All language subtitles for The.UnXplained.Special.Presentation.S01E12.1080p.WEB.h264-EDITH_track3_[eng]

af Afrikaans
ak Akan
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bem Bemba
bn Bengali
bh Bihari
bs Bosnian
br Breton
bg Bulgarian
km Cambodian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
chr Cherokee
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
ee Ewe
fo Faroese
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gaa Ga
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
gn Guarani
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ia Interlingua
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
rw Kinyarwanda
rn Kirundi
kg Kongo
ko Korean
kri Krio (Sierra Leone)
ku Kurdish
ckb Kurdish (Soranî)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Laothian
la Latin
lv Latvian
ln Lingala
lt Lithuanian
loz Lozi
lg Luganda
ach Luo
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mfe Mauritian Creole
mo Moldavian
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
sr-ME Montenegrin
ne Nepali
pcm Nigerian Pidgin
nso Northern Sotho
no Norwegian
nn Norwegian (Nynorsk)
oc Occitan
or Oriya
om Oromo
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt-BR Portuguese (Brazil)
pt Portuguese (Portugal)
pa Punjabi
qu Quechua
ro Romanian
rm Romansh
nyn Runyakitara
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
sh Serbo-Croatian
st Sesotho
tn Setswana
crs Seychellois Creole
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhalese
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
es-419 Spanish (Latin American)
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
tt Tatar
te Telugu
th Thai
ti Tigrinya
to Tonga
lua Tshiluba
tum Tumbuka
tr Turkish
tk Turkmen
tw Twi
ug Uighur
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
wo Wolof
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:03,250 WILLIAM SHATNER: A master of deception, 2 00:00:03,417 --> 00:00:05,667 who was known as "The Great Impostor"... 3 00:00:05,875 --> 00:00:07,458 an elusive serial killer 4 00:00:07,667 --> 00:00:11,167 who taunted the police with puzzling messages... 5 00:00:11,292 --> 00:00:14,250 and a gunslinger from the Wild West 6 00:00:14,417 --> 00:00:18,000 who may have faked his own death. 7 00:00:18,125 --> 00:00:21,042 Throughout history, there have been clever criminals 8 00:00:21,208 --> 00:00:25,333 who managed to outsmart both the police and the public. 9 00:00:25,542 --> 00:00:29,958 These larger-than-life figures capture our curiosity 10 00:00:30,125 --> 00:00:33,750 and make us wonder, just what were they thinking 11 00:00:33,917 --> 00:00:36,542 when they pulled off their daring crimes? 12 00:00:36,708 --> 00:00:40,667 As we investigate the misdeeds of infamous outlaws, 13 00:00:40,833 --> 00:00:44,500 can we unravel the complexity 14 00:00:44,667 --> 00:00:46,417 of the criminal mind? 15 00:00:47,625 --> 00:00:50,375 Well, that is what we'll try and find out. 16 00:00:50,542 --> 00:00:52,458 ♪ ♪ 17 00:01:10,042 --> 00:01:12,542 As the Korean War rages around it, 18 00:01:12,667 --> 00:01:17,083 the Royal Canadian destroyer HMCS Cayuga 19 00:01:17,292 --> 00:01:21,125 brings aboard 19 badly wounded South Korean soldiers 20 00:01:21,250 --> 00:01:23,667 requiring immediate surgery. 21 00:01:23,875 --> 00:01:25,667 Dr. Joseph Cyr, 22 00:01:25,833 --> 00:01:27,625 the ship's newly arrived physician, 23 00:01:27,792 --> 00:01:30,000 is called upon to perform 24 00:01:30,167 --> 00:01:33,000 a series of procedures to save the men's lives. 25 00:01:33,167 --> 00:01:34,958 There's quite a few wounded men. 26 00:01:35,125 --> 00:01:37,167 They're taken on board and the ship captain 27 00:01:37,333 --> 00:01:39,875 tells Dr. Cyr, "You have to operate. 28 00:01:40,042 --> 00:01:41,167 You have to save these guys." 29 00:01:41,375 --> 00:01:43,250 So, according to all accounts, 30 00:01:43,458 --> 00:01:46,792 Dr. Cyr takes this relatively calmly 31 00:01:46,875 --> 00:01:48,833 and goes to it. 32 00:01:50,375 --> 00:01:53,500 SHATNER: While the patients are prepped for surgery, 33 00:01:53,625 --> 00:01:57,083 Dr. Cyr reviews a medical textbook in his private quarters 34 00:01:57,292 --> 00:02:00,542 to prepare himself for what would be the defining moment 35 00:02:00,708 --> 00:02:05,208 of not only his career but his entire life. 36 00:02:06,250 --> 00:02:08,125 HENDLEY: He performs a number of operations 37 00:02:08,292 --> 00:02:11,000 on these wounded South Korean soldiers, 38 00:02:11,167 --> 00:02:13,833 removing bullets, doing chest surgery, 39 00:02:14,042 --> 00:02:16,542 and by all accounts, he was successful. 40 00:02:17,792 --> 00:02:21,167 SHATNER: The story of Dr. Cyr's valiant performance 41 00:02:21,333 --> 00:02:24,500 hit Canadian newspapers and spread like wildfire. 42 00:02:24,667 --> 00:02:26,792 Across the country, people read about 43 00:02:26,917 --> 00:02:28,250 the naval doctor's heroic efforts 44 00:02:28,458 --> 00:02:32,292 to save the lives of the Korean soldiers. 45 00:02:33,333 --> 00:02:34,833 But there was at least one woman who was stunned 46 00:02:35,042 --> 00:02:39,167 by the news that Dr. Joseph Cyr had become a national hero. 47 00:02:39,375 --> 00:02:41,167 And as it turned out, 48 00:02:41,292 --> 00:02:44,125 she had a very good reason to be surprised. 49 00:02:44,250 --> 00:02:48,375 HENDLEY: The mother of Dr. Joseph Cyr was reading the newspaper 50 00:02:48,542 --> 00:02:51,917 and reads this account of her son. 51 00:02:52,083 --> 00:02:54,583 So she phones her son up and her son is sort of like, 52 00:02:54,792 --> 00:02:57,792 "Uh, no, I'm still posted in New Brunswick. 53 00:02:57,958 --> 00:03:01,417 I'm not on a ship, what are you talking about?" 54 00:03:01,625 --> 00:03:03,417 And it becomes obvious very quickly 55 00:03:03,583 --> 00:03:07,250 that the guy on board the destroyer is an impostor. 56 00:03:07,417 --> 00:03:10,458 The mother of the real doctor contacts the RCMP-- 57 00:03:10,583 --> 00:03:12,708 Canada's equivalent of the FBI-- 58 00:03:12,875 --> 00:03:15,625 and the shipboard captain on the destroyer is told, 59 00:03:15,750 --> 00:03:18,375 "Uh, well, your surgeon is an impostor. 60 00:03:18,542 --> 00:03:20,667 Uh, we've, uh, got to take him into custody." 61 00:03:20,875 --> 00:03:24,417 He's taken back to Canada, he's put before a court 62 00:03:24,583 --> 00:03:27,292 that would reveal that he's Ferdinand Demara 63 00:03:27,417 --> 00:03:29,833 of Lawrence, Massachusetts. 64 00:03:30,875 --> 00:03:34,000 SHATNER: An American from Massachusetts 65 00:03:34,125 --> 00:03:38,375 masquerading as a Canadian Naval doctor in the Sea of Japan? 66 00:03:39,250 --> 00:03:42,500 But how, and why? 67 00:03:42,667 --> 00:03:45,708 HARVEY ROSENSTOCK: Ferdinand Demara is a very fascinating man. 68 00:03:45,875 --> 00:03:49,667 First of all, he came from a middle-class family, 69 00:03:49,833 --> 00:03:51,208 very comfortable. 70 00:03:51,375 --> 00:03:54,750 But then, they suffered the Great Depression. 71 00:03:54,875 --> 00:03:59,000 They had to move, they had to downgrade, as it were. 72 00:03:59,125 --> 00:04:00,583 They get to a poor neighborhood, 73 00:04:00,708 --> 00:04:05,125 less of the affluent or semi-affluent amenities. 74 00:04:05,292 --> 00:04:08,500 So, he went from a lot to less, 75 00:04:08,667 --> 00:04:11,167 but it seemed to bother him more than his parents, 76 00:04:11,292 --> 00:04:13,167 the best that we can tell. 77 00:04:13,375 --> 00:04:17,500 And therefore, he had to fill in the difference. 78 00:04:18,542 --> 00:04:21,167 HENDLEY: By all accounts, he's a very smart kid. 79 00:04:21,250 --> 00:04:22,833 You know, does well at school. 80 00:04:23,000 --> 00:04:24,333 But he drops out of high school 81 00:04:24,542 --> 00:04:28,833 and he starts this weird sort of moving around 82 00:04:28,958 --> 00:04:31,042 and trying on new personas. 83 00:04:31,208 --> 00:04:33,292 ROSENSTOCK: It turns out 84 00:04:33,458 --> 00:04:36,750 that he has the ability to memorize very quickly. 