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- 216 - ‘Where Sick Folks Get Well’: Norman Baker Couldn’t Cure Cancer. Period.
Norman Baker was an entrepreneur, a pioneering radio personality, and a fake doctor. He was a masterful propagandist, and through his radio station and multiple tabloid publications, he manipulated American anxieties about everything from politics to alleged ills of vaccinations. But his biggest claim was that he could cure cancer, in just six weeks, with his own elixir -- and your money.
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Tue, 23 Apr 2024 - 215 - Spoiler! Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale People … May Have Worked
Though the Pink Pills couldn't stand up to the wild advertising claims that the product was a cure-all, the pills were actually potentially medically beneficial to some people with a certain -- common -- condition; in theory. Maybe. Hey, we're not doctors. Let's talk about, how despite that, why this potentially potent patent medicine was under fire from the U.S. government.
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Tue, 16 Apr 2024 - 214 - Radioactive Quackery: 'Doctor' Bailey and His Jaw-Dissolving ‘Energy Drink’
William Bailey called himself a doctor, but his career was as a shady businessman, not a medical professional. In the early 20th century, he launched a series of start-up companies, capitalizing on the new discoveries of radioactive elements, and sold patent medicine products with lethal radioactive substances with unproven promises to cure everything from arthritis to impotence – it was said they could help you regain your youth. But instead, they were deadly.
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Tue, 09 Apr 2024 - 213 - How Perkins Tractors Taught Us the Placebo Effect
Today, if you’re asked to think of a tractor, most of us probably imagine farm equipment. But in the late 18th century, a physician named Elisha Perkins made and sold a different kind of tractor – a device consisting of small metal rods that could cure what ails you simply through touch. And for several years, people were mad for the Perkins Patent Metallic Instruments, or Perkins Tractors as they became popularly known -- even though it all turned out to be what we now know as the placebo effect.
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Tue, 02 Apr 2024 - 212 - Madame Yale Made a Fortune as America’s 19th-century ‘Wellness Guru’
When Maude Mayberg was 38 years old, this was back in 1890, she 'discovered' an elixir that transformed her life. It was called Fruitcura, she said, and it cured her ailments when medical doctors could not. Two years later, she was a patent medicine entrepreneur and saleswoman going by the name, Madame Yale. Let’s talk about how that’s code for, snake oil peddler.
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Tue, 26 Mar 2024 - 211 - How ‘Rattlesnake King’ Clark Stanley Became King of Snake Oil Sales
Clark Stanley was a silver-tongued Texas cowboy who called himself the ‘Rattlesnake King’. Back in the late 19th century, he wasn’t the first charlatan going from town to town in the American West, hawking quack products -- during this time when patent medicines were gaining popularity, American consumers could buy all sorts of fraudulent snake oil products like his. But Clark had a certain flair. A certain charisma and showmanship others didn't. And, for a few years, he really was the Rattlesnake King -- and king of the snake oil salesmen.
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Tue, 19 Mar 2024 - 210 - Welcome to a New Season of Criminalia: 'THE SNAKE OIL SALESMEN'
Snake oil. Today the term describes any worthless remedy that's promoted as a cure-all. And, by extension, snake oil salesmen are considered a bunch of rip-off artists who peddle fraudulent goods. We’re rolling straight from the criminal world of blackmail and extortion into a new season -- we’ll see you there, not only with some very real stories about some very bogus things, but also with the cocktails and mocktails made to go with them.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 12 Mar 2024 - 209 - Welcome to the Season Finale of Criminalia's 'BLACKMAILERS'
From illicit love letters to political bribes, everyone has a secret, and it’s the threat of exposure that’s key to this crime -- and we discovered a whole lot of surprising examples along the way -- including a man who built his own submarine, hoping to escape with his payout under Lake Michigan; it sounds made up, but we speak the truth. We have enjoyed sharing these sometimes-almost-unbelievable stories of crime and criminals with you. Listen as Holly and Maria share their favorite shows and drinks from the season in our 'Blackmail' season finale.
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Tue, 12 Mar 2024 - 208 - When Blackmail Accidentally Uncovers Political Corruption
This is a story of a Texas oil tycoon, a congressman from Idaho, and a financial commodities broker in Oklahoma City. It’s a story of blackmail, yes. But it’s also a story of political corruption and ethics uncovered by that blackmail. There’s a lot going on here, and pretty much everyone’s guilty.
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Tue, 05 Mar 2024 - 207 - Duke of York and Mary Anne Clarke
Mary Ann Clarke attempted to blackmail her ex-lover, the Duke of York — who led the British army — by threatening to publish his letters. Sounds similar to Wellington but it takes a turn: His political enemies took notice, and they discovered that Mary Ann was selling army commissions (meaning, men who wanted a military rank or promotion would pay off Clarke, who would then demand that the Duke give her clients what they wanted).
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Tue, 27 Feb 2024 - 206 - The Story of Walter Minx, the Sears Extortionist and His Homemade Submarine
Milwaukee Magazine once described Walter Minx as slender and fidgety, with, "the kind of sharp-featured handsomeness that the movies had taught people not to trust." He was German-born, and immigrated to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, with his parents, his brother, and his sister in 1925. He aspired to be a successful American businessman; he wanted to make a fortune -- and a name for himself. He did make a name for himself, but not quite the kind as he’d hoped for.
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Tue, 20 Feb 2024 - 205 - Blackmail Fail: What Happened When George Ratterman Reformed 'Sin City of the South'
When All-American footballer George Ratterman announced his candidacy for sheriff of Campbell County, Kentucky, in April of 1961, he said, “I am told that if I run for sheriff, I will be the victim of all sorts of personal slanderous attacks, but I say to our opponents, let the attacks start now, if they must.” And, well, the attacks did start – culminating in a high-profile set-up of Ratterman in a compromising position with a woman named April Flowers.
