My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark - 391 - Adult Hands and Adult Brain

Episode Date: August 31, 2023

This week, Georgia and Karen tell the stories of June and Jennifer Gibbons, aka "The Silent Twins," and notorious bank robber and escape artist Forrest Tucker.For our sources and show notes, ...visit www.myfavoritemurder.com/episodes.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Mike Williams set off on a hunting trip into the swamps of North Florida, where it was thought he met his fate by a group of hungry alligators, except that's not what happened. And after the uncovering of a secret love triangle, the truth would finally be revealed. Listen to over my dead body, gone hunting early and ad-free on Wondery Plus. Informus International, The Pink Panther's story, takes into the world of Serbia's most infamous Jewel thieves. Informus International, The Pink Panther's story takes you into the world of service most infamous Jewel thieves. Informis International, The Pink Panther's story premieres Thursday, September 14, on exactly right. Listen on Amazon Music, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. My city love Hello!
Starting point is 00:00:56 And welcome to my favorite murder. That's Georgia Hardstark. Thank you, that's Karen Kalkeriff. You're welcome. Here we are. Here we are. We are. I mean, they've tried to tell us we're not, but they're lying. I mean, we came back and we're like stronger than ever. We're like, what? We're here. It's another recording day. We are real. We clutched our pearls and we said, how dare you?
Starting point is 00:01:26 Can I ask you if you've seen the viral video of the woman who's on the plane and she goes, ah, the fucker is not real. Did we find out what's going on with her? Because that wasn't drunk. That was like mushrooms. Or she wanted to get off the plane and she needed to make a stink. She's a great actress then, because I fucking felt that in my bones.
Starting point is 00:01:50 I don't know what context you saw then, but the first video that I saw was somebody basically playing what she was saying and then panning over to some poor random dude who just had his hood up. Okay. Right? Did you see that one where they're like,
Starting point is 00:02:04 and then they basically say that his eyes blink the wrong way or something and that's who she's talking about. And it turns out of course she was not referring to that person, he was like across the aisle. She was pointing at someone else, she had already been making a problem. And the theory, the prevailing theory became, she just wanted to get off the plane.
Starting point is 00:02:25 And she knew it was gonna have to be a much bigger deal than just get me off this plane. But like, everything is filmed now. You have to know that everything is filmed, people are waiting for the next viral sensation, hashtag, like that's life now. It was like, do your best not to be the next viral sensation. That's right.
Starting point is 00:02:46 For whatever reason. Unless it's saving a dog or a kitten. Like, don't fucking. If you can do some sort of a pet, I found this box of puppies in a gutter, and now they're all mine. No, completely, but I just thought it was really funny because people are making references.
Starting point is 00:03:03 Now, that's how quickly the turnover is now, where you just hear someone go, that mother fucker. And then you just know that. But then when everyone in the plane when she said that and pointed, everyone turned around, like the camera panned behind and everyone was like, who's not real?
Starting point is 00:03:18 Yes. It's like a pretty good sociology study. I'm like, what people will do. If you didn't turn your head, you're the one that's not real type of, you know, that's what the theories become. It's like, oh, well, if you're not reacting, then you're somehow guilty, whatever it is.
Starting point is 00:03:34 But there was also a piece of it where like then people are trying to say, I was either there or I saw her before, or you just, you watch how these things get played with on social media and the angles. There was one guy who made a whole thing saying he was on the plane and kept posting videos and the whole thing was a prank.
Starting point is 00:03:55 He was not on the plane, he didn't know what he was talking about on purpose. I just feel like for our young listeners, they need to know that that's sometimes how acid can go bad. So, you know, it's all fun and games and you're in a field and it's like, well, beautiful. And then lovingly suggest you take a southwest flight somewhere and all the sudden you're up in the aisle. Your bun is really tight. No shame. Longer're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect.
Starting point is 00:04:25 You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect.
Starting point is 00:04:33 You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect.
Starting point is 00:04:41 You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. You're perfect. area. Like no one wants to be there with you. If you can have it in a field, that's great. And the Hot Dog Center at Costco is one of the most joyous places on this earth. So if you're having everyone's in a good mood. It's right. You're about to get a fucking what is it a dollar 99 mail? I felt like the reason my dad was such a great proponent of the Costco hotdog was because it was one dollar. Yeah, I could definitely be wrong.
Starting point is 00:05:06 I will say over the weekend, Vincent, I went to Berkeley to go see the band, my morning jacket, and Fleet Foxes at the Berkeley Bowl. It was lovely. I met a bunch of great murderinos. At one point, we went to have a hot dogs, speaking of hot dogs, we love hot dog stories. We love talking about hot dogs.
Starting point is 00:05:23 And like, maybe I'd had a of stela's and it was dark. And so maybe I accidentally put triple the amount of ketchup and mustard on my hot dog. So if anyone walked by and saw me just like having a play fight of mustard and ketchup when I was trying to eat my hot dog, let's look please forgive. Were you like drunken, like, just loving condiments? Or was it purely an accident?
Starting point is 00:05:49 Because you couldn't see very well. I got to say both. I don't think I realized how much shit I put on my hot dog. But, you know, I enjoyed it. I enjoyed it. So what have you got? What's going on with you? Do not much.
Starting point is 00:06:02 So I think we really need to keep condiment talk. condiment, condiment, cond we really need to keep condiment talk. condiment corner. condiment corner. condiment corner. That's what it is. It doesn't have to be hot dogs. We can switch around. So let's see what condiments of I had. I'm still up here with my family because of the great hurrahquake of 2023 where I just
Starting point is 00:06:21 was like, oh, I just won't go back home until everything gets cleared, turns out not that much happened in Los Angeles proper. It was a bust. It was a bust. Did you see the footage of Palm Springs where the tent is and Palm Springs was just like washed out? Like a complete mud. It's like the tent ended right on Palm Springs. It looks crazy. And then an earthquake hit. I felt it. Did you feel it? How bad was it? It was a shaker. Springs, it looks crazy. And then an earthquake hit, I felt it. Did you feel it? How bad was it? It was a shaker.
Starting point is 00:06:49 Like, it was a little like rumble. Like, I could see people not noticing it, depending on the structure they're in, but we definitely felt a little fun, cute rumble. Nothing broke. Nothing, oh my god, no. It was almost like you were in a massage chair like you had put a quarter in the motel and the rumble bed, you know, it was not a big deal.
Starting point is 00:07:10 It's weird when you're out of town for stuff like that and I am often but like the first video I saw was a wine store in Ohio that just the floors were just covered in wine. Well, yeah, that was the central, right? Is Ohio? Yeah. Oh, what a bummer. Fancy wines. You got to keep them behind glass. Please. I have a book to talk about. Do it. Normally, I wouldn't recommend a book until I'm done with it because I don't want to be tricked, and it ends up with a terrible ending. And then it's all about the ending. I've recommended a poor book, you know, I mean, sure. I love the premise so much much and it's so entertaining. And it's a apocalyptic zombie style book, which I love and I know a lot of people love. And the premise, the hero of the book,
Starting point is 00:07:54 humans turn into zombies and a domesticated crow named shit-turned. Why? Has to save the world. Wow. And it's like in his point of view, he's the narrator, he takes his like owner's dog and like sets out to try to like find people who aren't affected by this apocalypse, an zombie apocalypse. And it's like he's so clever and cute. And I love it so much.
Starting point is 00:08:20 And you know how we love to do a book club? That's kind of our thing. Absolutely. So it's called Hollow Kingdom by Kira Jane Bucston. Hollow Kingdom. And I'm just enjoying it so much. I almost don't care what the ending is. I just wanted to suggest it. That's a good sign. If they got you that good in the beginning, you have reason to hope for the ending. And you know, like all I want in my life is you'd be friends with a crow and an elephant. So like, oh, I thought you're
Starting point is 00:08:45 good. Tick-tock today. It looked like a teenage elephant just kind of swimming around in the breakers on a beach where the water was really light blue. I want to be there. Yeah, it just looked very relaxing and the elephant was underwater most of the time that I didn't see his little trunk come up a little bit. Just looked like they were having a great time. Cute. I'm in the middle of a booktube and I'm going to wait because I've been reserving my judgment as I've been reading. And I'm doing that thing where every night I go to bed thinking I need to wind down and then I wake up and it's five in the morning and the light
Starting point is 00:09:17 is still on and I've pretty much had a solid night sleep so it's going to take me as it usually does in six months to finish this book. I think. I feel like you and I meet in the middle where it's gonna take me as it usually does in six months to finish this book I think. I feel like you and I meet in the middle where it's like by the time you have woken up from the accidental falling asleep I have fallen asleep from the accidental staying up all fucking night. From your long stare at the ceiling and then whatever else you got to get into to get to that spot. Does it really take you a super long time to go to sleep? Yeah, for sure, but it's fine, whatever.
