Tuesday, March 29, 2016

THE THIN VENEER OF SANITY

3/29/1951 - Born in Connecticut in 1903, 47-year-old George Peter Metesky begins life appearing to be quite normal ... he has a mother and father, two sisters, is intelligent, goes to school, and loves his country ... shortly after WWI, he joins the Marines and serves as a electrician specialist at the United States Consulate in Shanghai, China. Returning home after foreign service, Metesky finds work as a mechanic with the Consolidated Edison utility company, and it is there that he lets his raging temper take him into madness!

Metesky 

Working as a generator wiper at Con-Ed's Hell Gate generating plant in 1931, Metesky is on duty when a backfire takes place in a boiler ... a blast that knocks the mechanic off his feet and fills his lungs with deadly toxic fumes, an accident that leaves Metesky permanently disabled to the point where after collecting 26 weeks of sick pay (he will also claim that the explosion weakens his immune system and is the source of the tuberculosis that will plague him the rest of his life), he is out of a job.  Workman's compensation denied over the technicality of a late filing, Metesky will appeal the decision, and three times have his appeal refused (the last time in 1936), fueling his ire at Con-Ed, and for three co-workers that give testimony in support of the company.  Pissed, pissed, and even more pissed, the rulings cause the former Marine to become unhinged.  Seeking attention and retribution, Metesky starts writing letters (over 900 before he starts bombing places) describing his rage (they will be signed F.P., for Fair Play) and plants his first bomb at a Con-Ed plant in Manhattan on November 16, 1940.

Metesky At Center

Warnings perhaps of what is to come, Metesky's first two bombs do not explode, and the man who will soon become known to the world as "The Mad Bomber" decides to put his payback plans on hold until Japan and Germany can be defeated in WWII (once a Marine, always a Marine).  Grievance locked away for over a decade, but not forgotten or forgiven, in March of 1951, Metesky begins planting bombs again, and this time, many of them go off!
Patriotic Insanity!

Weapons of minor destruction, Metesky's bombs consist of a pipe (four to ten inches long, one-half inch to two inches in diameter), gunpowder, and a crude ignition system of sugar and flashlight batteries (or a cheap pocket watch) wrapped in a wool sock.  In the years that follow, he will plant at least 33 bombs around New York City, in phone booths, storage lockers, movie theaters (one will go off during a screening of White Christmas starring Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye), and restrooms ... along with Con-Ed, his high publicity targets include the Grand Central Station (five times), Radio City Music Hall (three times), Pennsylvania Station (five times), the New York Public Library (three times), the Port Authority Bus Terminal (two times), the RCA building, and the New York City Subway.  No one is ever killed, but a 74-year old porter at Penn Station is crippled for life when thinking he is cleaning a clogged toilet, the man abuses the bomb hidden inside with a wet plunger ... in all, 22 devices will detonate, injuring 15 people, and by 1956, Police Commissioner Stephen P. Kennedy is calling for "... the greatest manhunt in the history of the Police Department" to find the man terrorizing the city.

Warning
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Bombed Locker
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Bomb Removal
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Bomb Making Implements

It would seem that authorities would be easily able to find the man the press calls the Mad Bomber, an individual with a major axe to grind against Con-Ed that has left major clues all about town, but Metesky escapes detection until 1957, when Dr. James Brussel, a criminologist, psychiatrist, and member of the New York State Commission for Mental Hygiene puts together one of the first criminal profiles used by authorities to arrest a public menace (as if Metesky has confessed to Brussel, the criminologist nails the bombers age, sex, stature, nationality, and habits ... even correctly guessing that when the bomber is captured, he will be wearing a button-downed double-breasted jacket).  Portions of the profile also make their way into the local newspapers, where Metesky reads about himself, and bonkers, feels the need to respond to it, writing another letter in which he stupidly gives the exact date of his Con-Ed injuries.

Brussel 

Also reading the article about Metesky is Con-Ed clerk Alice Kelly. On her own, she decides to check Con-Ed's employee files and discovers one that is filed with angry letters and uses words that the bomber also spits out repeatedly ... injustice, permanent disability, dastardly deeds, and others.  The file belongs to George Peter Metesky (hampering the investigation, police were originally told that Con-Ed had no employee records before 1930)!  Info turned over to the police (Kelly not playing with a full deck either, the clerk will refuse $26,000 in reward funds, stating she was just, "... doing her job"), a short time later, four NYPD officers arrive at Metesky's Waterbury, Connecticut address and arrest the aggrieved mechanic.  Caught, Metesky readily confesses his misdeeds to the detectives, gives them a handwriting sample, and shows them the bombing making equipment he keeps in the garage and in his pantry.
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The Arresting Officers

Busted!
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Headlines!

