The Binge Cases: Scary Terri - My Fugitive Dad | 2. The Hunt
Episode Date: December 11, 2023Introducing the Elliotts, the father-son pair who spent the better part of their lives with the singular mission of finding Ted Conrad. From the very start of this case, John Elliott made Ted his neme...sis. It turns out the Deputy Marshal had his reasons to despise him. Hosts Jonathan and Ashley discover a letter her Dad wrote in the weeks after the heist. Subscribe to The Binge to get all episodes of Smoke Screen: My Fugitive Dad, ad-free right now. Click ‘Subscribe’ at the top of the Smoke Screen: My Fugitive Dad show page on Apple Podcasts or visit GetTheBinge.com to get access wherever you get your podcasts. A Neon Hum Media & Sony Music Entertainment production. Find more great podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts and follow us @sonypodcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The Bench.
Even in October, Waikiki Beach must have felt like summer coming from the Midwest,
especially when you're on vacation.
The warm water lapping the shore, Mai Tai in hand, you're a world away from home.
And that's the point, to get away.
A couple found themselves on such a vacation.
The husband was from Scotland originally, and while on vacation, they ran into this nice guy on the beach. He'd moved to Hawaii from Cleveland a few months ago. He told them he'd been living
somewhere between the zoo and Diamond Head, working in group insurance, he said. Initially, he mistook the husband's Scottish accent
for an Australian one.
He asked him how he might get to Australia.
The three were really hitting it off,
talking about everything, and after a while,
the man offered to buy the couple another round of drinks.
But then something strange happened.
The husband corrected the man,
told him he was in fact from Scotland
and so couldn't really be helpful
in the man's efforts to get to Australia.
But also, they too were from the Cleveland area.
How crazy is that, right?
And just on vacation.
The man remained calm,
but seemed in a hurry to wrap up the conversation
after hearing where the couple was from.
He quickly excused the previous offer for a drink
and was on his way.
It struck the couple as odd,
but they quickly forgot about the incident
until they returned home.
The local newspaper ran a story, a big one, and it included a picture.
And when they saw that story, there was no doubt in their minds who that man on the beach really was.
Ted Conrad.
They reported the interaction to the U.S. Marshal's office,
to John Elliott, the Deputy U.S. Marshal.
John would spend nearly five decades
tracking down leads like this.
But that October day on Waikiki Beach, 1969?
Turned out he was never in Hawaii.
So, and it was a false identification.
It would be the last time a civilian
reported seeing Ted Conrad ever again.
And if you were a fugitive like Ted Conrad,
you might have thought you were in the wind.
But then, you'd never met the man chasing you.
U.S. Deputy Marshal John Elliott.
From Neon Hum Media and Sony Music Entertainment,
this is Smokescreen.
My fugitive dad.
I'm Jonathan Hirsch.
And I'm Ashley Randall.
Chapter 2. The Hunt.
If there was any cop in the world who was going to find Ted Conrad, it was going to be John Elliott.
My father was a hard individual. He was like a rock.
He entered law enforcement in the early 60s, around the time Pete was born.
He's known as a tough guy, probably with the strongest handshake that anybody's ever
felt in their life.
He was a commanding presence. Six foot two, 220, lifted.
Pete says he looked the part of a cop.
A very intimidating figure.
And when I was growing up,
all the kids were all scared of my father.
He remembers being out with his younger sister
and some guys drove by in a car and whistled at her.
His dad pursued the car, on foot, to a store around the corner and gave the boys a talking to.
John was the guy who, during a major storm, gathered all the kids on the block and secured
them in a cold storage facility. He was everybody's protector. He sniffed out criminal activity from a neighbor
down the street just through his powers of observation. One neighbor remembers their
child having nightmares and comforting her by saying that no matter what happens, the deputy
marshal across the street, John Elliott, is there. He'll take care of you, if nothing else.
Pete says John was a great dad, a great provider for their family.
But he was 100% into law enforcement.
He became the deputy U.S. marshal in 1967, two years before Ted Conrad stole the money right under his nose at Society National Bank.
And maybe that's part of what bothered him so much about it.
Ted's crime flew in the face of everything John stood for.
He was this hard-working law enforcement agent
dedicating himself to his job and to his community.
And his mission was to catch Ted Conrad.
His entire mission.
John wasn't going to let this arrogant kid get away with it.
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This is Jonathan Van Ness.
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Hi, everyone.
This is Jonathan Van Ness.
Clean water, fresh air, our health.
