A Shocking New Look at the 1932 Lindbergh Kidnapping & Murder w/ Lise Pearlman

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Most Notorious!

Most Notorious!

3 жыл бұрын

Bruno Richard Hauptmann was tried, convicted and executed for the kidnapping and murder of Charlie Lindbergh, son of famed aviator Charles Lindbergh and his wife Anne. However my guest, Lise Pearlman, author of "The Lindbergh Kidnapping Suspect No. 1: The Man Who Got Away" believes that not only was Hauptmann innocent, but something far more sinister likely happened to the little boy, at the hands of someone inside the Lindbergh's New Jersey farmhouse on that fateful night of March 1st, 1932.
More information on Lise and her books can be found at her website here: www.lisepearlman.com/

Пікірлер: 732
@tammyholmgren7553
@tammyholmgren7553 Жыл бұрын
Your book is beyond fascinating, detailed & spot on! I had just finished reading "The Lindbergh Nanny" and it left me seriously wondering if Lindbergh was the culprit. I'm an experienced criminal defense attorney and have handled almost exclusively homicides for the last 26 of my 30 years. I searched the internet after to find a book or anything that confirmed my suspicions. I found yours! What a gem. I'm about 100 pages in and I can't put it down. EXCELLENT BOOK!!!
@crouchingcaterpillar
@crouchingcaterpillar 9 ай бұрын
I believe Lindbergh was involved but the nanny book is a work of fiction. Supposedly.
@bonniecassler7214
@bonniecassler7214 2 жыл бұрын
My mom,who was a kid back when the kidnapping took place,always said Lindbergh himself was behind it,because the man everyone saw as such a great hero,couldn't have such an imperfect child. She also said he was a Nazi.
@tammymorris5475
@tammymorris5475 2 жыл бұрын
Chales lindberg was a hitter supporting rasist bigot
@sweetsuszie
@sweetsuszie 2 жыл бұрын
He was a nazi. It’s not hard to find out.
@harrietharlow9929
@harrietharlow9929 2 жыл бұрын
@@sweetsuszie That's why Upton Sinclair chose Lindbergh to be the fictional fascist president in the novel "It Can't Happen Here".
@sweetsuszie
@sweetsuszie 2 жыл бұрын
@@harrietharlow9929 I’ve never heard of that book but I recently tried to read one in which Lindbergh was hitler esker. I couldn’t read it because of the way it was written though
@juliegreen7396
@juliegreen7396 Жыл бұрын
He was , and I’m so happy to hear someone who lived at that time knew Lindy had something to do with it!
@alicesmith6750
@alicesmith6750 2 жыл бұрын
As someone who finds great interest in true-crime, this is one of the most intriguing, detailed, well researched explanations as to what really happened to the child, and who was really guilty of it.
@finalflowerchild
@finalflowerchild Жыл бұрын
If you're a world wide famous person, why would you let people outside the family take photos of your child?
@finalflowerchild
@finalflowerchild Жыл бұрын
In the early 1980s, I was cashiering at a Walgreens, and someone paid with a silver certificate, USA printed.
@thatguyinelnorte
@thatguyinelnorte 2 жыл бұрын
I don't know if she's right; but I never felt Hauptman was the guilty one.
@matthewgliatto7339
@matthewgliatto7339 Жыл бұрын
She is right. I’m slightly skeptical about little Charlie being dissected in Carrel’s lab, but I am certain that Lindbergh was indeed responsible for his son’s death. Ms. Pearlman succeeded in proving that beyond a doubt, I think.
@jefftube58
@jefftube58 10 ай бұрын
I think Hauptman was framed.
@paulklenknyc
@paulklenknyc 2 жыл бұрын
Think of the “prank” with the water pitcher of kerosene: a] Lindbergh was not only a pilot, but a tinkerer and mechanic and inventor. He had a far greater appreciation of the nature of kerosene than a normal person. b] Lindbergh was also obsessed with medicine and the human body. He invented a medical device. He knew anatomy. And he feeds a friend kerosene?! c] And this friend was a fellow aviator - a barnstormer. They were touring / working together flying planes as stuntmen. This hits my gut and makes me want to vomit. He nearly killed the guy. Sick bastard.
@MrJeffcoley1
@MrJeffcoley1 11 ай бұрын
Total dick move, but I'm surprised (as I'm sure Lindbergh was) that the guy slammed the water down so quickly he didn't even smell or taste it first.
@elena19-80
@elena19-80 2 жыл бұрын
1 - The dad never spent time with his son 2 - The dad wanted the baby in bed before he arrived home 3 - The dad sent someone to go to the shop to get flash lights ? After his son disappeared 4 - The dad gave all different stories 5 - The dad wrote the note 6 - The dad has EVERYTHING to do with his baby's death !
@deltaqueen5704
@deltaqueen5704 2 жыл бұрын
I u
@poetcomic1
@poetcomic1 2 жыл бұрын
He also 'took charge' of the investigation with the New Jersey police and REFUSED the help of the FBI(!). The night of kidnapping he did not show up for a major testimonial dinner in his honor and did not even call in an excuse. This is something he NEVER did.
@harrietharlow9929
@harrietharlow9929 2 жыл бұрын
All of those are definite red flags. I know children were put to bed early (I was in bed by 6:30 or 7pm when little) but Lindbergh didn't seem to want much contact with Chalie--except to knock the child down when we would walk. The man was a bloody sadist and narcissist.
@takohamoolsen2432
@takohamoolsen2432 2 жыл бұрын
Plus: The dad took over the investigation and demanded it be done his way. The dad was a 33rd Degree Freemason. The dad got investigators that were also Freemasons. The dad threatened the positions of said Freemasons (job and Lodge) if it wasn't done his way. How do I know this? My dad went to the same freemasonic lodge as Charles Lindbergh and Norman Schwartzkopf Snr.
@robertn800
@robertn800 2 жыл бұрын
Lindbergh called his child “ IT “ Case Closed 🔒
@GirlFriday68
@GirlFriday68 2 жыл бұрын
the fact that nobody saw the note before Lindbergh, the fact that he was still pulling cruel pranks during the search for his beloved missing child, also the fact that poor little Charlie most certainly was developmentally disabled due to lack of oxygen, and physically disabled as well, we know what Nazis did to the disabled, and Lindbergh was of the same mentality
@gokaren420
@gokaren420 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly...eugenics
@takohamoolsen2432
@takohamoolsen2432 2 жыл бұрын
Lindbergh forced his pregnant wife to fly at high altitudes, that's probably why. Dad and I saw the Lindbergh house in NJ. It was described as 'spacious and rambling', but we found it to be cramped and rather small. During the tour of the house, dad tripped and steadied himself on a wall in the upstairs hallway. He thought it felt rather hollow compared to the other walls. After we left the inside, we were outside in the garden and there was an area that looked like it was bricked up and patched over. Perhaps this was a 'secret entrance' where Lindbergh used to like to play pranks on his family...you know, he takes the baby, sneaks out, knocks on the main door with the baby and says 'Look who I found outside'. Maybe, maybe not. Can't discount it though. Another thing too, Some time before the kidnapping a ransom note was sent to the Morrow family for $50,000 or Constance (Anne's sister) would be kidnapped. Strange how $50,000 was also for CL Jnr.
@cannibalisticrequiem
@cannibalisticrequiem Жыл бұрын
@@takohamoolsen2432 That seems like too innocent a joke for Lindbergh to play. He was completely fine with poisoning someone to "teach them a lesson", fucking with someone's aircraft steering while they're supposed to be looking for his child - oh and don't forget he pelted his son with pillows to knock him over which could cause further harm to Charlie as he had brittle bones do to Rickets, most likely because his father thought it was a good idea to force his seven month pregnant wife to go flying, and because she did not receive enough oxygen while in the cockpit, it negatively impacted her pregnancy. Lindbergh was a dick.
@frederickbowdler8169
@frederickbowdler8169 Жыл бұрын
Compare Lindberg memorabilia handwriting. With ransom note they are identical.
@maggiesfarm7970
@maggiesfarm7970 Жыл бұрын
Agreed!
@alanaadams7440
@alanaadams7440 2 жыл бұрын
I tried to read Anne Morrows book "Hour of Gold Hour of Lead" but couldn't get thru it. Anne was truly heartbroken over this child
@robertn800
@robertn800 2 жыл бұрын
Her Husband ordered her not to cry in public. ☹️
@dianecummings7922
@dianecummings7922 2 жыл бұрын
Chas. Lindbergh wouldn't have gotten away with the crap he pulled "investigating" his son's kidnapping today. In fact he would've been suspect no. 1!