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Tue, 13 Feb 2024 - 204 - Inheritance Lost: The Murder of Captain Joseph White
Joseph Jenkins Knapp, Jr. was expecting to receive a sizable inheritance upon the death of his 82-year-old great uncle, wealthy retired shipmaster and trader Captain Joseph White. But with debts piling up, Knapp decided he couldn’t wait for natural causes; in April of 1830, he and his brother, John Francis Knapp, hired a hitman to murder him, faked some blackmail letters, and, in the end, didn't get any inheritance at all.
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Tue, 06 Feb 2024 - 203 - ‘Acid Burns’: That Time Mae West Was Blackmailed, Know What I Mean? See?
It started just after Labor Day, with an envelope postmarked September 13, 1935, sent special delivery, addressed to Miss Mae West of 570 N. Rossmore, Ravenswood Apartments, Hollywood, California. There was nothing unusual about the envelope, but its contents were a different matter. It was the first of what would become a series of extortion letters threatening disfigurement by acid if she didn't pay $1,000. This wasn’t about keeping secrets or giving favors; it was about taking money from Mae West.
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Tue, 30 Jan 2024 - 202 - Why Charles Augustus Howell Was Called the Worst Man in Victorian London
Described by some as a, “charming rogue,” Charles Augustus Howell was a dodgy figure in Victorian art circles, in particular London’s Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood movement. There was extortion. There was forgery. And just a whole lot of unsavory bits. Howell was an art dealer by trade who was also known to manipulate those around him so he could acquire works that would establish and increase his reputation – and his financial security. When that didn’t work, in the words of biographer Humphrey Hare, "Howell did not hesitate to blackmail." So let’s get to know this charming-yet-unsavory character.
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Tue, 23 Jan 2024 - 201 - A Murder, a Letter, and the Questions Surrounding King Edward II’s Death
This is a story of controversy; actually, more than one controversy. It’s a story of medieval kings and queens, of revenge, and of a letter that challenges the circumstances historians thought they knew surrounding King Edward II’s death – including possible blackmail. Or maybe not blackmail. Stick with us while we try to sort it out.
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Tue, 16 Jan 2024 - 200 - How Emily Posts' Philandering Husband Was the Catalyst for Her Career Success
Philandering husband Edwin Main Post found himself blackmailed by a scorned mistress who threatened to go public with their affair unless he paid her and her publisher to stay silent. This is a story about blackmail, yes, but it isn't actually a story about Edwin, not really; this is the story about how his wife, Emily Price Post, suffered the humiliations of his actions and the blackmail that ensued, and then rose above it. Let’s hop back to Manhattan during the Gilded Age for this story of adultery, blackmail, and bestselling books about etiquette.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 09 Jan 2024 - 199 - ‘Publish and Be Damned!’; and, Harriette Wilson Did
Regency courtesan Harriette Wilson exposed in her memoirs the names of royal, aristocratic, and political men, whom she then blackmailed to keep their names out of those memoirs. Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington, was, famously, one of those influential names. Arthur was a national hero and wasn’t the kind of man who was easily intimidated; and when Harriette threatened to name his name, he was outraged, leading him to roar the now-famous quote: "Publish and be damned!" Let's talk about what happened next.
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Tue, 02 Jan 2024 - 198 - Horrific Murderer and Half-Hearted Blackmailer: Meet Dr. Cream
Thomas Neill Cream graduated with honors from Montreal's McGill medical school in 1876. His thesis had been about the effects of chloroform; and he would soon demonstrate just how devastating he could be with toxic compounds. Several people died under his 'care.' But we’re not here to talk about Dr. Cream the murderer; we’re here to talk about his other criminal offense: extortion. Thomas was ultimately undone when he attempted to frame and blackmail other people for his murders. Let’s meet the doctor.
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Tue, 26 Dec 2023 - 197 - How Constance Kopp Become New Jersey's First 'Plucky Girl Sheriff'
“I got a revolver to protect us, and I soon had use for it,” stated Constance Kopp when interviewed about the intruders intimidating her family under the cover of darkness at her home. Her assistance with solving the case led to her role as the first female appointed deputy sheriff of Bergen County, New Jersey. Let's talk about how Constance got there in a time when women were not-so-much welcomed into such work.
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Tue, 19 Dec 2023 - 196 - Welcome to a New Season of Criminalia: THE BLACKMAILERS
Welcome to a brand new season of Criminalia, where we'll be talking about blackmail throughout history. We’re rolling straight from the criminal world of forgers to one of blackmailers -- we’ll see you there, not only with some very real stories about some very shady things, but also with the cocktails and mocktails made to go with them.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 12 Dec 2023 - 195 - Welcome to the Season Finale of Criminalia's 'FORGERS'
Welcome to the final episode of our season of forgers, where we've been exploring the stories of some of the most amazing forgeries – and those behind them -- throughout history. But it wasn't all about fakes and forgeries. There were plenty of cocktails and mocktails to go around, too.
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Tue, 12 Dec 2023 - 194 - The Mechanical 'Turk': Wouldn't You Prefer a Good Game Of Chess?
During the 18th century, early animatronics were hot. They were featured in circuses, carnivals, and other touring exhibitions, and were usually built and operated with various parts like axles, chains, cogs, gears, levers, pulleys, wheels, wind-up keys – you get the point. For Austrian Empress Maria Theresa, in 1769, Hungarian inventor Wolfgang von Kempelen’s created the Mechanical Turk, a chess-playing machine that could beat almost any person who played against it. The Turk appeared to be a fully functional artificial intelligence to those who saw and interacted with it. It left audiences delighted, but baffled as to how it worked -- until a young poet named Edgar Allan Poe convinced many audiences it was not what it seemed.