85 00:04:36,917 --> 00:04:40,167 He even claimed that he had a photographic memory, 86 00:04:40,375 --> 00:04:43,375 so that he could look at something, 87 00:04:43,542 --> 00:04:45,833 say, "That really belongs to me," 88 00:04:45,958 --> 00:04:50,625 and with a very good intellect, he could carry this off. 89 00:04:50,750 --> 00:04:56,375 And he found he could borrow any kind of credential 90 00:04:56,500 --> 00:05:00,875 and become that person represented by that credential. 91 00:05:02,458 --> 00:05:04,292 HENDLEY: He starts that from a very early age, 92 00:05:04,458 --> 00:05:07,208 and he joins the military, 93 00:05:07,375 --> 00:05:10,333 goes AWOL, joins other branches of the military. 94 00:05:10,542 --> 00:05:13,000 And one of his very early impersonations, 95 00:05:13,167 --> 00:05:18,000 he pretends to be a Trappist monk and joins a monastery. 96 00:05:18,167 --> 00:05:22,250 At the time he was pretending to be a Christian monk, 97 00:05:22,458 --> 00:05:26,167 he made friends with a Canadian doctor named Joseph Cyr, 98 00:05:26,375 --> 00:05:29,833 and he then goes to enlist in the Canadian Navy 99 00:05:30,042 --> 00:05:32,542 and announces that he's Dr. Joseph Cyr, 100 00:05:32,708 --> 00:05:35,792 and uses the same credentials that the real doctor had. 101 00:05:36,000 --> 00:05:38,792 There's a war going on at the time in Korea, 102 00:05:38,958 --> 00:05:40,833 so they don't ask too many questions. 103 00:05:41,000 --> 00:05:43,042 They're just delighted to get a surgeon. 104 00:05:45,042 --> 00:05:48,167 SHATNER: In addition to posing as a military surgeon and a monk, 105 00:05:48,292 --> 00:05:50,292 Demara tried his hand at impersonating 106 00:05:50,458 --> 00:05:51,833 a number of other professions, 107 00:05:52,042 --> 00:05:56,708 including civil engineer, zoologist, psychologist, 108 00:05:56,875 --> 00:06:01,667 philosophy professor and lawyer, among many others. 109 00:06:01,833 --> 00:06:04,917 Demara became so adept at impersonation 110 00:06:05,083 --> 00:06:09,500 that he eventually became known by his most famous alias of all, 111 00:06:09,625 --> 00:06:12,583 "The Great Impostor." 112 00:06:13,583 --> 00:06:16,000 Ironically, Demara's life went full circle. 113 00:06:16,167 --> 00:06:17,542 After pretending to be 114 00:06:17,708 --> 00:06:19,417 all these different identities his whole life, 115 00:06:19,583 --> 00:06:22,417 in the end, he became famous for who he was. 116 00:06:22,583 --> 00:06:24,375 Oh, I've been a surgeon lieutenant 117 00:06:24,542 --> 00:06:26,333 in the Royal Canadian Navy. 118 00:06:26,500 --> 00:06:28,167 -You operated on people? -Mm-hmm. 119 00:06:28,333 --> 00:06:29,958 (audience laughter) 120 00:06:30,083 --> 00:06:32,167 Isn't that rather dangerous? 121 00:06:32,375 --> 00:06:33,958 -Uh, you might say that. -Mm-hmm. 122 00:06:34,042 --> 00:06:36,167 Where did you steal your new credentials? 123 00:06:36,375 --> 00:06:38,250 -I acquire these things. -Yeah. 124 00:06:38,375 --> 00:06:40,000 I know, you keep telling me that. 125 00:06:40,208 --> 00:06:43,125 I hate to bring the word "steal" into this conversation. 126 00:06:43,333 --> 00:06:46,500 HENDLEY: He appeared on You Bet Your Life with Groucho Marx, 127 00:06:46,708 --> 00:06:51,208 and he makes it clear that he "acquired credentials," 128 00:06:51,375 --> 00:06:54,167 and that he's going to use his prize money 129 00:06:54,375 --> 00:06:56,458 to buy more credentials. 130 00:06:56,625 --> 00:06:58,958 Were you in jail in-in, uh, Canada? 131 00:06:59,125 --> 00:07:01,167 -No. No. -In the United States, have you ever been in jail? 132 00:07:01,375 --> 00:07:02,542 Yes, I have been in jail. 133 00:07:02,708 --> 00:07:05,500 I spent a year in the Texas State Penitentiary. 134 00:07:05,667 --> 00:07:08,667 Well, it's about time, I... that somebody nailed you. 135 00:07:08,833 --> 00:07:10,375 What were you in there for? 136 00:07:10,542 --> 00:07:13,000 Uh, I was in there as deputy warden. 137 00:07:13,167 --> 00:07:14,292 Oh. 138 00:07:14,500 --> 00:07:16,542 (laughter) 139 00:07:16,708 --> 00:07:18,542 As a result of that, everybody wants to meet him, 140 00:07:18,708 --> 00:07:20,542 wants to talk about him, wants to hear about him. 141 00:07:20,708 --> 00:07:22,667 -Are you Martin Goddard? -Yes, I am. 142 00:07:22,833 --> 00:07:25,708 And your real name is Ferdinand Waldo Demara Jr.? 143 00:07:25,833 --> 00:07:27,167 ROSENSTOCK: And then, when Tony Curtis 144 00:07:27,375 --> 00:07:28,792 acted in The Great Impostor, 145 00:07:28,958 --> 00:07:32,625 he became famous because he could fool the world. 146 00:07:34,417 --> 00:07:36,833 ALEXANDER STEIN: In many respects, to be an impostor 147 00:07:37,000 --> 00:07:39,417 is fairly normal, 148 00:07:39,583 --> 00:07:43,792 although we think of them as somehow pathological. 149 00:07:44,000 --> 00:07:47,417 In fact, there are many people who do it for work. 150 00:07:47,583 --> 00:07:50,250 Actors are a form of impostors. 151 00:07:50,375 --> 00:07:52,833 There are people who put on a costume 152 00:07:53,000 --> 00:07:55,667 or a uniform to transform themselves in some way 153 00:07:55,833 --> 00:07:59,667 that gives them some measure of authority in their work. 154 00:07:59,792 --> 00:08:01,667 SHATNER: Let's face it, 155 00:08:01,833 --> 00:08:03,750 at one time or another, most of us have fantasized 156 00:08:03,875 --> 00:08:05,583 about trying on a new identity, 157 00:08:05,750 --> 00:08:09,167 like when we engage in role-playing games 158 00:08:09,375 --> 00:08:11,667 or wear costumes on Halloween. 159 00:08:12,667 --> 00:08:13,875 For most of us, of course, 160 00:08:14,083 --> 00:08:16,833 the fantasy remains simply that: a fantasy. 161 00:08:17,042 --> 00:08:19,708 But in the case of Ferdinand Demara, 162 00:08:19,875 --> 00:08:23,000 the Great Impostor, by pretending to be a surgeon, 163 00:08:23,208 --> 00:08:26,958 is it possible that, in his mind, at least, 164 00:08:27,125 --> 00:08:29,583 he actually became one? 165 00:08:29,792 --> 00:08:32,792 Ferdinand Demara impersonated a surgeon. 166 00:08:32,958 --> 00:08:34,833 He wasn't a surgeon, but during the Korean War 167 00:08:35,042 --> 00:08:37,000 while he was on a ship, he saved lives. 168 00:08:37,208 --> 00:08:39,875 His ability to adapt from impersonation 169 00:08:40,042 --> 00:08:42,125 might have given him the ability to adapt 170 00:08:42,292 --> 00:08:43,917 under a stressful situation. 171 00:08:44,042 --> 00:08:47,292 Con man, of course, "con" is a kind of a nickname. 172 00:08:47,417 --> 00:08:51,833 The origin of that word is "confidence." 173 00:08:52,875 --> 00:08:56,542 In the case of someone like Ferdinand Demara, 174 00:08:56,667 --> 00:08:58,625 because of his success 175 00:08:58,792 --> 00:09:03,667 in being able to truly believe every one of his fantasies 176 00:09:03,792 --> 00:09:06,667 as one new piece of reality, 177 00:09:06,833 --> 00:09:09,625 he can act it out in such a real way 178 00:09:09,792 --> 00:09:12,000 for a limited period of time. 179 00:09:14,417 --> 00:09:15,625 SHATNER: By the time of his death, 180 00:09:15,833 --> 00:09:18,750 from a heart attack on June 7, 1982, 181 00:09:18,917 --> 00:09:20,458 Ferdinand Demara had spent 182 00:09:20,583 --> 00:09:22,000 the last several years of his life 183 00:09:22,167 --> 00:09:25,542 as a Baptist minister, and later, a counselor 184 00:09:25,708 --> 00:09:29,333 at Good Samaritan Hospital in Anaheim, California. 185 00:09:29,500 --> 00:09:34,417 In his obituary, Demara's lawyer and good friend Melvin Belli 186 00:09:34,583 --> 00:09:37,208 is quoted as saying, "I never heard him say 187 00:09:37,417 --> 00:09:39,708 he had any regrets about anything." 188 00:09:39,708 --> 00:09:41,458 And why should there be? 189 00:09:41,458 --> 00:09:45,583 After all, most of us can only live one life at a time. 190 00:09:45,750 --> 00:09:50,792 Ferdinand Demara was able to live several. 