@matthewgliatto7339
@matthewgliatto7339 Жыл бұрын
especially since well over half the time when a young child gets murdered, the culprit turns out to be one or both parents.
@karenoliver6061
@karenoliver6061 5 ай бұрын
I wish that was true but look at the McCanns, who imo definitely had something to do with Madelines disappearance, they were allowed to control the whole shabang
@-RAMS-FAN
@-RAMS-FAN Ай бұрын
Should be suspect number one anyways - it’s rarely a stranger
@kerry378
@kerry378 Ай бұрын
Think of the Jon Bennett case...that was an inside cover up as well, so not true.
@544CampStreet
@544CampStreet 3 жыл бұрын
I've read some of the books that conclude that Lindbergh did it, but this lady knows this case on such a granular level and obviously has done a ton of original research. I kept hearing bombshell after bombshell that I had no idea about. This is such a dark case on so many levels and the media and law enforcement's roles in it have obvious echoes to this day. Great podcast. I will be buying Ms. Pearlman's book.
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your interest and your feedback! I'm Lise Pearlman's daughter and lead research assistant. The book is available via www.lisepearlman.com and most places books are sold.
@vivianbrown2477
@vivianbrown2477 3 жыл бұрын
Very well said my thoughts exactly
@sarahhirshlee
@sarahhirshlee 3 жыл бұрын
@@smokeypearls being a fellow researcher myself (except I research for a podcast) let me just say thank you for all your work and research. Only another researcher can appreciate where something would be without a research 😉
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
@@sarahhirshlee thank you so much! That means a lot 😊
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
@@sarahhirshlee Thank you so much! 😊
@Proverbs-ou5cn
@Proverbs-ou5cn 3 жыл бұрын
So sad for the little boy and the innocent man who was framed. Shameful that so many were involved in the sham.
@hillaryclinton1232
@hillaryclinton1232 2 жыл бұрын
dyingwords.net/who-really-kidnapped-and-killed-charles-lindberghs-child/
@larryhatcher8927
@larryhatcher8927 2 жыл бұрын
Well....I kinda doubt that the ransom money just floated into his attic
@victoriajohnson5461
@victoriajohnson5461 2 жыл бұрын
He was a beautiful baby.😭
@sarahs5340
@sarahs5340 5 ай бұрын
She nailed it. His history speaks volumes as to what he is capable of.
@bethsheeba1198
@bethsheeba1198 2 жыл бұрын
I have just finished reading this book. It caused a lot of feelings regarding the cold-bloodied attitude of Charles Lindbergh. The research is so carefully and methodically done. I find the theory of using the little boy as a ' specimen' for study very possible. If this is the case the people who did it are totally depraved and the parent beyond words. It makes me feel so revolted and upset about Charles Jnr. and pray that justice can prevail. I also feel the family know more. Wish Anne's father had still been alive.
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your feedback! I was the chief research assistant for this book. The author, retired Judge Lise Pearlman, and I would be grateful if you would consider recommending THE LINDBERGH KIDNAPPING SUSPECT NO.1-THE MAN WHO GOT AWAY to your friends and local library. Thanks again!
@gloriacato7761
@gloriacato7761 Жыл бұрын
Bethsheeba...can you give the title of the book.wld love to read it. Thx
@Girlytang
@Girlytang 3 жыл бұрын
So utterly disturbing and detestable. It is hard to fathom that Lindbergh who should have been investigated and ruled out as a suspect instead commandeered the investigation according to his agenda obviously. His callousness and indifference in the face of a parent’s worse nightmare is unconscionable. To think historians portrayed Lindbergh as the iconic national hero for the time period. This is an example of how history can take great economy with the trutth. Thoroughly enjoyed Ms. Pearlman whose work on this subject is certainly unrivaled. Thank you, Most Notorious! ❤️🤗
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your interest and your feedback! I'm Lise Pearlman's daughter and lead research assistant. SUSPECT NO.1 -- THE MAN WHO GOT AWAY is available via www.lisepearlman.com and most places books are sold.
@Girlytang
@Girlytang 3 жыл бұрын
@@smokeypearls thank you and thank your mom! Her book is on my to-buy list!
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
@@Girlytang wonderful! I will pass the message on to her. Thank you!
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
@Shirley Bailey Wonderful! Thank you so much! I will share your feedback with my mom. :)
@theincorruptedeye8226
@theincorruptedeye8226 3 жыл бұрын
He would never have been ruled out. He was as guilty as could be. He commandeered the investigation, the ransom negotiations and the trial. He put Hauptmann in the electric chair when he said that it was his voice that he heard at the cemetery two years previously. Within a couple of days he invited a known gangster to live in his home and gave him access to the first ransom notes knowing that the fellow would try to extort his money, this fellow then incorporated Paul Wendel to assist, who in turn brought Isidor Fisch into the matter, who was Cemetery John.
@pauldrummond225
@pauldrummond225 2 жыл бұрын
Lindbergh was involved no doubt, he was a nasty man and in England he was not liked. My grandma told me he was a Nazi and he blamed England and the Jews for the war. He wanted America to stop sending food conveys to England so killing his own son was probably no big deal to him. Lise Pearlman has nailed this case, excellent, thanks for posting.
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Paul! Thank you so much for your feedback. I was the chief research assistant for this book. The author, retired Judge Lise Pearlman, and I would be grateful if you would consider recommending THE LINDBERGH KIDNAPPING SUSPECT NO.1-THE MAN WHO GOT AWAY to your friends and local library. Thanks again!
@pauldrummond225
@pauldrummond225 2 жыл бұрын
@@smokeypearls Yes of course I will thanks
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 2 жыл бұрын
@@pauldrummond225 thank you!
@frederickbowdler8169
@frederickbowdler8169 2 жыл бұрын
Look up Lindbergh memorabilia handwriting and compare with the ransom note identical. Case closed !
@kay1349
@kay1349 3 жыл бұрын
One thing I can't wrap my head around is how such a disgusting man like Lindbergh can be painted as a national hero by so many media and people. I admire the lady who wrote the book for the patience that she had and how thorough she was.
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
Kenean Behailu Zeleke-- Thank you so much for your feedback! I'm Lise Pearlman's daughter and lead research assistant. I will pass on your message to her. THE LINDBERGH KIDNAPPING SUSPECT NO.1 -- THE MAN WHO GOT AWAY is available via www.lisepearlman.com and most places books are sold. Please tell your friends and family if you think they might be interested. Thanks!
@fletcher373
@fletcher373 3 жыл бұрын
There are plenty of national heros that were disturbed human beings.
@evil1by1
@evil1by1 3 жыл бұрын
Because people are complex and not easily wrapped up as all good or all bad.
@sallyozuna3883
@sallyozuna3883 3 жыл бұрын
Have you heard of Donald Trump?
@comfortouch
@comfortouch 3 жыл бұрын
@@sallyozuna3883 Have you heard of the Clintons? Did you know that there's 68 mysterious deaths of 'associates' of theirs, who got on their bad side?
@Galen_G
@Galen_G 3 жыл бұрын
From experience, Charles Lindberg was a total narcissist. That poor little boy.
@Galen_G
@Galen_G 3 жыл бұрын
@@maliben81 No, but have studied several biographies. Not taking away from his accomplishments, but the guy did some very cruel things. The experience I spoke of was with my own narcissists.
@jmmbarkovich8734
@jmmbarkovich8734 2 жыл бұрын
It has been revealed he ( Lindbergh) had a second family in Europe that wasn't discovered until after his death
@carolynhorne9863
@carolynhorne9863 2 жыл бұрын
@@jmmbarkovich8734 on another platform he had 3 families, by two sisters who had two each, and his son by the other lady is still living in his house over there, the did dna. Think this was on the documentary here on utube
@rhiannonduncan153
@rhiannonduncan153 2 жыл бұрын
Truth be told, Charles Lindbergh truly was a classic example of a narcissistic individual. His popularity was beginning to decline, and it's most likely a publicity stunt gone horribly awry...look closer to home, folks
@elizabethaustin437
@elizabethaustin437 2 жыл бұрын
@@jmmbarkovich8734 I watched the documentary. A bad guy in my opinion!
