MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - Privilege
Episode Date: May 30, 2024Money doesn’t solve all problems, and today’s podcast features 2 stories that demonstrate that. The audio from both of these stories has been pulled from our main YouTube channel and has ...been remastered for today's episode.Story names, previews & links to original YouTube videos:#2 -- "Crocodile Tears" -- Family found murdered in Beverly Hills mansion (Original YouTube link -- https://youtu.be/AGjdQlwzbkk?feature=shared)#1 -- "Privilege" -- This story is about a crime so notorious it has been dubbed "The Crime of the Century" - but the reason for it's notoriety has less to do with the crime itself, and more to do with who committed it (Original YouTube link -- https://youtu.be/VxW5qmQD80M?feature=shared)For 100s more stories like these, check out our main YouTube channel just called "MrBallen" -- https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallenIf you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Prime members, you can binge 8 new episodes of the Mr. Ballin podcast one month early
and all episodes ad-free on Amazon Music.
Download the Amazon Music app today.
Money does not solve all problems, and today's podcast will feature two stories that demonstrate
that.
The audio from both of these stories has been pulled from our main YouTube channel and has
been remastered for today's episode.
The links to the original YouTube videos are in the description.
The first story you'll hear is called Crocodile Tears and it's about a family who was found
murdered in their Beverly Hills mansion.
And the second and final story you'll hear is called Privilege and it's about a crime
so notorious it's been dubbed the Crime of the Century.
But the reason for its notoriety has less to do with the crime itself and more to do
with who committed it.
But before we get into today's stories, if you're a fan of the strange, dark and mysterious
delivered in story format, then you've come to the right podcast because that's all we
do and we upload twice a week, once on Monday and once on Thursday.
So if that's of interest to you, please take three pigs and on each of them label them
with a number, one, two and four, and then release those pigs
on the Amazon Music Follow Buttons property.
Okay, let's get into our first story,
which is called Crocodile Tears. For fans of heart racing, bone chilling, and mind bending stories, Audible has everything
you need.
Audible is the leader in audiobooks, so you'll always find the best and freshest selections of mysteries and thrillers to choose from. Sometimes you just want to
get lost in a classic whodunit, and sometimes you just want to get wrapped
up in a twisted new mystery where the tension is super high and you just can't
stop listening until you find out what happens next.
Audible can take you places only you can imagine and whenever you want, on a run,
doing errands, commuting, or just relaxing
at home. And it's not just audiobooks. Audible also gives you exclusive originals with thousands
of included titles you can listen to all you want and more get added every week. So if you're into
mysteries, secrets, and suspense, or if you want to explore any other genre, remember there's always
more to imagine when you listen on Audible. Your first audiobook is absolutely free when you sign up for a free 30-day trial at audible.ca.
Some stories were never meant to be heard.
Beneath the visible world of parliaments, politicians, and civil servants lies an invisible state filled with secret operatives
playing to very different rules.
From Wondery, I'm Indra Varma and this is The Spy Who.
This month we open the file on Noor Anayat Khan, the spy who wouldn't lie.
When Germany invades France, Noor and her family are forced to flee to Britain.
But Noor decides she can't just sit out the war, so she accepts one of the most dangerous
spy missions of World War II, a job that will put her deep into enemy territory.
Follow The Spy Who now, wherever you listen to podcasts.
Or you can binge the full season of The Spy Who Wouldn't Lie
early and ad-free with Wondery+.
On August 20th, 1989, Eric and Lyle Menendez
returned home to their family's mansion in Beverly Hills and knew right away something was wrong.
The driveway gate was unlocked and then they went to their front door and it was already open.
They pushed the door open and cautiously walked inside and saw there was blood on the ground and looked in their TV room and there,
slouched against the couch, was their father Jose and their mother Kitty. They had both been executed.
Eric and Lyle are beside themselves. slouched against the couch was their father Jose and their mother Kitty. They had both been executed.