191 00:09:59,292 --> 00:10:02,625 SHATNER: Sandra Boss, a recent Harvard Business School graduate, 192 00:10:02,833 --> 00:10:06,417 marries Clark Rockefeller, a man who is known to her 193 00:10:06,583 --> 00:10:07,958 as a member of one of the wealthiest 194 00:10:08,042 --> 00:10:10,792 and most powerful families in America. 195 00:10:13,042 --> 00:10:14,750 After the couple's fairy-tale wedding, 196 00:10:14,875 --> 00:10:16,083 Sandra went to work 197 00:10:16,292 --> 00:10:18,833 for a prestigious consulting firm in Boston 198 00:10:18,958 --> 00:10:22,750 while Clark resumed working on international poverty relief. 199 00:10:22,917 --> 00:10:25,583 But the fairy tale didn't last long. 200 00:10:25,708 --> 00:10:28,375 MARK SEAL: He claimed he was working on so many high-level things, 201 00:10:28,500 --> 00:10:31,375 but he wasn't contributing to the marriage financially. 202 00:10:31,542 --> 00:10:34,042 He said, "Well, to charge these struggling countries 203 00:10:34,208 --> 00:10:36,750 a fee would be, you know, unconscionable." 204 00:10:36,958 --> 00:10:40,125 He didn't seem to want to go out and get a regular job. 205 00:10:40,208 --> 00:10:43,958 And so she was beginning to get tired of this. 206 00:10:47,167 --> 00:10:48,917 SHATNER: After more than ten years of marriage, 207 00:10:49,083 --> 00:10:52,542 Sandra Boss finally had enough and filed for divorce. 208 00:10:52,708 --> 00:10:55,792 It was a decision that would not only unravel her marriage 209 00:10:55,958 --> 00:11:01,083 but also unravel the strange truth about her husband. 210 00:11:01,292 --> 00:11:04,000 Clark Rockefeller had no passport, 211 00:11:04,208 --> 00:11:06,458 no credit cards, no birth certificate 212 00:11:06,625 --> 00:11:08,667 that she could find. 213 00:11:08,875 --> 00:11:10,625 HENDLEY: She can't come up with any documentation. 214 00:11:10,792 --> 00:11:14,000 So she really has the whip hand during the divorce, 215 00:11:14,167 --> 00:11:18,125 and she ends up winning custody of their daughter, Snooks. 216 00:11:18,292 --> 00:11:21,917 He's absolutely gobsmacked by this, and he's miserable 217 00:11:22,083 --> 00:11:24,083 because he is actually devoted to his daughter. 218 00:11:24,250 --> 00:11:26,458 So he comes up with this hairbrained plan, 219 00:11:26,625 --> 00:11:28,125 and he kidnaps his daughter. 220 00:11:29,250 --> 00:11:32,750 SHATNER: The FBI immediately launched a nationwide manhunt, 221 00:11:32,875 --> 00:11:36,333 but Clark Rockefeller had vanished into thin air. 222 00:11:36,542 --> 00:11:39,250 And the reason the authorities had such a hard time 223 00:11:39,375 --> 00:11:43,500 tracking down Clark Rockefeller was because... 224 00:11:43,667 --> 00:11:46,667 there was no Clark Rockefeller. 225 00:11:46,833 --> 00:11:48,167 EDWARD SAVIO: So, I'm at home. 226 00:11:48,375 --> 00:11:49,625 My brother calls me. 227 00:11:49,792 --> 00:11:52,042 He goes, "Turn on CNN right now." 228 00:11:53,292 --> 00:11:57,167 I turn on the TV, and I look, and I go... 229 00:11:57,292 --> 00:11:59,750 "That's Christian Gerhartsreiter." 230 00:11:59,958 --> 00:12:03,000 And it says right across the top, "Clark Rockefeller." 231 00:12:03,167 --> 00:12:05,125 So we called the FBI and said, 232 00:12:05,292 --> 00:12:07,083 "This is Christian Gerhartsreiter." 233 00:12:07,208 --> 00:12:09,875 He is a German exchange student that came to our house. 234 00:12:10,042 --> 00:12:15,667 I was 15 at the time, and he was 17. 235 00:12:15,833 --> 00:12:17,875 But the FBI, like, they didn't even know his name. 236 00:12:19,125 --> 00:12:21,875 SEAL: It was covered in all the media, on television, 237 00:12:22,042 --> 00:12:24,292 and when the Amber Alert was issued, 238 00:12:24,458 --> 00:12:26,750 he was apprehended. 239 00:12:26,875 --> 00:12:30,167 He was returned to Boston to face charges. 240 00:12:30,333 --> 00:12:32,833 And that's when his incredible life 241 00:12:33,000 --> 00:12:35,500 of all these different personas unspooled. 242 00:12:37,333 --> 00:12:39,958 SHATNER: At trial, Sandra watched as her husband, 243 00:12:40,125 --> 00:12:42,000 the man she had believed to be a member of 244 00:12:42,167 --> 00:12:43,667 the Rockefeller family, 245 00:12:43,833 --> 00:12:46,417 was sentenced to four to five years in prison 246 00:12:46,583 --> 00:12:49,000 for custodial kidnapping. 247 00:12:49,167 --> 00:12:54,000 But what was it that compelled Christian to lie to his friends, 248 00:12:54,167 --> 00:12:57,917 family and associates for so long? 249 00:12:59,042 --> 00:13:01,500 ROBBINS: The phenomenon of an impostor is, 250 00:13:01,667 --> 00:13:03,833 it's an interesting dichotomy that somebody has to live with. 251 00:13:03,958 --> 00:13:06,542 They have two stories constantly colliding. 252 00:13:06,708 --> 00:13:09,708 And often, if you're gonna perpetuate that consistently, 253 00:13:09,875 --> 00:13:11,500 you have to almost have a form of delusion 254 00:13:11,667 --> 00:13:13,667 to be able to compartmentalize one of those realities, 255 00:13:13,833 --> 00:13:15,333 so that you can live your life 256 00:13:15,500 --> 00:13:17,333 without having this other one on the back burner. 257 00:13:18,417 --> 00:13:22,000 SHATNER: Are impostors who carry out elaborate deceptions 258 00:13:22,167 --> 00:13:26,208 acting out a kind of wish-fantasy? 259 00:13:26,833 --> 00:13:31,375 And if so, how does this fantasy first take hold in their mind? 260 00:13:31,583 --> 00:13:33,875 For the answer, perhaps it's best to look 261 00:13:34,042 --> 00:13:37,292 all the way back into Christian's past. 262 00:13:39,042 --> 00:13:43,083 Christian Karl Gerhartsreiter grew up in West Germany. 263 00:13:43,250 --> 00:13:46,000 By all accounts he was kind of a bit of an oddball, 264 00:13:46,208 --> 00:13:49,042 prone to fantasy, little on the nerdy side 265 00:13:49,250 --> 00:13:52,292 and really wanted to get out of West Germany. 266 00:13:53,333 --> 00:13:57,125 So, in 1978, he travels to the United States 267 00:13:57,292 --> 00:14:00,250 and shows up on the doorstep of this family in Connecticut 268 00:14:00,417 --> 00:14:02,000 called the Savios, 269 00:14:02,125 --> 00:14:04,167 and sort of went into high school, 270 00:14:04,292 --> 00:14:06,500 said he was an exchange student 271 00:14:06,667 --> 00:14:09,333 and things got progressively stranger from there. 272 00:14:09,958 --> 00:14:14,792 SAVIO: He told me that his father created parts for Mercedes-Benz, 273 00:14:14,917 --> 00:14:16,750 and of course, you know, they had money, 274 00:14:16,917 --> 00:14:18,167 you know, servants. 275 00:14:18,375 --> 00:14:19,792 We all knew it was ridiculous. 276 00:14:19,958 --> 00:14:22,333 We laughed at it at the time. 277 00:14:24,000 --> 00:14:26,000 SHATNER: By 1985, Christian had taken up residence 278 00:14:26,167 --> 00:14:27,833 on the West Coast. 279 00:14:27,917 --> 00:14:30,708 He had also taken a new name. 280 00:14:30,875 --> 00:14:32,333 He moved to San Marino, 281 00:14:32,500 --> 00:14:34,708 which is a rich community in Southern California, 282 00:14:34,875 --> 00:14:37,958 and assumed the name Christopher Chichester 283 00:14:38,167 --> 00:14:40,875 and announced that he was part of the British royal family. 284 00:14:41,083 --> 00:14:43,292 He would go get free lunches 285 00:14:43,417 --> 00:14:46,292 at social clubs and private members clubs. 286 00:14:46,458 --> 00:14:49,458 He'd start schmoozing up all the rich ladies in town, 287 00:14:49,625 --> 00:14:51,833 attends a very fancy church. 288 00:14:52,000 --> 00:14:54,292 Ends up living in the guesthouse 289 00:14:54,458 --> 00:14:58,042 of a local woman named Ruth Sohus. 290 00:14:58,208 --> 00:15:02,667 He lives there rent-free and all is well for a while, 291 00:15:02,833 --> 00:15:07,833 but then Ruth's son, John, shows up with his wife Linda. 292 00:15:07,958 --> 00:15:11,333 And John apparently was a bit suspicious 293 00:15:11,500 --> 00:15:15,250 of this strange guy living in mom's guesthouse. 294 00:15:15,375 --> 00:15:19,542 And then all of a sudden Linda and her husband disappear. 