@monilaninetynine3811
@monilaninetynine3811 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, there are LOTS of shady characters in this story. Charles Lindbergh, sadly, is the shadiest of them all.
@NavigatorMother
@NavigatorMother Жыл бұрын
The doctor was in cahoots with Lindbergh in that he kept a lot of the child's medical history from the authorities, including J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI, and the child was crated and his ashes scattered, following only a cursory autopsy. Lindbergh was a bad man.
@pw6160
@pw6160 3 жыл бұрын
The Charles Lindbergh case is eerily similar to the Jon Benet Ramsey. Seems both fathers acted suspiciously and oddly, given the circumstances. Both investigations were botched by the fathers and law enforcement, yet the public refused to believe that the fathers or families of the children could be capable of those heinous acts.
@marrenrue7731
@marrenrue7731 2 жыл бұрын
DNA no the body didn't match the Father or Son so you're wrong
@georgesawtooth2214
@georgesawtooth2214 2 жыл бұрын
Jon Benet was killed by the brother in a fit of rage. The parents simply protected him from the consequences.
@georgesawtooth2214
@georgesawtooth2214 2 жыл бұрын
@@marrenrue7731 Strange DNA can be found on any person at any given time.
@EYE_GOTCHA
@EYE_GOTCHA 2 жыл бұрын
@@marrenrue7731 Just because we have been told that it’s so doesn’t mean that it’s the truth…
@beatrixbrennan1545
@beatrixbrennan1545 2 жыл бұрын
The brother, Burke, killed Jon Benet with a flashlight for stealing his pineapple. The parents covered it up for him, but not realizing that Colorado law would've not pressed criminal charges on Burke because he was only 9 years old at the time of the murder, they led the public and law enforcement in a huge debacle of lies and misinformation and only got away with it because of their affluence.
@merrywalsh2809
@merrywalsh2809 2 жыл бұрын
If you just look at the premise that a man traveled to a rural farmhouse, deciding to kidnap a famous child for ransom, from the second story of a house with four adults in it, while they are awake, it makes absolutely no sense. Add to that, the rejection of his child, by a man with control issues, and a strongly held belief in eugenics, and there you have it, an inside job by a father who lacked empathy, who fathered several children with other women while married and never bothered to know the children, either a narcissist or a sociopath, or both. Motive and opportunity. Hauptman or Fish was guilty of capitalizing on the supposed kidnapping by concocting a ransom scam, and Hauptman ended up paying with his life.
@gokaren420
@gokaren420 2 жыл бұрын
So they didn't write the first letter?
@DanaDakota
@DanaDakota 11 ай бұрын
The fact the genitalia was cut off makes me feel like he did that to stop the defect gene or something to put emphasis on that.
@wanderinghistorian
@wanderinghistorian 2 жыл бұрын
You know, I was first introduced to this case as a child - and even then I knew that rickety ladder couldn't support me, let alone a full grown man carrying a baby. I always thought maybe I just didn't know what I was talking about - good to know now that I was right the first time.
@Dr.Pepper001
@Dr.Pepper001 Жыл бұрын
The ladder broke, probably on the descent. The baby probably fell and died upon impact.
@StanCat4
@StanCat4 Жыл бұрын
Xray - of course! Case solved.
@kathybrem880
@kathybrem880 4 ай бұрын
And Hauptmann was a builder-he never would have made that rickety thing
@rebelbelle62
@rebelbelle62 3 жыл бұрын
I loved this podcast. I have during research found out a lot about Mr Lindbergh . But this was some new imfo I had not heard of. I started reading about this as a little girl after my mom told me the story of the kidnapping. Still interests me even now.
@stillliving5899
@stillliving5899 3 жыл бұрын
When you add rockefeller, and a bunch of masochistic freaks, that were into eugenics, which they were into before ww2 , you get some sick stuff like this going on. This story always seemed sketchy to me when it was taught in school back in the 80's. God bless everyone.
@fuzzamajumula
@fuzzamajumula 2 жыл бұрын
Do you mean sadistic?
@localbod
@localbod 3 жыл бұрын
Just to correct one fact. He made the first non stop solo transatlantic flight, but not the first transatlantic flight.
@charlesenglemier42
@charlesenglemier42 3 жыл бұрын
correct
@docsmithdc
@docsmithdc 2 жыл бұрын
He made the first flight from continental USA to continental Europe.That previous flight by the English was "island hopping".By the way I don't like Lindberg either but fact is fact.
@localbod
@localbod 2 жыл бұрын
@@docsmithdc Alcock and Brown either crossed the Atlantic non-stop or they didn't. Continental Europe has nothing to do with it. The Guiness Book of World Records has the first non-stop flight across the Atlantic as Alcock and Brown as does Wikipedia. Please can you give me a reference where that is contradicted? Lindbergh's was the first SOLO non-stop flight across the Atlantic.
@docsmithdc
@docsmithdc 2 жыл бұрын
@@localbod I stand by my statement
@roberteaston6413
@roberteaston6413 Жыл бұрын
@@docsmithdc When the King of England met Charles L he asked "How did you pee?"
@gaylemc2692
@gaylemc2692 3 жыл бұрын
A sicko that could fly a plane.
@AmyPieterse
@AmyPieterse 2 жыл бұрын
Agreed
@garrethgoodworth2494
@garrethgoodworth2494 3 жыл бұрын
Best theory since I read (the incredible book) 'The Cases that Haunt Us'. Thank you Erik!!!
@lb1984
@lb1984 2 жыл бұрын
Just finished her book, it is excellent, if you're looking for a good read this is your recommendation
@emilyfreeman4868
@emilyfreeman4868 2 жыл бұрын
I find it very weird that the Lindberghs named their second child JON, considering the person who took the ransom money was dubbed "Cemetary John" by the press at that time. I would have never wanted my child to have that name which would have been a constant reminder. I always suspected that he had his son kidnapped and killed to spare him the embarassment of having a less than perfect child.
@martinawhelan2015
@martinawhelan2015 2 жыл бұрын
Or a child who was the product of an affair which is another possibility that's been put forward. Events from the discovery of the remains to the instant cremation after the coroner's exam, effectively denying his wife the chance to see her child and to give him the burial she preferred, could fit the theory of him having a deep anger toward his wife.
@cristineconnell7803
@cristineconnell7803 2 жыл бұрын
@@martinawhelan2015 he was a Nazi lover & firmly believed in eugenics! A son with rickets/vit D deficiency, that had severe effects as a result was unfit to for his pure blood minded lineage! So he went & made 5 more families to get out those Aryan race babies! Evil puke!
@stephw1702
@stephw1702 Жыл бұрын
​@@martinawhelan2015 there is also another theory that the body found was not Charles Jr and Charles Sr merely lied.
@MegaTrinity111
@MegaTrinity111 2 жыл бұрын
Charles Lindbergh was a monster.
@LittleMighty1956
@LittleMighty1956 2 жыл бұрын
He was a racist who believed he had superior genes. He Fathered 13 children by several women at the same time as a testament to this. A disabled heir would have been an embarrassment to him so he got rid of it.
@LoudCitizen
@LoudCitizen 2 жыл бұрын
It just struck me, when you used the word 'heir', that Jr. being firstborn made him especially vulnerable to a man who would be shamed by a deformed offspring. Lindy could not bear to have his son seen in this way growing up. i suspect Lindy made the decision to off his kid almost immediately after Jr. was born, and carefully plotted out the details. Lindy was a very deliberate methodical man, and did not set out on projects with any other mind than to successfully carry them out.
@Liz-sn1mm
@Liz-sn1mm Жыл бұрын
You mean "him", of course.
@lakid9749
@lakid9749 2 жыл бұрын
I am so interested to know what Anne thought about all this. Did she suspect her husband?
@MarilynFromTarotClarity
@MarilynFromTarotClarity 2 жыл бұрын
That he killed his son has been a rumor since day one, at least what the locals used to say. I've always wondered how his wife could bear the sight of him.
@anthonytroisi6682
@anthonytroisi6682 6 ай бұрын
Anne was pregnant at the time of the kidnapping. Although she was married to a control freak, she loyally supported her husband all of her life. She even risked her family's censure during his "America First" days. Lindbergh's own father was an isolationist. Although well-educated, Anne had led a sheltered life before her marriage. She knew Lindbergh was capable of using the baby as part of his mean-spirited practical jokes, it is unlikely she ever thought her husband would harm her son.