Eric and Lyle are beside themselves. They call the police and they're in total hysterics, screaming for the officers to get there, that someone's killed their parents. The police show up, they go inside, and just based on the brutality of the injuries,
Jose and Kitty had clearly been gunned down with shotguns and multiple blasts because pieces of them were missing. They were just totally destroyed.
The police, because of that, assumed
this has gotta be a mob hit.
There is some real aggression here.
This is not an accident.
This is a statement.
The police immediately turned to Jose's business.
He was the CEO of this very prominent media company.
He had made millions and millions of dollars.
He was very well connected,
and they figured
that somewhere in his dealings there must have been a bad actor that was after him. And so for
the first six months of the investigation the focus was almost exclusively on Jose's business
contacts. Meanwhile Lyle and Eric seemed to go totally crazy. They immediately inherited the 14 million dollar family estate and there was
this huge cash payout right up front. And so the two of them go on this insane spending spree over
those first six months. They bought condos on the water, they bought cars and Rolexes, they bought a
chicken wing shop for $550,000. I mean they were just buying things left and right. During their
parents funeral Lyle was overheard talking about how he can't wait to go to the US Open and look I $150,000. I mean, they were just buying things left and right. During their parents' funeral,
Lyle was overheard talking about how he can't wait to go to the US Open and, look, I just
bought a new Rolex. His mind was not on the fact that his parents had just been savagely
murdered. It was on, what fun thing am I going to do with my money next?
After the funeral, Eric decided he was going to put his energy into becoming a professional
tennis player. So for $60,000, he hires a tennis player to live at his house and work with him every day on tennis,
even though realistically Eric was not a very good tennis player. But that was his focus. That's
what he was going to work on. And Lyle spent most of his time building a team of people that could
help him make investments into different companies in and around New York and New Jersey. But in
addition to spending tons of money on their respective career interests, the brothers were make investments into different companies in and around New York and New Jersey. But in addition
to spending tons of money on their respective career interests, the brothers were also going
to therapy sessions. And during one particular closed-door session, Eric would tell his therapist
that me and my brother actually killed our parents. Eric clearly believed that he was able to talk to
a therapist about anything and nothing would escape this room, that it was totally confidential.
But what Eric wasn't planning for is the therapist's assistant was outside the doors walking by
and overheard Eric say it.
And she would tell the police, the police would confront Eric as well as Lyle and very
quickly Eric and Lyle would confess.
During their confession, they told investigators that on August 18th, they went out
and purchased two shotguns and they stored them in their home. The next day on August 19th, the
brothers and their mom and dad go out on a fishing trip together. The whole day they come back and
then on August 20th, the two brothers retrieve their shotguns while the parents are sitting in
the TV room and they walk in and fire 15 shots
into their parents, obliterating them.
Afterwards, the brothers would ditch their shotguns
and bloody clothes and they would go to the movie theater
and they would watch Batman.
After the movie was over, they go back to the mansion,
knowing exactly what they're gonna find,
and they go in and they put on this big performance,
oh my goodness goodness someone killed our
parents, but it was all a lie because they killed their parents for their money.
Eric and Lyle were given life sentences and were sent to separate prisons but actually just recently
they were reunited in the same jail. 30 years after their crime a guy who collected NBA trading cards was rooting through some
of his older cards and he came across the Mark Jackson 1990 card.
And he noticed in the background of the picture sitting courtside is none other than Eric
and Lyle Menendez.
It was during that six month crazy spending spree after they had murdered their parents
when they were going around buying up whatever they wanted, and they had bought court-side tickets
to that particular game,
and they happened to be immortalized on this playing card.
Have you ever felt like escaping to your own desert island?
Well, that's exactly what Jane, Phil,
and their three kids did when they traded
their English home for a tropical island they bought online.
But paradise has its secrets,
and family life is about to take a terrifying turn.
You don't fire at people in that area
without some kind of consequence.
And he says, yes ma'am, he's dead.
There's pure cold-blooded terror running through me.