Starting point is 00:09:50 Let's not talk about fucking condiments and insomnia and the same. What if I bring it around for the trifecta magnesium? Have we talked about magnesium? Cause it works. It does, you're right, it does. I believe in magnesium for real. And it also really helps with anxiety feelings. It does, you're right, it does. I believe in magnesium for real. And it also really helps with
Starting point is 00:10:05 the anxiety feelings. It does. Put that on your hot dog and see how you feel. Yeah. Should we go to exactly right corner? Yeah. Hey, we have a podcast network called exactly right. And here's some highlights from it. In case you missed it infamous international, the Pink Panther story premieres on exactly right on Thursday, September 14th. Very excited, it's fascinating, it's amazing, it's so exciting that we're doing it. So head to the shows podcast feed and click follow. So you don't miss it.
Starting point is 00:10:35 And if you like the trailer, we'd love for you to give it a review. Definitely. Exactly right, comedy podcasts are overflowing with hilarious stand-ups this week. Comedian Sam J helps answer your questions on Adelting with Michelle Boutot and Jordan Carlos, Nicole Byer, who's absolutely one of the funniest people in the world. Super-podcaster.
Starting point is 00:10:54 Yeah. Joins Ghosted by Ros Hernandez and punky Johnson chats with the ladies of Lady to Lady. I mean, those are all like headliner superstar, hitter, Sam J is so funny. Yeah. Lastly, in the MFM store, for $10, you can receive an exciting mystery shirt. Oh.
Starting point is 00:11:13 You can just select your size, and then we're gonna send you a surprise shirt for your back-to-school wardrobe. I didn't know that. I love that. That's fun. That's great idea. It's so fun.
Starting point is 00:11:22 I think that was an Aaron Brown special. Aaron Brown, killing it. My favorite murder.com. I'm first, right? You are. So today I'm going to tell you about one of the stories you've probably seen on the late night listicles of like creepy stories that you don't know. And then they tell you a paragraph of them and then you still don't know. Yeah. I'm going to tell you the story of one of those that you've probably seen. My story today is about the silent twins, June and Jennifer Gibbons. And this is a story about an extreme version of some fairly common issues and childhood development
Starting point is 00:12:01 that combined with racism and several other systemic failures to create a perfect storm within one British family. I have definitely heard of these twins and I have definitely read at least one article and a list of all about them. There's the black and white photo of the four years old and these adorable little girls next to each other and you've definitely seen it. Main sources for the story are a 2000 New Yorker article by Hilton Al's called We Too Made One at 1994 BBC Documentary and a book called
Starting point is 00:12:36 The Silent Twins by Marjorie Wallace. And the rest you can find in our show notes. So June Gibbons and Jennifer Gibbons are born on April 11, 1963 in Aidan, which is now a part of Yemen, but at the time was a British colony. Their father, Aubrey Gibbons, is a staff technician in the Royal Air Force. He and his wife Gloria had immigrated from Barbados, which is another British colony with the twins, two older siblings, and then they were born.
Starting point is 00:13:08 Twins were born. The family travels from post to post for Aubrey's job, never really finding a community anywhere. This is only partially because of the nature of being in the military, but also Caribbean immigrants to the UK in this time period were often met with racism and hostility from a country that didn't see them as true Britons.
Starting point is 00:13:30 Right. The Twinnies, as Gloria, their mother, fondly called them, have a speech chalet in toddlerhood, which I think is pretty normal, and they also share the same speech impediment. At the same time, the two girls are constantly communicating with each other in the language that no one else understands. I've read a couple articles about twins that do this when they know what the other one
Starting point is 00:13:54 is saying as their toddler. So no one else gets it, but they get each other. That's so wild. So cool. As it says in my notes, this is somewhat common among twins and can be associated with additional speech delays down the line Because they don't really have to communicate with anyone else or fully communicate themselves, right? They have like each other right, but now of course we have many more resources for speech therapy and treatment Especially in schools than we did back then. I mean back then, you know, it's the 60s, right? You said yeah Yeah, it's like you're fucked in their You said? Yeah, that's like your fucked. In their early childhoods, the twins do speak to other people, particularly their family
Starting point is 00:14:28 members, but they get frustrated when people have a difficult time understanding them. In the 1994 documentary, Gloria the mother says, quote, when they knew we couldn't understand them, they went back into their shell. And June says, quote, we decided not to speak and we got into a habit of not speaking. So in 1971, when the girls are eight, the family moves to Devin, England. At the school there, the girls are teased relentlessly, mostly because they are the only black children there. And June says, quote, people called us names. We were the only black girls in school. Terrible names, they pulled our hair." This causes the girls, of course, as bullying does to withdraw even more.
Starting point is 00:15:13 And this is when they make a pact not to speak to anyone else. Totally on their side. Yeah, it makes perfect sense. Yeah. June says quote, we said we weren't going to speak to anybody. We stopped talking altogether, only us two in our bedroom upstairs. Hilton Al is the journalist who wrote the article for the New Yorker writes quote, Aubrey and Gloria were the parents would sometimes hear the girls chattering to each other in their room. In a Patoa, they couldn't understand any more than they understood the girl's silence. The family moves again when the girls are 11, this time to a town called Havrford West in Wales.
Starting point is 00:15:52 The same problems persistent school with the twins and their older brother are again the only black children. This is the fucking most heartbreaking thing you'll ever hear. The bullying is so merciless that the twins have to be dismissed five minutes early every day to give them a head start to get home. I mean, and so just nothing is done. Yeah, like that's the solution.
Starting point is 00:16:16 Bullying felt to me like up until 1995 or something. Bullying was just like, just accepted. It was just like, yeah, sorry, too bad. And looking back on it, the idea that children are just on a daily basis exposed to something like that. And then it's like, well, we'll just adjust your schedule. That's the solution. Also just this profound misunderstanding
Starting point is 00:16:39 of what affects children and how it affects you as a child. Totally. And like, no understanding of what bullying is and why children do it and how it's stopped. Like there's just no, there's nothing. Yeah. So, the twins do speak to their younger sister Rosie, who shares their bedroom. They play dolls and they also make their own dolls and create richly imagined worlds for them.
Starting point is 00:17:04 Rosie is given the job of recording births and deaths in the doll world. Oh yeah. The girls often record themselves narrating the dramas of their dolls live on a tape recorder and at this point in the recordings with Rosie, they are speaking plain English. According to June, she and her sister say prayers every day that their silence would not hurt their parents' feelings. And they pray for the strength to start talking, but that is too hard for them. It's just so sad.
Starting point is 00:17:32 It's like, you make a decision, and then it's like this psychological obsession. And it's a thing that you already have an issue with in the best case scenario. But then you're supposed to go out into a world and try out a thing that you're worried about to a overtly hostile world, totally. The school, of course, doesn't take much action regarding the girl silence. The girls never break any rules. June does very well in English and well enough and a lot of other subjects. Jennifer struggles more academically, but they both do the work and generally behave, which I think was like, that's a status quo. If you're not making trouble, like you're just going to pass right through and no one's
Starting point is 00:18:14 going to pay attention to you, even if you need help, you know? Right. Yeah. The school's reaction, which is basically a shrug, also stems from racism. One teacher refers to the twins' secret language as a quote, African dialect, even though the twins have only ever lived in the UK or its territories and are of Caribbean descent.
Starting point is 00:18:35 This all changes when the girls are 13 and 1976, when a doctor comes to the school to administer tuberculosis vaccines. So the doctor is so upset and disturbed by the twin silence and non-reactions to the shots. They have blank faces that he asks to speak with the school's headmaster and then to the girl's parents. So finally someone's fecking paying attention.