@Gail1Marie
@Gail1Marie 5 ай бұрын
There were marital problems. In the 1950s, both Lindberghs had affairs. Charles Lindbergh had affairs with three women, which produced a total of 7 children: three with one, and two more with another, and two more with a third. Anne Lindbergh's three-year affair with her physician produced no children. @@anthonytroisi6682
@sinatra222
@sinatra222 20 күн бұрын
​@@anthonytroisi6682She had an affair with another man while married to Lindbergh.
@deborahhockett
@deborahhockett 2 жыл бұрын
Lindbergh is a Monster. How devastating. Between the kidnapping, and murder of his son. He also had at least two other families. German wives,while married to Ann. Amelia Earhart will remain the true American Aeronautic Hero.
@deborahhockett
@deborahhockett 2 жыл бұрын
An innocent man was executed for what Lindbergh did. Disgusting.
@ladylibertywdc8324
@ladylibertywdc8324 2 жыл бұрын
3 Secret families- unbelievable!
@gokaren420
@gokaren420 2 жыл бұрын
Amelia Earhart resembled him
@hambam7533
@hambam7533 2 жыл бұрын
@@gokaren420 maybe he fathered amelia , just kidding but he seemed to have fathered alot of kids back then
@ileanaacacostaacosta1813
@ileanaacacostaacosta1813 Жыл бұрын
@@hambam7533 You mean they looked like brother and sister because Amelia was five years older than Lindbergh s they were contemporaries almost the same age group
@Ant-ls2pr
@Ant-ls2pr 2 жыл бұрын
It is a really in depth analysis of the topic, thanks for posting.
@southernlight6
@southernlight6 Жыл бұрын
Seems Lindbergh was a sadistic abusive man.
@laurabuehler
@laurabuehler 2 жыл бұрын
I knew a fair amount about the kidnapping before this podcast, but this is much more detailed than what I've heard in the past. What I've read previously was always directed toward the nanny, but I always had a feeling the Lindbergh was involved. Other than the details with the ladder that always left doubt as to the origins, I have never heard anyone point the finger at Lindbergh before, but I always "felt" that he was involved.
@sarahhirshlee
@sarahhirshlee 3 жыл бұрын
I'm really enjoying this podcast I just found it like just now and I'm thinking where has this been on my life it's so informative and the podcaster his voice is so soothing.
@abbyfer8705
@abbyfer8705 2 жыл бұрын
So many odd things that were never pursued...very sad and disappointing
@howardstites2145
@howardstites2145 2 жыл бұрын
What little I have read about in the past regarding the alleged kidnapping of his namesake, left me with an uneasy feeling about Charles Sr.. Lise Pearlman's book re-arranges the puzzlement I felt about the case with information that is logical to support beyond hypothesis to theory what actually occurred. Charles Lindbergh Sr. basically sacrificed his son to further support eugenics...
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 2 жыл бұрын
Howard Stites --Thank you so much for your feedback. I was the chief research assistant for this book. The author, retired Judge Lise Pearlman, and I would be grateful if you would consider recommending THE LINDBERGH KIDNAPPING SUSPECT NO.1-THE MAN WHO GOT AWAY by Lise Pearlman to your friends and local library. Thanks again!
@howardstites2145
@howardstites2145 2 жыл бұрын
@@smokeypearls Absolutely Jamie. Thank you for your message. Definitely I have and will continue to recommend the book. Quite fascinating considering the current human world affairs...
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 2 жыл бұрын
@@howardstites2145 Thank you!
@karawilliamson106
@karawilliamson106 5 ай бұрын
I used to think Charles would never harm his first born son… but the older you get, you see how cold and cruel people can be… I now think he knew exactly what happened to Little Charlie because he had it done … He was embarrassed of him, Charles felt like he was a perfect specimen of a man and didn’t want people knowing his son wasn’t perfect… and he believed all disabled people were worthless 😞💔
@allisonoconnor8055
@allisonoconnor8055 Жыл бұрын
I have always thought Lindbergh did this.
@sallyreno6296
@sallyreno6296 Жыл бұрын
Excellent interview.
@AngelfromGenX
@AngelfromGenX 2 жыл бұрын
In hindsight Lindbergh's behavior seems detached, uncaring and even cruel. Try to keep in mind that the 1930s were totally different culture. Ugly but true.
@bettywith2girls
@bettywith2girls 2 жыл бұрын
I think it was considered uncaring and cruel even back then too...but Lindy was a "hero" so people overlooked his behavior. He also was very much into eugenics/Hitler, said the Jews and people in England were wrong fighting the Germans and wanted the U.S. to stop sending food/aide to England during the bombing raids, and was extremely controlling with his family as well as having 3 German "families" on the side (with 7 add'l children) that he would visit 3 to 4 times a year in Germany. Doesn't take away his "hero" status for being daring (and lucky) enough to make it across the Atlantic, but there's plenty of people who knew him as kind of a jerk...sorry, but true.
@rhondawilliams5859
@rhondawilliams5859 3 жыл бұрын
CHARLES LINDBERGH. HAD MANY MISTRESSES AND CHILDREN WITH THEM. 😥
@joannschlicker6995
@joannschlicker6995 Жыл бұрын
He told his kids to have as many children as possible because they had superior genes.
@Dr.Pepper001
@Dr.Pepper001 Жыл бұрын
Lindberg thought he was fathering a master race.
@roberteaston6413
@roberteaston6413 Жыл бұрын
CL had one thing in common with former Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. As young men they lived celibate lives. When they got to be middle aged they became promiscuous.
@heideggerm2
@heideggerm2 3 жыл бұрын
As we heard in this podcast, the official story of the kidnapping of Charles Lindbergh, Jr. makes no sense. What actually does make sense is that Lindbergh was disgusted by his son's physical ailments and he ended up killing Charles, Jr. either by accident or on purpose and burying him in the woods. Lindbergh would have felt that his son's appearance was an embarrassment because he didn't fit the image of a child who was the son of "Lucky Lindy". Lindbergh was all about his public image. Stupidly, he greatly damaged that image by getting involved in the supporting Nazi Germany prior to the US entry into World War II; however, it doesn't change the fact that his image was very important to him. Creating the illusion of a kidnapping and then controlling the 'investigation' from the start deflected all attention away from him. I've heard, elsewhere, that Mrs. Lindbergh was afraid of 'the colonel' which may have stemmed from an idea that he was involved in the death of their son as well as other factors. Unfortunately, the truth regarding exactly what happened will never be officially stated.
@lydialilli4351
@lydialilli4351 2 жыл бұрын
He sounds an awful lot like Joe Kennedy Sr. (JFK's father). JFK's sister Rosemary was intellectually disabled (at the time they said "retarded"). Old Joe had a lobotomy performed on her and it ruined her life. She ended up having the capacity of a 4 year old and lived in an institution for the rest of her life because her father wanted nothing to do with her - she wasn't perfect. He was a big sleaze just like Lindbergh.
@bettywith2girls
@bettywith2girls 2 жыл бұрын
I don't think Mrs. Lindbergh was afraid of "the colonel" as she came from a very rich, loving family and they actually lived with HER parents, so if she needed help, she had it there. Also Mrs. Lindbergh had 5 children, later on, with her husband. Doesn't mean she didn't think he was an arrogant you-know-what but we all put up with stuff when we are married, and he ended up leaving at least 3 to 4 times a year for Germany to visit his 3 other "families" (with 7 add'l children he made also) as well as doing speeches all over the country...so I imagine he wasn't home a lot for her to deal with. I did notice, in another documentary, that at the end of his life when he lived in that rural secluded nature preserve in Hawaii, died and was buried on the property, that his wife chose to be buried somewhere else and not beside him when she died later.
@pleasedroses3811
@pleasedroses3811 Жыл бұрын
Didn’t Lindbergh play a practical joke on Anne by hiding Charlie in a closet? How disgusting.
@lakid9749
@lakid9749 2 жыл бұрын
I am so happy I found this channel Excellent content
@fuzzamajumula
@fuzzamajumula 2 жыл бұрын
When I heard about this book, I was eager to get it, thinking that it would be a well researched treatise on the subject - full of footnotes, cited quotations, reference materials and laborious attributions, to include copies of long forgotten FBI and law enforcement evidence. My preference is to read original source materials, then to decide for myself.
@Jasper7182009
@Jasper7182009 Жыл бұрын
Sure, you want to read the original source material. Give me a break!