From Wondery, I'm Alice Levine and this is The Price of Paradise, the real life story
of an island dream that ends in kidnap, corruption and murder.
Follow the price of paradise wherever you get your podcasts or binge the entire season right now on Wondry+.
Hello, I'm Emily.
And I'm Anna.
And we're the hosts of Terribly Famous,
the show that takes you inside the lives of our biggest celebrities. And just a warning, our latest season will feature a lot of accents.
Can I just check what accents? Because...
I can't tell this story without going all in.
Okay, I'm scared to ask, but can you give us a clue?
Why I'm Ant?
Ooh, Ant-and-or-deck?
I'm afraid not, and it's not Alan Shearer either.
I am talking about a young woman, plucked obscurity who rose to become the Neershin's
sweetheart. A woman who's had a lot of surnames and has ditched them all to become just Cheryl.
Love it. Girls Aloud fans strap in. We're gonna follow Cheryl from her Girl Band Glory days,
getting together with Ashley Cole and the many scandals and humiliations that followed.
Not to mention a near-death experience. Oh she's been through a lot. And she has needed every ounce The The next and final story of today's episode is called Privilege.
On the evening of Wednesday, May 21st, 1924, a man named Jacob Franks walked up the steps
to his mansion and right as he
went to open his door, his butler opened it up, welcomed him inside, and Jacob smiled
at the butler and stepped in.
Jacob had just spent a long day at his office in Chicago, Illinois, doing a big real estate
deal, and now he was just happy to be home with his wife and his three kids.
Jacob was an incredibly successful businessperson who had made a name for himself first
in the early 1900s when he ran a bank that specialized in giving out these enormous loans
to gamblers.
But it wasn't until he was named the president of the Rockford Watch Company and he expanded
into real estate that he became outrageously wealthy. His fortune
in today's dollars would have been around 70 million dollars. But now that Jacob
was so well established in the business world in Chicago, he was trying to make
a more conscious effort to spend more time at home with his wife and kids. And
so as soon as he walked past his butler into his mansion, he hung up his hat and his jacket, and he went to find his wife, Flora, to tell her about an
idea he had for a trip for that upcoming weekend.
But when Jacob found Flora, she was not remotely interested in talking about their weekend
plans, because Flora was very worked up about their youngest son, Bobby. Bobby, who was
14 years old, was supposed to come home right after school, but it was
now 6pm and he still hadn't shown up and she had no idea where he was.
And Jacob's reaction to this news was just to feel kind of aggravated.
Bobby was generally a really good kid.
He was a student at a prestigious boys school right down the road, and his teacher was convinced
that Bobby was the smartest kid in his entire grade.
Bobby was a member of the school's debate team and regularly beat the older kids and Bobby was just a natural leader and very hardworking
and kind, but Bobby could also be fairly irresponsible sometimes,
specifically in terms of coming home on time. This was not the first time that Bobby had not come home by curfew.
So Jacob told Flora, you know, don't worry about it. This is something Bobby does. He likely lost
track of time. And as Jacob and Flora are having this discussion, Bobby's older brother came into
the room and suggested to his dad, Jacob, that perhaps Bobby was across the street at Richard's
house. Richard was Bobby's cousin playing tennis
on their private court.
Richard and Bobby were quite close,
even though they were four years apart.
Richard was 18, Bobby was 14,
but they really bonded over tennis.
And so that was something they did all the time.
And so Jacob said he would go across the street
and see if Bobby was there.
And he also told his wife, Flora,
to just continue to call around town
and see if anybody knew where Bobby might be.
And so Jacob left his mansion and began walking across the street towards Richard's family's mansion to see if his son was there.
Now, this neighborhood that Jacob lived in was one of the most exclusive neighborhoods really in the entire country,
but definitely within Chicago's city limits. It was called South Kenwood, and basically imagine a street where every house is a huge mansion,
and every mansion is home to some business tycoon or famous person,
and all the families who lived in this neighborhood had a full staff of maids and butlers and drivers and fleets of private cars.