Electricity, honey. We tend to take for granted
the things that matter most, like the separation of church and state. Americans United for Separation
of Church and State has been on the front lines defending your freedom to live and believe as you
choose, so long as you don't harm others. Most folks don't see how church-state separation affects
our daily lives until that freedom is gone.
The separation between church and state covers many core freedoms like
civil rights for LGBTQIA plus people, women, and racial slash religious minorities,
or reproductive justice and freedom.
But those rights are not a given.
Every day, Americans United works at the state and federal level to make sure these freedoms
and more are protected for every American to enjoy and benefit from.
They can't do this alone, though.
Join Americans United for separation of church and state
and growing the movement,
because church-state separation protects everyone.
Freedom without favor and equality without exception.
Learn more and get involved at au.org slash curious.
From the moment John was assigned the Ted Conrad case, it took over his life and permeated into his personal life too. Pete remembers this clearly.
The family would have dinner together at their home in Lakewood, sharing details of the day over
a meal. Well, that's all he did was talk about Conrad.
And there was this running joke.
We'd be sitting around the dinner table and, you know, pass some mashed potatoes.
My dad would be like, when am I going to get Conrad?
Catching Ted was a lifelong pursuit.
He made an enemy with Conrad right away, right?
And sometimes you need that in your life, that other thing to motivate you.
Ted was John's nemesis. So my father, what you need that and you're like that other thing to motivate you.
Ted was John's nemesis.
So my father, what you saw is what you got. And he was not the kind of guy that ever talked about anybody else behind their back. If he didn't like somebody, he'd go up and tell you he didn't like
you. It's easy to see why John would have disliked Ted immediately. But with Ted on the run,
there'd be no chance to say it to his face. It would just
have to bubble up inside, unresolved. He took it personal because Conrad lived in Lakewood,
so my dad would talk about it all the time, talk about it to the neighbors.
And when John began the investigation, you can see why the narrative of the Thomas Crown Affair might have stuck.
There were few outward signs of trouble in Ted's life. John started pulling all the employment and school records on him, from Lakewood High to New England College, where he went for a semester.
His dad was a teacher there. If you can look at that over there, that's actually from New England
College, which is important. And that looks like the original, right? That's an original document in blue ink from New England College that my dad had
in his file. But in the spring of 1968, he didn't come back to New England College. Instead, he
decided to move back home, hang out with his buddy Russ, started dating Kathy. The summer that the Thomas Crown affair was plastered across movie screens all over Ohio
and the country.
Then there was the paper trail, the flight to D.C., the letter that he wrote to Kathy.
The only information that came through was that Washington, D.C., there's a letter sent
back to his girlfriend that was postmarked from D.C.,
which is where he flew to from Cleveland that Friday night.
And later, a letter postmarked from Inglewood, California, near Los Angeles.
And after that, he just disappeared.
That letter, to me, is telling. It didn't reveal anything about where Ted might be
or how he got away with it.
I want to tell you more on that letter later.
But as you might have guessed,
after the sighting in Honolulu,
John's leads became more and more far-fetched.
The original focus, even throughout the years, was that he was fluent in French
and probably went back to France at one point.
So that was the assumption?
That was the assumption, yeah.
This is a fun thought experiment.
Conrad managed to escape to France.
Was he disguised in a beret on the streets of Paris?
It was a compelling argument,
but John couldn't find any evidence anywhere
of Conrad being overseas.
John wondered if his father had aided in getting him out of the States. He had a father in New Hampshire
who was in the military. Or in true fugitive style, was he hiding out in the New England
wilderness? His mom frequented this cabin on Lake Erie. Was he there? Was he fishing for trout?
frequented this cabin on Lake Erie. Was he there?
Was he fishing for trout?
Or did something more sinister happen to him?
One of the theories was that he was murdered by the mob.
And I think that came from a family member at one point,
because they didn't believe he would be still alive in the 60s.
And they believed he was put up by them to steal the money.
And once he stole the money, you know, they shot and killed him
and buried his body somewhere.
You know, over the years, I wondered a million things about him.
I wondered if he had gone to an island.
I wondered if he went to Montreal because he spoke French.
I never thought he was probably in the States somewhere. And I always hoped, I hoped against hope, that he pulled
it off. Ted had become something of a celebrity by now. You know, when I think about it, it was
kind of like a headquarters for all of his fan club. We had a big sign on the front of the house
that said, Go Ted Go. Some of the kids had Go Ted Go shirts on.
Much to the chagrin of John Elliott,
who was crisscrossing the country,
running down leads as they appeared.
One of the theories that came through
was that he had had a sex change
and he was now a female.
And that he was back in Lakewood, Ohio
at one point, you know, somewhere in that area.