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Tue, 05 Dec 2023 - 193 - The Calaveras Skull: The Practical Joke That Almost Changed Human Evolution
When a group of miners uncovered a skull deep in a mine shaft on the western slopes of Bald Mountain in Calaveras County, California, it was believed, at least initially, to be a history-changing discovery. The owner of the mine didn't know at first what it was that he'd dug up that day in 1866. And when he shared it with those who might, including the State Geologist of California, things went a bit, well, off the rails.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 28 Nov 2023 - 192 - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and the Truth Behind the 'Cottingley Fairies'
In the summer of 1917, Elsie Wright and Frances Griffiths convinced a whole lot of people, including the famous Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, they'd seen fairies neat their home -- and they had photographic evidence to prove it. After decades of keeping their ruse a secret, they admitted their "joke was to last two hours, and it has lasted 70 years.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 21 Nov 2023 - 191 - Fake! The Story of Clifford Irving and the Howard Hughes Literary Hoax
In the early 1970s, McGraw-Hill Book Company landed what could have been the literary scoop of the 20th century: A writer named Clifford Irving pitched them that he'd obtained the permission of the reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes to write a tell-all memoir of the mogul. That manuscript, though, turned out to be one of the biggest literary hoaxes of the 20th century, and it landed Irving in prison.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 14 Nov 2023 - 190 - The Tiara of Saitaphernes: How Much Art in Museums Is Not What It Seems?
In April of 1896, the Louvre announced it had purchased a tiara they believed must have been from the treasure house of a great Scythian king -- and that it had the exciting potential to rewrite ancient history. But only a few days after putting it on display, there were questions about its authenticity. The tiara, they would come to learn, was a fake. And in this episode, we're talking about it as part of a larger conversation of, how much art in museums is not what it seems?
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 07 Nov 2023 - 189 - False Impressions: Frederic Spitzer and His Master Forgers
A 19th-century German goldsmith famous for his forgeries of Renaissance objects, including jewelry and vessels. His fakery was discovered after his death, during a major archive by the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 31 Oct 2023 - 188 - To Be or Not to Be Shakespeare: The Forgeries of William-Henry Ireland
"Done to death by slanderous tongues," wrote William Shakespeare in his play, 'Much Ado About Nothing'. Shakespeare may be a renowned English playwright, poet, and actor, but, he has a bit of a credibility problem among some circles, and he has for quite a long time. It's known as the 'Shakespeare Authorship Question', and we're going to talk about some theories that suggest Shakespeare was a fake -- before we talk about a man who wrote a five-act play pretending to be the Bard. That could not have been easy. So, how now, good friends, and welcome.
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Tue, 24 Oct 2023 - 187 - Eugène Boban and the Real Story of the Crystal Skulls
The Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. has a fake crystal skull. And so does the British Museum in London, as does Paris's Quai Branly Museum. As of 2019, it was estimated there are more than a dozen crystal skulls known to exist. Long considered pre-Columbian relics, they've also inspired theories about the occult, aliens, and psychic abilities. But the reality is, none of it's true. Meet Eugène Boban, the real provenance of crystal skulls.
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Tue, 17 Oct 2023 - 186 - Alceo Dossena: The Forger Who Sued the Men Who Sold His Forgeries
Sculptor Alceo Dossena was an impactful figure in the art world of the early 20th century because he created forged masterpieces capable of fooling even the most expert of experts. Critics attributed his pieces to famous classical and Renaissance artists, and his works were sold through dealers and purchased by museums and collectors. But in an unexpected turn of events, the forger sued the dealers who sold his work.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 10 Oct 2023 - 185 - Violin Virtuoso Fritz Kreisler's Great Musical Hoax
Virtuoso Fritz Kreisler was known and is remembered for his artistry as a violinist and composer -- and, also, as an unashamed showman. He was one of the most beloved and best known of the early recording-era artists, and a household name in his day. In fact, he was so adored by his audiences that when he revealed some of the pieces he'd performed and attributed to composers such as Vivaldi, Pugnani, and Couperin were, actually, his own compositions, the critics were irate, but his fans continued to pack concert halls.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 03 Oct 2023 - 184 - League of Lady Poisoners: Interview with author Lisa Perrin
Things are a little different on today's episode of our show. Today we're talking to Lisa Perrin, an award-winning illustrator, designer and entrepreneur. Lisa stops by to chat about her new book, “League of Lady Poisoners.” Enjoy!