Starting point is 00:18:58 Although there is a note in my research from Ali that the doctor, just the doctor is not a saint. He also is racist based on the way he tells the story and the words he uses. So it's you know, the nomenclature. Right before they turn 14, the girls begin treatment with a speech therapist. They refuse to speak to her, but they do allow her to record them when she's not in the room. And when the speech therapist captures their secret language and slows down the recording, she can tell that the girls are speaking English with some Barbadian slang, and they're just talking very quickly.
Starting point is 00:19:34 So it's kind of like, you know, language they've created. Almost everyone who observes the twins during their childhood describes Jennifer as the leader. June looks to her before taking any kind of action. The speech therapist will later tell Marjorie Wallace, their biographer, quote, I could see June dying to tell me things than something would happen. Jennifer was stopping June. She never moved.
Starting point is 00:19:58 I watched and could barely detect the slightest eye movement, but I know she was stopping June. So Jennifer was kind of in charge. And June will later corroborate this and refer to it as eye language. Which is like, yeah, you know someone well enough. Yes. And you sometimes, especially probably in the environments they were forced into, you would have to have that kind of like silent communication, yeah. You're forced to.
Starting point is 00:20:24 Totally. It's like really empathetic and sensitive people are just constantly reading other people's signs. And it's your sister and you rely on her for communication and trust. Of course, you're gonna pick up on any fucking subtle movement. Look like don't talk to anyone. Right.
Starting point is 00:20:41 And don't trust anyone. It more importantly, like there's a safety factor with everything they do that I'm sure any of those people that would come in to quote-unquote help them are not considering their experience. Totally. Totally. When the twins eat or drink, they do so very slowly, coordinating their movements so they are taking bites and sips in unison. The twins are transferred to a boarding school for special education. Marjorie Wallace's account says their parents were glad to see the girls finally getting some treatment and attention. While the BBC documentary
Starting point is 00:21:15 and it seems like this is true, say the parents really weren't consulted much on the decision. And it's kind of a, you know, both our true scenario where it's like, here's what's happening next. Back then, there wasn't any like, you know, both our true scenario where it's like, here's what's happening next. Back then, there wasn't any like, you know, we're going to try to understand the whole family unit. It's like, here's the diagnosis and here's, you know, what's going to happen. Right. So while at the boarding school, the girls work closely with a teacher named Kathy Arthur
Starting point is 00:21:39 and the idea of separating them comes up. This is something that twins themselves have thought about. They each write letters to Kathy, asking to be separated and sent in different schools. The teachers and therapists tell the twins to decide which one of them will stay at the current school and which one will go to a new school. Essentially it leads to huge fights, like the girls first fights together. And in the days leading up to the separation, the girls then become terrified about it. And in the end, because June seems more open to communication, you know, the one who
Starting point is 00:22:13 isn't in control as much, she sent to the other school and the girls thought this would be helpful. They were actually looking forward to a little bit although they were nervous, but in practice, it doesn't actually work. June refuses to speak to eat, to dress herself, or even to get out of bed at the new school. June's despair and distress are so great that the separation is called off. I mean I can't imagine you're a teenager at this point you've lived your whole life with this connection, just seems terrifying. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:44 And that you would think if you have to only talk to one person, only deal with one connection, just seems terrifying. Yeah. And that you would think if you have to only talk to one person, only deal with one person, the urge to do something different would be really strong, but the reality of that, what coping mechanisms would you have in place to deal with it? When you've... This human being has been your coping mechanism probably this whole time.
Starting point is 00:23:04 Jesus. So the girls finished school at 16 and they move back into their home, into their bedroom, the share. They don't feel like they can interact with the outside world. They're desperate to connect with it. From their bedroom, they write to pentals all over the world and just peer out the window with binoculars trying to see what's going on. They buy typewriters and take correspondence courses. One is so heartbreaking, the art of conversation. And another course they take is a creative writing course. And they enroll jointly as one student, which is like so telling.
Starting point is 00:23:42 The girls decide that they will be novelist, and this way they can communicate with the outside world and also make their family proud of them. So they write prolifically each turning out several models. They pay to have one of June's bound and publish and also submit to traditional publishing houses, but they don't get any traction. And in this period, they also keep detailed diaries. So in 18th, the summer of 1981, the girls decided that they must have some interaction with the outside world.
Starting point is 00:24:11 So they're enamored with an American boy from their boarding school. He's already joined the Navy and moved away, but his three brothers still live in town. So at first the twins repeatedly break into the brother's house and ransack their bedrooms. Like this is the kind of, you know, interaction that they understand, unfortunately. Well, if they skip down on everything else, they haven't seen any other kind of like teen interaction to base anything on it. It's almost like that's a really great kind of acting out of the feeling you have when you're like, oh, it's on you. I'm just gonna break everything in your room. I want to know you. I'm just gonna go ballistic and just destroy.
Starting point is 00:24:53 But did they ransack their rooms or did they just kind of go through everything and leave it messy? Yeah, probably. Yeah, it's just like I want to see your stuff. I want to like figure you out. Yeah. I mean, I went through all my fucking family shit when I was that age, you know, or no one was the young way younger, I would like, what's in this drawer of my mom's whatever? Those nightstand drawers, they held everything. Go over to our friend's house and do it to like,
Starting point is 00:25:20 let's look through your mom's stuff, let's do it. For now. I remember my mom's, me walking into now. I remember my mom's standing there, me walking into my parents bedroom, my mom's standing there, and then I stand, Rose over to you,
Starting point is 00:25:29 she goes, what are you looking for? She's just like a copy of jaws and some old lipstick and you know, there's nothing in there. One time my friend and I went through her mom's stuff and we found like what I now understand was like a gag gift from someone, like maybe to celebrate her divorce or whatever, like knowing that like, you don't actually use
Starting point is 00:25:54 those kinds of toys as a, right, you know, just as a casual Monday night. It's just, it was just like this can't of like, we were both just blown away and kind of just like casually put it back and walk away to watch like, you know, Clarissa explains it all because it just didn't. With the weird feeling of like,
Starting point is 00:26:12 is that what you have to do? Well, not, do I have to do that? I, it doesn't look like it. You're so good. I don't know if it's so ratty for those fur handcuffs. Exactly, should like that. Okay, da da da da da da. They never had any real social contact,
Starting point is 00:26:26 and they're intensely curious. The boy's father catches them, but feels badly when they don't respond to any of his questions. So just let's them go, kind of understanding what's going on. The girls keep coming back, and then they start actually meeting up with the boys and start experimenting with sex and drugs and alcohol,
Starting point is 00:26:43 and under the influence, something really surprising happens, which is that the girls can talk. I mean, who among us, right? I mean, hello. That is what wine coolers are for. It's called a crutch, and that's what you use it for. It's called social lubrication or whatever. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:27:03 It's not that you're more interesting. It's just you don't give a shit anymore. You're willing to to risk it. Oh my God, it's such a bummer. It's so hard. But we did sounds like those boys were kind of nice like that they were like, hey, instead of going through our underwear drawer,
Starting point is 00:27:19 why don't we all just go drink in the field or something? You know how it is with those boys you grew up with that then just suddenly become this experimental fun time to hang out with. Yeah, you know. What are you accusing me of? So what if I know? It didn't mean specifically you.
Starting point is 00:27:41 I mean, one knows. Oh, sorry, yeah, of course, what are you hiding from me? So the girls at the time fought with each other sometimes violently in their diaries, they would often write about their feelings of competitiveness with each other or a sense that the other twin has bad intentions. And their relationship with the boys only makes this competitiveness and this desperation to separate from each other or worse. At the end of the summer with the boys only makes this competitiveness and this desperation to separate from each other worse. At the end of the summer, the boys go back to America,
Starting point is 00:28:11 and so losing their only connection to the outside world breaks the twins' hearts, and they begin to act out. Throughout the fall, they ring doorbells and steal bicycles. They start acting up, you know, as board teens do. Then they start vandalizing property, smashing windows and drawing graffiti. And they move on to arson and the twins burn down a tractor store. Oh, yeah. So they just like start preserking. In her diary, June writes, about setting the fire saying, quote, it's been a long, painful, hard year.
Starting point is 00:28:46 Don't I deserve to express my distress? Yes, you do. Yes, but like clearly she's not had the social norms that she should have had that she deserved to have. And it's interesting to be able to be so accurate about those feelings, but then be like, and now I'm going to act out with arson, which is just like, oh no.
