The Lindbergh Kidnapping: Suspect No. 1
The Man Who Got Away
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Narrated by:
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Lise Pearlman
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By:
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Lise Pearlman
In the depths of the Depression, millions worldwide followed every twist and turn of the Lindbergh baby kidnap/murder. Yet what was reported was largely fake news. Nearly a century after undocumented immigrant Bruno Richard Hauptmann was executed for the dastardly crime, questions still linger. If the wrong man was convicted, who did it? When? Why? Where? How? The shocking answers have eluded all prior authors. Now in The Lindbergh Kidnapping: Suspect No. 1 - The Man Who Got Away award-winning author Lise Pearlman’s extensive research into dusty archives yielded crucial forensic evidence never before analyzed. Listeners are invited to reexamine "the crime of the century" freshly focused on a key suspect - a slim, clean-shaven man wearing a fedora that obscured his face. He was spotted with a ladder in his car near the Lindberghs' driveway early that fateful night. The police let an insider who fit that description oversee the entire investigation - the boy's father, international hero Charles Lindbergh. Abuse of power, amorality and xenophobia all feature in this saga set in an era dominated by white supremacists and social Darwinists.
Astonishingly more key evidence is accessible today than was presented at the death penalty trial of Bruno Richard Hauptmann for the kidnap/murder of Charles Lindbergh, Jr. You get to judge for yourself who committed the "crime of the century".
©2020 Lise A. Pearlman (P)2021 Lise PearlmanListeners also enjoyed...
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so I knew the story.
This was shocking to me. Although it’s hard to turn away, it’s so obviously true. Her deductions and truthful reasonings make it make sense. I never would have believed it 10 years ago but living these last years has eroded my own sense of the absurd, and despotic evil nature of white giants. I also had read The Pilots Wife and learned more about him. Because Nazi Germany and others believed in Eugenics to an impossibly heinous point, it is plausible to think it’s the truth he did it. At my age 65, I really don’t know anyone to discuss this historic case with. No one really knows about it or cares enough to do the research to find out . It was fascinating to me as an avid young reader. And I have always felt things just did not add up in the public presented case. The intricate details presented meticulously, all the awful things he did to stymie the ludicrous policing of the case. You might say in the end “ oh no, of course a man would’nt do that to his own son “ But they sometimes do…. And he was clearly a sociopath that Americans placed high as a god…
The crime of the Century
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It was only as an adult when I started doing my own research that I came to find out what a terrible person he was. I always suspected that Mr. Haupmann was railroaded, and even thought that Lindbergh himself may have had a part in it. This cements that idea for me. While he did perform a major accomplishment, he was more than likely a sociopath. I feel so bad for that little baby.
Eye-opening story about a man considered a hero.
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Hard to Believe
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Lindbergh Baby Kidnapping Case
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