295 00:15:19,708 --> 00:15:22,833 SHATNER: Soon after Linda and John Sohus disappeared 296 00:15:23,042 --> 00:15:24,792 so did Christopher Chichester. 297 00:15:25,875 --> 00:15:29,083 And Christian, the impostor, moved back to the East Coast, 298 00:15:29,250 --> 00:15:32,542 where he would eventually live under his most infamous alias: 299 00:15:32,708 --> 00:15:34,875 Clark Rockefeller. 300 00:15:35,042 --> 00:15:38,167 The rest, as they say, is history. 301 00:15:38,375 --> 00:15:40,083 But not before this bizarre story 302 00:15:40,250 --> 00:15:43,500 took yet another unexpected twist. 303 00:15:44,708 --> 00:15:46,500 In March of 2011, 304 00:15:46,667 --> 00:15:49,500 after Christian was convicted of kidnapping his daughter, 305 00:15:49,667 --> 00:15:52,875 authorities in California gathered enough evidence 306 00:15:53,042 --> 00:15:54,875 to charge him with a more serious crime 307 00:15:55,042 --> 00:15:58,292 than any he had been charged with before: 308 00:15:58,458 --> 00:16:03,250 the 1985 murder of John Sohus. 309 00:16:05,208 --> 00:16:08,000 SEAL: Ruth Sohus had passed away 310 00:16:08,208 --> 00:16:10,875 and another couple had bought her home 311 00:16:11,042 --> 00:16:13,083 and were installing a swimming pool. 312 00:16:14,125 --> 00:16:15,750 HENDLEY: Where Christian lived in San Marino, 313 00:16:15,875 --> 00:16:19,292 they dug up the backyard and discovered human remains, 314 00:16:19,458 --> 00:16:22,792 and the body was cut up into pieces, 315 00:16:22,958 --> 00:16:25,000 but it was wearing the same kind of clothes 316 00:16:25,208 --> 00:16:27,208 that John Sohus typically wore-- 317 00:16:27,417 --> 00:16:29,292 jeans and a flannel shirt. 318 00:16:29,500 --> 00:16:33,000 And apparently parts were in bags from schools 319 00:16:33,167 --> 00:16:36,333 that Christian Gerhartsreiter had attended. 320 00:16:36,500 --> 00:16:40,542 So then he was put on trial for murdering John Sohus. 321 00:16:40,708 --> 00:16:43,250 He was found guilty, and he is now an inmate 322 00:16:43,417 --> 00:16:46,167 in San Quentin Prison in California. 323 00:16:46,292 --> 00:16:48,583 The police detective that I interviewed said 324 00:16:48,708 --> 00:16:50,000 that the motive was money. 325 00:16:50,167 --> 00:16:52,625 He was to inherit a sizable amount of money 326 00:16:52,833 --> 00:16:56,292 from Ruth Sohus, and that's what they believed. 327 00:16:56,458 --> 00:17:01,167 And Linda Sohus had disappeared off the face of the Earth. 328 00:17:01,333 --> 00:17:02,625 What happened to Linda? 329 00:17:02,792 --> 00:17:05,500 That's still an enduring mystery of this case. 330 00:17:05,625 --> 00:17:08,708 SHATNER: Impostors like Christian, who are willing to lie-- 331 00:17:08,875 --> 00:17:12,750 or even kill-- for the sake of protecting an illusion 332 00:17:12,917 --> 00:17:17,667 would certainly seem to be troubled, misguided individuals. 333 00:17:17,875 --> 00:17:21,083 But if that's true, then why do so many of us 334 00:17:21,250 --> 00:17:23,375 fall for their deceptions? 335 00:17:25,500 --> 00:17:27,542 ROBBINS: The secret to a con is 336 00:17:27,708 --> 00:17:30,042 not about manufacturing a whole fake reality. 337 00:17:30,208 --> 00:17:31,833 Instead, it's finding the story 338 00:17:32,042 --> 00:17:33,125 that people are telling themselves 339 00:17:33,292 --> 00:17:34,625 and just elaborating on it. 340 00:17:34,833 --> 00:17:37,167 They're able to compartmentalize this reality 341 00:17:37,333 --> 00:17:39,167 because they're not worried about somebody else. 342 00:17:39,333 --> 00:17:41,500 These together present opportunity for somebody 343 00:17:41,708 --> 00:17:42,792 to be very evil. 344 00:17:44,458 --> 00:17:47,333 SHATNER: Today, instead of going by the name Clark Rockefeller, 345 00:17:47,542 --> 00:17:52,167 Christian is known as inmate number AR3108 346 00:17:52,333 --> 00:17:55,000 at San Quentin State Prison. 347 00:17:55,208 --> 00:17:57,667 Hopefully, his days of adopting false identities 348 00:17:57,833 --> 00:18:00,542 have been ended forever. 349 00:18:09,708 --> 00:18:12,083 SHATNER: The city is gripped by fear 350 00:18:12,250 --> 00:18:14,500 after a number of horrific and unsolved murders 351 00:18:14,667 --> 00:18:18,250 are committed by a shadowy serial killer. 352 00:18:19,292 --> 00:18:20,792 The panic reaches a fever pitch 353 00:18:20,958 --> 00:18:24,208 when the killer releases a series of chilling notes, 354 00:18:24,375 --> 00:18:28,917 in which he refers to himself as the Zodiac. 355 00:18:29,083 --> 00:18:31,792 Three virtually identical handwritten letters arrived 356 00:18:31,958 --> 00:18:35,417 at the offices of three California newspapers. 357 00:18:36,708 --> 00:18:39,083 And those letters took credit for the crimes 358 00:18:39,292 --> 00:18:42,250 and included details from the crimes, 359 00:18:42,417 --> 00:18:45,417 including the ammunition that was used, 360 00:18:45,583 --> 00:18:48,792 the positions of the victims, and things like that. 361 00:18:49,833 --> 00:18:54,333 And then another letter that was sent on August 4 of 1969, 362 00:18:54,542 --> 00:18:57,833 was the first to use the name the Zodiac. 363 00:18:58,792 --> 00:19:01,167 The Zodiac's crime spree is often referred to 364 00:19:01,333 --> 00:19:03,042 as a reign of terror. 365 00:19:03,167 --> 00:19:05,292 And that's because his murders 366 00:19:05,458 --> 00:19:07,792 not only sent fear throughout the community, 367 00:19:07,917 --> 00:19:11,958 but he eventually threatened to murder schoolchildren on a bus. 368 00:19:12,125 --> 00:19:14,208 He also said he was gonna use a bomb. 369 00:19:14,417 --> 00:19:17,792 He threatened to kill dozens of people over a weekend. 370 00:19:17,958 --> 00:19:19,875 So there were a lot of threats that sent fear 371 00:19:20,042 --> 00:19:21,333 through the community. 372 00:19:22,375 --> 00:19:25,500 DAVID ORANCHAK: His name really got out there, and on top of that, 373 00:19:25,625 --> 00:19:28,958 Zodiac's victims were selected presumably randomly. 374 00:19:30,000 --> 00:19:32,667 And so people felt like, "Well, he could be around the corner, 375 00:19:32,833 --> 00:19:34,458 ready to kill me or us." 376 00:19:34,625 --> 00:19:36,667 So he became kind of like a boogeyman 377 00:19:36,875 --> 00:19:39,750 waiting to kill somebody out of the blue. 378 00:19:40,792 --> 00:19:43,417 SHATNER: The Zodiac's reign of terror became national news, 379 00:19:43,583 --> 00:19:45,125 not only because of the frightening nature 380 00:19:45,250 --> 00:19:47,333 of his crimes 381 00:19:47,500 --> 00:19:50,958 but also because some of his mysterious letters 382 00:19:51,042 --> 00:19:53,500 were written in code. 383 00:19:53,708 --> 00:19:56,833 The Zodiac, as macabre as this sounds, 384 00:19:57,042 --> 00:19:59,875 turned his killings into a game, 385 00:20:00,042 --> 00:20:02,333 not just for law enforcement to try to figure out 386 00:20:02,458 --> 00:20:03,792 but for the average citizen. 387 00:20:04,875 --> 00:20:06,958 These ciphers sort of served as a way 388 00:20:07,167 --> 00:20:09,542 for people to play his game. 389 00:20:10,875 --> 00:20:12,667 Can you figure out who I am? 390 00:20:12,833 --> 00:20:14,250 So, using these codes, 391 00:20:14,375 --> 00:20:18,292 while it made Zodiac incredibly scary, 392 00:20:18,375 --> 00:20:20,708 it also made him intriguing, because... 393 00:20:20,875 --> 00:20:24,292 anybody could figure out who the Zodiac Killer is, 394 00:20:24,458 --> 00:20:26,542 if you know how to play his game correctly. 395 00:20:27,833 --> 00:20:29,958 SHATNER: The Zodiac's claim that the ciphers 396 00:20:30,042 --> 00:20:31,583 revealed his true identity 397 00:20:31,750 --> 00:20:34,708 taunted the police and the public. 398 00:20:34,875 --> 00:20:38,167 Both the authorities and amateurs alike 399 00:20:38,333 --> 00:20:40,500 poured over the encrypted letters, 400 00:20:40,667 --> 00:20:45,333 hoping to crack the killer's devious codes. 401 00:20:45,500 --> 00:20:47,375 JARROUSH: The first cipher of the Zodiac, 402 00:20:47,542 --> 00:20:51,125 it's commonly referred to as the 408 cipher. 