Starting point is 00:29:06 Most kids would be like, I'm mad and I'm doing this, but she's like, the reason I am doing this is because I want to express my distress. Like that's a very attuned. A tune, yeah, totally. So they don't get caught for the fire right away, but on November 18th, 1981, the twins are caught smashing windows
Starting point is 00:29:23 at a technical college and they're arrested, and the police search their rooms and find their diaries, which confirm that they've been the culprits behind the rash of vandalism in town, which is why you should never keep a true diary, you know? For real. All lies in those books to keep that shunt in your head. And it confirms that they are the ones who burned down the tractor store. So this is when all hell breaks loose. The twins are sent to jail for seven months,
Starting point is 00:29:48 awaiting their trial, and they are held together and while there, they're desired to break free of each other's deep ends. They each write in their diaries, worried that the other is plotting to kill the other. And Hilton Al's describes it like this, writing quote, when they were together, they wanted to kill each other. When they were apart, they were so lonely, they wanted to die. Oh, God. And then when they were reunited, they were disappointed and imagined that they had felt stronger alone, end quote.
Starting point is 00:30:19 So complicated. Yeah. So once a chaiatrist hired by their defense team, witnesses the girls fighting with each other and Dignosis them with psychopathic personality disorder He recommends that they be sent to broadmore a high security psychiatric hospital and his rationale is that no other Hospitals will accept arsonists So the fact that they were arsonists made it
Starting point is 00:30:45 so that they had to go to one of Britain's most notorious maximum security hospitals. Yeah. So you've heard of Broadmoor, for sure. And yeah, so like Marjorie Wallace, their biographer, says, quote, rapist, child molesters, poisoners, stranglers, arsonists, and mass murderers are among the 500 inhabitants.
Starting point is 00:31:08 She says, quote, the 40-foot brick walls spill over the hilltop, like a fortified town, designed not to keep invaders out, but inhabitants in. And so I looked it up, and there was a, like, notable prisoners. I jack the ripper suspect named James Kelly stayed there and Peter Sackcliff, the Yorkshire ripper piece of shit stayed there. And he survived multiple attempts on his life by other inmates while there. And also Jimmy Saville was a volunteer and on the board abroad more. Yeah. Oh, that fucking guy. that piece of fucking shit creep.
Starting point is 00:31:48 God. He should have been there. He should have been a patient there. And instead he was volunteering to molest people. Right. This is where he committed many of the actual acts of sexual abuse. That later came to light, but it doesn't look like the twins had any interaction with him, which is fucking the godsend. So he was volunteering there at the same time. They were there. Uh-huh I mean They so sorry so basically they qualified to be sent there because of the arson right the arson was the culprit that like led them there Unfortunately, but there's no other mental health facilities anywhere else to be sent to not if you're an arsonist
Starting point is 00:32:26 I know They're brought to broadmore about a month after their 19th birthday and The twin psychologist Tim Thomas vehemently disagrees with the idea of sending the girls to broadmore He says quote the youngest person at broadmore at that time was 27. And they're 19. They were putting a label on these children. That is what I thought they were as psychopaths. How the hell can you decide that somebody has a mental health problem as serious as that if you don't communicate with them?
Starting point is 00:32:58 He says, have they been white and middle class? The outcome would have been different. Yes, obvious. Similar first-time offenders, the outcome would have been different. Yes. Obviously. Similar first-time offenders, the girls age would typically get a very short sentence, if any. But the girls are pressured to plead guilty and are sent to broadmore for an indeterminate amount of time.
Starting point is 00:33:16 So that's the thing about mental health facilities. When they send them there, they don't have to give them 20 to life or whatever the fuck they would normally. Also, I'm just making this up obviously, but I just imagine if you burnt down a tractor store that's someone in the community's business that they have lost their business, and the rage there which may or may not have been partially
Starting point is 00:33:38 fueled by racist feelings is like lock them up and throw away the key, it vibes. And they're 18, they're adults. Like, you can't get away with shit like that. Right, but there's treatment that needs to be had. And it's, you know, right. Wow. Only days after their arrival at Broadmoor, June attempts to take her own life, though
Starting point is 00:33:59 doctors have promised not to prescribe them any medications. Both girls are put on strong anti-psychotics. In Jennifer's case, the medication causes blurred vision and makes it hard for her to read or write. Can you second imagine psychotropics in the second 80s and 90s? And the one way you express yourself and actually get those feelings out, you can't do it. So at least 10 years pass. Every few years, the twins asked to be released and every few years the doctors decide that they need another year or two. This persists even of the twins start talking and socializing to some extent while they are in broadmore.
Starting point is 00:34:39 June describes this saying quote, juvenile delinquents get two years in prison. We got 12 years of hell because we didn't speak. We had to work hard to get out. We went to the doctor. We said, look, they wanted us to talk. We're talking now. He said, you're not getting out. You're going to be here for 30 years. We lost hope, really. I wrote a letter to the home office. I wrote a letter to the queen asking her to pardon us to get us out, but we were trapped." End quote. That's a nightmare. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 00:35:09 The twins father said that he and his wife were misled about the amount of time their daughters would be hospitalized for. He said quote, we never expected them to be imprisoned all those years. So right around the time the twins had been sent to Broadmore, the author and biographer, Marjorie Wallace had become acquainted with their case. And the twins' parents allow her access to their diaries and while the twins are at Broadmoore, Marjorie begins visiting them and advocating
Starting point is 00:35:33 for their release through her initial articles. Other people in the mental health community join in on her calls, pointing to the failures in the judicial and health care system that have led to the girls languishing in the hospital for so long, and some pressure finally begins to build with all this attention.
Starting point is 00:35:52 But the pressures also building within the twins' relationship, they have long believed that if one were to die, one of the twins were to die, the other would be finally free to fully become a part of the outside world. Like that's the only way for them to separate in a healthy manner is if one of them dies. To the end of their 10-year stay-at-broad more, the twins, who are now almost 30, become preoccupied with which one of them will die first, and they talk and fight about it a lot.
Starting point is 00:36:21 They go back and forth between wanting to be the twin that dies versus the twin that survives. And these conversations intensify when the twins learn that in the coming months they will be transferred to a lower security hospital on whales closer to their family. So they're almost like this is the plan now. In January of 93, Jennifer writes in her diary, quote, I have a long last conquered my fear of death. And now I am no longer a baby, but a woman. And the twins meet with Marjorie Wallace, the writer, shortly before they leave, broadmore.
Starting point is 00:36:54 At that meeting, Jennifer says, quote, I'm going to die, unquote. And Marjorie asks her how she knows that. She answers saying, I just know. So like, sounds going on. The day to the transfer is set for March 9th, 1983. And in the days leading up to the transfer, Jennifer doesn't feel well. She complains that she's feeling weak and
Starting point is 00:37:16 tired, and she doesn't eat much. On the day, the transfer, both girls board a van that will drive them from broad more to the hospital and whales. On the drive, Jennifer seems tired. She rests her head on June's shoulder. When they stop at a gas station, Jennifer is asleep, and she won't wake up. When the van arrives at the hospital and whales,
Starting point is 00:37:37 that evening, Jennifer can't walk her talk. Her condition deteriorates, and she dies about a half an hour after arriving at the hospital. So Jennifer's cause of death is found to be acute myocarditis, which is an inflammation of the heart, which is rarely fatal. The cause of the inflammation is never determined. Some doctors believe the high doses of medication, Jennifer received it broad more. Maybe we can do her heart, but June received similar doses and was in good health. So it's just like kind of
Starting point is 00:38:09 weird mystery of how she knew she was going to die. And then days later died. Yeah, very odd. That day, June writes in her diary quote, today, my beloved twin sister, Jennifer died. She is dead. Her heart stopped beating. She will never recognize me. Mom and dad came to see her body. I kissed her stone-colored face. I went hysterical with grief. So June is released from the hospital a year later
Starting point is 00:38:35 and goes on to live a quiet life in West Wales, near her family. She's able to become a part of the local community, although she generally prefers to have privacy. At the same time, she still maintains a close relationship with her biographer, Marjorie Wallace. June is now going professionally by June Allison Gibbons and has very recently re-released one of her early novels
Starting point is 00:38:58 called The Pepsi Cola Addict. Wow. And that is the story of the silent twins, June, and Jennifer Gibbons. Okay, here's what gets me about this story is that every time I've kind of scandalistical where they kind of try to synopsize this story. Yeah. Because the world we live in, you know, up until very recently, has been essentially white washed. So it's like mystery twins, mystery language, something was going on between them.