There will however be no prison time for Metesky.  Indicted by a grand jury on 47 charges of attempted murder, damaging buildings, maliciously endangering life, and carrying concealed weapons (the bombs), prosecutors, because of the statue of limitations for some of the crimes, settle on going after Metesky for seven counts of attempted murder (one for each person injured), but the bomber's psychiatric evaluation from Manhattan's Bellevue Hospital gets in the way.  No trial necessary, on April 18, 1957, Judge Samuel S. Liebowitz declares Metesky to be a paranoid schizophrenic and commits him to the Matteawan Hospital for the Criminally Insane at Beacon, New York.

Judge Liebowitz
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Matteawan Exercise Yard

But a nut assigned to a rubber room until he dies of old age is not how Metesky's tale ends.  A United States Supreme Court ruling that a mentally ill defendant can not be committed to a mental asylum without a jury trial deeming the person dangerous puts Metesky in the news again in 1973. Since Metesky did not have a trial, New York authorities have two choices ... put Metesky on trial, or free him immediately.  Deemed non-dangerous by an assortment of doctors, and having served two-thirds of what his prison sentence would have been if he'd been found guilty in 1957 (a 25-year maximum), the decision is made to send Metesky back to his home in Waterbury ... the sole condition for his freedom being that he makes regular visits to the nearby Connecticut Department of Mental Hygiene.  Causing no further problems, Metesky spends another twenty years keeping his anger finally in check.  He dies at home in 1994 at the age of 90 ... still alive, when one of the children of his wrath, Theodore John "Ted" Kaczynski, the "Unabomber," begins following in his footsteps by settling his disgruntlements with explosives too!

Happy To Be Caught?
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Kaczynski - 1996 

One More Maniac Smile!

Monday, March 21, 2016

CELEBRITY JUSTICE IN COLORADO

3/21/1976 - Yet another tale of justice thwarted by celebrity and wealth begins on a late afternoon in the ritzy Starwood section of Aspen, Colorado, when 34-year-old singer-actress Claudine Longet, guns down her 31-year-old boyfriend, former World Cup championship skier, Vladimir Peter "Spider" Sabich, Jr.

Before

The second child born to Vladimir and Frances Sabich (daughter Mary is first), in 1945. Spider earns his permanent nickname from his bomber and test pilot father because of the thin arms and legs his premature birth causes.  But thin soon turns to muscle when Vladimir Sr., a CHP officer after retiring from the army, is sent from Sacramento to the town of Kyburz ... a small burg formerly called Slippery Ford, located on the South Fork of the American River, only minutes away from the Edelweiss ski area where former downhill champion Lutz Aynedter teaches European-style ski racing.  Availing themselves of the mountain and teacher, Spider, and his younger brother Steve grow up skiing (Spider gets his first set of skis at the age of 5!), skiing, and doing more skiing (alter boys at a Catholic church across from the ski slopes, the boys often strap on their gear and go flying off the Edelweiss runs directly after Mass), soon establishing themselves as the best junior skiers in northern California ... success that opens doors!
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Aynedter
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 Downhill Racer

After graduation from El Dorado High School in Placerville, California, both brothers are offered skiing scholarships to attend the University of Colorado at Boulder (Steve's competitive ski career will end there when he suffers a serious knee injury), the dominant collegiate program for winter sports in the nation at the time, its ski program headed by U.S. Ski Team head coach, Bob Beattie.  With Colorado as his new base of operations, Spider wins the Dick Schoenberger Memorial Award as the university's best skier of 1967, skis the first four seasons of the World Cup circuit (he will have 18 Top Ten finishes in his Olympic and World Cup career), in a thick fog at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Chamrousse, France, he finishes fifth in the slalom, takes a World Cup victory in the slalom at an event at Lake Tahoe's Heavenly Valley, is the U.S. downhill champion in 1968, and then after turning pro, wins the championship of that sport in 1971 and 1972 (going for his 3rd title in 1973, he is hurt in a fall and finishes 3rd behind the legendary French skier, Jean Claude Killy).  Whether winning or losing (he is said to be making in the neighborhood of $200,000 a year in winnings and endorsements), tanned and surfer blonde handsome, wearing his standard big grin, Spider is famous and in demand (he builds his own ski chalet in the exclusive Starwood section of Aspen in which his neighbors are John Denver and Tina Sinatra) ... especially to other celebrities that like to party (the character Robert Redford plays in Downhill Racer is partially based on Spider).

Beattie
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Killy
JAN 14 1971, JAN 17 1971; SPIDER SABICH DURING EARLIER, AMATEUR DAYS; Professional skiing has simple
Sabich - 1971

At roughly the same time as Sabich is forging his athletic resume, Claudine Longet is climbing the rungs of the world of entertainment.  Born in Paris, France, to a businessman specializing in X-ray technology and a doctor mother during the Nazi occupation of that city during WWII, Claudine Georgette Longet relocates to America as a teenager when nightclub owner Lou Walters sees her on TV and hires her to perform in Las Vegas (she is 17 at the time), where eventually she becomes the lead dancer for the Folies Bergere at the Tropicana Resort & Casino.  Kismet takes place for her when she has car problems, and entertainer Andy Williams stops to help ... she is 18 and he is 32 ... one thing leading to another as can happen, the pair fall in love, marry, and will have three children together, Noelle, Christian, and Robert.  Connected (Robert F. Kennedy becomes one of her best friends) and talented, Longet releases several hit singles and albums, guest stars on numerous TV shows (among her credits are roles on McHale's Navy, Dr. Kildare, Twelve O'Clock High, Combat, The Name of the Game, The Rat Patrol, Alias Smith and Jones, The Streets of San Francisco, Hogan's Heroes, It Takes A Thief, Mr. Novak, Run for Your Life, and of course, The Andy Williams Show, even after the pair split), and has movie part opposite Peter Sellers in The Party.  The celebrity marriage eventually sours however, and though Williams and Longet remain friends, the couple divorces in 1975.