403 00:20:51,292 --> 00:20:54,667 That was actually solved in a matter of days by 404 00:20:54,833 --> 00:20:57,708 a couple of citizens in the San Francisco Bay area. 405 00:20:58,750 --> 00:21:02,208 BUTTERFIELD: A local high school economics teacher and his wife, 406 00:21:02,375 --> 00:21:04,583 Donald and Bettye Harden, 407 00:21:04,792 --> 00:21:07,000 decided to take the killer's challenge 408 00:21:07,167 --> 00:21:09,708 and spend a weekend trying to solve that cipher. 409 00:21:09,875 --> 00:21:13,333 And they were able to find a solution. 410 00:21:13,458 --> 00:21:15,583 Unfortunately, the Hardens' solution 411 00:21:15,750 --> 00:21:18,458 did not reveal the killer's identity. 412 00:21:19,625 --> 00:21:21,667 But it did begin with the phrase: 413 00:21:25,250 --> 00:21:29,000 Then he talked about collecting slaves for his afterlife. 414 00:21:30,542 --> 00:21:32,667 SHATNER: The shocking content of the first cipher 415 00:21:32,875 --> 00:21:35,667 heightened public panic about the Zodiac. 416 00:21:35,833 --> 00:21:40,625 But the killer's second cipher, known as Z-340, 417 00:21:40,833 --> 00:21:43,833 would not be solved so easily. 418 00:21:44,000 --> 00:21:48,000 BUTTERFIELD: The Zodiac's second cipher consisted of 340 symbols. 419 00:21:48,167 --> 00:21:51,292 Unfortunately, that cipher was very difficult to solve. 420 00:21:51,458 --> 00:21:53,833 And he may have made it that way deliberately 421 00:21:54,042 --> 00:21:56,208 because he may have been upset that his first cipher 422 00:21:56,375 --> 00:21:57,667 was solved so quickly. 423 00:21:57,875 --> 00:21:59,750 SHATNER: Despite years of effort, 424 00:21:59,917 --> 00:22:02,792 the Z-340 cipher eluded decryption. 425 00:22:03,958 --> 00:22:08,667 By 1974, the Zodiac had released more than 20 letters, 426 00:22:08,792 --> 00:22:12,917 in which he claimed to have killed 37 people. 427 00:22:14,042 --> 00:22:17,167 And then, after a five-year reign of terror, 428 00:22:17,375 --> 00:22:19,500 his communications abruptly ceased, 429 00:22:19,708 --> 00:22:22,667 and the case went cold. 430 00:22:23,917 --> 00:22:26,292 It seemed that the codes-- and the crimes-- 431 00:22:26,458 --> 00:22:28,792 of this evil genius 432 00:22:28,917 --> 00:22:32,792 were destined to remain unsolved. 433 00:22:35,625 --> 00:22:37,167 More than 30 years would pass 434 00:22:37,333 --> 00:22:40,625 before software engineer David Oranchak 435 00:22:40,792 --> 00:22:45,792 became inspired to take on the Z-340 cipher. 436 00:22:45,958 --> 00:22:47,875 I first heard about the Zodiac ciphers 437 00:22:48,042 --> 00:22:50,792 when the Zodiac movie came out in 2007. 438 00:22:50,958 --> 00:22:53,792 And so there was already kind of a vibrant community 439 00:22:53,958 --> 00:22:56,500 of people involved with the Zodiac cipher specifically. 440 00:22:56,625 --> 00:22:58,000 So when I saw that, I thought, 441 00:22:58,125 --> 00:22:59,917 "Hey, I want to take a crack at that." 442 00:23:00,083 --> 00:23:03,167 Because I'm a programmer, uh, I like puzzles 443 00:23:03,292 --> 00:23:06,958 and it would be very cool to be able to-to crack that. 444 00:23:08,417 --> 00:23:10,833 SHATNER: To try and solve the cipher, David Oranchak teamed up 445 00:23:11,000 --> 00:23:14,042 with Australian mathematician Sam Blake 446 00:23:14,208 --> 00:23:18,167 and Belgian computer programmer Jarl Van Eycke. 447 00:23:18,375 --> 00:23:21,375 The team became kind of this collaboration of people 448 00:23:21,583 --> 00:23:24,667 that would run experiments, try out different ideas, 449 00:23:24,833 --> 00:23:27,375 come up with computer programs 450 00:23:27,542 --> 00:23:30,333 and different kind of specialized tools 451 00:23:30,542 --> 00:23:32,583 in order to try out these ideas 452 00:23:32,750 --> 00:23:35,750 or to just run a bunch of keys and try to break the code. 453 00:23:37,125 --> 00:23:39,917 SHATNER: In spite of their combined efforts, the Z-340 cipher 454 00:23:40,083 --> 00:23:43,667 seemed like it might be an unbreakable code. 455 00:23:43,833 --> 00:23:49,042 But then, after 15 years of challenging work, 456 00:23:49,208 --> 00:23:52,208 the team finally cracked it. 457 00:23:52,375 --> 00:23:54,167 ORANCHAK: It was very satisfying to decrypt the message. 458 00:23:54,333 --> 00:23:56,000 It was very exciting. 459 00:23:56,125 --> 00:23:57,833 Once we had the solution, 460 00:23:58,000 --> 00:24:00,208 I put together a report and sent it to my contacts 461 00:24:00,375 --> 00:24:02,167 in the code-breaking unit of the FBI. 462 00:24:02,375 --> 00:24:05,667 And then very quickly they came back to us and said, 463 00:24:05,833 --> 00:24:07,625 "This looks good, it looks strong, 464 00:24:07,750 --> 00:24:10,167 looks like the real solution," 465 00:24:10,375 --> 00:24:12,833 and that's when the media storm hit. 466 00:24:13,042 --> 00:24:16,667 SHATNER: The revelation that the Z-340 cipher 467 00:24:16,833 --> 00:24:20,000 had been broken, more than 50 years after it was released, 468 00:24:20,208 --> 00:24:22,042 made headlines around the world. 469 00:24:22,208 --> 00:24:25,500 But unfortunately, the decrypted message 470 00:24:25,667 --> 00:24:28,167 did not reveal the killer's identity. 471 00:24:28,375 --> 00:24:32,333 However, the search continues, 472 00:24:32,458 --> 00:24:36,125 because there are other Zodiac ciphers 473 00:24:36,292 --> 00:24:39,833 that are yet to be solved, the most fascinating of which 474 00:24:40,000 --> 00:24:43,625 is called Z-13. 475 00:24:43,792 --> 00:24:46,625 This cipher will literally make you pull your hair out, 476 00:24:46,792 --> 00:24:48,500 because at first glance, 477 00:24:48,667 --> 00:24:49,833 you would think it's got to be easy. 478 00:24:50,042 --> 00:24:52,083 There's only 13 characters in the cipher. 479 00:24:52,292 --> 00:24:55,833 What's worse, is that it starts with the phrase, 480 00:24:56,000 --> 00:24:57,833 "My name is..." 481 00:24:58,833 --> 00:25:01,833 He's literally telling you, "Here's who I am." 482 00:25:02,000 --> 00:25:05,083 And to this day, no one's been able to figure it out as of yet. 483 00:25:07,875 --> 00:25:11,167 Until cipher Z-13 can finally be solved, 484 00:25:11,375 --> 00:25:14,542 it seems that the true identity of the Zodiac Killer 485 00:25:14,750 --> 00:25:17,000 will continue to remain a mystery. 486 00:25:17,167 --> 00:25:19,833 But there's another master criminal 487 00:25:20,000 --> 00:25:22,458 whose name is quite well known. 488 00:25:22,667 --> 00:25:26,250 He's the notorious gunslinger William H. Bonney, 489 00:25:26,417 --> 00:25:28,625 better known as Billy the Kid. 490 00:25:28,750 --> 00:25:34,000 And some people believe that this outlaw eluded justice 491 00:25:34,167 --> 00:25:36,083 by faking his own death. 492 00:25:44,500 --> 00:25:47,625 SHATNER: Each year, thousands of tourists travel to this small rural town, 493 00:25:47,792 --> 00:25:51,333 located 160 miles east of Albuquerque, 494 00:25:51,458 --> 00:25:53,792 to visit a museum dedicated 495 00:25:53,958 --> 00:25:57,292 to the most notorious outlaw of the Old West... 496 00:25:58,375 --> 00:26:00,083 Billy the Kid. 497 00:26:01,375 --> 00:26:05,292 Among the attractions is a tombstone where, 498 00:26:05,458 --> 00:26:07,167 according to the history books, 499 00:26:07,333 --> 00:26:09,750 the gunslinger was laid to rest. 500 00:26:11,750 --> 00:26:13,792 DOWNS: Billy the Kid claimed to have killed 21 men, 501 00:26:13,875 --> 00:26:15,917 one for each year of his short life. 502 00:26:17,375 --> 00:26:19,292 (gunfire) 503 00:26:20,167 --> 00:26:21,125 (screams) 504 00:26:23,833 --> 00:26:27,333 DOWNS: He escaped prison at least three times, 505 00:26:27,500 --> 00:26:30,375 he was shot and stabbed, 506 00:26:30,542 --> 00:26:32,625 and these things all added to the legend 507 00:26:32,750 --> 00:26:34,167 and the lore surrounding him. 508 00:26:34,333 --> 00:26:35,958 At the height of his infamy, 509 00:26:36,083 --> 00:26:38,167 there was a $500 bounty on Billy the Kid's head, 510 00:26:38,333 --> 00:26:40,792 which was a crazy amount of money at that time period. 