@victoriajohnson5461
@victoriajohnson5461 2 жыл бұрын
God bless the baby may he rest in peace arise in God's light.
@lm2530
@lm2530 2 жыл бұрын
I studied this case a lot years ago. I never have felt that Hauptmann had much to do with the kidnapping. He did have $14,000 of the kidnapping money which he tries to explain having with his "Fish story". But if I found $14,000 in my house and needed it, I would spend it too. Also, he was a carpenter. He would not have built such a flimsy ladder. The police finding that money in his house was his "death warrant". No other suspects around. He had the ransom money. Case closed as far as the police were concerned.
@christorpher84
@christorpher84 Жыл бұрын
he did have $14,000 Wake up
@Liz-sn1mm
@Liz-sn1mm Жыл бұрын
The police also had sole access to Hauptman's house after his wife and son moved out, and likely removed the board at that time. Despite multiple searches, no one had commented on a missing floor board previously. The State of New Jersey will not allow the board to be examined. Apparently there is a form of wood DNA testing available.
@Liz-sn1mm
@Liz-sn1mm Жыл бұрын
​@@christorpher84 lm2530 knows that.
@kathybrem880
@kathybrem880 4 ай бұрын
Those are my concerns as well
@timothybelgard-wiley4823
@timothybelgard-wiley4823 2 жыл бұрын
People think of Columbus as some kind of hero too...he was a complete religious fanatic who justified what he did by saying he did it in the name of God....and he thought he was in India ..."the Great Navigator" was lost when in reality he was still over 10000 miles short of where he started out to go...yeah a hero...explorers get some kind of pass for being terrible humans...
@sandrasalas9813
@sandrasalas9813 2 жыл бұрын
Dad was a horrible person once you look into to him. He believed in what Hitler was doing and tried to breed as much as possible while he was in Germany.
@Pugs365
@Pugs365 5 ай бұрын
I used to request my ashes be spread on the beautiful grounds where Lindbergh is buried in Maui. Over many years, I've learned what a monster this man was, and I wouldn't take my dogs ashes near there.
@JohnPaul-qs2qf
@JohnPaul-qs2qf 3 жыл бұрын
i can’t imagine a nanny, particularly in those days, not reporting back that a window lock was broken.
@sarahhirshlee
@sarahhirshlee 3 жыл бұрын
If I remember correctly it was a farmhouse and I want to say the window was or the whole room was like on a higher floor because the letter had to be used by these supposed kidnappers that being said a baby's not tall enough to reach the window it was a farmhouse not like they had maintenance on staff so it wasn't a concern is my thoughts it wasn't a concern it's not like it would be fixed immediately and it's not like it had to be I don't think anyone thought hey they're just going to scale this wall and steal baby out of this window if I don't fix the lock
@sarahhirshlee
@sarahhirshlee 3 жыл бұрын
@@maliben81 so you've read the whole book? It sounds like a great book but I always like to get the opinions of people who purchased it. Is it safe to assume you recommended it? I'm feeling like I need to buy it...
@theincorruptedeye8226
@theincorruptedeye8226 2 жыл бұрын
The house had just been built, they had not even hung curtains or blinds. The problem was not the lock, rather the wooden shutter was warped and would not close all the way. Not deliberately tampered with, but Lindy knew about it and exploited it. Lindy's motive was revenge against his mother-in-law and to get get some of her money, not eugenics or any of these other crazy theories.
@Valentina-Steinway
@Valentina-Steinway 2 жыл бұрын
The parents knew that the window didn’t close properly.
@gokaren420
@gokaren420 2 жыл бұрын
@@theincorruptedeye8226 he was already rich and what did he have against mother in law?
@DogMumsey
@DogMumsey 2 жыл бұрын
Him not reading the ransom note 🚩
@heideggerm2
@heideggerm2 3 жыл бұрын
General Norman Schwarzkopf's father, Herbert Norman Schwarzkopf, was superintendent of the NJ Police at the time of the kidnapping and became famous as a result of it. He was completely controlled by Charles Lindbergh, Sr. throughout the entire "investigation". It was very convenient that they found someone who couldn't speak English very well to accuse of kidnapping Charles, Jr.. Hauptmann was the last person executed by the state of NJ and the death penalty is no longer on the books in the Garden State. The people and the media wanted to make sure that this trial was over rather quickly and there was a conviction, so railroading Haupmann was certainly an option.
@mwatts-riley2688
@mwatts-riley2688 2 жыл бұрын
The ideal of this family has been personified on the book-movie Murder On The Orient Express. That book had the first chance to actually set the ideal of the perfect family, in the public mind. Many had no radios or tv, and reading books or news papers was THE main entertainment or news source of middle- American popular. Her book came out in 1939. M. Elgin Illinois.
@bluezauza
@bluezauza 3 жыл бұрын
Shocking. And extremely fascinating. Thank you so much.
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your interest and your feedback! I'm Lise Pearlman's daughter and lead research assistant. THE LINDBERGH KIDNAPPING SUSPECT NO.1 -- THE MAN WHO GOT AWAY is available via www.lisepearlman.com and most places books are sold.
@Gwaithmir
@Gwaithmir 3 жыл бұрын
@@smokeypearls I bought my copy from Amazon.
@regeneratedsun6105
@regeneratedsun6105 3 жыл бұрын
I saw that ladder long ago and was thinking "Something isn't right." Though I followed thru with the original story I was always skeptical of the thinness of the ladder. But the rest of this info is new to me.
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
A Musical Soul--Thank you so much for your feedback! I'm Lise Pearlman's daughter and lead research assistant. THE LINDBERGH KIDNAPPING SUSPECT NO.1 -- THE MAN WHO GOT AWAY is available via www.lisepearlman.com and most places books are sold. Please tell your friends and family if you think they might be interested. Thanks!
@margaretbanks8969
@margaretbanks8969 3 жыл бұрын
Hauptmann was a carpenter if he'd made the ladder wouldn't he have made a ladder that didn't break.
@worldeconomicforumbarbie9323
@worldeconomicforumbarbie9323 3 жыл бұрын
The cutting off of the baby's genitals, is ritual.
@gokaren420
@gokaren420 2 жыл бұрын
@@worldeconomicforumbarbie9323 genitals were cut? Omgosh
@marthashartzer6669
@marthashartzer6669 2 жыл бұрын
I am disappointed with Lindbergh's personal interests and beliefs in allowing the imperfect animals born on his family farm as a teenager to die without medical attention. Did this continue with humans, even his own child, firstborn, to perhaps be undervalued?
@MaternalUnit
@MaternalUnit 2 жыл бұрын
Why would the body have been dumped so near the Lindberg home if it had been used in the lab? Why bring it back toward the house? Also, however horrible Lindberg was, is it believable that he would have had his son vivisected? And is she saying that a Nobel prize scientist performed vivisection on children?? Despite these questions, I can definitely buy the idea that Lindberg was responsible for his son's death.
@stutzbearcat5624
@stutzbearcat5624 2 жыл бұрын
Lindberg's ... Farmhouse? Hell of a farmhouse! That aside ... I can't wait 2get my hands on this book!! Thank you - very much!!
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 2 жыл бұрын
Stutz Bearcat Thank you so much for your interest! I was the chief research assistant for this book. If you read it, and find it compelling, the author -- retired Judge Lise Pearlman -- and I would be grateful if you would consider recommending THE LINDBERGH KIDNAPPING SUSPECT NO.1-THE MAN WHO GOT AWAY to your friends and local library. Thanks again!
@keithsurland5856
@keithsurland5856 3 жыл бұрын
Excellent research and interview. Heartbreaking story. Lindbergh guilty
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your interest and your feedback! I'm Lise Pearlman's daughter and lead research assistant. The book is available via www.lisepearlman.com and most places books are sold.
@marysolcruzii8414
@marysolcruzii8414 2 жыл бұрын
Realmente una joya de investigación de la señora escritora en este tema, que siempre es interesante y confuso a la vez, felicitaciones por darle otra mirada a esos lugares oscuros de la historia del secuestro del siglo xx. Saludo cordial 👍🏻
@maureentrant5588
@maureentrant5588 2 жыл бұрын
Speak English…. You’re in America or writing on an American site where English is our mother tongue. Es muy grosero 😡
@tanjahorvat1311
@tanjahorvat1311 Жыл бұрын
I am confused. The details about the body are weird. Toddlers change but not that fast. Charlie had enlarged organs. The heart becomes too big. That details sound like a weird " medical " experiment with growth hormones. This is " medical " horror. " Doctor " wanted adult organs in the toddler body. This is a very hard case because the victim was a toddler.