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 26 Sep 2023 - 183 - Giovanni (Jean) de Sperati: Legendary Philatelic 'Artist'
Millions of people around the world collect, preserve, and trade or sell postage stamps; the hobby, or investment, is known as, philately. The first stamp forgeries began to show up, well, when the first stamps showed up. The Penny Black, the world’s first adhesive stamp, was issued in 1840, and the world’s first forged stamps followed later that year. Stamp collecting has been called, quote, "the hobby of kings and the king of hobbies." And for a time in the early 20th century, a man named Jean de Sperati was king.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 19 Sep 2023 - 182 - The Nicotra Forgeries
Some historians believe Italian forger Tobia Nicotra may have produced hundreds of document and signature forgeries attributed to names like Mozart and Galileo, before he was caught in the 1930s. He faded into obscurity, but his forgeries didn't. And for more than 80 years the University of Michigan housed a Galileo manuscript they didn't know was fake -- until a historian named Nick Wilding called its bluff.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 12 Sep 2023 - 181 - 'Lincoln the Lover': The Wilma Frances Minor Collection
Wilma Minor's 'Lincoln the Lover' forgery has been called one of the most audacious literary hoaxes of all time, and involves an alleged love story between a young Abraham Lincoln and a woman named Ann Rutledge. There was never any conclusive evidence the two had a romantic relationship; there was nothing in the historical record – no letters or notes between them, for instance -- that showed any indication of their love. Until 1928.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 05 Sep 2023 - 180 - Joseph Cosey: 'Yrs. Truly, A. Lincoln'
It's said his own handwriting was a neat and graceful script, not unlike Abraham Lincoln’s. He could fake the hand of Edgar Allan Poe, Mary Baker Eddy, and dozens of other historical figures. In fact, experts believe that a large number of the documents he produced in the early 20th century are still circulating today -- and inaccurately regarded as genuine. This is the story of Martin Coneely, alias, Joseph Cosey, who could sign Benjamin Franklin's name perhaps better than Ben, himself.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 29 Aug 2023 - 179 - The Fake Etruscan Terracotta Warriors in The Metropolitan Museum of Art
On Valentine's Day of 1961, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York had to, for the very first time, announce they were housing a fake. Three fakes, actually. After nearly three decades as a prized exhibit, their Etruscan Terracotta Warriors, as they'd become known, were determined to be inauthentic -- but here's the story of how and why The Met should have know that fact before they ever put them on display.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 22 Aug 2023 - 178 - Han van Meegeren's Fake Vermeers
Dutch painter Han van Meegeren has often been described as a dapper man, with, quote, “a small, birdlike frame constantly aflutter, and irreverent sense of humor.” His life story is anything but small. It's not just about art; it's about deception, fortune, Bakelite, and … Nazis. And, it has an unexpected twist at the end. Welcome to a new season of forgery and forgers, here on Criminalia.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 15 Aug 2023 - 177 - Welcome to a New Season of Criminalia: The Forgers
Some estimates suggest that as much as 50 percent of all artwork on the market today is likely forged or misattributed. It can be difficult to verify what is authentic and what is counterfeit, from art to music to archaelogical findings. In this new season, we'll talk about who makes these fakes.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 08 Aug 2023 - 176 - Welcome to the Season Finale of Criminalia's 'Firebugs'
Welcome to the final episode of Firebugs season, where we've been telling the stories of some of the most destructive blazes and those who set them throughout history. But it wasn't all about fires. There were plenty of cocktails and mocktails to go around, too.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 08 Aug 2023 - 175 - Stories of Arson as Homicide in Medieval Scandinavia
In Old Icelandic,'hús-brenna' means 'house burning', and it was a form of homicide by arson used to settle a vendetta, and sometimes used during political conflicts in medieval Scandinavia. Its sole purpose, make no mistake, was assassination. And it's terrifying.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby BiasSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 01 Aug 2023 - 173 - Meet James Aitken, Patriot Sympathizer and Dockyard Incendiarist
Opposition to the British crown began years before the battles of the American Revolutionary War broke out in the Thirteen Colonies, and that opposition took many forms, like riots and boycotts. A Scotsman named James Aitken sympathized with the rebels, and stood by them by setting British dockyards on fire – if the Royal Navy didn't have any ships, then England couldn't go to war with the colonies, he believed. Let's talk about who James was, and how he wanted to be an American hero.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby Bias
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 25 Jul 2023 - 172 - The Execution of Rose Butler
Rose Butler was a teenager performing domestic services for the Morris family of Manhattan when early one morning a small fire broke out. Though no one was injured, and the fire was quickly extinguished, the family accused Rose of intentionally setting it. A capital crime in New York, she was executed, making her the last person hanged for arson in the state. But her story involves something much deeper than a book of matches. Let's talk about what really brought Rose to the gallows.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby Bias
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 18 Jul 2023 - 171 - All the Times San Francisco Burned Down During the Gold Rush
Between 1849 and 1851, peak years of the Gold Rush, San Francisco was almost entirely destroyed by fire seven times. And there was something about these fires, at least the majority of them, that seemed somehow not accidental. Some were suspicious because they seemed to start at odd times, or when someone's temper was flaring, or they seemed to break out when, what locals reported as "odd people" were hanging around.
Seven's a lot of fires, and we'll talk about some additional smaller blazes, too.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby Bias
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 11 Jul 2023 - 170 - Firefighter Firebugs: The Small but Impactful Phenomenon
Firefighters who set fires, officially called 'firefighter arsonists', may be small in number, but they definitely make an impact. While things like insurance fraud and covering up another crime are common motives for arson outside the firefighting community, experts say those aren't what drive firefighter arsonists. So how does this happen? How does a firefighter turn into arsonist? Well. Let's take a look.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby Bias
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 04 Jul 2023 - 168 - 'Ladies and Gentlemen, the Bronx Is Burning': New York City in the 1970s
The Bronx in the 1970s was a perfect storm of things going wrong in New York City: poor urban planning, white flight, budget cuts to municipal and social services, and discriminatory practices coverged into a pressure cooker -- and the outcome was fiery and devastating. But we can't talk about the Bronx burning without ending on the phoenix that emerged from the rubble: the birth of hip-hop.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby Bias
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 27 Jun 2023 - 167 - The Drunken Night When Alexander the Great Burned Persepolis
Alexander the Great burned Persepolis to the ground during a night of drunken revelry, after being encouraged to do so by a Greek courtesan named Thaïs. It's said she told Alexander torching the royal palace would be among his crowning achievements, and it's said she inspired his soldiers and followers to take up torches. That is, at least, according to legend. Let's talk about the downfall of the Persian Empire and why anyone would have wanted to torch Persepolis.