None of these theories would ever be substantiated.
He would spend decades following up bad leads with no luck.
Then, just a year before he retired,
there was a dangling on the fishing line,
a break in the case.
Pete gave me a letter John had written.
Subject, Theodore John Conrad, it reads.
Above name subject is wanted on warrant issued July 1969
for the crime of bank embezzlement.
So even 30 years later, months away from retirement,
John was sniffing out leads.
Conrad has not been seen since,
but there was an unconfirmed sighting in Honolulu, Hawaii,
late in 1969 or early 1970.
John refers to himself as Inspector.
On 1-18-1989, this inspector was watching the TV program Unsolved Mysteries.
A segment showed the arrest of an individual identified as Steve Cox.
Cox was arrested by the U.S. Park Police
and the Lake Mead National Park on warrants issued in Medford, Oregon.
The letter continues.
John had apparently been watching an episode of Unsolved Mysteries.
Update. Stephen Cox has been arrested in Lake Mead, Nevada, 25 miles southeast of Las Vegas.
Because of the extreme similarities between the photos of Conrad and Cox,
I contacted Unsolved Mysteries and was given the following physical descriptions of Stephen Cox.
The note went on to trace the investigation
into potential similarities between the two,
their fingerprints, their physical characteristics,
and the fact that Cox had used a phony place of birth
on his ID and that it was Honolulu,
the last known potential sighting 20 years ago.
But ultimately, they were able to rule him out.
The letter ends by saying,
I am fully satisfied that Cox and Conrad are not the same individual.
John, of course, was not satisfied. He never really gave up looking for Conrad.
And not just because it happened on his watch. Being a marshal in those days was not glamorous.
Some people portrayed Conrad as a, you know, a Robin Hood.
And my dad called him nothing but a, you know, a thief.
And you got to remember, back then in 1969,
my father made $6,700 a year being a deputy U.S. Marshal.
$56,000 today.
Conrad stole more money than John would have made in 32 years. So basically the rest of his
tenure as a deputy U.S. marshal. I can imagine the rage and frustration he must have felt.
And until I did the story, I really didn't appreciate how low the salaries were for a
deputy marshal in those days. You know, my mom worked at the church.
She was a cleaning lady for 50 plus years.
Look, I'm not going to say sometimes it wasn't difficult times.
I mean, that's just the way it was.
So, you know, I don't know if money makes things better in life, but it would probably help my parents out a lot back in those days.
I helped my parents out a lot back in those days.
A lot of the time, John would be traveling, tracking down people like Ted Conrad, while his family struggled to get by.
He wasn't there for Pete's baseball games growing up.
He said some years, he'd be gone nine months out of the year.
So, this kid from his neighborhood got away with all that cash cash while his family had to use food stamps to buy groceries and he couldn't be with his children. He was going to make Ted pay.
And there comes Conrad taking $215,000 and disappears, you know, in the thin air.
So I think again, for my dad, he took it personal just because location, you know, location, location.
It was right in his backyard when he was going to be the person that was going to pursue Conrad his entire life.
And even when John retired on his own, Ted continued to haunt him.
He was around the corner somewhere, a strong lead away from finally being caught.
I know he still didn't give the
pursuit up of trying to find Conrad. So during those years, he was working on his own. You know,
my dad would come in with a briefcase that we still have here that were just filled with Conrad
things. Did he ever get close and not know it?
No.
No, I don't think any... After going back in time here,
I don't think anybody
ever got close
at any time on anything.
I hate to say
he did things perfectly,
but he did things
pretty damn perfectly.
A lifetime of pursuit.
And it seems
they didn't even get close to catching Ted.
He was that good at disappearing.
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I said earlier that the story of Ted Conrad
made me think about how you can never really know someone.
You know, like, we are infinite in our complexity.
We're like those layers of dirt
and cross-sections of the earth.
The deeper you dig, the farther back in time you go.
And if you dig really deep, there's no dirt at all.
Just a molten, fiery core at the center.
Our souls.
I believe we are just as unknowable to our own selves.
And this story really showed me that.
Our deepest fears and feelings, the things that truly define us, they reveal themselves
over time, like a slow drip of knowledge, when we're ready. And pouring over the case files,
talking to Pete and to his staff and to Russ, I began to wonder how much Ted could have really
known about himself at 20. Then I found and read the letter.
My darling Kathy.
It's the one Ted wrote to his girlfriend, Kathy Einhaus,
dated July 22, 1969,
11 days after he stole the money from Society National.
Kathy hadn't seen this letter in half a century.
I never really read this letter since...