Starting point is 00:39:27 Who knows what the problem was? And then one dies knowing she's going to die. The entire background, they're so crucial to the story is about the effects of racial discrimination and how it actually impacts children, people that have to deal with it every single day. Child to trauma, yeah. That piece of the story that just is not ever included
Starting point is 00:39:50 because we're just trying to radicalisticle everybody. Right, there was something wrong with them. It's not like society worsened whatever was going on. It's like, no. It's the white lens of whatever could be going on here. Yeah. It cause you don't experience it. It just makes you crazy. Because then that's the Florida lens of whatever could be going on here. Yeah, because you don't experience it. It just makes you crazy,
Starting point is 00:40:07 because then that's the Florida thing of like, we're not going to teach history, we're going to erase history, and you're not allowed to talk about it, where it's like, but then how are we ever going to get the context right? How is anyone ever gonna understand? And how are we gonna learn and grow
Starting point is 00:40:20 if you don't pay attention to the things that came before you? Well, that was great. I mean, I'm so glad to like finally have learned the whole story because that was always the feeling. It's just like there's got to be more to this. There's like obviously so much more going on. Great job.
Starting point is 00:40:35 Thank you. All right. Well, turning left as we do in this podcast, I'm going to tell you a story today that starts in the middle of the afternoon on March 7th, 1983 at a high security bank in Massachusetts. So today the staff of course is expecting an armored vehicle to arrive for the usual cash pickup and then just ahead of schedule, three older uniformed guards enter the building and approach the teller. So the age of these guards does stand out to the bank employees because usually the guards are younger,
Starting point is 00:41:17 but not enough to cause concern. But then when the guards approach to get buzzed into the vaults, where the cash is to pick up, the on-shift manager notices something, and that's the two of the guards are wearing obviously fake mustache. Come on, guys. Is it that they didn't use glue and they just kind of coming up off their lip? Was it the shape? I mean, the technology for the glue back then.
Starting point is 00:41:45 I mean, nowadays you can't wear fake eyelashes without them fucking coming off halfway through the night. Can you imagine back then? I mean, they must have been rolling up in the car right over. And also just that feeling where this bank manager is just trying to get through his day. He's just like, come on guys, what is this? So then the bank manager looks out into the parking lot
Starting point is 00:42:06 and that's what he notices. No armored vehicle is parked out there. So he asks these three guards to show their work IDs. And that's when the one guard who's wearing a hearing aid flashes a gun and calmly announces, this is a holdup. So then they order everyone out of the bank, then they lock the bank manager and the tellers up in the bank office. And they take all the cash, they actually flee the scene with
Starting point is 00:42:32 nearly $500,000, which in today's money is over. Oh, do you want to guess? It's going to be at least It's $2 million. It's $1.5. Damn it. I know. So they get all this done in minutes and once they leave, they all just disappear. So the FBI is called in and they figure out who is responsible for this robbery almost immediately because it's a band of notorious thieves who've been hitting a bunch of banks and stores around the country. The cops
Starting point is 00:43:05 started calling them the over the hill gang because they're all old. And what the FBI doesn't realize is that the mastermind behind these heists and that's the one with the hearing aid is actually kind of a legend. I'm about to tell you the story of notorious bank robber and escape artist, forest Tucker. Yes. So the sources used in the story today are a 2003 New Yorker article by a writer named David Graham titled The Old Man in the Gun and a 2018 Treasure Coast News article by Greg and Alice Luckhart entitled Forest Silva Tucker Life of a, and the rest of the sources are in our show notes. Okay, so I'll tell you about his early life. Forest Tucker's born in June 1920 in Miami, Florida, and his parents, Leroy and Carmen, are struggling to make ends meet. And then when Forest is
Starting point is 00:44:00 only six years old, his father leaves the family. Carmen can't provide for the household with just her small income. And so she's forced to send Forest to live with his grandmother, Ellen, in Stuart, Florida, which is a hundred miles north of Miami. And actually Forest grows into a very crafty and creative child at his grandmother's house. He is excellent at making things out of scrap metal and wood. He actually at one point builds himself a canoe that is as a child. He builds a canoe that's so well constructed that it actually works. It actually floats. Which if you think about that, that is not an easy thing to do. No, I couldn't do it now and I have adult hands.
Starting point is 00:44:43 Hell no. And an adult brain. It would be a weird box and that would immediately sink. Yeah. Forest also teaches himself how to play multiple instruments including the saxophone and the clarinet. So as the Great Depression hits in 1929, Forest is around nine years old. He's never had much in his life before. Now of course things get worse. And he starts hearing about these famous outlaws of the time, like John Dillinger and Ma Barker,
Starting point is 00:45:11 who we talked about on this show, and to Forrest, and so many other frustrated Americans during the Great Depression. All of these crumbles, crumbles, crbles. These specific crumbles. That sounds like a British treat. Oh, wouldn't you love a crimble right now with a nice. I can really go for a crimble. With a nice tea. These criminals. Uh-huh. Wait, sorry, really quick. You know, remember when I said, Winnie the Pear? Yes. Somebody drew a picture of winning the pair. That's just winning the coup that's pear shaped on the bottom. So these criminals, they symbolize rebellion and basically sticking it to the man, which everybody wanted to do at the time. And so inspired by their exploits, Forest starts getting into trouble himself. When he's 16 years old,
Starting point is 00:46:05 he gets arrested for stealing a car and just going on a joy ride. So he's handcuffed, he's taken to jail, he's put in a holding cell. And a little while later, he's moved from that cell into an interrogation room, but that's when he sees his chance. He basically sprints out of that room, he makes it out of the police station, and he just runs away. Good, I... Right. This will be one of the many escapes that Forest Tucker will make throughout his life,
Starting point is 00:46:33 and the first of many captures, because the police find him a few days later hiding out in a nearby citrus grove, just eating oranges, just shoving his mouth full of oranges. What was the plan there? You know, no plan with the car. He's just doing it all to say fuck you essentially. He's trying not to get scurvy and not to get caught.
Starting point is 00:46:53 No, that's not going to. I mean, if you're super poor, it's the depression, everything's difficult. And then you run away and then you suddenly you're like, what's that wonderful smell? Wait, what are these? Yeah. Things around me and you're just like surrounded by oranges. That's rad. Sustinous.
Starting point is 00:47:10 He's like, I have to keep going, but real quick, I'm going to eat 29 oranges. Okay, so the officers take for us back to the station. They put him in a cell, but what they don't realize is while he was on the lamb, he had picked up a couple hacksaw blades and he had crept back over to the police station and slipped through the small windows of the jail.
Starting point is 00:47:30 It almost like here's the one part of the plan that he did have was he knew he was going back. He knew he wasn't gonna be able to get away entirely. Wow. So on his first night back in jail, he gets together with a couple inmates and they grab the hacksaw's cut through the bars on the windows and one by one squeeze themselves through and
Starting point is 00:47:50 escape. Goodbye, part two. This one is even faster than the last one. According to David Graham from the New Yorker, Forest and one of his jailed friends are found an hour later in a nearby river. And the quote is that they were, quote, hiding with just their noses above the water. So it's just, it's a fucking cartoon. It's kind of Dennis the menacing. Oh my God. Capers.
Starting point is 00:48:15 Tons of capers. So after being arrested for a third time, Forest is shipped off to a very strict reform school. And he will later tell David Grant, quote, the guards would give you the first three days to let you get your hands broken in with calluses. But after that, the walking boss would punish you, hit you with his cane or fist. And if you didn't work hard enough, the guards would take you into the bathroom, tie your hands behind your back, put a pressure hose in your face,
Starting point is 00:48:42 and hold it there until you'd sputter and couldn't breathe. What the fuck? And how old was he at this point? He was a teenager. He was like 16. Oh my God. Yeah, he was being water-borted at this quote-unquote reform school.
Starting point is 00:48:56 So safe to say that he was traumatized by going there. So that adds to his growing resentment for authority figures. What it definitely doesn't do is straight and forest out quite the opposite. When he's released six months later, he goes right back to stealing cars and taking them for joy rights. And this continues into the 40s as he enters his 20s. He's now in a consistent loop of stealing cars going to prison, getting released, and then just doing it all over again. So now he's basically developing a kind of compulsion around breaking the law. But he is not a villain by any means, and by most accounts he's extremely charming. His eyes are described as quite piercing. He's said to be extremely polite, he is quite the showman. And when he's not stealing cars, force plays the saxophone. It clubs around South Florida and women absolutely adore him.