511 00:26:40,917 --> 00:26:43,833 That resulted in Sheriff Pat Garrett 512 00:26:44,042 --> 00:26:46,417 and his sizable posse trying to hunt him down. 513 00:26:47,833 --> 00:26:49,042 According to official accounts, 514 00:26:49,208 --> 00:26:52,833 he was shot down by Pat Garrett in 1881 515 00:26:53,000 --> 00:26:55,250 and laid to rest in Sumner, New Mexico. 516 00:26:56,417 --> 00:27:00,083 SHATNER: In 1882, Sheriff Pat Garrett published a book entitled 517 00:27:00,250 --> 00:27:04,125 An Authentic Life of Billy the Kid, 518 00:27:04,250 --> 00:27:07,833 which described Garrett's encounters with the outlaw, 519 00:27:07,958 --> 00:27:12,833 including their final showdown in Sumner, New Mexico. 520 00:27:13,042 --> 00:27:15,125 For decades, historians considered the book 521 00:27:15,292 --> 00:27:18,458 to be the definitive account of the death of Billy the Kid. 522 00:27:19,958 --> 00:27:24,458 But then, in the 1940s, new information came to light 523 00:27:24,625 --> 00:27:27,000 which suggested that, incredibly, 524 00:27:27,083 --> 00:27:29,375 Billy the Kid had evaded justice 525 00:27:29,542 --> 00:27:32,292 and survived for more than 60 years. 526 00:27:39,917 --> 00:27:42,292 Investigator and lawyer William Morrison 527 00:27:42,458 --> 00:27:44,917 visits this rural community 528 00:27:45,083 --> 00:27:48,667 in search of an elderly prospector and cowboy named 529 00:27:48,792 --> 00:27:51,875 Brushy Bill Roberts. 530 00:27:52,917 --> 00:27:54,750 Morrison has traveled to meet with Brushy Bill 531 00:27:54,958 --> 00:27:57,833 because he has reason to believe that Bill 532 00:27:58,042 --> 00:28:02,125 may in fact be Billy the Kid. 533 00:28:03,500 --> 00:28:07,292 NELIGH: In 1949, William Morrison came across somebody 534 00:28:07,417 --> 00:28:11,333 who said he knew that Billy the Kid was still alive 535 00:28:11,500 --> 00:28:13,000 and living in Texas 536 00:28:13,167 --> 00:28:14,583 and William Morrison decided 537 00:28:14,708 --> 00:28:16,208 that that's who he needed to find. 538 00:28:17,333 --> 00:28:18,667 So, he went to Texas 539 00:28:18,875 --> 00:28:21,208 and he found Brushy Bill Roberts. 540 00:28:22,208 --> 00:28:25,667 When he asked Brushy Bill if he was Billy the Kid, 541 00:28:25,750 --> 00:28:28,792 Brushy Bill said, "Okay, I am Billy the Kid, 542 00:28:28,958 --> 00:28:32,792 "and I will tell my story if you can secure me a pardon 543 00:28:32,958 --> 00:28:34,667 "from the governor of New Mexico 544 00:28:34,875 --> 00:28:37,125 for the crimes that I committed." 545 00:28:38,375 --> 00:28:41,167 DOWNS: Brushy Bill was hesitant to admit to being Billy the Kid 546 00:28:41,375 --> 00:28:43,500 because there was still technically 547 00:28:43,667 --> 00:28:45,167 a warrant out for his arrest 548 00:28:45,292 --> 00:28:48,167 and he'd been sentenced to death and if he were recaptured, 549 00:28:48,375 --> 00:28:50,875 he technically could have still been executed. 550 00:28:53,333 --> 00:28:55,500 SHATNER: It may seem outlandish to consider the possibility 551 00:28:55,708 --> 00:28:59,042 that Brushy Bill Roberts was Billy the Kid. 552 00:29:00,083 --> 00:29:02,750 But the truth is that the more William Morrison 553 00:29:02,917 --> 00:29:05,333 investigated Brushy Bill's story 554 00:29:06,375 --> 00:29:10,417 the more he started to believe that it could be true. 555 00:29:11,750 --> 00:29:15,083 William Morrison thought that Brushy Bill 556 00:29:15,250 --> 00:29:17,583 very well could be Billy the Kid. 557 00:29:17,750 --> 00:29:20,083 He had knife wounds and bullet wounds 558 00:29:20,250 --> 00:29:22,333 that seemed to fit with the Kid's story. 559 00:29:23,375 --> 00:29:26,125 In addition, Morrison found several different people 560 00:29:26,292 --> 00:29:28,708 who knew the Kid in the olden days 561 00:29:28,875 --> 00:29:32,000 who were willing to sign affidavits 562 00:29:32,125 --> 00:29:35,667 saying that, "Yeah, indeed, Brushy Bill was Billy the Kid." 563 00:29:36,792 --> 00:29:39,083 SHATNER: While the evidence in favor of Brushy Bill's story 564 00:29:39,250 --> 00:29:43,083 was compelling, many skeptics asked an obvious question: 565 00:29:44,083 --> 00:29:47,958 If Billy the Kid didn't actually die in 1881, 566 00:29:48,083 --> 00:29:51,458 then who is buried in the grave site 567 00:29:51,625 --> 00:29:54,750 located in Fort Sumner, New Mexico? 568 00:29:54,917 --> 00:29:57,208 The official account of Billy the Kid's death 569 00:29:57,375 --> 00:29:58,542 comes from Pat Garrett. 570 00:29:59,750 --> 00:30:01,333 But there's a lot of inconsistencies 571 00:30:01,500 --> 00:30:04,167 in Garrett's story from the very beginning. 572 00:30:04,250 --> 00:30:06,208 He said that Billy was armed, 573 00:30:06,333 --> 00:30:10,375 but when the body was examined, there was no weapon on him. 574 00:30:10,583 --> 00:30:13,500 The body was described as having facial hair. 575 00:30:13,708 --> 00:30:15,000 Billy the Kid was always described 576 00:30:15,208 --> 00:30:17,000 as not having facial hair. 577 00:30:17,208 --> 00:30:20,250 The body was also described as having dark skin, 578 00:30:20,458 --> 00:30:23,833 and Billy was always described as fair-skinned. 579 00:30:23,958 --> 00:30:26,875 So, all of the inconsistencies in Garrett's story 580 00:30:27,042 --> 00:30:29,583 raises a lot of doubt into his version 581 00:30:29,708 --> 00:30:31,167 of Billy the Kid's death 582 00:30:31,375 --> 00:30:32,917 and it opens the door for the possibility 583 00:30:33,083 --> 00:30:34,958 that Garrett shot the wrong man. 584 00:30:35,167 --> 00:30:37,958 And Billy the Kid could have survived, 585 00:30:38,167 --> 00:30:41,042 and Brushy Bill Roberts really could have been Billy the Kid. 586 00:30:42,375 --> 00:30:44,208 SHATNER: With the help of William Morrison, 587 00:30:44,375 --> 00:30:46,292 Brushy Bill was able to secure a meeting 588 00:30:46,458 --> 00:30:50,833 with Thomas Mabry, the governor of New Mexico, 589 00:30:51,000 --> 00:30:52,958 in an effort to finally receive a pardon 590 00:30:53,125 --> 00:30:55,500 for the crimes of Billy the Kid. 591 00:30:55,708 --> 00:30:59,958 But unfortunately, the meeting did not go well 592 00:31:00,083 --> 00:31:02,667 for Brushy Bill. 593 00:31:02,833 --> 00:31:04,125 NELIGH: Brushy Bill's meeting 594 00:31:04,292 --> 00:31:06,917 with the governor of New Mexico went horribly. 595 00:31:07,042 --> 00:31:09,167 He couldn't remember Pat Garrett's name. 596 00:31:09,333 --> 00:31:11,750 It's said that he maybe was suffering 597 00:31:11,875 --> 00:31:13,375 from some kind of physical ailment. 598 00:31:13,542 --> 00:31:16,250 We don't really know, but it didn't take long 599 00:31:16,417 --> 00:31:18,125 for the governor to decide that he wasn't 600 00:31:18,292 --> 00:31:19,708 going to give him the pardon. 601 00:31:21,292 --> 00:31:23,583 SHATNER: Soon after the governor denied his clemency, 602 00:31:23,750 --> 00:31:25,500 Brushy Bill suffered a heart attack 603 00:31:25,667 --> 00:31:29,208 and died on December 27th, 1950. 604 00:31:29,417 --> 00:31:31,500 But the town of Hamilton, Texas still commemorates 605 00:31:31,625 --> 00:31:33,000 Brushy Bill to this day, 606 00:31:33,167 --> 00:31:36,667 where his tombstone identifies him as being 607 00:31:36,875 --> 00:31:39,333 the notorious gunslinger. 608 00:31:40,583 --> 00:31:43,833 Could Billy the Kid have actually escaped an early death? 609 00:31:44,708 --> 00:31:48,708 The true fate of the notorious outlaw remains a mystery. 610 00:31:48,875 --> 00:31:51,333 Just like the fate of three criminals... 611 00:31:52,375 --> 00:31:56,333 ...who may have pulled off one of history's greatest escapes. 612 00:32:07,208 --> 00:32:09,083 SHATNER: A little over one mile offshore stands 613 00:32:09,208 --> 00:32:10,917 what was, at one time, 614 00:32:11,083 --> 00:32:14,375 the most secure penitentiary in the United States-- 615 00:32:15,958 --> 00:32:17,333 Alcatraz. 