Executive Producers: Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey
Producer & Editor: Casby Bias
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 20 Jun 2023 - 166 - The Night Herostratus Destroyed One of the Seven Wonders of the World
On the night of July 21, in 356 BCE, a man named Herostratus took a walk to the Temple of Artemis of Ephesus … and burned it down. "First," he said of his crime, "I was very scared, then it all went away once I imagined the fame I would have … ." In this episode we're shining the spotlight on the ancient Greek who burned one of the Seven Wonders of the World to the ground.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 13 Jun 2023 - 165 - The Dramatic Life and Death of a Scuba-Clad Arsonist: Michael Marin
"Michael Marin couldn't pay his mortgage, so he burned down his house," began Deputy Maricopa County Attorney Chris Rapp in the prosecution's opening statements at Mr. Marin's arson trial. In this episode about firebugs, Holly and Maria talk about a convicted arsonist who used arson with the intention of committing insurance fraud. But when the case went to court, things took an unexpected turn.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 06 Jun 2023 - 164 - Les Pétroleuses: 'Savage Hordes of She-Devils'
Join Holly and Maria for a new season of Criminalia, one that's all about arson. In this episode, get introduced to a creature known as the 'pétroleuse', and why according to the rumors around Paris in May of 1871, these 'unruly' female incendiaries were to blame for burning down much of the city.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 30 May 2023 - 162 - Welcome to the Season Finale of Criminalia's 'Confidence Artists'
Welcome to the final episode of our season on grifts and grafts here on Criminalia, where we've been exploring the stories of some of the most notorious swindles and swindlers throughout history. And, of course there were plenty of cocktails and mocktails to go around, too. Listen as Holly and Maria continue their tradition, highlighting their Top 3 shows and favorite drinks of the season.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 23 May 2023 - 161 - Welcome to Season 10 of Criminalia: THE FIREBUGS
They're called arsonists, torchers, pyromaniacs, and firebugs – and each of their stories is unique, in technique, in damage, and in motivation to set things aflame. Welcome to a new season of Criminalia, where we're talking about arson and the firebugs responsible for igniting illegal blazes throughout history.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tue, 16 May 2023 - 160 - Famous Landmarks for 'Sale': For You? Half Price.
The phrase, "There's a sucker born every minute," is attributed to P.T. Barnum, but it could be about this episode: We're talking about con artists who swindled people into buying some really famous landmarks. George C. Parker sold the Brooklyn Bridge. Among Victor Lustig's most audacious scams was when he sold the Eiffel Tower. And a man known as Natwarlal made a name for himself selling the Taj Mahal among other famous landmarks in India. Let's look at what happened when each of these guys dipped a toe into real estate.
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Tue, 16 May 2023 - 159 - Leo Koretz and the Bayano River Syndicate
Those who considered themselves financially savvy in Chicago in the early 1920s wanted in on one investment: the Bayano River Syndicate. It was an exclusive investment, and centered around oil-rich lands in Panama. And a mild-mannered, balding, and bespectacled lawyer named Leo Koretz was the guy who held the key to investing in it. But Koretz wasn't who he seemed, and neither were his oil fields in Panama.
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Tue, 09 May 2023 - 158 - Inheritance Cons: Meet the Bakers and the 'Drakers'
In this 2-for-1 inheritance scam special, Holly and Maria talk about William Cameron Morrow Smith and Oscar Hartzell, who, separately, bilked thousands of people out of millions of dollars, just by telling them they might be in line to receive a huge fortune. Spoiler alert on that: There was no fortune.
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Tue, 02 May 2023 - 157 - There’s Something About Mary -- But It’s Not Royal Blood
There was something about Mary, but despite her claims, it wasn't an inheritance, prestigious titles, peerage, or any aristocratic honors. Mary Carelton became famous-for-being-famous when the paparazzi and media of her day caught wind of a scandal involving her. It wasn't about her penchant for pretending to be a princess -- as it turns out, it was for bigamy.
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Tue, 25 Apr 2023 - 156 - How “Dr.” Samuel Bennett Became the 'King of the Thimbles'
You can't talk about confidence artists and their games without talking about one of the classics: the shell game. It's been called a lot of things over the decades, and during the time and place we're going to visit in this episode, it was 'thimblerig'. It's often portrayed as a gambling game, but it's actually a con used to fleece unsuspecting bettors. Samuel Bennett was one of the best-known 'thimbleriggers' – perhaps ever, depending who you ask – and he made a fortune scamming passengers on steamboats along America's waterways in the 19th century.
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Tue, 18 Apr 2023 - 155 - The So-Called 'Dr.' Blood and His 'Oxygenized Air' Cure
In January of 1881, the Cincinnati Examiner described Charles Lewis Blood as a "very affable" man, but questioned his right to the title M.D. And the Boston Globe described him as having a, "national reputation for crooked work.” In fact, he did have career in crooked work. "Dr." Blood ran a long con peddling patent medicine he called, oxygenized air -- which was actually nitrous oxide. And it's not the only crime he was involved in during his confidence career.
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Tue, 11 Apr 2023 - 154 - The Legend of Jefferson 'Soapy' Smith, Uncrowned King of Skagway
Jefferson 'Soapy' Smith had a different sort of destiny than his siblings, who were doctors and lawyers. Soapy led a dishonest life that included bribery and graft, fraud, theft, and extortion. When he discovered that he could make more money with less effort by being clever, he changed his line of work to running confidence games on gullible westerners, from soaps scams Colorado to fleecing prospectors in Alaska.
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Tue, 04 Apr 2023 - 153 - The Miners Who Fooled Millionaires: The Great Diamond Hoax
During the 19th century it seemed like the American West held endless possibilities for great wealth, and Americans were looking for that next big thing. Two Kentucky swindlers, taking advantage of gemstone fever, lured some of the country's biggest bankers and businnessmen -- and the founder of Tiffany & Co. -- into a jewel con with claims of having discovered a large deposit of diamonds. The value of their diamond mine would have exceeded $86 million in today's money. If it had been real.
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Tue, 28 Mar 2023 - 152 - Sarah Emily Howe and the Ladies' Deposit Company
Calling herself a financial agent, Sarah Emily Howe introduced the women of the greater Boston area to the Ladies’ Deposit Company, which potentially sounds a lot better than what it really was: a swindle. The Ladies' Deposit was a savings bank that promised women a very high interest rate on deposits – so high, it seemed to impossible. It relied on referrals, and Sarah used the deposits she collected from those new customers to pay the large returns she'd promised to early customers. If that sounds like a Ponzi scheme to you, you're right -- but it happened about 40 years before Ponzi, himself, tried it.
