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The Escape | Criminal Podcast

December 26, 2022 / 25:44

This episode covers the story of Marie Anglin Weidner, her brothers John and Clarence Anglin, and their infamous escape from Alcatraz. It discusses their childhood, criminal activities, and the details surrounding their escape.

Marie Anglin Weidner, who has lived in Leesburg, Georgia for 50 years, reflects on her brothers' lives and their mischievous childhood. She shares memories of their adventures and the trouble they often found themselves in.

The episode details the brothers' criminal activities leading up to their bank robbery in 1958, which resulted in their imprisonment. Marie recounts their attempts to escape from various facilities, culminating in their infamous escape from Alcatraz.

Marie believes her brothers survived the escape and continues to wait for them to contact her. The episode features insights from Mike Dyke, a U.S. Marshal, who has been investigating the case for years.

Listeners hear about the elaborate planning behind the escape, including the creation of dummy heads and a makeshift raft. The episode raises questions about the brothers' fate and the ongoing search for them.

TLDR

Marie Anglin Weidner recalls her brothers' lives and escape from Alcatraz, believing they survived and are still out there.

Episode

25:44
00:00:00
tell me uh your name and where we are okay I'm Marie Anglin wadner we're at Leesburg Georgia
00:00:09
how long have you lived here 50 years we had this house built in 67. 50 years right here right here I've
00:00:19
never had the One telephone number I still got it so you must know everyone in town oh
00:00:26
yeah people could find me they know where I'm at for the past 50 years Marie England
00:00:32
Weidner has been waiting for someone to find her she's 82 and lives on a small Road in a small town three hours south
00:00:41
of Atlanta I kept trying to find the main street in town but somehow even if I was on it
00:00:47
never figured out which one it was the first thing you see when you walk in the front door of Marie's house is
00:00:54
pictures of her brothers it's sort of a shrine the pictures are old her brothers look like two handsome
00:01:01
men in their Prime how often do you think of them all the time all the time every day
00:01:09
every time I walk by my display she hasn't seen her brothers in almost 60 years she's not the only one looking for them
00:01:20
growing up Marie says her family didn't have any money they lived most of the year in Florida
00:01:27
her father would pick tomatoes and then in the Summers the whole family traveled
00:01:32
North to pick cherries in Michigan and wherever they went her brothers John and Clarence were always getting into
00:01:40
trouble little Mischief things to begin with like what like the neighbors Pete Sal had some little pigs okay so
00:01:52
they were little and they wanted to play with the pigs like a toy to them so one
00:01:57
of the Little Pigs got through the fence and they chased a little pig and they thought trying to catch you to play with
00:02:03
it and the little pig got hot and it fell over dead [Music] that's the first trouble that you
00:02:10
remember them getting into my dad had to pay for the pig I read that they were good swimmers
00:02:17
growing up oh my goodness yeah they would swim across the lake and all the way back without a problem and I'm not
00:02:25
sure how far it was across there but it was a long ways thank you so they would swim often oh the damn we
00:02:33
go to Michigan to work big strawberries and cherries and stuff they break the ice and go swimming
00:02:40
in really cold water yes yes as John and Clarence got older they got Wilder stealing tires and tractor batteries
00:02:49
they'd break into cars hot wire them and go for a drive by the time Clarence was 14 he'd been
00:02:56
sentenced to one year in a very rough youth facility called the state industrial school for boys
00:03:03
when he got out he and John broke into a store Landing them both in the industrial school for another year
00:03:10
they kept breaking into places and doing a terrible job they were caught over and
00:03:16
over and sent to prisons in Alabama Florida and Georgia many times they escaped some Reports say
00:03:24
they escaped from every single prison they were sent to Marie says sometimes they just walk home
00:03:31
well some Mama's cooking want some two older sisters were good Cooks always when they would show up with your
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mother your sister say oh no not again not again God 1958 John and Clarence along with their
00:03:52
older brother Alfred rented a cabin and came up with a plan to rob a bank John stayed in the getaway car while
00:04:01
Clarence and Alfred went in with a toy pistol well I thought it was awful and I thought well it's a miracle that didn't
00:04:11
get hurt because they did have a toy pistol but the people in the bank did not know
00:04:17
it was a toy pistol I mean you know it looked real to them and they were afraid I'm sure they were
00:04:24
afraid but one of the uh ladies in the bank she almost fainted and my oldest brother
00:04:31
Alfred he gets he stops everything he gets water for her to drink they never have hurt anybody
00:04:43
um do you remember were your parents alive when this happened do you remember what
00:04:49
your parents reaction was oh yeah they were alive and they were devastated you know about the bank robbery in fact
00:04:58
John always wanted Mama to have a electric washing machine okay so he went and bought Mama a
00:05:07
washing machine and put it on the porch in the back and when my mama saw it she said and she had
00:05:15
all then she had heard about the bank robbery she told John she says you take it away I don't want it it was bought
00:05:22