Where'd you get this?
Wow.
It's another lonely night without my family and friends.
I wish with all my heart that I could be with you now,
but I guess in time you'll be happier this way.
I wish I could tell you where
I am, but it's best that you don't know. I'd only begin to sink lower each time I heard from you.
If only I could see or hear you, I'd be stronger. I never realized how wonderful you were until I
lost you. Your wonderful little smile, that beautiful face, all those happy hours we spent
alone. Love was ours, but my blown mind did us all in.
Please forgive me, dear.
This was not the tone of a letter written by a calculated criminal on the run.
He sounds like a young man who made a big mistake.
Someone desperate for love, friendship, and family.
I guess you got put through a lot because of me. I'm only one man,
but sooner or later I'll be found out. Maybe on that seventh year we'll meet and fall in love.
It's now seven days. Only six years and 358 days to go. I'll be waiting and you'll be married with
three marvelous little monsters. If you get a chance, say hi to Russ and Chris for me. They
were such good friends to me. Russ was like a brother. I want to Russ and Chris for me They were such good friends to me
Russ was like a brother
I want to hold you close to me and tell you
I'm in like with you and never stop
Love is the most wonderful yet terrible thing in the world
I want, I need, I cherish, I adore, I love
But I blew it, for what?
A mere $219,500?
Our love was worth six times that, when a hundred times it.
Please be with me.
Love always, Teddy.
My first thought was, I just, I look at it as how young we were,
and how, just what kind of emotions you have when you're that age.
And how he must have felt.
He must have been terrified.
Eventually, Ted did find peace, a family, love.
It's a surprising aspect of the story.
Someone commits a grand crime and is never caught,
starts a new life that, in theory,
looks a lot like the old one could have.
He would get married and have a daughter, Ashley.
It's Ashley. Oh, Ashley.
You're such a beautiful child.
When Ashley and I first met, she'd never seen this letter either.
So when we banded together to look into the life of Ted,
I called her up and read it to her.
How are you feeling about that?
Oh, I always knew my dad as this very strong, very confident
man. And hearing this letter, my heart just breaks for him. He just sounds like a really sad kid.
Did you know him to be the kind of person who would have said something like this?
He was not a nostalgic person.
And he was not someone who was emotionally earnest.
I think that the only way I saw him like that was with my mom, Kathy.
Like he was very much in love and earnest with her. It really does sound like a different person
writing that letter. He also seems very alone. Another lonely night without my family and friends i've lost you i want to hold you
close to me and never stop please be with me that i think tracks a little bit for the guy that i knew
yeah his entire world was the two of us and he was adamant about the fact that he did not want to live in a
world without my mom. And so maybe this sort of loneliness carried over with him and he found
companionship with my mom and he found this life. Yeah. But I could imagine a place where he was still sort of at his core, kind of lonely.
It feels to me like this is one detail about Ted that flies in the face of the idea that he was this clever, enterprising criminal.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah.
I think that there is this whole narrative about him being this cool guy who gets away with a heist because he can't. from something to put himself in this position where he is clearly devastated and alone
and pining for what he gave up.
I also think it's probably important for us to mention just sort of where this is in the
timeline, right?
This is two weeks after the heist.
Yeah.
July 22nd, 1969.
And Ted Conrad is presumably on the run.
And even in the letter, he says something that the U.S. Marshals corroborated with us, that he only has six years and 358 days
to go so it does lead us to believe that he thought that there was some statute
of limitations on the crime that he had committed that after seven years he
would be able to be free if he could just be on the run for that long and I
talked to Pete Elliott about this and he mentioned to me that it doesn't really work that way
when you're indicted for a crime by the federal government.
There's no statute of limitations on that indictment.
Ted Conrad was a mystery to me,
and certainly a mystery to his daughter, Ashley,
but for different reasons.
What does the name Ted Conrad mean to you?
Honestly?
Nothing.
I mean, I know that's the name people knew my dad by, but...
So what's his actual name?
To mum and me?
I mean, he's just Tom.
He's Tom Randall.
So Ashley, I have to ask,
why are you doing this story?
Well,
there's a lot of things my dad hid from me.
I need to figure out how much
of what I know of him is the truth,
and how much is part of a
story he's been telling for 50 years.
Like, you want to figure
out what's real and what isn't.
Yeah.
It's almost like I'm trying to see him
for the first time.
How Ted
Became Tom.
That's next on My Fugitive Dad.
Hello, it's your beauty and wellness BFFs We'll see you next time. honest and unfiltered thoughts always. Listen to Lipstick on the Rim now on Apple or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you.