I mean, these people who lived in South Kenwood were literally the richest of the rich.
And so Jacob, he gets across the street, he's standing in front of Richard's family's mansion,
and he looks around the side and he can see the private tennis court where his son and Richard
would always play, but it's totally vacant and in fact the house is just totally quiet, no one's home.
When Jacob got back to his own home, he found his wife pacing around in the parlor looking
really concerned, and so Jacob immediately asked her, you know, what'd you learn?
What's going on?
And she would tell Jacob that she had spoken to one of Bobby's friends, who told her that
Bobby had umpired a baseball game after school and had left to walk back home at around 5
p.m.
The school and the baseball field where Bobby would have been was only about 3 blocks away
from their home and now it was 6.30pm so it's been an hour and a half since Bobby had supposedly
began his walk home and so by now he certainly should be here but of course he wasn't.
At this point Jacob went from feeling aggravated with his son to being concerned for his son's
safety, despite the fact that he's thinking, okay, well, my son is likely somewhere in
this neighborhood in South Kenwood, one of the safest, richest, best places in the country.
He's got to be okay, but I really want to find him.
And so Jacob would call one of his very close friends who lived in this neighborhood, who
also happened to be a former state senator, and he asked him to come over and basically look around
the neighborhood for Bobby.
When the state senator friend arrived at Jacob's house, the two men left and began walking
down the street lined with mansions, making their way towards the school where Bobby supposedly
had been umpiring.
And when they got there, they saw there was no baseball game happening
and the school was dark and closed for the night.
But Jacob and his friend decided that, you know,
maybe it was possible that after umpiring this game,
when Bobby had begun his walk home,
maybe he had taken a detour into the school
to get something and then perhaps the doors got shut
and locked on him.
And so Jacob and his friend went to the school and looked for a way to basically break into the school,
and sure enough they would find an open window, they'd open it up,
they would climb inside and they would search the entire school, but Bobby was not in there.
At this point, Jacob was really starting to panic.
His friend was trying to calm him down, but Jacob is now thinking,
something is terribly wrong with my son.
And so the two men actually ran from the school back to Jacob's house,
and when they went inside, Jacob immediately called out to his wife
to see if maybe she had located Bobby,
but when he called Flora's name, there was no response.
And so Jacob and his friend, they run inside and they make their way towards the parlor,
which is where they had last seen Flora before they left, and when they walked in there, they
found Flora lying on the ground totally lifeless, with the phone off the hook right next to
her hand.
And so Jacob and the Senator, they run over and they begin shaking Flora, and suddenly
she wakes up with a gasp, and she looks up at Jacob and just begins sobbing hysterically.
And after Jacob finally calmed her down
she would tell him that after they had left to go to the school she had received a phone call and
At first she thought it was Bobby calling to check in but when she answered it it wasn't Bobby
It was a man's voice
She didn't recognize who told her that Bobby had been kidnapped
He was safe for now, but if they went to police something terrible
would happen to him. This mystery man also told Flora that they would be in touch soon with more
information and then they hung up. And Flora had been so overwhelmed by what she was told that she
had fainted and that was why they found her on the ground. That night Jacob, Flora, and the state senator friend stayed up late going over,
you know, what they should do. Of course they wanted to go to police, but this felt like a
credible threat that Bobby could be harmed if they did that. And so they just went back and forth and
back and forth over how to handle this horrible situation. But by 2 a.m. they had made a decision.
The state senator had some close friends and connections in the police department
and so they decided that they would go talk to the police but they would swear them to secrecy so the kidnapper or
kidnappers wouldn't know the police were investigating.
And so a few hours later when the police department opened up, Jacob and the state senator friend went to the police,
they spoke to the highest ranking officer who was sworn to secrecy, and then that morning the police would begin a quiet
investigation into Bobby's kidnapping.