with bad money and John had to move it she want to have it all three brothers were arrested for
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bank robbery and sent to prison in Atlanta but John and Clarence kept trying to escape and were eventually
00:05:37
transferred to Leavenworth Kansas in 1960 Clarence tried to help John smuggle himself out of Leavenworth in a
00:05:45
big bread box that was the last straw John was sent to Alcatraz Clarence joined him three months later
00:05:54
after a letter smuggling incident Alcatraz became a federal prison in 1934 1934 it was a military base in prison on
00:06:08
an island more than a mile off the coast of San Francisco the water in San Francisco Bay is very
00:06:15
cold and the currents are strong it was said to be escape proof the government was sending a message not only to high
00:06:24
profile inmates like Al Capone and Machine Gun Kelly but also to problem inmates people like John and Clarence
00:06:31
who were determined to escape the idea was you could not Escape from Alcatraz my sister had wrote to John and
00:06:41
asked John how was the ride out to Alcatraz he said well the ride was good but it was going the wrong way
00:06:48
John was only at Alcatraz for 20 months Clarence was there for 17. and I was ironing and I had the radio on and they
00:06:58
broke into the news channel you know there and told about the escape from Alcatraz and I said I know that was John
00:07:04
and Clarence before they ever told it I said that's them they got out of there foreign
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I was teasing the Marshalls and I I said I know one that didn't like Alcatraz the beds were too hard
00:07:23
I just I wonder when you heard that two people had escaped if you thought oh no they they must be dead because no
00:07:32
one had you know because everyone who tried drowned did is that was that what your worry no not one bit I was not
00:07:40
worried about I know there were good swimmers it's been 55 years and Marie believes
00:07:47
her brothers made it to the shore and are still out there somewhere they would be 86 and 87 years old today
00:07:54
two old men paling around outsmarting everyone especially the one U.S Marshal who's
00:08:01
still on the case what did you think when you were told this was going to be your new assignment
00:08:07
um I didn't want it they were thinking why me yeah exactly Mike Dyke is a supervisory Deputy with
00:08:17
the U.S Marshals about 15 years ago he was handed thousands of files tissue thin pieces of paper fragments various
00:08:27
law enforcement agencies have been collecting since 1962. he says the U.S Marshal Service will
00:08:34
keep going after a fugitive no matter what until they turn 99 years old then the marshals back off if you've
00:08:43
made it that far I guess you gotta pass and Mike Dyke says he still gets tips about the whereabouts of John and
00:08:51
Clarence every year I'm Phoebe judge this is Criminal thank you foreign [Music] and this big limousine I call it drove
00:09:15
up and this man got out with a big book and he said are you Marie angling Weidner and I said I am and I said who
00:09:23
are you and he said I'm the FBI and I said what do you want with me and this was after they got out
00:09:30
he said well I wanted to know if if you know where your brothers are and I said well if I did I wouldn't tell you
00:09:37
I would not tell you if I knew where they are and he said I said by the way how long will y'all be looking for my
00:09:44
brothers and he said 100 years from now and I said well good luck so he closed his book got in the car and left
00:09:52
were you waiting for your brothers to contact you oh yeah I'm still waiting sure I would love for him to contact me
00:10:05
have they ever tried they were spotted at Mama's funeral dress like women and then when my dad died they were
00:10:13
spotted at the funeral home two hours before the family was supposed to be there
00:10:18
and they went down to view the body hats beard long coats didn't say a word didn't sign a book
00:10:28
that stood there about 15 minutes this lady told us and then they left that's a wild story that they showed up
00:10:36
in women's clothing for your mother's funeral I believe it the lady that told us she would not lie
00:10:43
she spotted him she didn't tell anybody but she spotted him she told the family afterwards after the funeral
00:10:52
you know they like to take chances but they like I do think nobody else would do
00:11:00
I would assume for for a woman like you um of your age and your position in the community and
00:11:07
everything else your faith that you take lying pretty seriously oh yeah oh yes I do absolutely
00:11:17
and so you would have no reason to to believe that all these stories weren't true that you've been hearing oh they
00:11:24
were true they were true they come from reliable source they have a photo that was given to them
00:11:36
years ago which they say shows the two brothers in Brazil they're middle-aged and based on the open shirts and
00:11:44
sunglasses looks to me like it was the 70s Mike Dyke says the photo isn't at all
00:11:51
conclusive he had it analyzed and it didn't persuade him but if the brothers were smart enough to get out of the
00:11:59
escape proof prison maybe they were smart enough to hide out all this time they were discovered missing early in
00:12:08
the morning of June 12 1962. as The Story Goes prison guards tried to wake up John Anglin and he wouldn't wake
00:12:16
up they poked him and his head rolled off the bed guards went into clarence's cell and
00:12:24
again found a paper mache head on the pillow another one in the bed of a third man Frank Morris
00:12:32
the guards sounded the alarm but the men were already off the island the Escape triggered the greatest
00:12:39