@tedirogers
@tedirogers 3 жыл бұрын
I am so excited to find this podcast and will be getting the book. I own several books on the kidnapping. I have never believed the story that Lindbergh told. There were too many unanswered questions. Why did Violet Sharpe commit suicide? I hope you touch on the time that he faked a kidnapping and hid Baby Charles in a bin. That was only two months before the kidnapping. Was it a dry run for the real thing? I believe that at worst, Hauptman could be an extortionist or fraternized with one.
@theincorruptedeye8226
@theincorruptedeye8226 2 жыл бұрын
Violet had a hunch about what happened, but could not speak, else she'd have been quickly humiliated and deported. I assume that you don't know about the chicken-coup that Lindy fashioned. Dry run? You're on the right track. Hauptman's story was valid.Read A Fleeting Glimpse Into The Lindbergh Kidnapping, eBay.
@harrietharlow9929
@harrietharlow9929 2 жыл бұрын
IMO, Lindbergh was no hero. Definitely abusive to little Charlie and very likely abusive to his wife, Anne. My heart goes out to the both of them. Imagine, knocking a disabled child down when he tries to walk. Disgusting.
@feistyjerseygirl
@feistyjerseygirl Жыл бұрын
And a horrible human being.
@Adriana-hp1eh
@Adriana-hp1eh 3 жыл бұрын
Kind of wonder if the kid didn't have some form of dwarfism that started becoming more obvious as he grew.
@gmaureen
@gmaureen 2 жыл бұрын
A narcissist would have trouble with a less than physically perfect child. Something wasn't right. Hiding, or not having, current pictures is the giveaway.
@merrywalsh2809
@merrywalsh2809 2 жыл бұрын
I agree, his appearance as described, sounds like dwarfism, except they also say he was big for his age. The large head and open fontanells does point to hydrocephalus. Malformed limbs in a child who also has hydrocephalus would point to a serious genetic defect, rather than rickets.. I am an RN. There are thousands and thousands of genetic defects, many of them poorly understood, even today.
@MostNotorious
@MostNotorious 3 жыл бұрын
For some reason, 1 hour 15 minutes made this too long for me to post, so I removed the normal intro and and exit music on this episode and it converted successfully. Just an FYI, I don't post all of the Most Notorious podcast episodes here on KZfaq, so there are many more to listen to at my website www.mostnotorious.com/ and your favorite podcast apps, including: Apple Podcasts: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/most-notorious-a-true-crime-history-podcast/id1055044256 Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/1JeYsvYZI4OxGTC9TJljLV Spreaker: www.spreaker.com/show/mostnotorious Stitcher: www.stitcher.com/show/most-notorious-a-true-crime-history-podcast Pandora: www.pandora.com/podcast/all-episodes/most-notorious-a-true-crime-history-podcast/PC:16671 Amazon Music: music.amazon.com/podcasts/39005731-4486-40a2-a16b-1bc62255b243/most-notorious-a-true-crime-history-podcast?refMarker=null Google Podcasts: podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuc3ByZWFrZXIuY29tL3Nob3cvNDY5ODMxNS9lcGlzb2Rlcy9mZWVk TuneIn Radio: www.pandora.com/podcast/all-episodes/most-notorious-a-true-crime-history-podcast/PC:16671
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for the amazing interview and for posting this on youtube! I'm Lise Pearlman's daughter and lead research assistant. Is it ok if I list my mother's website here? Thanks again. I really enjoy your show!
@MostNotorious
@MostNotorious 3 жыл бұрын
@@smokeypearls Yes, of course! I listed her website in the description above as well.
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
@@MostNotorious Thank you so much!
@andrewgillis8572
@andrewgillis8572 3 жыл бұрын
In some ways the pillow story is among the grimmest things I have heard on this channel. But this is another well-informed well-aced interview - the natural flow of a journalist's mind at work, as i hear it. I imagine this research would not fit any MSM narrative, just the way all the wrongful conviction signposts are present in the Oswald case. The complete lack of a tight case against Hauptmann, Sam Shepherd, even OJ, if you check best & earliest evidence. Same night of the crimes? You have no Oswald fingerprints on weapon, no way even for him to have gotten delivery of it; just Mrs Paine's weird & ready accusations; you got no OJ blood on gate, no socks at all, no glove at his place; (turns out blood amounts on glove & Bronco wer less than even i thought). you have no Hauptmann floorboards for the ladder, nor other planted evidence, or DAs tall tales & media spin (EG Shively in the OJ case, Brennan in Dallas; the hoaey Colonel in this case hearing the accented remarks. None is valid on the night, and with lawyers my bet Hauptmann Oswald maybe James Ear4l Ray could have alibied themselves. All three wculd have saved their own lives. Were Sirhan, HInkley Bremer or Chapman patsies - well then we have automotons, mind-controlled,- and yes Ike's complex will have won out. But still I say: the string of deaths of anti-war leaders, via lone nut, or small plane crash, and no other causes, from 1961 forward - how far? - is IMO a real question. That list would begin with the death of Patrice Lumumba & includes those of JFK, MLK, Malcom RFK & wounding of Gov Wallace, obviously. Proof of such a scheme is that Castro & deGaulle were survivors of multiple conspiracy murder attempts. Another proof is arrest of an ex-Marine IE patsy Mr Vallee 5 Nov 63 - JFK motorcade, cancelled - while a major gun stash was seized, across town. Proof of a false defector scheme, making Oswald look bad, forever, is Mr Paul Webster of Maine. Proof of a plan to enact terror on US streets, if not infiltrate local mayors & cops (EG Dallas Mayor Cabell, DPD Officer Westbrook) is founf in Lemnitzer's Operation Northweoods. Cheers sir and compliments on everything about the channel, even the sound quality & level! Tight!
@worldeconomicforumbarbie9323
@worldeconomicforumbarbie9323 3 жыл бұрын
The obvious seems to be historically ignored. The first time I heard the Linberg story I knew it was off. Linberg and Rockefeller, what an interesting couple.
@jasminespencer3992
@jasminespencer3992 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating podcast. I had never heard this theory before but it makes perfect sense. Especially the facts about the ladder and how there’s no way Helpmann would’ve taken wood from his own house instead of just buying some to make the ladder.
@sinatra222
@sinatra222 20 күн бұрын
He was broke so it does make sense
@jasminespencer3992
@jasminespencer3992 18 күн бұрын
@@sinatra222 No he wasn’t broke at all you need to do your research
@robertwoods3750
@robertwoods3750 2 жыл бұрын
wondering how the so called kidnappers knew exactly what room to go to and the best time to get there .
@GirlFriday68
@GirlFriday68 2 жыл бұрын
exactly,... this was not there main residence, who knew when little Charlie went down for sleep without adult presence... it makes no sense
@merrywalsh2809
@merrywalsh2809 2 жыл бұрын
And he decided that the best time would be when four adults were awake in the house at night.
@Liz-sn1mm
@Liz-sn1mm Жыл бұрын
Especially when they NEVER stayed there that night of the week.
@PRH123
@PRH123 9 ай бұрын
if he hung out in the woods nearby, maybe with binoculars, watching the windows in the evenings... The significant bit of evidence is that Hauptman was exiled from Germany, because he had used a folding ladder that he made to break into the local city hall... that's too much to be a coincidence...
@poetcomic1
@poetcomic1 11 ай бұрын
Scotland Yard's top detective immediately contacted the FBI that they had begun to notice that the family circle was the FIRST place to look in a child death.
@chatita9527
@chatita9527 3 жыл бұрын
Fascinating and great research! I think that Lindbergh was never thought of as a suspect because of his hero status. I guess that would be different nowadays, although there are cases where the parents "take over" the investigations, thus leaving a bad aftertaste in the public (i.e. JonBenet Ramsey, little Maddie, ... ); luckily these cases do not die down too quickly because nowadays there are not only many more efficient tools regarding research, pathology, science etc., but also the means of distributing information worldwide with a interested private sleuthing community behind it. Lindbergh sounds like a narcissist to me: Tasteless and hurtful jokes at the wrong time, very commanding man taking over the investigation, smug comments, no show of emotion, ... ). The way he behaved makes me feel that the son was not what he wanted, he was a hindrence to him, perhaps because this boy was sickly and - in Lindhbergs mind - not fit to be the son of a "hero" ... ? I wonder whether the mom EVER had afterthoughts wondering whether or not her husband may have played a role in all this?!