At the same time this investigation was beginning on the morning of May 22, 1924,
a man named Morton D. Ballard drove through downtown Chicago in a luxury car known as
a Willis Knight. He pulled this luxury car into a parking lot right next to a rental
car company and after parking the car, Morton got out, he went inside of the shop and he
handed the keys over to the clerk behind the desk. The clerk would ask Morton, you know,
how did it go with your rental car? And Morton would say, oh, it was perfect, went totally fine.
After that, Morton thanked the clerk.
He turned around and walked outside where another luxury car was waiting for him
being driven by his good friend, Lewis Mason.
And once Morton had climbed inside, the two men smiled and drove off and disappeared into traffic.
drove off and disappeared into traffic. That same morning, Jacob and Flora received a letter from the kidnapper or kidnappers
demanding $10,000 in small unmarked bills and if they gave this money over, they would
get their son back.
And immediately Jacob went to the bank and got the money, but before he could actually deliver the money to the kidnappers at the location they had specified in this letter,
the police who were quietly investigating discovered a clue that would break the case wide open.
It would take over a week to unravel this bizarre clue, but it all started to come together
when the police brought in Morton D. Ballard and Lewis Mason for questioning.
Here is the shocking story that detectives were finally able to piece together about about what happened to Bobby Franks.
On May 7th, 1924, so two weeks before Bobby went missing, Morton D. Ballard walked into a hotel in Chicago called the Morrison and rented room 1031.
He would tell the front desk that he wanted them to hold his mail for him, and over the
next couple of days Morton would come in and he would get his mail from the front desk,
but he didn't appear to ever actually go up to his room.
Finally, a suspicious maid at the Morrison Hotel, who had been going into room 1031 every
day to clean it, only to discover that Morton was not in there
and the room was totally untouched and clean already, she went in one morning
and saw Morton was not in there and she would actually just open up one of
Morton's suitcases that he had left inside. And instead of the suitcase
containing clothes or toiletries, it just contained a bunch of random library books.
As it happened, after this maid found this
strange suitcase full of books, Morton stopped coming to the hotel. He stopped getting his mail,
he did not claim his luggage, and he didn't pay the bill. He just kind of vanished.
On May 9th, so just a couple of days after Morton first booked that room at the Morrison Hotel,
Morton also opened a bank account
in Chicago. He also made his first appearance at that car rental company where he asked for the
Willis Knight car. The rental company would not just let anybody take a Willis Knight car, you
needed a reference to show that you were someone who could pay for this type of vehicle and so
Morton's friend, Lewis Mason, would give him that reference
and allow him to rent the Willis Knight car.
About a week and a half later, on May 21st, so the day Bobby went missing, Morton and
Lewis were driving around South Kenwood in their Willis Knight car when they spotted
Bobby by himself walking down the road.
Now Lewis recognized Bobby and he knew
that Bobby was an incredible tennis player and Lewis had a question for Bobby about a particular
tennis racket. And so Lewis, who was in the front seat of the car, told Morton, who was driving,
to pull over so Lewis could talk to Bobby. And so Morton pulled over, Lewis rolled his window down,
he called over to Bobby, Bobby came over and before long Lewis and Bobby were talking about this tennis racket, and then when that conversation naturally wrapped up, Lewis offered Bobby a ride the rest of the way home, because that was where Bobby was walking to when they stopped him.
And so Lewis climbed into the back seat, Morton stayed in the driver's seat, and Bobby climbed inside and sat in the front seat.
And then once those two were situated, Morton pulled away from the curb and began driving
towards Bobby's house. And as they were driving to Bobby's house, Bobby just kind of continued
talking about this tennis racket because that was the thing they were talking about. And as he was
mid-sentence, Lewis from the back seat reached into his pocket, pulled out a chisel, and then
lunged forward and began smashing Bobby in the back of the head over and over again with this chisel.
And as Bobby is screaming in pain and trying to protect himself, Lewis lunges forward, grabs Bobby,
drags him into the backseat, and then holds him down, pulls a rag out of his pocket, and jams it into Bobby's throat.