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Tue, 21 Mar 2023 - 151 - Reed C. Waddell and the Goldbrick Game
Psst, buddy, want to buy some cheap gold? It may appear to be a gold bar on the surface, but in reality, what's for sale is something far less valuable. American Reed C. Waddell is credited with one of the most celebrated cons among cons – the goldbrick swindle. You'll never find a better deal!
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Tue, 14 Mar 2023 - 150 - 'Cazique' Gregor MacGregor, the Man Who Fabricated a Country
Poyais: a magical place, and the picture of Caribbean paradise. And according to Scottish swindler Gregor MacGregor, it could all be yours … if you invested in his land, Poyais. In the early 19th century, MacGregor invented his own country, and then conned investors into buying the bonds of a country that did not exist.
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Tue, 07 Mar 2023 - 149 - Lord Gordon-Gordon, the Robber of Robber-Barons
Between the years 1869 and 1874, a man calling himself Lord Gordon-Gordon swindled the wealthy populations of Scotland, England, the United States, and Canada. Until he began pulling cons in the late 19th century, though, there isn't much information about this guy. We don't even know what his real name was. But we do know he had endless charm and charisma that helped him bilk people out of millions of dollars, including one of the richest and most ruthless railroad tycoons in American history.
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Tue, 28 Feb 2023 - 148 - Ann O'Delia Diss Debar, Spirit Princess and Worst Woman In The World
Ann O'Delia Diss Debar was a medium and a fortune teller who was once described by the famous performer Harry Houdini as, quote, “one of the most extraordinary fake mediums and mystery swindlers the world has ever known.” She made her name -- well, her many names -- as a spiritualist with occult powers, but she was 100 percent fraud. And from 1870 to 1910, she bilked people for millions of dollars around the world.
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Tue, 21 Feb 2023 - 147 - Lonely Hearts: 'They're Not Your Honey if They're Asking for Money'
Back in the mid-20th century, a widow named Susanna Mildred Hill began placing newspaper ads posing as a much younger woman looking for love. Once she had fraudulently won the affection of hundreds of pen pals, she asked each for a gift of money -- and she successfully did so for years. Known as the Lonely Hearts Scam, this con continues to be big criminal business. We're going to talk about romance scams, and how to keep yourself safe from falling for it.
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Tue, 14 Feb 2023 - 145 - William A. Rockefeller Sr.: The Vagabond Lothario of the Family
Bill Rockefeller Sr. once bragged that he taught his sons about business by swindling them: "I trade with the boys and skin 'em. I want to make 'em sharp.” But the Rockefeller name and money were established not by Bill, but by his eldest son, John D. Rockefeller Sr., who founded the Standard Oil Company in 1870. Bill, himself, had no interest in things like family or work. He liked to roam, and created a career on the road, peddling worthless trinkets and miracle elixirs. This is the story of the thorn in the side of the Rockefeller family.
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Tue, 07 Feb 2023 - 144 - 'May I Borrow Your Watch?': William Thompson, America's Original Confidence Man
William Thompson certainly was not the first person involved in the con game. We can assume people have been tricking and cheating each other likely since there were people to trick and cheat. We really don’t know a whole lot about William’s life. He just sort of pops up in the historical record when he starts getting noticed around the streets of New York City -- which, as you might imagine, is not good for the con business. He may have been small time, but he was the guy responsible for helping coin the term, confidence man -- or con man.
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Tue, 31 Jan 2023 - 143 - Bertha Heyman: America's 'Confidence Queen'
Legendary New York City police detective Thomas F. Byrnes once described Bertha Heyman as "one of the smartest confidence women in America." And she was considered among New York City police to be, “the boldest and most expert of the many female adventuresses who infested the country” at the close of the 19th century. Let's meet this so-called Confidence Queen.
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Tue, 24 Jan 2023 - 142 - Dr. Albert Abrams and His Oscilloclast: Charlatan or Visionary
His medical contemporaries once considered him to be a "clever, money-mad neuropath." But what makes Dr. Albert Abrams a bit different than other charlatans we’ll meet this season is that though he was dismissed within the medical community for quackery in his time, he probably wasn’t a guy running a con – at least not on purpose.
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Tue, 17 Jan 2023 - 141 - Madame Rachel: the Victorian Swindler Who Sold Bogus Beauty
Their crimes may vary, but con artists have this one thing in common: the power of persuasion to take advantage of people. And in this episode, we’re talking about how one woman known as Madame Rachel took advantage of Victorian high society with her pricey promises of eternal youth.
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Tue, 10 Jan 2023 - 140 - Welcome to the Season 8 Finale of Criminalia: The Artnappers
Despite the fact that many priceless works are today carefully preserved and placed under heavy security and surveillance, there are numerous examples in history of thieves simply finding a way. Although the methods used to conduct art heists have evolved, sometimes it doesn’t take an ingenious Hollywood-esque plan involving rappelling through a skylight to make your mark. Sometimes, thefts are opportunistic – say, someone didn’t turn the security alarm on at night, or someone left the bathroom window open. And it wasn't just all about the heists. There were plenty of cocktails and mocktails to go around, too. Listen as Holly and Maria continue their tradition, and talk about their Top 3 favorite shows and favorite drinks of the season.
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Tue, 03 Jan 2023 - 139 - Welcome to Season 9 of Criminalia: The Art of the Con
It was a charming and persuasive man named William Thompson who is considered to have been the original confidence artist – although that’s a title that’s probably difficult to pin down. Welcome to a new season of Criminalia, where we'll be talking about master swindlers, offering things too good to be true throughout history.
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Tue, 27 Dec 2022 - 138 - The Night the Nazi’s Stole Michelangelo’s Mask of a Faun
Mask of a Faun may not be a piece that first comes to mind when you think of Michelangelo’s portfolio of work. But it’s an important one, because it's the first marble sculpture he made. And more than 450 years after Michelangelo chiseled the details, Mask of a Faun was looted by the Nazis, and it hasn’t been seen since.