Starting point is 00:49:51 How about? He's a Renaissance man. He's just fun times. So he's fun. I mean, it's cool if you know how to hotwire a car. I'm sorry. I'm sorry, the law. It's that's real. Sorry, it's kind of sexy. The law. The law. So by his mid-20s, force seems very aware of who he is and who he wants to be, which is an all-american outlaw. So even though his favorite depression era, outlaw heroes have almost all been brought to justice, force reportedly, quote, began to imitate their style, dressing in chalk striped suits and two-tone shoes."
Starting point is 00:50:25 And, quote, and then in 1950, 30-year-old forest decides to escalate his criminal career. That September he ties a bandana around his face. He walks into a Miami bank, goes up to the counter, and with his bright eyes beaming, he politely addresses the teller, and calmly announces that he intends to rob the bank. To make sure his message is relayed, he very quickly shows off the gun on his hip. So, Forest leaves that bank with around $1,300, which is $16,000 and today's stolen money. But even though this is a real success for a first bank ice. He has this nagging feeling that the job wasn't done fully. So days later, he goes back to the same bank
Starting point is 00:51:10 and robs it again. Like, give me the rest, motherfuckers. Yeah. I know you have more in here, you're a bank. This time, he makes off with an entire safe. But he's captured almost immediately after being spotted, trying to open the safe with a blowtorch on side of the road. Yeah, what is happening, dude?
Starting point is 00:51:27 Certainly. Take it to the citrus grove where you would have some privacy. So he's arrested, convicted, and sent to prison, but he doesn't stay behind bars for long. He will later say, quote, it didn't matter to me if they gave me five years, ten years or life, I was an escape artist. End quote. So Forest spends his time studying the prison
Starting point is 00:51:48 for what he calls the weak spot. And then in late December of 1950, just a few weeks into his sentence, Forest grabs his stomach, he howls in pain. Prison staffers take him to the local hospital, his appendix is removed. And then while he's recovering from the operation, he pulls a hairy hudini.
Starting point is 00:52:07 No. This is from David Graham's New Yorker article. It says, quote, chain to his bed, he started to work on the shackles. He had taught himself how to pick a lock using almost anything, a pen, a paper clip, a piece of wire, nail clippers, a watch spring. And after a few minutes, he walked out unnoticed. And, um, minus Lena Pendix. He would later say that his appendix was, quote, a small price to pay.
Starting point is 00:52:32 I mean, you know, you got a sacrifice. Sure. So, when he escapes the hospital, Forest decides to head west, where no one knows him, and he settles in California, where he continues to rob banks in style. He reportedly carries out these high swearing bright, checkered suits. He even finds a partner in crime named Richard Blue, who appreciates old school outlaws in the same way Forest does. So for the next two years, the two men hit bank after bank up and down California, wearing
Starting point is 00:53:06 their sharp suits and sparkling shoes, and their grabbing headlines as they go. The unidentified duo are described as both scary and impressive. Journalists report about the quote, armed men who terrorized their victims in dramatic attire. Some even call them quote, hold up artists. There's so much coverage of these crimes. It actually pulls attention away from the 1952 presidential election cycle and from the McCarthy hearings. So it was very big news in California. Yeah. These fascinistas were holding up banks. But then in 1953, after more than two years on the loose, the FBI finally arrests
Starting point is 00:53:45 Forest while he's robbing a bank in San Francisco. And so while he's being booked at the police station, the FBI decides to search his apartment in nearby San Mateo. Their investigators are surprised to be greeted at the door by a young woman holding an infant in her arms. Oh, shit. The Thonplicins. She says her name is Shirley. And when they ask if she knows a forest Tucker,
Starting point is 00:54:09 she's adamant that she's never heard that name before. When the agents ask about her husband, Shirley says he's a successful songwriter named Richard, but he isn't home at the moment. So they pull out a mugshot of forest and ask her if the man pictured is her husband and she be in stacry and says, yes, it is her husband and she begins to cry and says,
Starting point is 00:54:25 yes, it is. Surely he's absolutely shocked to learn that her husband and the father of their child is actually a career criminal. She tells the agents, quote, I can't believe it. He was such a good man. He was such a good provider. Yeah, because he robbed bank. Yeah, it should have been like suspicious of that, that he's a musician. That's a good provider. Who's like, that doesn't really happen often. The musician that has bags of money, literal canvas bags of money.
Starting point is 00:54:55 Oh, he's not Lady Gaga, then he's probably, full of shit. He is the richest clarinetist in all of California. So when Forrest is sent back to prison, Shirley annals their marriage and raises their baby without him. And much later, Forrest will express deep regret about betraying his wife. He says, quote, we loved each other. I didn't know how to explain to her the truth that this was my way of life. And quote, he's passionately dedicated to breaking the law. So in September of 1953, the now 33-year-old forest
Starting point is 00:55:28 Tucker is sent to Alcatraz. We've had lots of conversations about Alcatraz. So to police and prosecutors, it was the perfect fit for forest, build at the time as an escape-proof prison. The now infamous Alcatraz is built on an island surrounded by the freezing cold water and extremely dangerous currents of the San Francisco Bay. But as is his nature, Forest Tucker arrives ready
Starting point is 00:55:55 to test that claim. Oh, shit. Right. So right after he gets there, he meets another inmate named Teddy Green, who is also a seasoned bank robber with a knack for clever escapes.
Starting point is 00:56:06 Teddy was known for once breaking out a prison by packing himself into a shipping box and getting mailed out. Clever, very clever. I mean, you had to do something, right? Yeah, I mean, it's almost like show their weaknesses, you know? You did them in favor. Yeah. I mean, you have all day to think it through.
Starting point is 00:56:26 Yeah. So you're just like, hmm. And also it's back then where they hadn't seen all these moves. Sure. Much more low tech. So Teddy was eventually recaptured and now it alcatraz. And that's when he meets a kindred spirit and forest Tucker. So soon the two start scheming together.
Starting point is 00:56:44 And they start by pulling tiny pieces of steel wool off of the cleaning pads and hiding it in their clothing, you know, like a doing dishes or whatever. Scrubby brush, yeah. Yeah. And they're hoping to trigger the prison's metal detectors and make the guards think that they're defective, which is brilliant. So next the men start stealing tools from their workstations and hiding them in holes they carve out in the prison toilets. And then they can seal these holes with putty that they've also stolen from the prison's supply.
Starting point is 00:57:15 And then at night, the men go to the toilets, remove the putty, take out the tools, and start working on digging a tunnel through the prison floor. Wow. So for a while, it seems like this plan might actually work, but then somehow a prisoner in solitary confinement learns about this scheme and gives the men up. No, that's not supposed to work that way. He's supposed to be in solitary.
Starting point is 00:57:38 He shouldn't know what's going on. I know, but do you wonder if he was like digging under or over or to the side of where he was in solitary? He'd like heard every word through the wall or something. Snitches get candy after all. Snitches get out of solitary, which is like fine, fine, that more power to you. I don't care. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:57:57 So later when Alcatraz officials find those tools that they had hid in the toilet, they made a list of them that included, quote, a blowtorch, a bar spreader, a pair of side cutters, a brace, a screwdriver, one or two pieces of wire and a piece of stone. So they just like were stealing everything they got a blowtorch. I would know how, where to get a blowtorch right now. And they fucking got one in prison. Yeah. And stole it and hid it. That's a master's wild. So as a punishment for us, and Teddy are thrown into the hole.
Starting point is 00:58:30 So on the website, probation, information network, they described the whole as a place where quote, inmates were stripped, naked, and held in rooms made entirely of concrete. Scrubs of food were shoved through a small hole in the door, and prisoners were forced to use another hole in the floor as a toilet. The goal was not just to restrict inmates
Starting point is 00:58:51 and confiscate their access to other individuals, but to punish and completely humiliate them." End quote. So, forest winds up in the hole in the dead of winter. And he would later say, yeah, he would later say, quote, I remember walking in with no clothes or shoes on. And the steel floor was so cold it hurt to touch it. And the only way to stay warm was to keep walking. Oh, God.