And then he closes Bobby's mouth and holds it shut until Bobby goes still.
After that, Lewis kind of grimaced at all of Bobby's blood all over him, and he kind of pushed Bobby
down onto the floorboards below, and then Lewis calmly climbed back into the front seat and sat
down. And meanwhile, Morton has not remotely reacted
to what's just happened.
This is just business as usual.
Morton and Lewis did not go to Bobby's house but instead drove towards Indiana and on their
drive to Indiana they would stop at a roadside restaurant and eat hot dogs and root beers
with their car parked right near this restaurant with Bobby's body just totally exposed laying out on the floorboards of the back seat.
Morton and Lewis would eventually get into Indiana and they would head to this
particular forest that Morton was familiar with because he was a birdwatcher
and often came out here and when they got to this forest they parked in this
clearing, they got out, they checked on Bobby and confirmed that he was dead, so they pulled him out, they stripped all of
his clothes off of him, they rolled him up in a rug, and then they dragged him over to
this drainage pipe that sat underneath some railroad tracks in this swampy area, and they
jammed him inside of it.
And then they got back in their car, they drove back to Chicago, at which point Morton
called Bobby's mother, Flora, and informed her
that her son was kidnapped but alive even though he wasn't, and don't call the police, we'll be in
touch soon. That night Morton and Lewis would burn all of the clothes they had stripped off of Bobby,
they would also clean the interior of their Willis Knight rental car and then they would play a game of cards together before going to bed.
The next day, May 22nd, so the same day that police began their quiet investigation into Bobby's kidnapping,
Morton and Lewis would send that letter to Jacob and Flora demanding
$10,000 for the safe return of Bobby, but unfortunately before Lewis and Morton could claim their ransom money,
Bobby's body was discovered. In fact, that day he was discovered. A walker was cutting through the
woods in Indiana and saw Bobby in the pipe. And so when Morton and Lewis realized that, you know,
the jig is up, the family's never gonna pay for their son because he's dead, they just returned
their Willis Night rental car and went back to their normal lives as if nothing had ever happened.
But unbeknownst to him, Morton had accidentally dropped his eyeglasses right next to Bobby's
body when they dumped him in the woods in Indiana. And Morton's eyeglasses were very unique. In fact,
there was only one store in the world that sold this particular kind of eyeglasses were very unique. In fact, there was only one store in the world that sold this
particular kind of eyeglasses. And so when detectives got the call about Bobby's body being found,
they would also find these glasses. And that was the big clue, because these glasses led detectives
to the store where they were sold, and the owner of the store was able to say that yep, those particular
glasses were sold to Morton. And when detectives went to Morton, Morton immediately pointed the
finger at Lewis saying that Morton didn't do anything to Bobby, Lewis did. But about a week
later on May 31st, both Morton and Lewis would confess to police that they murdered Bobby.
Morton and Lewis would confess to police that they murdered Bobby. But far more shocking than what Morton and Lewis had done was who they were.
Because Morton and Lewis were not their real names.
The two men who killed Bobby Franks were rich kids just like Bobby who lived in South Kenwood.
They created two fake names, Morton D. Ballard and Lewis Mason, and then
they booked room 1031 at the Morrison Hotel. Now, they had no intention of actually staying
at this hotel, and so they just left that suitcase full of books inside of the room
to make it appear like they were staying there, but in reality, the only reason they booked
that room is they needed a physical mailing address that was connected to their fake personas.
And so after booking this room,
they began sending mail to Morton D. Ballard and Lewis Mason at the Morrison Hotel, room 1031,
and then after collecting that mail, which served as a sort of proof of legal name and address,
they were able to open a bank account in Chicago,
they dumped some money into
that, and then again they used their proof of legal name and address to rent that Willis Knight
car, and then used money from their phony bank account to pay for it. And then once they had
their luxury car, it was time to go kill. In reality, Morton was actually a 19-year-old prodigy named Nathan Leopold.