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Tue, 27 Dec 2022 - 137 - The Day the Dalí Escaped From Prison
The one thing that might be weirder than an original Salvador Dalí painting being stolen from the walls of the New York City Department of Corrections, is the fact that an original Salvador Dalí painting hung for nearly 40 years in the lobby of the Rikers Island jail complex in the first place.
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Tue, 20 Dec 2022 - 136 - Small Talk With Mo Rocca: 'Mobituaries' and Perspective on Historical Crimes
Things are a little different on today's episode of our show: Today we're talking to Mo Rocca. Among the many interesting things he's involved with, Mo is the host and creator of the hit podcast "Mobituaries" and author of the New York Times bestselling book, Mobituaries: Great Lives Worth Reliving. Join us as we talk about historical crimes, obituaries, and Mo's favorite cocktail/mocktail.
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Tue, 13 Dec 2022 - 135 - The Legend of The Horses of St. Mark’s
No one knows when Emperor Constantine installed the gilded Triumphal Quadriga sculpture in his new capital city, Constantinople, near the triumphal arch which led to the Hippodrome. How it got to Constantinople has been lost to the ages, and, so is its origin story. What we do know is these four horses have traveled from Chios to Constantinople; to Venice, Paris, and back to Venice again, with some interesting stops along the way. This sculpture is best known as The Horses of St. Mark’s, and what we do know about it begins after it was stolen during the Sack of Constantinople, in April of 1204.
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Tue, 06 Dec 2022 - 134 - The Ghent Altarpiece: Chasing the Lost 'Just Judges' Panel
Napoleon once stole several of its panels. The Nazis; they took the whole thing. The Ghent Altarpiece, also known as Adoration of the Mystic Lamb, has been the victim of more than a dozen crimes, including several thefts. Commissioned in the 15th century, it is, today, considered the most famous Flemish painting from the Renaissance period. Since it's completion, though, the work has been cut in half, nearly damaged in fire, and hidden in salt mines -- and part of it's still missing today. It's kind of a miracle it's made it this far through history.
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Tue, 29 Nov 2022 - 133 - The Skylight Caper: Canada's Biggest Unsolved Art Heist
One the world's greatest unsolved art thefts happened in Montréal, Québec, Canada, in 1972. Seventeen paintings remain missing, and the cat burglars behind the incident have never been apprehended. In fact, the story sounds a lot like a Hollywood script. Under the cover of darkness, three men entered the building through the one skylight that was under repair, and rappelled into the museum galleries below. It was, it's agreed, a very cinematic theft.
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Tue, 22 Nov 2022 - 132 - Who Was Jacob de Gheyn III and Why Do People Keep Stealing His Portrait?
“We have some bad news, sir. The Rembrandt is gone again,” the investigating officer told the gallery director at the Dulwich Picture Gallery. Rembrandt painted during the 17th century, and as part of his completed works you’ll find a portrait of a man named Jacob de Gheyn III, an engraver who commissioned the painting. The piece has since been nicknamed, the Takeaway Rembrandt, because it’s been stolen so many times – four times, so far, and from the same gallery. And here's its story.
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Tue, 15 Nov 2022 - 131 - Title Who Really Stole Goya's 'The Duke'?
Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, is probably best remembered for his defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo. A military general, he became a leading military and political figure of 19th-century Britain. And, his portrait, painted by Goya, also became a target of theft from the National Gallery in London – though not for reasons any of us might image. The Duke was once quoted as saying, “The only thing I am afraid of is fear.” We wonder, though, how he felt about ... ransom?
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Tue, 08 Nov 2022 - 130 - The Day Polish Pirates Pinched the Last Judgment
For some, the Book of Revelation in the New Testament of the Christian bible is an apocalyptic prophecy, involving the second coming of Christ and the judgment of souls. And the imagery for that interpretation is seen in artwork over the centuries, including The Last Judgment triptych. You may wonder, but which one? And you're right -- there are actually several Last Judgments. But only one has been stolen -- by pirates.
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Tue, 01 Nov 2022 - 129 - The Heist That Turned the Mona Lisa Into a Star
Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa has been described as, “the best known, the most visited, the most written about, the most sung about, the most parodied work of art in the world.” She's been immortalized in everything from Andy Warhol’s pop art to Dan Brown’s bestselling novel, The Da Vinci Code. But there was a time when the Mona Lisa was not well known, if you can imagine – and it took a man named Vincenzo Peruggia to launch her into stardom.
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Tue, 25 Oct 2022 - 128 - The Time 5 Thieves Paid an Entrance Fee to Steal 9 Paintings
Art heists can often look and sound like something out of a Hollywood script. One time, two thieves lifted two Van Gogh paintings from the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, and they entered the premises through the roof -- Mission Impossible-style … ish. In this new season of Criminalia, we’re telling the stories of, and looking at the motivations for, art heists throughout history. In this episode, we’re talking about five men who were brazen enough to buy tickets to a museum and pull off an art heist in broad daylight.
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Tue, 18 Oct 2022 - 127 - Did the Sicilian Mafia Really Feed Caravaggio’s Nativity to the Pigs?
Nativity with St. Francis and St. Lawrence considered a 17th century masterpiece, created by Italian painter Caravaggio in 1609. Nativity has been missing since it was nicked by thieves in Palermo in 1969. No one for sure knows who stole it, or why they stole it, but what might have become of it has sparked dozens of tales. One prominent theory is that it was stolen by the mafia – and, quite possibly, eaten by pigs.
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Tue, 11 Oct 2022 - 125 - Kōtoku Shūsui Wasn't Part of the Kōtoku Incident; Or Was He?
It began with the discovery of bomb-making materials at the home of a man named Miyashita Takichi, in the Nagano Prefecture. And it resulted in what became known as, the High Treason Incident, a socialist-anarchist bomb plot to assassinate Japanese Emperor Meiji in 1910. The fall-out led to the convictions of 26 people on charges of high treason against the Imperial family, including well-known anarchist, Kōtoku Shūsui.