Starting point is 00:59:14 And, quote, it's unclear how long he stayed in the hole. But he's definitely there for at least several days, which I'm sure one day would be. Yeah. But thousand. So, yeah. So over the next couple of years at Alcatraz, Forest seems to reroute his energy.
Starting point is 00:59:29 He starts pouring over law books, and he begins to inundate the California court system with legal rits and appeals. Even though a local prosecutor dismisses his appeals as fantasy, a judge eventually grants Forest a hearing. So the night before he's scheduled to appear in court, forest is transferred from Alcatraz to the county jail, which of course has a much more lack security system.
Starting point is 00:59:53 And once there, he complains about a pain in his lower stomach. So they throw him in shackles and handcuffs, and they rush him to the nearest hospital. When no one's looking, he grabs a pencil and stabs himself in the ankle so the doctors have to remove the shackles because he now has an open wound there where the shackles would be, but he's still in handcuffs. So they wheel him into the x-ray room on a gurney and force watches intently as the nurse steps away from his bedside. When he sees that his accompanying officer is distracted for a moment, force leaps off
Starting point is 01:00:32 the gurney, runs through the hospital's hallways and out the front door. Dude, he can't stay. He remains on the loose for several hours until he's tracked down in the middle of a corn field, still handcuffed and in his hospital gown. He knows where to find food, at least. So he's always going for vegetation. Uh-huh. The idea that he's handcuffed with his butt out
Starting point is 01:00:56 makes me laugh, because it's just like, well, good luck. Lay down, maybe make a little skirt out of the corn. So this clever escape is written up in the local papers. Even those profiles, an escape artist is rising. He's not going to be able to evade the consequences of his actions. Another 23 years is tacked on to his sentence. And he is eventually transferred from Alcatraz to San Quentin, which is the infamous maximum security prison that's just basically nine miles north of Alcatraz at the top of the bay. So for many years, forest stay in San Quentin
Starting point is 01:01:32 is uneventful. But then in 1979, when he is 59 years old, he's looking out the window one afternoon, and he can see some rowers from the Marin Yacht Club passing by in their small boats. For us, thanks back to his childhood in Florida, and this gives him an idea. He finds a couple like-minded inmates named John Waller and William McGurk. The men start to pocket small scraps of wood and laminate from the prison's electrical and furniture workshops, as well as paint, tape, and plastic sheets. They hide this stockpile in a big cardboard box, labeled Office Supplies.
Starting point is 01:02:10 Someone was on a break. Someone was not paying attention or over their job or whatever. I mean, I wonder if it's that he let nine years pass. So it's like, don't worry about me. I'm just old. You know, I'm not doing anything. Yeah. Yeah. Everyone's well, I'll pick up a tarp and you won't see where I put it down. Other than that, don't worry about me. But also, where are they keeping a box called office supplies? That's what I'd like to know. In August,
Starting point is 01:02:43 after months of careful planning, Forest John John, and William meet in the hallway outside of San Quentin's wood shop. And then, as John and William stand guard, Forest goes into the shop and gets to work, using all the odds and ends that they've been lifting from around the prison, Forest builds a boat that can fit all three of them. He doesn't use a hammer.
Starting point is 01:03:03 So this is how good he has a building boats from childhood. He could do it as a nine-year-old. He built a canoe. So he's like, I've got this. He doesn't use a hammer because he's worried it'll make too much noise. Instead, he pieces the boat together using tape and bolts.
Starting point is 01:03:20 And once the boat is built, Forest wants to paint it to look like the ones he saw from the Marignac Clubs. Oh, so smart. How genius is that? Yeah. But the problem is he doesn't have very much paint to work with. So he figures out which side of the boat
Starting point is 01:03:36 will face the guard towers. Mm-hmm. And he paints that side. And then he stensils the words words Rubbidub dub on it. And then with the tiny amount of paint he has left, he draws the Marin Yacht Club logo on his and the other two guys, prison-issued sailor hats and sweatshirts. And when he's finished, they throw on their hats, they carry the boat outside in a far-flung part of the prison campus that has access to the water, they walk down
Starting point is 01:04:10 and they put the boat into the bay. And force really knocks us one out of the park. The boat is beautifully constructed, it's watertight. It fits all three men. The problem is that the current is horrifying. In San Francisco Bay, you just, you want to be nowhere near it. The idea that anybody ever puts a boat in there to me is crazy. It's intense. Choppy. Yeah, the ocean is right there. It's like crazy. I mean, I'm sure that like sailing people
Starting point is 01:04:39 love it because you can really sail, but it's pretty serious. So that morning, especially the current is unforgiving, John Waller says, quote, the boat didn't leak a drop. We could have paddled to Australia. It was those damn waves over the side. When we finally reached the edge of the property, the son of a bitch sank. End quote.
Starting point is 01:04:59 So essentially, the current got them on a technicality. It wouldn't have gone any other way. So, for us and his two companions are now clinging to the upside down boat and doing their best to swim it back to shore. So as they struggle in the rough waters, a guard in San Quentin's tower spots them, but he doesn't realize that they're inmates. He sees the boat, he sees their outfits, he yells and asks if they need any help. He thinks they're from the Marin Young Club.
Starting point is 01:05:28 Yeah. William McGurk reportedly responds, quote, we just lost a couple ors, but my time X is still running. And the guard leaves them alone. Oh my god. I feel like if you win first place for clever escapism, then your sentence gets You should get to go. Yeah, it's like a science fair at a high school. Exactly, you know Can you build like a small boat without using a hammer? Mm-hmm And then actually if it floats and you can get away in it doesn't look like a prison boat It looks like an actual yeah the Marin yacht club. I mean that's those are some rich bitches over there first And you blend
Starting point is 01:06:13 That's that guard bought it you win you won in every way definitely so Miraculously for us John and William make it to shore in this boat, and they immediately go their separate ways. And when the San Quentin officials find out that these three inmates are on the loose, a manhunt begins, John and William are eventually recaptured. Forest is nowhere to be found. So soon after there's a rash of robberies at banks and grocery stores in Arizona, then New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana.
Starting point is 01:06:48 So, it's kind of all along the southwest, going east. Please don't make any connection between the missing prisoner from San Quentin and these heists because they're so hung up on the descriptions of these perpetrators, men much older than your average armed robber, and the ringleader being a 60-something old man wearing a hearing aid. Oh, oh my God. Please begin referring to them as the over-the-hill gang. So basically, Forest got out.
Starting point is 01:07:18 He got much needed hearing aid, and he got some friends together and said, let's get the band back together and start holding up banks again. In one month alone, the escaped force Tucker pulls off as many as 60 robberies. 60? 60? 60. 60.
Starting point is 01:07:36 Jesus. I don't understand why people just don't like, take a break. He's so ambitious, you know? It truly sounds like he couldn't. Right. This was his passion. Yeah. Yeah. He's so ambitious, you know? It truly sounds like he couldn't. Like this was his passion. Yeah. Yeah. He was into it. So it says with his small group of criminally inclined friends. He later claimed that he quote, mastered the art of the holdup. He does consider it an art.
Starting point is 01:08:01 Not only does he wear wigs and make up to these heists, but he also follows a few key rules. He looks for targets near highways. He spends time casing each joint. And then when he makes his move, he is always very calm. Forest would be quoted as saying, in the old days, the stick up men were like cowboys. They would just go in shooting, yelling for everyone to lie down, but not me. Violence is the first sign of an amateur. And forrest has evolved with the times, paying attention to the science of a hold-up.
Starting point is 01:08:32 He covers his fingerprints with nail polish, believing that that will obstruct the prints. He also brings a glass cutter. He brings a canvas bag that's, quote, big enough for the dough. And he always has a gun, which he insists is just a prop and something he'd never actually used to hurt a civilian. Well, they don't know that. They don't know that. That's him being interviewed by the New Yorker after the fact, essentially.