He spoke five languages, he had already graduated from college, and he was a nationally respected
ornithologist, which is someone who studies birds.
Nathan's IQ was so high, it literally couldn't be measured.
His father was the president of a very successful steamship company, and Nathan
was planning to attend Harvard University in the fall to get yet another college degree.
And Lewis was actually 18-year-old Richard Loeb, who was Bobby's cousin and one of his
best friends. Bobby and Richard played tennis together all the time in Richard's private
court, which is where Bobby's father went first to go looking for his son.
Like Nathan, Richard was also a genius.
He was the youngest person ever to have graduated from the University of Michigan.
He graduated at 17 years old.
And to celebrate the occasion, Richard's father, who in today's dollars was worth about $175
million, he was a retired vice president for the major retail store Sears. Richard's father, who in today's dollars was worth about a hundred and seventy-five million dollars,
he was a retired vice president for the major retail store Sears, he bought Richard a custom golf course.
He built him his own golf course. That was his graduation present.
And at the time of Bobby's murder, Richard was actually enrolled at the University of Chicago's law school, studying to become a lawyer.
enrolled at the University of Chicago's Law School studying to become a lawyer. Nathan and Richard would very proudly tell investigators that they didn't kill
Bobby to get money out of his parents. Nathan and Richard were fabulously
wealthy. The money meant nothing. Instead, they had come up with this scheme and
killed Bobby because of their belief in the philosopher Nietzsche's concept of supermen,
men whose superiority allows them to rise above all ordinary rules, ethics, and laws.
Basically, Nathan and Richard believed they were so much better than everybody else in
the world that if they wanted to kill someone, they should be able to.
And Bobby seemed like a pretty easy target.
After Nathan and Richard confessed, they were put under arrest, but a chauffeur was allowed
to come to the police station and drop off silk pajamas for them to wear in custody,
and instead of being held in a cell, they were allowed to stay in a hotel.
But ultimately, they both were sentenced to life in prison.
Bobby's family never recovered from his murder, and his father, Jacob, would die just four years after his son died. As for Nathan, he would be murdered in prison in 1936 by another inmate,
and as for Richard, he would serve his time and get paroled and then die of natural causes in 1971.
Today, the murder of Bobby Franks is often referred to as the crime of the century.
Thank you for listening to the Mr. Bolland Podcast.
If you enjoyed today's stories and you're looking for more strange, dark and mysterious
content, be sure to check out all of our studio's podcasts.
They are this one of course, Mr. Bolland Podcast, and we also have Mr. Bolland's Medical Mysteries,
we have Bedtime Stories, and also Run Fool.
To find those other podcasts, all you have to do is search for Ballin Studios wherever you listen to your podcasts. To watch hundreds more
stories just like the ones you heard today, head over to our YouTube channel
which is just called Mr. Ballin. So that's gonna do it. I really appreciate
your support. Until next time, see ya. Hey Prime members, you can binge 8 new episodes of the Mr. Ballin Podcast one month early
and all episodes ad- free on Amazon Music.
Download the Amazon Music app today.
And before you go, please tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondry.com
slash survey.
Hey, Mr. Bolland fans, here's some great news.
You can now listen to all Bolland Studios shows ad free on Amazon Music.
That's right.
You can listen to shows like Run Fool, Bedtime Stories, and Mr. Bolland's Medical
Mysteries without any ads. What's more, you get access to the Mr. Bolland podcast, Strange, Dark,
and Mysterious Stories, one month early and ad-free, and all this is included with your Prime
membership. You also get access to other amazing shows like Morbid, 48 Hours, and 2020 ad-free too.
You know what that means, uninterrupted listening, so no more cliffhangers.
Immerse yourself in the world of true crime with Amazon Music with the most ad-free top
podcasts.
And it's all included in your Prime membership.
To listen now, all you need to do is go to Amazon.com slash ballin.
That's Amazon.com slash ballin or download the free Amazon Music app.
It's just that easy.