Dancing In Vegas

Williams & Longet

Longet

Longet and Sabich paths cross and finally connect in 1972 at a celebrity ski event in Bear Valley, California, when fancy tweaked, Sabich walks up to the table the singer is sitting at with Liza Minelli, Robert Conrad, and Clint Eastwood, and introduces himself ... by the end of the weekend, the two are a couple ... and shortly after, Spider offers his Aspen home to Longet and her children, which they gladly move into.  Star couple of the Colorado ski set, the fairy tale romance turns sour by 1976 over drugs, drinking, the attention Spider receives from beautiful female fans, and the lack of attention he at times gives to Longet (for which at least once in public, she will throw a glass of wine in Spider's face) ... friends of both parties realize the relationship is ending, it appears it is just a question of when ... not how.

The Happy Times

Spider On Cover

The Sabich Ski Chalet - Aspen

In training to make a comeback on the pro skiing circuit after knee surgery and a poor 1975 season, on the last day of his life, Spider skis at Aspen Highlands, briefly meets with his former coach Beattie (they discuss Sabich's desire to break up with Longet and get her out of his house and arrange to have dinner later that evening), and then goes home to shower in preparation for his later dinner plans.  At about 4:00 in the afternoon he is in the process of disrobing in the bathroom, down to his blue thermal underwear, when Longet walks in and shoots the skier once in the stomach. Down and bleeding, Spider Sabich dies on the way to the hospital from blood loss.  Murder over being upset about being bounced out of a relationship, Longet has a different tale to tell when the authorities arrive at the chalet ... Sabich is killed when the pistol he was showing Longet how to use accidentally goes off (what a strange place for gun instruction).  The authorities, however (and most of the residents of Aspen), are not buying!

Longet & Sabich
Aspen Times after the murder of Spider Sabich
Headlines

Brought to trial in what appears will be a slam dunk guilty verdict (Andy Williams will fly into town to give his ex his moral support), the courtroom instead becomes a haunted house for the prosecution ... the booze and cocaine in Longet's system can not be admitted because her blood was taken without a release waiver being signed, the Longet diary that documents the couple's relationship falling apart is kept out of the proceedings because it is taken from the home without a warrant, Judge George Lohr fails to reprimand Longet when she interrupts testimony in court, the killing gun is "mishandled" and so testimony that its trigger needs to pulled repeatedly to fire is kept from the jury (the term "star struck" has been used to describe the judge), as is the autopsy report that shows that at the time of his death, Spider was bent over, facing away, and over six feet away from Longet when the gun discharged (a strange posture to be taken if giving a demonstration on how to use a weapon).  And so it is that the trial is over in four days and the jury takes only three hours and 40 minutes to arrive at its tainted verdict ... Longet is found guilty of misdemeanor criminal negligence, fined $250, and sentenced to 30 days in jail for killing Sabich (and the judge allows Longet to pick the days she will serve her sentence).

The Gun
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Longet & Williams
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People Magazine
Claudine attor
Longet And Her Attorney, Ron Austin

Travesty ... and the tale gets even stranger after the trial is over. Thanks for what you've done, abandoning his wife and family, attorney Ron Austin takes up with his client, squires her to Mexico, and marries the killer (they are still married and live in Aspen) in 1985.  Extremely unhappy with the death of Spider, and Longet's antics afterwards, the Sabich Family will initiate wrongful death civil proceedings against Longet to the tune of $1.3 million, a case which is eventually settled out of court, with Longet agreeing to never talk or write about her relationship with Spider.  Others though will not be a stifled ... Saturday Night Live will parody the killing in one its most successful, funniest, and controversial skits (they offer an apology the following week), and on the song Claudine on the Rolling Stones' Emotional Rescue album, Mick Jagger will sing, "Oh Claudine/Now only Spider knows for sure/But he ain't talkin' about it any more/Is he, Claudine?/There's blood in the chalet/And blood in the snow/She washed her hands of the whole damned thing/The best you could do, Claudine."  Says former district attorney Frank Tucker, "I've always known she shot Spider Sabich and meant to do it."  And Spider's brother Steve states of the tragedy that befalls his family, "It's a shame, because Spider accomplished so much in his life. Claudine accomplished two things; marrying Andy Williams and getting away with murder."  Indeed!

Spider Sabich ... 1/10/1945 - 3/21/1976