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Tue, 27 Sep 2022 - 124 - Welcome to Season 8 of Criminalia: THE ARTNAPPERS
The most famous art heist happened in 81 minutes, when two men dressed in law enforcement uniforms stole 13 masterpieces from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston in 1990. But the art heist isn't a recent phenomenon; in fact, it's been part of Western culture since the 1400s. Welcome to a brand new season of Criminalia, where we’ll be telling the stories of bold art thieves who took priceless paintings, sculptures, and other forms of visual art from galleries, museums, as well as from other public and private locations.
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Tue, 04 Oct 2022 - 123 - Welcome to the Season 7 Finale of Criminalia: The Treasonists
Author and historian Andro Linklater once said, “Some people are born to treachery.” It seems like it. It was an season of interesting moments, for sure. Treason, pretty generally, is the crime of betraying a nation or a sovereign by acts considered dangerous to security. A cursory glance suggests … well … that there were a lot of variables from show to show, not only in regard to treasonous activities, but also when it came to motivations. And there were plenty of cocktails and mocktails to go around, too. Listen as Holly and Maria continue their tradition, and talk about their Top 3 favorite shows and favorite drinks of the season.
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Tue, 04 Oct 2022 - 122 - No Comment From the Bug House: When Ezra Pound Was Charged With Treason
“Europe calling! Pound speaking! Ezra Pound speaking!” came over the airwaves in more than 100 shortwave broadcasts from Rome, directed toward America during WWII. Ezra Pound was an American ex-pat, poet, and intellectual who was a major figure of the Modernist literary movement in early-to-mid 20th century -- and was also a fascist collaborator and anti-Semite arrested for treason against the United States for his radio broadcasts.
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Tue, 20 Sep 2022 - 121 - Will the Real Sidney Reilly Please Stand Up?
Many knew this man as Sidney Reilly, but his real name was Sigmund Georgievich Rosenblum -- probably. Historians do know he was a British intelligence officer, and he’s considered the most accomplished spy in history. But, most of Reilly’s account of who he was and what he did was probably a lie. We can be certain of one thing; he was executed for treason, on the order of Joseph Stalin, leader of the Soviet Union.
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Tue, 13 Sep 2022 - 120 - John Brown: The First American to Hang for Treason
He was arrested in 1859 for his role in the Harpers Ferry raid – an event that set the stage for the American Civil War. He was convicted of treason, as well as for murder, and for instigating insurrection. We’re talking about American abolitionist John Brown, the first person executed for treason in the United States.
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Tue, 06 Sep 2022 - 119 - Lavrentiy Beria, the Chief of Stalin's Secret Police Who Was Executed as a Traitor
“Let me have a man for one night, and I’ll have him confessing he’s the king of England,” Lavrentiy Beria bragged to his colleague, Nikita Khrushchev. He was intelligent and intriguing and cynical. He was also violent, unethical, and prone to using ruthless measures, including kidnapping, torture, rape, and murder. And he was almost the ruler of the Soviet Union after the Second World War – until his former colleagues executed him for treason.
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Tue, 30 Aug 2022 - 118 - The Political and Rebellious Life of Robert William Kalanihiapo Wilcox
The first time Robert Wilcox incited rebellion was in an effort to overthrow the so-called Bayonet Constitution and the newly-formed provisional government of Hawaii. The second time was when he tried to restore the deposed monarch, Queen Liliʻuokalani, and the Native Hawaiian government. His revolts led to his arrest on charges of treason – treason, technically, against an illegitimate government.
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Tue, 23 Aug 2022 - 117 - The Complicity of Magdalena Rudenschöld in the Armfelt Conspiracy
This is the story of a noble woman convicted for crimes against her country because of her devotion to the wrong person. To talk about how Magdalena Rudenschöld found herself a traitor to the Kingdom of Sweden and imprisoned for it, we need to talk about that wrong person -- a Swedish courtier and diplomat named Gustaf Mauritz Armfelt, and the conspiracy that was named for him.
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Tue, 16 Aug 2022 - 116 - The Execution of Mary Surratt
More than a century after these events unfolded, there continues to be debate among historians as to whether or not Mary Surratt was or was not involved in the plot to assassinate U.S. President Abraham Lincoln. What we know for sure, though, is Mary was hanged for treason in the summer of 1865.
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Tue, 09 Aug 2022 - 114 - Chidiock Tichborne: The Poet Who Fell in With a Regicidal Crowd
Chidiock Tichborne was a poet raised Catholic among Protestants. He is known to history as one of the conspirators involved in a plot to assassinate Queen Elizabeth I, a Protestant, and replace her with Mary, Queen of Scots, a Catholic. Let's talk about how his involvement in what was called the Babington Plot led to his execution for high treason.
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Tue, 02 Aug 2022 - 113 - The United States v. Douglas Chandler: America's ‘Lord Haw-Haw’
This American traitor used the pseudonym 'Paul Revere’ when he broadcast over the airways. But it was the pro-Nazi and anti-Semitic agenda that dominated Douglas Chandler’s radio show that was problematic for the United States government, not his nom de plume.
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Tue, 26 Jul 2022 - 112 - 'Down With the Coal Barons!': When the Red Neck Army Went to War
The New York Times published daily news on the events, reporting “Fighting continues in mountains as federal troops reach Mingo; planes reported bombing miners.” Just about 100 years ago, the conflict between West Virginia coal miners and mining companies escalated to violence not seen in the United States since the Civil War -- and it resulted in multiple charges of treason.
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Tue, 19 Jul 2022 - 111 - Thomas Dorr and the Time When Rhode Island Had 2 Governors
Once, the state of Rhode Island had two governors at the same time. True story. Thomas Wilson Dorr was elected governor under a new state constitution. The problem with that, though, was that Rhode Island already had a governor.
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Tue, 12 Jul 2022
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