving, because they were giving him trouble walking and sitting,
which we're going to get to the needles in a minute.
Later, he also had his kids sneak rubbing alcohol into the cell.
He must have told them it was for something else.
I was like, no.
And he stashed a rag and one day asked, so he would like, at this point, especially,
like, in time inmates were like smoking cigarettes and the guards would like light their
cigarette for them.
and shit. And he asked the guards for a match to light a cigarette. And one of the guards offhandedly
just gave him the match to light a cigarette. And luckily they caught him, but he had stuffed
the rag with alcohol soaked in it. He was trying to light it on fire in his ass. Again, I don't
understand how he didn't go blaze. Yep. Don't know. I don't know. Well, they caught him this time.
What is that going to do, though? It just burns your butthole? I guess so. I'm not real sure
the ins and outs of the whole thing, but it doesn't sound great.
He was the ins and outs.
But he told them and a few other people involved in the investigation that because he felt guilt
after killing Grace Budd, because remember, he's highly religious, he had decided to punish himself
by pushing needles into the area between his anus and testicles.
And he had left them there.
And that's why he said he sat weird and walked weird.
I literally hate it here.
So, you know, December 28th, we're always.
around my birthday. Hey girl, happy birthday. Very exciting day indeed. And they brought him to
Grasslands Hospital to get some x-rays done because they were like, we might as well see if
he's telling the truth. Yeah. The chief radiologist, Dr. Roy D. Duckworth, was the one to do it. And I can't
imagine what he was thinking when he took a look at this film. He was thinking, I gotta get out here.
Yeah. He was like, why am I doing this? Now, he looked at the film and what he saw was 27, which ended up being
29 altogether at final count.
Sewing needles,
bloating around inside of fish's pelvis,
all different sizes.
And they'd only gotten in there.
He said the only way they could have gotten in there was by mean pushed in through the outside,
not swallowed.
No, pushed in through, like, you're not a push cushion.
Some of them were like, uh, were like corroded.
They had been in there for years.
Some of them.
It's also like, how did you not get like tetanus?
Like in perforations and shit?
I'm like, damn.
What are you doing, dude?
Yeah. Oh, my God. Once they had this, this was another thing that they were going to end up using to try to do that insanity defense because they were like, how is this sane? Right. And again, I don't know how to answer that. I really don't. But there's differences here in what they're looking at, like mentally and criminally and legally. And it becomes very blurry. But this man knew what he was doing. Obviously. And I think this whole pushpin thing is a way.
weird paraphylic thing he has, but it doesn't make him insane.
No.
It doesn't make him insane to the point where he didn't know what he was doing was wrong.
Because people do things like that.
Yeah.
And they're sane, quote unquote.
In some sense they are.
In some capacity.
In the sense that we are looking at here, right.
He was not out of his mind when he did all these things.
He can recall them perfectly.
He knows they were wrong.
He talks about guilt.
He writes letters afterwards to fuck with family members.
people who cared, who cared about these people. Which is just like so, like, I can't get past that.
Yeah. I don't think I will ever get past that. No, I never will. And you know what?
This is where we're going to leave it. Okay, cool. At the x-rays of the pelvis. Because when we
begin in chapter four, I'm writing a book with you. In episode four, we're going to talk about the trial and
finally get to the end. Finally get out of here. We will get out of here. Oh, my God.
get me out of here.
So this is all just to the trial, which the trial started in March 1935, and that's where
we are going to start.
And that's when we end.
Okay.
Well, that's where we start next time.
That's where we start next time, and that's where we will end.
Oh, my, Lordy, Lord, Lord, Lord.
Sorry, everybody.
And again, this is releasing on Sunday.
And you are going to be getting part four on Monday.
It's coming right after.
Coming right up after you.
But because I think we're at like an hour.
and a half with this episode.
If I went through what I have after this,
this would end up being like a three and a half hour episode or something.
So everybody needs a little reprieve.
And if you don't, I do.
So we can blame it on Ash.
Yeah, feel free.
Yeah, and I got to take a break too from talking about it.
I was going to say you definitely.
I really do.
It's a long time to talk.
So we'll see you tomorrow.
Yay.
For the conclusion of this fucking nightmare.
Yay.
Never to return to it again.
Of course.
Okay. Well, we hope you keep listening.
Because you got to, you got to end it. You got to get out of here.
Yeah. And we hope you keep it weird. I'm not telling you. I'm not telling you not to keep in the spirit.
No, you know. You already know. You know. Write yourself a post it if you already know.
Oh, wow. She's, she's Igia Zilia.