@elsajones6325
@elsajones6325 2 жыл бұрын
She knew that she'd better keep quiet or else. She handled it as well as she could for that era
@harrietharlow9929
@harrietharlow9929 2 жыл бұрын
@@elsajones6325Yes. She sounds as if she was abused during the marriage and had learned to keep quiet.
@ileanaacacostaacosta1813
@ileanaacacostaacosta1813 Жыл бұрын
It was her child for God s sake as nd era has nothing to do with Charlie was their only child at the time she could have gotten a divorce with such a suspicion I could not have endured the sight of him or him near me
@SusanSloate
@SusanSloate 2 жыл бұрын
I've wanted to read Judge Pearlman's book since I first heard of it. When I read it, it made me ill. The quality of the investigations is impeccable, and the explanation she came up with makes more sense than anything else I've ever read about this case. After finishing her book, I told a friend that not only would I have put Lindbergh in the electric chair, I'd have PAID to throw the switch myself!
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 2 жыл бұрын
Susan Sloate Thank you so much for your feedback! I was the chief research assistant for this book. The author, retired Judge Lise Pearlman, and I would be grateful if you would consider recommending THE LINDBERGH KIDNAPPING SUSPECT NO.1-THE MAN WHO GOT AWAY to your friends and local library. Thanks again!
@markpekrul4393
@markpekrul4393 6 ай бұрын
Among all the other problems with this case, the ladder has struck me as simply ridiculous - if you're planning on kidnapping the child of the most famous man in the world, why not go out an buy the best ladder on the market? Or, perhaps steal it - obviously your moral compass is set not to register something that minimal. Also - let's remember that Lindbergh sat on the witness stand and gave sworn testimony he knew to be false and which he knew would send an innocent man, a husband and a father, to the chair. THAT'S Charles Lindbergh.
@sarahhirshlee
@sarahhirshlee 3 жыл бұрын
I'm over here fact checking like a mad woman and not only is your podcast crazy accurate it brings up a lot of facts people didn't know and I think had all of this been known and presented as it is in your podcast Lindbergh would have been charged with at the very least conspiracy to kidnap and conspiracy to commit first degree murder... In my opinion. And keep in mind I'm a St Louisan. as a teenager we cruised up and down Lindbergh Boulevard my friends went to Lindbergh High School so I'm not looking at this with any kind of confirmation bias as much of St Louis still swoons over Lindbergh
@everettjennings4443
@everettjennings4443 2 жыл бұрын
How St. Louis County continues to have a major boulevard named after a well-known, proven racist and unabashed traitorous Nazi is simply baffling to me. I'm surprised an effort has not been made in the St. Louis area to banish the Lindbergh name for good and rename that long, well-traveled boulevard.
@everettjennings4443
@everettjennings4443 2 жыл бұрын
For a narcissist such as Lindbergh, the baby's mere presence was a constant reminder that the "great hero" produced such an "inferior" (his thinking) child. From all accounts the Lindbergh farmhouse was huge in size. I would love for someone to pls explain to me how exactly would a supposed kidnapper know exactly which second story window to climb and enter??? Lastly, I find it interesting that during the baby's entire short existence, Lindbergh showed absolutely no interest in the baby boy. Then, when the baby turns up missing, ALL OF A SUDDEN Lindbergh jumps into action, runs to the baby's room to investigate. It does not add up. I believe Lindbergh paid someone to abduct & kill baby Charlie.
@everettjennings4443
@everettjennings4443 2 жыл бұрын
The black man who found the Lindbergh baby should have considered himself lucky. Given the state of racism and bigotry at that time, he could have very easily found himself a scapegoat, thus executed. I think it's entirely possible that Hauptmann's only involvement was that of an opportunist--an extortionist. He saw an easy way of making money by PRETENDING to be the kidnapper, thus he came into access of the money. This explains his possession of the money. Unfortunately for Hauptmann, he thus became the scapegoat from his own greed.
@GirlFriday68
@GirlFriday68 2 жыл бұрын
Never trust anyone who likes to scare people with cruel "jokes" like Ellen Degeneres is famous for as well, to me it's someone who gets off on seeing people suffer or be scared or humiliated.. Lindbergh was notorious for his cruel "practical jokes"
@gokaren420
@gokaren420 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly....l hate pranks
@lauratroxel24
@lauratroxel24 2 жыл бұрын
He sounds like a real gem. He would fit in today.
@AmyPieterse
@AmyPieterse 2 жыл бұрын
Poor child 💔
@MT864
@MT864 2 жыл бұрын
Wait a second wouldn't the child cry or scream not recognizing the person grabbing him?? Nobody heard anything. They were awake. The nanny had to walk across the yard from the guest house to the main house. She didn't see or hear anything?? It's pretty quiet out in the country at night ya think?? Maybe old lindy didn't want a child with flaws!!
@merrywalsh2809
@merrywalsh2809 2 жыл бұрын
The author said the baby was being medicated for a cold, with a med that caused drowsiness, and this uninvolved father made it a point to tell his wife to give him the medication.
@gokaren420
@gokaren420 2 жыл бұрын
Dog didnt bark
@sport1girl
@sport1girl 3 ай бұрын
​@@gokaren420 I read on a different site that the dog was missing and found at the pound a few days later
@jocarruthers5957
@jocarruthers5957 3 жыл бұрын
Fascinating stuff! Just ordered the book and look forward to reading it! As an aside, I think it’s interesting that this case inspired Agatha Christie to write Murder on the Orient Express. Just goes to show ... truth is indeed stranger than fiction!
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
Jo Carruthers --Thank you so much for your feedback and for ordering SUSPECT NO. 1. There are lots of photographs and original documents as part of the bonus material that I think you will find very enlightening. I'm Lise Pearlman's daughter and lead research assistant. Please tell your friends and family if you think they might be interested. I agree. Truth really is stranger than fiction. Especially in this case. Thanks again!
@saydvoncripps
@saydvoncripps 3 жыл бұрын
Me too! I've rearly heard a more comprehensive explanation of evidence to back a theory by an author.
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
@@saydvoncripps Thank you so much! I will share your feedback with my mother. If you are inclined, please consider telling your friends and family. Suspect No. 1 was published via an independent publisher so every little bit helps get notice.
@saydvoncripps
@saydvoncripps 3 жыл бұрын
@@smokeypearls beautifully done and the book is on my reading list.in fact, im going to order it now before i forget.
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
@@saydvoncripps Thank you so much! My mother will be very pleased to hear that. Once you finish the book, we would be grateful if you would post a review on Amazon or goodreads. If you are inclined, please also consider suggesting it to your local library. Independent authors need all the help they can get. Thanks again for your support!
@theincorruptedeye8226
@theincorruptedeye8226 3 жыл бұрын
Lets begin the open debate right now, I ask the expert, Lise Pearlman, why did Murray Bleefeld approach Anthony Scaduto and tell him that Paul Wendell was the kidnapper?
@heatherbowlan1961
@heatherbowlan1961 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you ,for this new story on the kidnapping of the Lindbergh baby .very interesting .fr.Canada
@maryduhon9769
@maryduhon9769 Жыл бұрын
I was surprised the eugenics didn't come up until the end
@JohnDoe-wb4iv
@JohnDoe-wb4iv 2 жыл бұрын
I think because we were n the throes of the depression we were starved for good news so Lindbergh was made n2 a god
@lindavirgilio4225
@lindavirgilio4225 2 жыл бұрын
John Wilkes Booth, Leopold & Loeb, Hauptmann, Oswald, and Manson are names that bring instant recognition of horrendous crimes.
@bethanyjohnson5598
@bethanyjohnson5598 2 жыл бұрын
I am currently reading her book. It is strange but true that his grandfather's last name was Mannson but he changed it when he came to America so actually he would have been Charles Mannson. Fitting.
@EYE_GOTCHA
@EYE_GOTCHA 2 жыл бұрын
Oswald was a patsy, as was Hauptmann.