Manhunt in San Francisco's history as agents of the FBI Coast Guardsmen Highway Patrol sheriff's deputies and
00:12:45
local police join in the search whatever their fate the three convicts have apparently accomplished a feat that many
00:12:51
have tried with no success I'm just gonna say it their escape was ingenious they've been planning it for months the
00:13:03
three men along with a fourth named Alan West sharpened spoons and started chipping away at the backs of their
00:13:10
cells they made a drill from the motor of a broken vacuum cleaner and loosened the grills over their cell air vents so
00:13:19
they were able to enlarge the holes in the back herself and they made what they did they out of cardboard they made
00:13:24
false grills that matched the existing vent in the back and it covered up the larger hole they made and since West was
00:13:34
on the you know the crew to do maintenance he had access to paint so you know they put the cardboard Grill
00:13:39
back in the hole put soap around it to fill in the crack and then they'd paint over it and you really couldn't tell
00:13:44
unless you went up and looked right at it that that was a larger hole than the the vent that was originally there the
00:13:50
holes and fake vent grills allowed them to leave their cells freely at night and
00:13:56
they set up shop Behind the Walls in an unused utility space guards seemed unaware exist it and uh you know once
00:14:04
they were out of the backs of their cells uh they were able to you know climb up and they collected raincoats uh
00:14:11
from various prisoners who would give them up and there was no count of raincoat so a prisoner could go get a
00:14:17
raincoat and then the next day he can go get another raincoat and another raincoat because nobody kept track of
00:14:22
him because you know who's gonna who's gonna worry about raincoats on an island so the um uh they were able to collect
00:14:29
uh 40 50 60 raincoats and mostly using the backs of the raincoats they were able to
00:14:36
make pontoons for a raft and life vests they created mouthpieces to inflate the life
00:14:43
jackets and to inflate the raft they used a concertina that type of accordion as a kind of bellows
00:14:51
from what I from what I understand this was a kind of a whole prison effort there were a lot of people
00:14:59
rooting for these guys and helping out uh yeah so basically most of the prisoners knew about it the the majority
00:15:05
of them knew about it and they were just able to keep their mouths shut once the men had figured out how to get
00:15:11
out of their cells they started focusing on how to get out of the building the ceiling was about 30 feet high FBI Files
00:15:20
show they created a periscope so they could keep watch and they were using like a steam line to help vulcanize you
00:15:26
know to provide heat to help help cure the the seals on the on the on the glue when they're when they're putting the
00:15:33
life vest together and you know as far as what the quality of what they made you know one of the life vests there
00:15:38
there's one life best left behind and uh when FBI took that as evidence they tested it and they filled it with air in
00:15:46
a lab and they put a weight on it and that held air indefinitely it didn't even leak so it was actually fairly well
00:15:51
made in order to make the guards think they were asleep in their cells the men put the paper mache heads on their
00:15:57
pillows Marie says Clarence worked in the barber shop and collected hair to make them as lifelike as possible even
00:16:05
giving them eyelashes she says the requested paint sets so they could make portraits of their
00:16:11
girlfriends back home they use that paint to give their dummy heads facial features but they also really did paint
00:16:19
their girlfriends Marie has the portraits in her house I saw them they're actually very very good
00:16:27
originally all four men were gonna leave together but on the night of the Escape
00:16:33
Alan West had trouble with the vent in his cell he couldn't go and when it came out that he was involved the FBI probed
00:16:42
him and they learned a lot this is how we know what we do know about the Escape West did describe the raft as like 14
00:16:51
feet each the two pontoons were 14 feet long and about 15 to 16 inches in diameter
00:16:58
uh and then the other pontoon was uh about six feet long so we figured it was like a triangle like an isosceles type
00:17:05
triangle uh shape raft and they supposedly put a piece of canvas across the bottom of it uh to help support
00:17:12
their weight and it also made some paddles uh to help paddle away at 10 30 pm on June 11th the guards
00:17:22
heard a loud noise Mike Dykes as it was described like a hand beating a 55-gallon drum and we assume that's the
00:17:30
time when they were actually able to dislodge the cover on the vent on top of the building and there's no real way
00:17:36
nothing else they could have done with it except push it up and push it over and it would have landed on the roof and
00:17:42
made some noise so that's sensible that that's what time they actually got out of the building the group most likely
00:17:48
went to the very North End of the building where there was a stove pipe that they could shimmy down and there's
00:17:54
some dislodged barbed wire on a fence right outside of there that shows you know they
00:17:59
they went up over the fence there and then up over another fence and then once they're after that fence there was
00:18:04
really nothing left that they had to defeat except the water believed that they didn't inflate their
00:18:11
raft until they were at the water's edge and that they set out not from Mainland
00:18:16
San Francisco but for Angel Island West said their plan was to steal a real boat then steal a car then head east
00:18:28