Starting point is 01:08:56 But Forrest considers his hearing aid to be the most valuable tool because he's got it wired to a police scanner that is tucked into his shirt. Dude, that's the hearing aid. Brillian. So that way, he's tipped off inside the bank if anybody hits a silent alarm during the robbery. Then he knows how much time they have. As the over the hill gang continue sitting banks across the southwest, investigators struggle
Starting point is 01:09:24 to track them down, and soon newspapers run headlines like, quote, senior citizens strike again, and quote, middle-aged bandits puzzle detectives. A Texas police sergeant named John Hunt says, quote, they were the most professional successful robbers that I'd ever encountered in all my years on the force. They had more experience in robbery
Starting point is 01:09:44 than we had in catching them." But all that changes during the 1983 Heist in Massachusetts, where we started this story, because remember the over-the-hill gangs disguises weren't exactly on point that day. So two of the forests accomplices and their comically-fake m mustaches were part of the problem, but the other part was forced was missing an important part of his usual disguise. Author David Graham explains, quote, Tucker's wig had shrunk in a recent snowstorm. And quote, so he decides to ditch it, which allows the tellers and the bank manager to very easily identify him as the man with the hearing aid
Starting point is 01:10:26 when they are shown his mug shot. At this point, Forest Tucker has been at large and on the run for three years. So they finally track him down in Florida that June, walking towards his car in a parking garage, and they immediately start firing their weapons when they know it's him. The officers will later claim that forest had threatened them with his gun. Forest adamantly says that he did not do that. So as forest rushes to his car, he gets shot in the arms and legs, but he still somehow manages to throw himself into his vehicle, slam the door shut, throw the car into reverse and race through the parking garage backwards.
Starting point is 01:11:10 Holy shit. Yeah. I couldn't do that without bullet holes in my fucking arms. No. And he's also losing blood. He's getting dizzy. He busts out onto the street and then he crashes his car. He climbs out of the vehicle, starts running away on foot.
Starting point is 01:11:27 And within seconds, there's a woman driving in forest direction. Her young child's in the back seat. She'll later tell reporters, quote, as I got closer, he started to look bloodier and bloodier. It was all over him. And I thought this poor man's been hit by a car. Oh, dear. End quote. So this woman pulls over. been hit by a car. Oh dear. End quote.
Starting point is 01:11:45 So this woman pulls over, she offers for us to ride to the hospital. Do you know how I'm picturing this whole time? Oh, his Walton Groggins. Oh, yeah. The rest of the gemstones. He'll be perfect. That's a good one. Actually, that's interesting.
Starting point is 01:11:59 Bookmark that for the end of this. Okay. So, once he's in her car, he pulls out a gun, he grabs the steering wheel and says that she needs to hit the gas. Now she's terrified, of course. Oh my shit. She obeys.
Starting point is 01:12:13 So with him steering and her working the gas pedal, the police are now on their tail. The car flies down the street for half a mile and suddenly Forest gives up. He just mutters, okay. She pulls over, he steps out of the car flies down the street for half a mile and suddenly Forest gives up. He just mutters, okay, she pulls over, he steps out of the car and he passes out on the street from blood loss. He's immediately taken to the local hospital and from there he's eventually taken into custody. Meanwhile, police decide to search his house, which is in a well-to-do Florida retirement community. And then when they knock on the door there, they're greeted by a pretty woman in her 50s.
Starting point is 01:12:46 No. Uh huh. She tells police that her husband's name is Bob Callahan and that he's a retired securities broker. Mm hmm. When they tell her that her husband is actually forest Tucker and notorious bank robber who successfully busted out a prison, she breaks down in tears. Oh honey.
Starting point is 01:13:03 We're always so surprised when these men are bank robbers and not retired securities brokers. Aren't we? Oh, Jesus. So, Forest Tucker is eventually sent back to San Quentin. Wow. And when he gets there, because of his legendary escape on the Rubba Dub dub, everybody calls him the captain.
Starting point is 01:13:25 Oh my God. Love. That's how you get a nickname. You know what I mean? It's not like you're into a fucking girl cheese and so everyone calls you, don't she sandwich or whatever. It's like the captain. The captain and that's earned.
Starting point is 01:13:37 That's capital T capital C. It's earned. Now, here's such a moving part of this. Desperate to salvage his marriage. Forest promises his wife that he can change. He says, quote, I told her that from then on, I'd only look at ways to escape. And quote, he does seem committed to this promise. But again, Forrest is studying the law. He spends a lot of time cranking out legal appeals, citing his declining physical health,
Starting point is 01:14:07 he actually manages to get his sentence reduced by half. Wow. He also starts to write his life story. It attempts to unpack his lifelong passion for robbing banks. Forrest says that heists are his quote, way of keeping his sanity in a lifetime of being the hunted. Each new joint is a game, a game to outwit the authorities." And quote, he calls his completed manuscript, the can opener, and then Marin made a note underneath and she was like, I cannot figure out why this is the name.
Starting point is 01:14:39 There's nothing to tie it back to an actual. She thinks it's because maybe the can is slang for jail. Oh yeah. So it's like the can opener, but that's a guess. That's Marin's guess. In 1993, when Forrest is 73 years old, he is released from prison. He and his wife settle in Pompano Beach, Florida,
Starting point is 01:15:00 where he gives saxophone and clarinet lessons to locals. After all these years, it seems that he's finally turned his life around. He seems genuinely happy. And much of that happiness is attributed to his wife, who forest is absolutely in love with. He composes songs to her. He takes her out dancing.
Starting point is 01:15:19 And he says, quote, she is one and a million. So cute. But then in 1999, when Forrest is 78 years old, he walks into yet another sort of bank for the bandana with a bandana over his face. My friend, please. He flashes a gun and he demands all their money. He runs out with $5,300, which is around $10,000
Starting point is 01:15:44 in today's stolen money. But this time, the police are on his trail. They get no high-speed chase. He crashes his car into a palm tree. A responding officer says, quote, he looked like he just came off the golf course. You'd more expect to see him go to the early bird special than robbing banks. So once again, Forest is arrested. In October of 2000, he pleads guilty and is sentenced
Starting point is 01:16:09 to 13 years in prison. His wife tells reporters, quote, he didn't do it for the money. We had a new car, a nice home that was paid for, beautiful clothes. He had everything, end quote. In May of 2004, about a month shives 84th birthday, Forest Tucker dies behind bars. And to this day, it's unclear how much money Forest Tucker stole in his lifetime,
Starting point is 01:16:32 but he died with millions of dollars. What? And what's quoted to be a fleet of sports cars, like he died a rich man. And he did claim that not once in all of these robberies, did he ever actually use his gun or commit an act of violence against a civilian, although I bet that mother and child in that car
Starting point is 01:16:51 would have a different story to tell. Right. But, you know, you gotta get your credit where you can. It's also unclear if his autobiography was ever published, but when this 2003 article is written about him for the New Yorker by writer David Graham, that then turned into a movie. And that right there is the life story
Starting point is 01:17:12 of prolific bank robber and escape artist, Forest Tucker. I have never fucking heard of that in my life. Me either. He's a modern tuck-in. Outlaw. He was just, I love the energy because usually these stories, He's a modern tuck-in outlaw. He was just, I love the energy because usually these stories, it's like,
Starting point is 01:17:29 well, drugs are involved. Right. Well, you know, this is involved. This just seems to be a little bit of a weird compulsion. Yeah. Yeah. He needed to say fuck you to the man. Sure.
Starting point is 01:17:41 There's nothing wrong with that. Wow. I wonder where his son is. Now he feels about all of this. Yeah, that's true. I've actually do it with fucking 23 and me. And you're like, do do do. Where's my dad? And they're like, Oh, he's the old man banded or whatever. He's the old, he's the, he's the guy with the hearing aid that's actually a police getter. Oh, that's brilliant. It's so smart. Well, great job. Thank you. We did it again. A podcast.
Starting point is 01:18:07 A podcast that I would say that one had full range. Yeah, it was a podcast within a podcast. Yeah, it was. And we thank you for joining us once again. We couldn't appreciate you more audience member, and we mean you. Always, and forever. Thank you.
Starting point is 01:18:23 And stay sexy. And don't get murdered! KABBAY! YEEE! Elvis, do you want a cookie? AHHHH! This has been an exactly right production. Our senior producer is Alejandra Keck.
Starting point is 01:18:43 Our managing producer is Hanukkahel Critan. Our editor Producer is Alejandra Keck, our managing producers Hanukau Critan. Our editor is Aristotle Acevedo. This episode was mixed by Liana Squilachi. Our researchers are Marin McClaashan and Ali Elkin. Email your hometowns to my favorite murder at gmail.com. Follow the show on Instagram and Facebook at my favorite murder and Twitter at my fave murder. Goodbye! my Fave Murder. Support my favorite murder by filling out a survey at Wendery.com slash survey.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.