@robertn800
@robertn800 2 жыл бұрын
Take Hauptmann off the List: Add Lindbergh
@tanjahorvat1311
@tanjahorvat1311 Жыл бұрын
The Charlie's father was quality. But his father was rich. The poor people were innocent. Most important evidence - Father wanted no one to see the baby. That is extremely suspicious because rich people were doing that when their child wasn't " perfect ". One weird detail - The child's routine usually was mother/ nanny bisnis, not the father bisnis. ( I know that because my grandma was born in the year 1932. My great-grandma was a housewife. ) . The mini terrier is very protective. Also very loud. The whole house will wake up. ( I know that because one of my furry babies was a cairn terrier ( mini terrier ). ).
@opaltaberna6817
@opaltaberna6817 Жыл бұрын
But a controlling man wants to control everyone and everything.
@patrickcasey357
@patrickcasey357 3 күн бұрын
Another disturbing thing is that if Lindbergh truly did it, not only did he murder his own son but let an innocent man be executed.
@teresawoods7476
@teresawoods7476 3 жыл бұрын
Poor baby. Poor family
@biaedwards4025
@biaedwards4025 2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. So sad that given the time (unchecked police corruption/incompetence) hero worshipping. Ms. Pearlman info is formidable. More recent pictures would how that the child didn't "look" normal. This is very compelling information that Lindbergh didn't approve of a son who didn't fit the bill of a superior being. An innocent man was framed.
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 2 жыл бұрын
@ Bia Edwards Thank you so much for your feedback! I was the chief research assistant for this book. The author, retired Judge Lise Pearlman, and I would be grateful if you would consider recommending THE LINDBERGH KIDNAPPING SUSPECT NO.1-THE MAN WHO GOT AWAY to your friends and local library. Thanks again!
@-Reagan
@-Reagan 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much to the writer and to your podcast for giving her air time and conducting such wonderful interviews. I can always depend on your podcast to do amazing work and allow your guests the proper air time, and ask pertinent questions which don’t detract or distract. This case “resolution” has never sat right with me, from the first time I became familiar with the details. I’d never heard the “anecdotes” about Lindbergh and his anti-social behavior. That Lindbergh was knocking down the baby every time he started to walk wasn’t only disturbing bc he might have had “ricketts”. It was very disturbing and abusive to even a healthy child, but especially in the circumstances - a red flag to say the least. For Lindbergh, it was an immature display of resentment and dominance and it was cruel. For the child, the fact he began to sit before being knocked down was a sign of conditioning - that the child wasn’t crying out for his mother, but gave in and began to comply is also disconcerting. I wonder if Lindbergh attempted to kill the baby before this - I wouldn’t be surprised at all. I would also look for extant letters or any records/memories from those around the family who might have known the couple and witnessed possessiveness or abuse of Charles to Anne Lindbergh. There are indications of that in the facts that her behavior was much more caring than her husband, in playing with and spending time with him and indications she truly mourned her son, but Charles didn’t - playing tricks and being not only indifferent to his son, but to her emotional state of distress. He may not have “persuaded” her to leave her baby to go on trips or take flight lessons, but Charles may have *forced* her in some way. I know she was a writer in her own right. I read a book of poetry she wrote after the death of her son, but I was extremely young at the time, so I may easily have missed any indication she gave of withstanding abuse. It would be interesting to revisit her writing. I’m thankful to the author of this book for giving voice and airing what I do believe to be the truth, as well as injury and injustices to so many others who were harmed by Lindbergh and his colleagues, (cohorts).
@thebarky1988
@thebarky1988 2 жыл бұрын
I agree with you. I read her book “ Gifts of the Sea” several years back. It is a beautiful and inspirational book but I remember feeling a sense of sadness from her. I thought it may be due to the death of her son. I am going to read it again through a different lens. I only head of Charles as a National Treasure. I had no idea of this back story. Thank you.
@harrietharlow9929
@harrietharlow9929 2 жыл бұрын
Wow. Lindbergh really was one nasty piece of work. Abusing any child is awful and doubly so when the child is differently-abled. That poor little boy.
@harrietharlow9929
@harrietharlow9929 2 жыл бұрын
I suffered from rickets when very young and my mum told me that the failure of my fontanells to close was caused by rickets. Knocking little Charlie down when he would try to walk? Lindbergh was the lowest. SMH.
@Liz-sn1mm
@Liz-sn1mm Жыл бұрын
Lindbergh's biographer, Harold Nicholson, reported an incident when Lindbergh slowly poured a glass of milk over Anne's head in front of guests, humiliating her and ruining her silk dress. The onlookers were very embarrassed for her, but no one intervened, IIRC.
@ronaldwinker2197
@ronaldwinker2197 2 жыл бұрын
Here in St Louis Charles A Lindbergh will be Remembered (though many wanted to change the name of the old route 66 by-past named after him in the 40s). His photo with the Spirit of St Louis" plane is easily viewed at the airport and nearby hotels. A replicant of the plane hangs from the ceiling of the Missouri Historical Museum in Forest Park (Jefferson Memorial). The first city to have its own airport was St Louis the home of aviators: the Wright Brothers, John F McDonnell, 'Butch' O'Hare (Chicago's Airport name's sake), and Charles Lindbergh all lived here.
@stephaniegilcher4577
@stephaniegilcher4577 Жыл бұрын
Wow Disgusting
@winkieblink7625
@winkieblink7625 2 жыл бұрын
There were others involved that escaped to Germany. Hauptmann could have been just a dup.
@forestcobra7796
@forestcobra7796 2 жыл бұрын
I say "to hell" with the whole lot of them. Subjecting a 7 month fetus to low oxygen saturation created Charles' "village idiot." He was as guilty as hell with complicity, if not outright main criminal, in his son's abduction/killing. But guess what, each one reading this will learn the whole truth when each person has to stand before the judgment bar of God to learn your eternal destiny. All will be seen then. Ecclesiastes 12:14. "For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good or whether it be evil."
@merrywalsh2809
@merrywalsh2809 2 жыл бұрын
Lindbergh and Ann lived out their final years in a remote and beautiful spot here on Maui. Interestingly, they had a large monkey enclosure. I saw it. I think they were just pets. They appeared well taken care of and happy. There is a cemetery on the property where Lindy is buried. His headstone has a beautiful poem on it, which you can google, probably. Several of the monkeys have headstones too. I don’t know if you can still go onto the property. I went forty years ago, although I still live here.
@crouchingcaterpillar
@crouchingcaterpillar 9 ай бұрын
I would never visit that monster's grave.
@merrywalsh2809
@merrywalsh2809 9 ай бұрын
@@crouchingcaterpillar Yes, you are right. I visited before I knew about his eugenics and anti-semitism.
@mojowarrior4578
@mojowarrior4578 3 жыл бұрын
This is excellent I listened to it twice. 👍
@smokeypearls
@smokeypearls 3 жыл бұрын
M.W. Gaming Channel-Thank you so much. I’m glad you enjoyed it. I am Hon (ret.) Pearlman’s daughter and lead research assistant for The Lindbergh Kidnapping Suspect No. 1- The Man Who Got Away. If you are interested in many more details about the case and the trial, and the supporting evidence (including photographic), it’s all in the book, which is available via www.lisepearlman.com and most places books are sold. If you are inclined, please tell your friends and family. Thank you again. I will share your review with my mother. She will be pleased to hear it.
@lauriekrebs4522
@lauriekrebs4522 3 жыл бұрын
Incredible author who performed exceptional research. Lindbergh has always made me a bit queasy, and this case has always been a tragedy fanned by the incessant media attention. Lindbergh comes across as a careless, ruthless and manipulative narcissist. Interesting to note that multiple cops were very unhappy with Lindbergh and his behaviors/lies, but Lindbergh dismissed them from the case. Ridiculous.
@normajeanmorrissey4459
@normajeanmorrissey4459 Жыл бұрын
The information in this presentation is just mind boggling!!! After his friend drank the kerosene, Lindbergh should have been brought up on charges of attempted murder. Is there a reason that didn’t happen? If my husband hid my baby or threw things at him, he would be invited to divorce court! I am. An OB. NURSE. HE HAD NO BUSINESS MAKING HER FLY ACROSS THE COUNTRY 7 months pregnant. I. believe he was a big time control freak and perhaps a psychopath. 4 wives????This man should have been locked up to keep him away from normal people!!
@marciamccarthy7583
@marciamccarthy7583 2 жыл бұрын
Has anyone else seen the baby at the 2nd story window?
@johnsonhunglo1993
@johnsonhunglo1993 2 жыл бұрын
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