there's no way they could have known what the ties were going to do uh the Wrath they made
00:18:32
who knows how watertight that was and there was a paddle found near Angel Island so about 24 hours after they
00:18:41
would have escaped out of their cells and out of the building a a paddle was found and it was matching a paddle that
00:18:48
was left on top of the cell block for West uh so we know it's one of the panels for
00:18:52
them but it was found near Angel Island Days Later a packet of letters sealed in
00:18:57
rubber and thought to have belonged to the men was found and a homemade life jacket washed up not far from Golden
00:19:03
Gate Bridge you could drop 20 things floating things in the bay and all of them would end up in different locations
00:19:10
that's the whole you know that's the whole problem with trying to judge where things are going to end up
00:19:16
well I think they made it well good for you what do you think what makes everything
00:19:23
you think that well you've just told me about a wonderful plan that they were able to execute there I mean
00:19:30
I I don't know I mean why wouldn't they have made it it sounds fantastic the whole thing uh you know once they went
00:19:38
in the water obviously nobody knows what happened um no bodies were ever recovered
00:19:43
but also on the same note uh there's been no positive proof that any of them lived so
00:19:51
Marie says they do have proof a piece of leather with a horse on it it was delivered to Alfred Clarence and
00:19:58
John's oldest brother in prison after the brothers escaped from Alcatraz she showed it to me it's small the size
00:20:07
of a picture frame Marie says the stitching on the edges of the leather is unmistakably clearance is stitching and
00:20:15
perfectly matches the stitching on a leather wallet he made it Alcatraz but more importantly she pointed out a
00:20:24
small slit in the side of the leather where she says Clarence and John left a secret note for Alfred
00:20:32
when the three brothers were little they figured out how to use milk to write on
00:20:37
blank paper to pass messages back and forth without their father seeing he said when he took the note out
00:20:45
there was nothing on it struck a match to it held it over the commode and then you could read it as it burned
00:20:54
and it told him told him where the boys were Alfred died shortly after he received
00:21:01
that horse he was electrocuted trying to escape from a prison in Alabama officials said it was an accident his
00:21:08
body made contact with an electrified fence in an attempt to climb over it as for Frank Morris the third man who
00:21:17
escaped with John and Clarence we don't know anything in 2010 Mike Dyke started looking at
00:21:23
bones that had washed up in 1963 nine months after the escape a pelvis with two femurs attached
00:21:32
it was a male Mike Dyke contacted the Anglin family and got DNA it wasn't a match
00:21:40
Frank Morris has no living blood relatives that Mike Dyke could locate so he was stuck he describes it as a broken
00:21:49
chain what would happen if you caught the brothers today uh well just like any any
00:21:55
criminal any guy Fusion we catch they're going to go to court you know we'll we'll arrest them and then the U.S
00:22:02
attorneys would decide whether you know it's worth the trouble to prosecute them you know
00:22:07
because they are they would be very old men now if they're still alive and uh is
00:22:12
it worth the trouble to prosecute them because they obviously stayed out of trouble for the last 55 years as far as
00:22:18
we can tell uh and you'll you know as far as that's concerned as well I mean if if any of
00:22:24
them were still alive all three of those guys would have reoffended in some way shape
00:22:30
or form because they're all career criminals there's nothing there's no indication whatsoever that they would
00:22:36
have turned over a new Leaf right after that escape and because they've all escaped before and every time they've
00:22:42
reoffended ferment uh their sister Marie Marie uh yeah Marie with Marie Whitner yeah I met her
00:22:50
really believes that her brothers made it and I can I can understand her position on that because it's your
00:22:57
brother if my brother you know if my brother disappeared and um I didn't know whether he lived or died I'd still try
00:23:05
and I was I would feel the same way I would think my brothers might be still alive somewhere or try to anyway unless
00:23:11
there was some proof otherwise and she's in the England family is in the same boat I am they have no evidence either
00:23:17
way whether they made it or whether they died so and maybe if I can prove something one way or other you know it
00:23:24
might give closure to everybody what would you do if you saw them again oh my goodness
00:23:33
I probably couldn't get through hugging them okay I don't know how much I love them
00:23:42
how do you imagine their lives after the Escape where do you see them and what do
00:23:47
you think their life was like well I used to dream about them a lot and they were every time they were in a
00:23:54
big white house in the side of a mountain and a lot of clay around I they were happy
00:24:05
when I tell you I'm in my dream [Music] so I would always hope that that's probably what happened
00:24:15
[Music] criminal is produced by Lauren Spore Nadia Wilson and me audio mix by Corey
00:24:45
schreeppel and Rob Byers our intern is matild erfilino Julian Alexander makes original illustrations for each episode
00:24:53
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00:25:00
recorded in the studios of North Carolina public radio wunc we're a proud member of radiotopia from PRX a
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for providing their ad serving platform to radiotopia I'm Phoebe judge this is Criminal
00:25:26
foreign [Music] [Music]