616 00:32:17,500 --> 00:32:19,958 Or, as it is more famously known... 617 00:32:20,125 --> 00:32:22,083 The Rock. 618 00:32:22,917 --> 00:32:24,667 ♪ ♪ 619 00:32:26,000 --> 00:32:27,792 Formerly a military stockade, 620 00:32:27,917 --> 00:32:31,333 it was converted to a maximum security prison in 1934 621 00:32:31,542 --> 00:32:35,333 by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover who wanted to house 622 00:32:35,542 --> 00:32:38,125 the nation's most dangerous criminals in a place 623 00:32:38,250 --> 00:32:41,208 from which there was no escape. 624 00:32:41,375 --> 00:32:42,583 MICHAEL DYKE: Alcatraz was Hoover's baby. 625 00:32:42,750 --> 00:32:45,083 And he wanted it for his public enemy number ones. 626 00:32:45,250 --> 00:32:48,375 And, supposedly, nobody could escape. 627 00:32:49,417 --> 00:32:51,667 The island is out in the middle of the water, 628 00:32:51,875 --> 00:32:53,750 the water's 52 degrees on average 629 00:32:53,917 --> 00:32:55,000 throughout the whole year, 630 00:32:55,125 --> 00:32:57,542 and there's sharks in the Bay. 631 00:32:59,000 --> 00:33:04,125 SHATNER: Since it first began operations in 1934 until 1962, 632 00:33:04,208 --> 00:33:07,458 a total of 31 prisoners attempted to escape Alcatraz. 633 00:33:08,417 --> 00:33:12,208 23 were caught. Six were shot and killed. 634 00:33:12,417 --> 00:33:16,625 Two drowned in the frigid waters of San Francisco Bay. 635 00:33:17,667 --> 00:33:19,833 MICHAEL ESSLINGER: With Alcatraz, you had 636 00:33:20,000 --> 00:33:21,833 America's most security safe prison 637 00:33:22,042 --> 00:33:24,375 in the middle of the San Francisco Bay. 638 00:33:24,542 --> 00:33:25,750 When it first opened, they had what was called 639 00:33:25,917 --> 00:33:27,083 the silence rule. 640 00:33:27,250 --> 00:33:28,333 They couldn't talk to each other. 641 00:33:28,500 --> 00:33:30,167 There was no news coming in. 642 00:33:30,333 --> 00:33:33,667 But they had the sights, even the smells 643 00:33:33,875 --> 00:33:37,042 of the Ghirardelli chocolate factory across the Bay. 644 00:33:37,208 --> 00:33:38,375 They could hear the tour boats in the Bay 645 00:33:38,542 --> 00:33:39,625 -kind of going around -(people laughing) 646 00:33:39,750 --> 00:33:41,375 and the laughs and the parties going on. 647 00:33:41,542 --> 00:33:44,333 So it was more of a psychological torture for them 648 00:33:44,500 --> 00:33:46,458 than it was actually physical torture. 649 00:33:48,000 --> 00:33:49,583 SHATNER: In 1960, 650 00:33:49,750 --> 00:33:52,292 an inmate named Frank Morris was admitted to Alcatraz, 651 00:33:52,417 --> 00:33:53,708 followed by three others-- 652 00:33:53,875 --> 00:33:58,125 Allen West, and brothers John and Clarence Anglin. 653 00:33:59,125 --> 00:34:01,042 ESSLINGER: Allen West, Frank Morris 654 00:34:01,208 --> 00:34:02,500 and the Anglins had all served time 655 00:34:02,708 --> 00:34:04,417 in Atlanta Penitentiary. 656 00:34:04,583 --> 00:34:06,500 I think that at least, you know, by sight, 657 00:34:06,625 --> 00:34:08,000 they would have known each other, 658 00:34:08,208 --> 00:34:10,125 probably met for certain. 659 00:34:12,042 --> 00:34:16,375 SHATNER: Together, the four men hatched an elaborate plan to succeed 660 00:34:16,542 --> 00:34:20,000 where other potential escapees had failed. 661 00:34:20,125 --> 00:34:22,000 Allan West was on the cleaning detail. 662 00:34:22,167 --> 00:34:25,042 He was up on top of the cell blocks sweeping up 663 00:34:25,167 --> 00:34:27,625 when he saw that there was a vent in the roof 664 00:34:27,792 --> 00:34:29,167 that didn't work. 665 00:34:29,375 --> 00:34:31,583 And West, the Anglin brothers and Morris noticed 666 00:34:31,708 --> 00:34:34,000 that the cement inside the backs of the cells was 667 00:34:34,125 --> 00:34:36,500 crumbling because of the salt air. 668 00:34:36,667 --> 00:34:38,000 ESSLINGER: So, what they would do is 669 00:34:38,125 --> 00:34:40,792 they would take the ends of these steel spoons 670 00:34:40,958 --> 00:34:44,542 and use them to route out these holes 671 00:34:44,708 --> 00:34:46,083 through the cement. 672 00:34:46,292 --> 00:34:49,417 And they recreated the grates using cardboard, 673 00:34:49,542 --> 00:34:51,958 cutting out the exact pattern. 674 00:34:52,167 --> 00:34:54,000 When you actually compare the grill itself, 675 00:34:54,167 --> 00:34:56,208 the fake ones they made, to the real grill, 676 00:34:56,375 --> 00:34:57,917 they're pretty convincing actually. 677 00:34:59,000 --> 00:35:01,958 SHATNER: The men now had access to the roof of the prison, 678 00:35:02,125 --> 00:35:03,333 but in order to hide the fact 679 00:35:03,542 --> 00:35:05,333 that they were working there every night, 680 00:35:05,500 --> 00:35:07,167 they needed to fool the guards into thinking 681 00:35:07,333 --> 00:35:09,125 they were still asleep in their bunks. 682 00:35:09,292 --> 00:35:11,667 So they devised an ingenious solution-- 683 00:35:11,833 --> 00:35:14,667 they created dummy heads in their likenesses 684 00:35:14,792 --> 00:35:17,208 and placed them in their beds while they worked. 685 00:35:17,417 --> 00:35:18,667 DAVID WIDNER: Each one of them had a part. 686 00:35:18,875 --> 00:35:22,208 They knew that they needed to make dummy heads. 687 00:35:22,417 --> 00:35:24,958 So they took up paint to paint these two portraits 688 00:35:25,125 --> 00:35:26,708 of their girlfriends. 689 00:35:26,875 --> 00:35:27,958 That gave them access 690 00:35:28,125 --> 00:35:29,458 to the flesh colored paint 691 00:35:29,625 --> 00:35:32,167 that they needed for the dummy heads. 692 00:35:32,333 --> 00:35:34,000 Clarence took up haircutting. 693 00:35:34,208 --> 00:35:35,417 He was a barber. 694 00:35:35,583 --> 00:35:37,458 And so, while he was cutting hair, 695 00:35:37,625 --> 00:35:39,625 he would walk it back to the cells and that's where 696 00:35:39,833 --> 00:35:43,375 they got the real hair that's on the dummy heads. 697 00:35:44,583 --> 00:35:46,375 SHATNER: After 18 months of digging and planning, 698 00:35:46,542 --> 00:35:49,375 the men were finally ready to make their escape. 699 00:35:49,583 --> 00:35:52,000 There was just one more problem: 700 00:35:53,042 --> 00:35:55,625 Surviving the more than one mile of treacherous waters 701 00:35:55,750 --> 00:35:58,250 between the island and the mainland. 702 00:35:58,458 --> 00:36:02,125 They were able to go to all these other convicts at the time 703 00:36:02,292 --> 00:36:04,833 and acquire all these different raincoats. 704 00:36:05,042 --> 00:36:09,208 And then Clarence actually stitched a raft together. 705 00:36:09,375 --> 00:36:10,833 And then they created this valve 706 00:36:11,042 --> 00:36:12,792 kind of like an air stem where they would blow it up. 707 00:36:12,958 --> 00:36:16,125 They were creating things that they would be able to use 708 00:36:16,250 --> 00:36:17,667 in the success of their escape. 709 00:36:19,792 --> 00:36:22,125 SHATNER: On the night of June 11, 1962, 710 00:36:22,292 --> 00:36:25,042 at approximately 9:45 p.m., 711 00:36:25,208 --> 00:36:27,458 the men put their plan into action. 712 00:36:28,500 --> 00:36:31,833 As they crawled from their cells and headed up to the roof, 713 00:36:32,000 --> 00:36:36,167 Allen West elected to stay behind, fearing capture. 714 00:36:37,208 --> 00:36:41,917 It was the last verified time anyone would see Frank Morris 715 00:36:42,083 --> 00:36:43,500 and the Anglin brothers again 716 00:36:43,667 --> 00:36:48,667 because their elaborate escape plan worked. 717 00:36:50,667 --> 00:36:53,208 ESSLINGER: This massive manhunt is initiated. 718 00:36:53,375 --> 00:36:56,167 You've got the FBI, uh, the U.S. Marshals Service, 719 00:36:56,375 --> 00:36:59,000 the Coast Guard, everybody is searching 720 00:36:59,167 --> 00:37:00,375 for these three men. 721 00:37:01,333 --> 00:37:02,792 The warden of the prison comes out 722 00:37:02,958 --> 00:37:05,333 and says that the water conditions were too extreme. 723 00:37:05,458 --> 00:37:07,125 He didn't feel that they could have made it. 724 00:37:07,208 --> 00:37:08,792 J. Edgar Hoover comes out. 725 00:37:08,958 --> 00:37:11,750 He indicates that, you know, they certainly drowned. 726 00:37:11,917 --> 00:37:13,708 It was a big embarrassment to them. 727 00:37:13,875 --> 00:37:16,125 Alcatraz was supposed to be escape-proof. 728 00:37:17,167 --> 00:37:19,000 DYKE: I still to this day will never 100% say 729 00:37:19,208 --> 00:37:20,417 whether they lived or died 730 00:37:20,583 --> 00:37:22,250 because there's no bodies recovered. 731 00:37:22,458 --> 00:37:23,667 Once they left the island, 732 00:37:23,792 --> 00:37:25,083 nobody knows what happened except them. 733 00:37:26,708 --> 00:37:28,417 WIDNER: Digging through the FBI files, 734 00:37:28,583 --> 00:37:30,708 there's no doubt in my mind 735 00:37:30,875 --> 00:37:33,542 that John and Clarence survived that escape. 736 00:37:34,458 --> 00:37:36,250 Every year on Mother's Day, 737 00:37:36,417 --> 00:37:39,167 my grandmother received roses. 738 00:37:39,875 --> 00:37:42,833 And the card would always say, "Joe and Jerry." 739 00:37:43,000 --> 00:37:45,583 Well, she didn't know anybody named Joe and Jerry, 740 00:37:45,750 --> 00:37:48,875 but she did know who those flowers came from. 741 00:37:50,542 --> 00:37:53,083 SHATNER: Did Frank Morris and the Anglin brothers survive 742 00:37:53,250 --> 00:37:56,417 their treacherous journey across San Francisco Bay? 743 00:37:57,583 --> 00:37:58,875 Or did they fall prey to the rough, 744 00:37:59,042 --> 00:38:00,750 shark-infested waters? 745 00:38:02,917 --> 00:38:05,625 One thing is certain-- they made it off The Rock. 746 00:38:05,750 --> 00:38:07,333 And there are many who believe 747 00:38:07,542 --> 00:38:10,583 that not only did they make it to the mainland-- 748 00:38:10,708 --> 00:38:13,458 they did so with the help of mysterious 749 00:38:13,625 --> 00:38:16,333 and unexplained forces. 750 00:38:16,500 --> 00:38:18,583 (seagulls calling) 751 00:38:23,333 --> 00:38:25,250 SHATNER: On June the 11th, 1962, 752 00:38:25,417 --> 00:38:27,833 Frank Morris, John Anglin, 753 00:38:28,042 --> 00:38:29,500 and his brother Clarence, 754 00:38:29,667 --> 00:38:32,375 pulled off what is arguably the most daring 755 00:38:32,542 --> 00:38:35,083 and difficult prison break in history. 756 00:38:37,042 --> 00:38:38,708 And if the rumors are true, 757 00:38:38,875 --> 00:38:41,542 it's because they knew the precise moment 758 00:38:41,708 --> 00:38:44,500 to attempt to get off Alcatraz Island. 759 00:38:46,833 --> 00:38:49,167 ♪ ♪ 760 00:38:49,333 --> 00:38:52,417 Long before Alcatraz became a prison, 761 00:38:52,583 --> 00:38:55,333 it was actually used by local indigenous tribes 762 00:38:55,542 --> 00:38:57,917 who used the island for the same purpose. 763 00:38:58,958 --> 00:39:00,583 They sent their own undesirables there, 764 00:39:00,708 --> 00:39:02,833 their own criminals there, 765 00:39:03,042 --> 00:39:04,958 and they essentially left them there to die. 766 00:39:05,125 --> 00:39:09,333 Most did die and many of them were buried on the island. 767 00:39:09,500 --> 00:39:11,125 And that led to speculation 768 00:39:11,208 --> 00:39:15,500 that their spirits still inhabit the island right up to this day. 769 00:39:18,125 --> 00:39:19,833 ESSLINGER: Certainly, there were Native American inmates 770 00:39:20,042 --> 00:39:21,333 who were on the island. 771 00:39:21,500 --> 00:39:22,875 Some of the Native American's believed 772 00:39:23,000 --> 00:39:25,292 that if, you know, they could actually tell, 773 00:39:25,417 --> 00:39:27,333 that if the birds were circling the island 774 00:39:27,542 --> 00:39:28,917 and they refused to land, 775 00:39:29,083 --> 00:39:31,250 that there was some type of negative energy. 776 00:39:31,458 --> 00:39:34,042 Clarence Carnes was a Native American 777 00:39:34,208 --> 00:39:35,500 who was on the island. 778 00:39:35,667 --> 00:39:38,000 He was very close friends with Frank Morris 779 00:39:38,167 --> 00:39:39,667 and with the Anglins. 780 00:39:39,833 --> 00:39:42,083 Maybe it's something that he brought up to them, 781 00:39:42,250 --> 00:39:44,208 but certainly it could've been one of the stories out there. 782 00:39:45,833 --> 00:39:48,500 SHATNER: On the day of the escape, while out in the prison yard, 783 00:39:48,667 --> 00:39:50,500 Frank Morris reportedly noticed 784 00:39:50,708 --> 00:39:53,000 the birds were particularly calm. 785 00:39:54,500 --> 00:39:56,792 According to local legend, Morris believed 786 00:39:56,958 --> 00:39:59,667 that this was the island's spirits sending him 787 00:39:59,833 --> 00:40:02,542 and his accomplices an omen 788 00:40:02,750 --> 00:40:04,333 that it was safe to put their escape plan 789 00:40:04,542 --> 00:40:07,000 into motion on that day. 790 00:40:07,958 --> 00:40:11,625 But not everyone believes the tale to be true. 791 00:40:12,708 --> 00:40:14,333 I've heard that rumor, 792 00:40:14,542 --> 00:40:16,542 but I've-I've never seen any proof 793 00:40:16,708 --> 00:40:19,000 that Frank Morris actually knew about premonitions 794 00:40:19,167 --> 00:40:20,583 or anything to that effect. 795 00:40:20,750 --> 00:40:22,375 (seagulls calling) 796 00:40:22,542 --> 00:40:24,167 I don't think when the birds were flying 797 00:40:24,333 --> 00:40:26,042 or their activities 798 00:40:26,208 --> 00:40:27,833 or anything like that had any bearing 799 00:40:28,042 --> 00:40:29,542 on what day they were gonna make the escape. 800 00:40:29,708 --> 00:40:31,708 They'd worked on their escape for months 801 00:40:31,917 --> 00:40:33,458 and they hadn't been caught up to that point, 802 00:40:33,625 --> 00:40:35,000 and I think they were starting to get worried. 803 00:40:35,208 --> 00:40:37,542 They left when it was their opportunity to leave 804 00:40:37,750 --> 00:40:40,167 and they thought they had the best chance. 805 00:40:43,542 --> 00:40:47,333 WIDNER: When my grandmother passed away, I was about ten years old. 806 00:40:47,542 --> 00:40:48,958 At the funeral, 807 00:40:49,125 --> 00:40:51,667 there were several FBI agents there, 808 00:40:51,792 --> 00:40:53,167 and they were very noticeable. 809 00:40:53,375 --> 00:40:55,792 I mean, you could tell that that's who they were. 810 00:40:56,792 --> 00:40:58,500 After the funeral, there was a lot of talk 811 00:40:58,667 --> 00:41:01,542 about the two women that showed up. 812 00:41:01,708 --> 00:41:03,625 They sat up front. They didn't talk to anybody. 813 00:41:03,792 --> 00:41:05,500 And they were very tall women. 814 00:41:05,625 --> 00:41:07,125 And from what we understand, 815 00:41:07,250 --> 00:41:09,958 the FBI actually noticed that and they was wanting 816 00:41:10,125 --> 00:41:12,333 to question these two individuals 817 00:41:12,542 --> 00:41:15,083 that actually were men dressed up as women. 818 00:41:15,250 --> 00:41:17,625 But they disappeared before they had a chance. 819 00:41:17,750 --> 00:41:21,042 There's no doubt that it was John and Clarence. 820 00:41:21,208 --> 00:41:23,833 But my question to them was, "Well, if y'all really believed 821 00:41:24,042 --> 00:41:26,000 "that these guys died in that water, 822 00:41:26,167 --> 00:41:27,917 "why are you all still looking for them? 823 00:41:28,042 --> 00:41:29,292 Close the case." 824 00:41:33,042 --> 00:41:36,958 Whether it's convicts who escape from maximum security prisons, 825 00:41:37,125 --> 00:41:39,458 gunslingers who fake their own death, 826 00:41:39,625 --> 00:41:42,667 or serial killers who toy with the police, 827 00:41:42,875 --> 00:41:46,833 outlaws are strangely compelling figures. 828 00:41:47,917 --> 00:41:51,292 And while we condemn their devious actions, 829 00:41:51,458 --> 00:41:55,000 these criminal masterminds continue to be unforgettable. 830 00:41:55,167 --> 00:41:59,500 And their evil exploits will remain... 831 00:41:59,708 --> 00:42:01,333 unexplained. 832 00:42:01,458 --> 00:42:03,875 CAPTIONING PROVIDED BY A+E NETWORKS 67312

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.