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 80
    Most heartbreaking
  • 80
    Most unpredictable
  • 75
    Most shocking
  • 75
    Best concept / idea

Episode Highlights

  • Marie Anglin Weidner's Life in Leesburg
    Marie has lived in Leesburg, Georgia for 50 years, never changing her phone number.
    “I've never had the One telephone number.”
    @ 00m 19s
    December 26, 2022
  • The Brothers' Daring Escape
    Marie believes her brothers, John and Clarence, successfully escaped from Alcatraz and are still alive.
    “I know they made it to the shore and are still out there somewhere.”
    @ 07m 47s
    December 26, 2022
  • A Wild Family Story
    Marie shares a surprising tale of her brothers' appearance at family funerals in disguise.
    “They showed up in women's clothing for your mother's funeral.”
    @ 10m 36s
    December 26, 2022
  • Searching for Closure
    The quest for answers about lost family members and the hope for closure.
    “It might give closure to everybody.”
    @ 23m 24s
    December 26, 2022
  • Imagining a Reunion
    The emotional weight of reuniting with lost loved ones.
    “I probably couldn't get through hugging them.”
    @ 23m 33s
    December 26, 2022
  • Dreams of Happiness
    Recalling dreams where lost family members are happy and together.
    “They were happy in my dreams.”
    @ 24m 05s
    December 26, 2022

Episode Quotes

  • I kept trying to find the main street in town...
    The Escape | Criminal Podcast
  • I know they made it to the shore and are still out there somewhere.
    The Escape | Criminal Podcast
  • They showed up in women's clothing for your mother's funeral.
    The Escape | Criminal Podcast
  • Their escape was ingenious.
    The Escape | Criminal Podcast
  • I think they made it.
    The Escape | Criminal Podcast
  • What would you do if you saw them again? Oh my goodness.
    The Escape | Criminal Podcast

Key Moments

  • 50 Years in Leesburg00:09
  • Waiting for Family10:00
  • Wild Family Tales10:36
  • Ingenious Escape12:59
  • Belief in Survival19:18
  • Hope for Family23:04
  • Imagining Reunion23:29
  • Dreams of Happiness24:05

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown