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#61 The Bank Robber

In this gripping episode of Heavyweight, host Jonathan Goldstein delves into the extraordinary story of a young boy named X, who, at just 14 years old, commits an armed bank robbery. As he navigates t...

#61 The Bank Robber
#61 The Bank Robber
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spk_0 Pushkin.
spk_0 How's it going?
spk_0 Dr. Jack Ekoen?
spk_0 Yeah.
spk_0 How about this Jack Ekoen, Dr. Jack Ekoen?
spk_0 So now that I am officially in my late 50s, what do you think I could do to start improving
spk_0 my health?
spk_0 Yeah, you can build up that little little body of yours.
spk_0 Get some meatballs on this big edit.
spk_0 Yes, yes.
spk_0 Are you're laughing?
spk_0 Is that a medical term?
spk_0 Why aren't you doing any weight lifting?
spk_0 Because I don't live near a gym.
spk_0 You don't have to be here to do what you're doing at home.
spk_0 Like where I just go around the house and I like lift a couch or try to pull a toilet
spk_0 out or something?
spk_0 Yeah, that.
spk_0 From Pushkin Industries, I'm Jonathan Goldstein and this is Heavyweight.
spk_0 Today's episode, The Bank Robber.
spk_0 Right after the break.
spk_0 This is an I Heart Podcast.
spk_0 Hi, it's Terry O'Reilly.
spk_0 I host a fun podcast called Under the Influence where I analyze how advertising affects your
spk_0 life.
spk_0 Like, why does that add you hate so much sell the most products?
spk_0 And what's the story behind the most famous Super Bowl ads?
spk_0 If you never thought you would ever listen to a show about advertising, consider the show
spk_0 iTunes shows as one of the best podcasts of the year.
spk_0 Under the Influence.
spk_0 Hello.
spk_0 Hello, how are you?
spk_0 Hi, good, how are you?
spk_0 Doing really well, thank you.
spk_0 Good.
spk_0 Are you comfortable?
spk_0 I am, yes.
spk_0 The story you're about to hear is from some of the people who are watching this video
spk_0
spk_0
spk_0 and someone who's still figuring out how to tell it or even if he should tell it.
spk_0 It just seems very crazy and it's kind of hard for me to talk about it.
spk_0 At this point, he's only shared the story with a couple of people and he only agreed to
spk_0 share it with me after I promised not to use his real name, so we'll call him X.
spk_0 My communication with X began with an email he sent me over three years ago.
spk_0 It contained a lot of nervous, preamble and throat clearing, but eventually he came
spk_0 to the point.
spk_0 In 1992, he said, I committed an armed bank robbery.
spk_0 I was just one month past my 14th birthday.
spk_0 X begins this story by telling me about his family.
spk_0 He was raised on a dairy farm, the son of immigrant parents.
spk_0 He was one of seven children, all brothers.
spk_0 X was right in the middle.
spk_0 Right in the middle, yeah, three older, three younger.
spk_0 Yeah.
spk_0 X's home life wasn't an easy one.
spk_0 Well you'd call it abusive today.
spk_0 The bell tore, broomstick or whatever was handy was used as a corrective measure.
spk_0 My mom was a little more creative in the implements she would use, but it didn't hurt as much
spk_0 as when my dad did it.
spk_0 To illustrate, X tells me about the night he snuck out to the local junior high.
spk_0 He noticed an open window and broke in.
spk_0 The police caught him and brought him home, where his parents were waiting.
spk_0 They told me to remove all my clueless, so I did minus my underwear.
spk_0 And then I just got like the beating of my life with a belt, but I just remember hitting
spk_0 me all over my body.
spk_0 I remember hitting my penis.
spk_0 It was pretty brutal.
spk_0 X says there were other nights like that.
spk_0 I remember crying and lights are out and my younger brother trying to say something
spk_0 to comfort me and me saying something like I hate them and I don't want to be here anymore.
spk_0 School offered no respite.
spk_0 X was small for his age and had a high voice.
spk_0 The bullies took notice.
spk_0 When they'd seen me in the halls, they'd ask me questions, you know, kind of vulgar.
spk_0 Like I heard you like giving head or something like that.
spk_0 I didn't even know what that meant.
spk_0 Or I remember once they asked me, is it true you like to choke the chicken?
spk_0 And again, I was like, what?
spk_0 But I said, not really.
spk_0 And they really keyed in on that not really because it was like, oh, so you kind of like
spk_0 it.
spk_0 My strategy with them was just curl up in a ball and hope that they'd leave me alone.
spk_0 And that I think made them want to pick on me more.
spk_0 Between school and his home life, it felt like there was no safe place to be.
spk_0 So X retreated into a fantasy world.
spk_0 He'd come home from a day of being bullied and lie in bed playing out scenes in which
spk_0 he was the powerful one, the one to be feared.
spk_0 As an example, one of these guys makes fun of me in class.
spk_0 And I get up and I push them down and beat them up like, you know, let's even
spk_0 so call a video here or something.
spk_0 X found himself drawn to movies like that about tough guys and outlaws, young guns, point
spk_0 break.
spk_0 A favorite was actually called tough guys.
spk_0 At around this time, he discovered a book titled The Encyclopedia of Crime in the School
spk_0 Library.
spk_0 It's been lunchtime there, hiding from trouble and reading about criminals like Al Capone,
spk_0 babyface Nelson, and pretty boy Floyd.
spk_0 No one bullied them.
spk_0 So I started to fantasize daydream about robbing a bank.
spk_0 I had this image of going into a bank and getting a big bag of money and the place that
spk_0 I dreamed about going to was New York.
spk_0 I thought of New York as being synonymous with the mafia and I thought, well, maybe if
spk_0 I could go there somehow, I could ingratiate myself to someone in that family and that
spk_0 would become my new family as opposed to this family who doesn't seem to want me and
spk_0 who I can do nothing right for.
spk_0 It was all just a child's fantasy until one day in class, when X witnessed something that
spk_0 made him realize it might be time to act.
spk_0 A quiet, smaller kid said something to a bigger, tougher kid, the bigger kid pounced.
spk_0 He started kicking him and including kicking him in the face.
spk_0 That really shook me on my way home on the bus that day.
spk_0 I remember thinking I got to get out of here.
spk_0 Like you felt like there was more of an imperative like you were next.
spk_0 Yeah, because I saw myself as that powerless kid.
spk_0 And I even, this is like years and years and years ago and I still get so emotional
spk_0 about it.
spk_0 It's like what a horrible way to go through a day and I just thought I don't want that
spk_0 to be me.
spk_0 And so he came up with a plan.
spk_0 There was a bank downtown where his mom was a customer.
spk_0 In the movies, there was always a silent alarm, which meant he'd only have a few minutes
spk_0 to do what he needed to before the police arrived.
spk_0 He'd have to move quickly.
spk_0 He'd also need a hideout.
spk_0 There was a hotel about a block away from the bank.
spk_0 After the robbery, he could rent a room.
spk_0 Once the coast was clear, he'd call a taxi to take him to the airport.
spk_0 And then it was off to New York.
spk_0 And this is the part of the story that feels hardest for X to tell.
spk_0 Okay.
spk_0 My dad owned a shotgun, which he had used to hunt.
spk_0 It was in a closet.
spk_0 And the first thing I did when I got home was I took that gun, I took it into my bedroom.
spk_0 And with a hacksaw, I saw it the barrel off so it would be easy to carry.
spk_0 I remember once the barrel came off and I had removed it, I thought, okay, I don't really
spk_0 know if I want to do this.
spk_0 I'm kind of terrified.
spk_0 But now I'm in.
spk_0 I can't.
spk_0 I'm on this track now that I can't back up on.
spk_0 I have to go forward because I've now destroyed my dad's gun.
spk_0 And eventually that will come to light.
spk_0 I didn't sleep very well that night.
spk_0 I got up in the morning, you know, after staring at the ceiling for what seemed like hours.
spk_0 I remember going out and my mom was putting breakfast on the table.
spk_0 The television was on and they were talking about the 1992 presidential campaign and
spk_0 does Governor Bill Clinton.
spk_0 And then I just remember thinking like, this is a world I'm no longer part of.
spk_0 I don't, none of that means anything to me.
spk_0 Today I'm going into a whole different world and I'm leaving this one behind.
spk_0 It was October, the beginning of ninth grade.
spk_0 X had just turned 14 years old.
spk_0 X packed a suitcase with some clothes and books and a few favorite CDs, iced tea, they might
spk_0 be giants.
spk_0 He stole a pair of his mother's pantyhose to pull over his face as a disguise.
spk_0 He put on a trench coat and hid the sought-off shotgun inside.
spk_0 As he got on the school bus, the driver asked about his outfit.
spk_0 It's for drama class, he said.
spk_0 When the bus arrived at school, he was the last to get off.
spk_0 All around him, kids were streaming out of buses and parents' cars, filing into school,
spk_0 going about another normal day.
spk_0 And there was a moment of standing there and if I turned left, I would be the crowd of kids
spk_0 and heading towards the entrance of the school.
spk_0 If I turned right, I'd be off school grounds and walking towards where the bank was.
spk_0 Maybe it still wasn't too late to give up on his plan.
spk_0 Like I could just go to school and life could just go back to what it was yesterday in the day before.
spk_0 But I turned the other way and I walked towards the bank.
spk_0 When X arrived, the bank was still closed.
spk_0 So at the back of the bank's parking lot, he waited behind some trees.
spk_0 And then, at 1015, he took a deep breath.
spk_0 Okay, he thought, here we go.
spk_0 And so I pulled stocking over my face and I ran through the parking lot and I entered the bank.
spk_0 With the gun raised in the air and I yelled something to the effect of everybody getting on the floor and this was a robbery.
spk_0 It was like a dream or like watching someone else go through these actions.
spk_0 Like I was a passenger and they were doing the driving.
spk_0 Yeah.
spk_0 I remember there was a guy, the first person who was standing in line and he turned toward me and started laughing.
spk_0 I don't know if he thought it was a joke or he just couldn't believe that this little
spk_0 tips-queue voice kid was holding up a bank or something.
spk_0 But that really made me mad.
spk_0 I felt like I was being laughed at.
spk_0 And so I pointed the gun at him and said, this isn't a joke.
spk_0 And he got down and I remember feeling kind of a surge of like, okay, this is power.
spk_0 Had you ever used a gun before?
spk_0 No, I was actually kind of scared of him.
spk_0 Like I didn't load this gun because I was scared that I would get hurt or somebody would get hurt.
spk_0 I didn't want to hurt anybody.
spk_0 X knew that most of the money would be in the vault.
spk_0 He forced two bank tellers to bring him in there and told them to stuff stacks of bills into his bag.
spk_0 When the bag grew full, he picked it up and walked past all the customers still lying on the floor.
spk_0 Then he exited out the front door and made his way to a dumpster where he threw away the shotgun.
spk_0 And I entered the hotel just a teenager with a green and yellow sports bag of over $40,000.
spk_0 Unbelievably, the plan had worked.
spk_0 Now X just had to wait out the police who would be responding to the scene.
spk_0 And then he'd be off to New York.
spk_0 He marched up to the hotel clerk and asked for a room.
spk_0 And she kind of looked at me like, what?
spk_0 And she said, I'm sorry, all of our rooms are rented by the month.
spk_0 This isn't like that kind of hotel where you can come and just get a room for a night.
spk_0 Daily versus monthly raids.
spk_0 The one thing, movies hadn't prepared him for.
spk_0 X Panicked.
spk_0 He couldn't just hang out in the lobby.
spk_0 A kid playing hooky would draw attention.
spk_0 So he headed out the hotel door.
spk_0 And right on the corner of the street is a police officer.
spk_0 X had two options.
spk_0 Walk away from the officer, which might look suspicious, or walk towards him.
spk_0 And so I decided to walk towards him and try to act as cool as I could.
spk_0 Just after passing the officer and crossing the street, he heard the policeman cry out, freeze.
spk_0 When X turned around, the cops gun was pointed right at him.
spk_0 X was arrested and from there things moved quickly.
spk_0 At the police station, he confessed to the crime and a date was said in juvenile court.
spk_0 Expand the next few nights in jail.
spk_0 Because his parents couldn't afford a lawyer, one was appointed to him.
spk_0 After the court proceedings, he was allowed to see his parents.
spk_0 It was his first time seeing them since breakfast on the morning of the robbery.
spk_0 They were just destroyed.
spk_0 I've never seen them cry as much.
spk_0 It was hard for me to look at.
spk_0 They were so upset.
spk_0 They just looked broken.
spk_0 A few days later, X was sentenced to 12 years.
spk_0 I remember hearing that big long number and thinking,
spk_0 okay, well, I guess they're not going to let me off because I was a kid.
spk_0 And I remember going back to my cell and crying because it was like,
spk_0 okay, this is really sinking in now.
spk_0 I'm going to be here for a long time.
spk_0 X was sent to a youth facility where he was one of the youngest inmates.
spk_0 He spent a lot of time reading, mostly the classics, Dickens, Moby Dick, the Bible.
spk_0 He underwent an intensive treatment program of daily therapies and took his rehabilitation seriously.
spk_0 After three years, when his case came up for review, he was released at the age of 17.
spk_0 From here, X's story, and I mean this in a good way, is unremarkable.
spk_0 He went to college, he got married, and his had good jobs.
spk_0 I ended up at one point working in the bank, which, wow, yeah, kind of funny.
spk_0 It's been over 30 years since the day of the robbery.
spk_0 And in many ways, X's turned his life completely around.
spk_0 And yet, when he thinks about that day,
spk_0 I really feel so ashamed and so regretful.
spk_0 So much so that it's almost like he's divided himself into,
spk_0 there's the boy who is capable of committing that crime,
spk_0 and the grown man to whom that boy is a stranger.
spk_0 A part of the reason it's been so hard for X to tell the story is because in a weird way,
spk_0 it's like he's telling someone else's story.
spk_0 And it's a story that all his life, he's been told no one wants to hear.
spk_0 My parents, in particular, just want to pretend like it never even happened,
spk_0 and they were very embarrassed and kept it very secret.
spk_0 It wasn't a matter of just don't tell anyone.
spk_0 It was if anybody asked, he went to go live with one of your older brothers.
spk_0 I spoke to several of X's six brothers to hear how the crime impacted the family.
spk_0 My mom, I think, was really embarrassed by this.
spk_0 She thought the community would judge her.
spk_0 For years, I didn't tell people about it, like well into my adulthood.
spk_0 It wasn't until maybe my sophomore year of high school that I shared it with some very close friends.
spk_0 Yeah, it had that feel.
spk_0 It was weird. I remember being really nervous.
spk_0 Like, oh my gosh, are they going to judge me?
spk_0 No.
spk_0 When you're told it's a nine-year-old, that this thing is really embarrassing and shameful.
spk_0 You almost absorb it as like your own.
spk_0 You take it on.
spk_0 To feel compelled to keep up a lie, to feel shame.
spk_0 That's difficult for a nine-year-old.
spk_0 And it can remain difficult.
spk_0 I didn't feel comfortable breaking about silence.
spk_0 This is another of X's brothers, now a middle-aged man.
spk_0 Even now, my wife, I've been married to her for over 20 years.
spk_0 I've never told her about it.
spk_0 You've never told your wife about your brother?
spk_0 Yeah, that's right.
spk_0 Until even now?
spk_0 Yeah.
spk_0 Wow. Did you feel compelled to share it with her at any point?
spk_0 I could say, I don't know, over the last couple of decades, there's probably been one or two instances
spk_0 where I thought about mentioning it.
spk_0 But after this interview, I may tell her, probably will.
spk_0 It hasn't come up yet.
spk_0 Shame can be silencing.
spk_0 And so for 30 years, X has kept quiet.
spk_0 But it hasn't prevented him from thinking about the people in the bank that day.
spk_0 Which is why he's come to me.
spk_0 The people that were there, I was hoping that I might be able to at least let them know in some fashion that I'm really sorry that I destroyed their piece and left them with a lot of trauma.
spk_0 In all those movies X love to watch, after the crime is committed, the camera remains on the criminal, the star.
spk_0 It never follows the customers, the employees. They're just extras.
spk_0 But X wants to know what became of them, how that day fits into their lives.
spk_0 And most of all, he wants to apologize.
spk_0 I tried to imagine what the rest of their day was like.
spk_0 I'm guessing they went home early and spouses were called, their children were called.
spk_0 And they had to tell that story probably multiple times to police, to family, and relive it.
spk_0 And how do they sleep that night?
spk_0 And for the nights to come, it is just horrific to me.
spk_0 And I talked earlier about the students at the school who I saw get beat up.
spk_0 I empathized with the guy on the floor, getting his face kicked.
spk_0 It never would have occurred to me that I would have been the bully in that scenario,
spk_0 that I would be the one metaphorically anyway doing the kicking.
spk_0 After the break, the day of the robbery, from the perspective of the victims.
spk_0 I'm Shankar Vedantam.
spk_0 Here to tell you about a great mystery.
spk_0 That mystery is you.
spk_0 As the host of a podcast called Hidden Brain, I explored big questions about what it means to be human.
spk_0 Questions like, where do our emotions come from?
spk_0 Why do so many of us feel overwhelmed by modern life?
spk_0 How can we better understand the people around us?
spk_0 Discover your Hidden Brain.
spk_0 Find us wherever you get your podcasts.
spk_0 When X thinks about apologizing, there are three people he wants to apologize to.
spk_0 First, the bank tellers, the two women who led him into the vault that day.
spk_0 That vault was a very small room, and they were in very close proximity to me.
spk_0 So close, in fact, that at one point, while opening his gym bag,
spk_0 X unthinkingly leaned the shotgun against one of their thighs.
spk_0 They didn't know it wasn't loaded, they didn't know how unstable I was, they didn't know anything.
spk_0 And to feel the weight of that against their leg is just horrifying.
spk_0 The other person X wants to apologize to is the officer who arrested him that day.
spk_0 There's some stuff that's fuzzy, but I remember this very well.
spk_0 After the policeman yelled for him to drop the money,
spk_0 X reached into his back pocket, where he had kept a few bills stashed for his cab to the airport.
spk_0 Not thinking how a police officer might perceive someone reaching behind their back and pulling something out.
spk_0 I found out later that he came very close to shooting me,
spk_0 and that Macop was very distraught thinking that he almost shot a teenage kid.
spk_0 Teen NABbed for Bank theft reads a local newspaper the day after the robbery.
spk_0 The article names the arresting policeman as Officer Roy Tupin.
spk_0 Our search for Officer Tupin is a few years too late, though.
spk_0 In 2019, Tupin died in a diving accident.
spk_0 My name is Nick Tupin. I'm the son of the arresting officer on the day of the robbery.
spk_0 Nick says his dad told him stories about that day.
spk_0 It's my knowledge that was the closest that he'd ever gotten to shooting anyone.
spk_0 Yeah, it shook his world.
spk_0 He took some time off of work.
spk_0 You know, he wasn't sure that that was his career path anymore.
spk_0 I know that it messed with him.
spk_0 One thing Tupin never shared with his son was what kept him from shooting acts when he reached into his pocket.
spk_0 But Nick has a theory.
spk_0 14 years old, he's on 43 now, born in 78, so you do the math.
spk_0 Yeah, you would have been about the same age.
spk_0 Imagine he looked at that kid like he was looking at me kind of deal.
spk_0 When I tell Nick about X's undertaking, how he's been hoping to make a man's for that day,
spk_0 he offers this.
spk_0 I think dad would have forgiven him all the time ago, apparently I really do.
spk_0 What makes you think that?
spk_0 As he got older, just some of the rhetoric that people make mistakes.
spk_0 And you just hope, like hell, that they don't have life-changing consequences for what it's worth.
spk_0 After speaking with Nick, I turn my attention to the bank tellers.
spk_0 They aren't identified in any of the articles, and the police reports have redacted their names.
spk_0 And since the courthouse records have been sealed, and the bank itself no longer exists,
spk_0 I decide that my best bet is to post a sort of missing person's notice on the local paper.
spk_0 I ask if there's anyone who might remember the bank robbery from over 30 years ago, or the bank employees from that time.
spk_0 One person responds, she doesn't know the tellers, but she does know about the robbery.
spk_0 Even though my ad didn't mention X by name, she knew who it was immediately.
spk_0 I sat behind X in Spanish class, she says.
spk_0 And so, the day after the robbery, when a photo of X lying face down was published in the newspaper, she recognized him.
spk_0 Because her desk was behind his, she knew the back of his head well.
spk_0 He had a small bald spot, and the bullies teased him about it relentlessly.
spk_0 I emailed because I was thinking, if X wants to talk about why he did it, he probably would say he was bullied.
spk_0 I want to back him up.
spk_0 She says she can understand why X felt so desperate.
spk_0 She was a target of the same bullies.
spk_0 She too spent her lunches in the library, in her case reading science fiction, and imagining a life in a different world.
spk_0 It makes me sad, she says.
spk_0 If he stuck around, maybe we would have been friends.
spk_0 Because the missing person noticed he owed no leads, I start combing through old articles for names that might connect me to the tellers.
spk_0 Hi, I'm William, and I was a customer in the bank of the day of the robbery.
spk_0 Not only was William a customer, but in one of the articles I read, he's described as chasing X after he fled, in hopes of apprehending him.
spk_0 Many times you're facing somebody in a combat situation.
spk_0 Everything else around you disappears.
spk_0 It just went total vision on this guy.
spk_0 Who is this son of a bitch?
spk_0 What inspired you, are you a risk taker, kind of person?
spk_0 Yeah, many years of martial art training.
spk_0 That's where that comes from. No fear.
spk_0 Before I can ask William about the bank tellers, we're interrupted.
spk_0 Just one second, we're going to order something from a drive in.
spk_0 William is talking to me from his car. He's with his wife.
spk_0 The two of us hadn't eaten.
spk_0 Oh my.
spk_0 The doctor's off us all day.
spk_0 So I'm going to interrupt you here, I'm going to place his order.
spk_0 Yeah, don't mind me.
spk_0 Where's that button?
spk_0 Okay.
spk_0 I can help you.
spk_0 Yes, this is a small order of nuggets.
spk_0 Four or six.
spk_0 Just four.
spk_0 Quickly, I do the math.
spk_0 Four divided by two is two?
spk_0 Two nuggets per spouse?
spk_0 For those of you unfamiliar with nugget apportioning or nuggets,
spk_0 eating two nuggets is like eating two grapes, two peanuts.
spk_0 It's like eating two nuggets.
spk_0 With my microphone muted to William, I process my feelings of judgementalness
spk_0 to my producer, Stevie, like you're starving and you're like,
spk_0 oh my god, I haven't eaten all day.
spk_0 I'll share four nuggets.
spk_0 And I'm like a nugget's that big.
spk_0 Okay.
spk_0 Thank you.
spk_0 All right, so go right ahead.
spk_0 I proceed with the most pressing question.
spk_0 Is that that's all you're getting?
spk_0 Well, we have a nice dinner plan, so we don't want to wreck the dinner.
spk_0 Yeah, so I'm just going to get a little appetizer.
spk_0 William has no fear.
spk_0 Save the fear of ruining his appetite.
spk_0 With that bit of housekeeping out of the way, I ask William if he remembers the names of the tellers.
spk_0 He says no, but he does remember X.
spk_0 Yeah, yell that everybody to get on the effing floor or I'll blow your heads off.
spk_0 Did he sound like a child?
spk_0 No, he sounded very menacing.
spk_0 And he did not look like a child.
spk_0 Exa told me that he looked like a pipsqueet kid that people laughed.
spk_0 But William says he doesn't remember any laughter, only screaming.
spk_0 I found out the next day that he was 14 years old.
spk_0 I couldn't believe it, unbelievable.
spk_0 You know, that takes hootspots.
spk_0 Roars real desperate.
spk_0 My name is Lujin.
spk_0 I was a former manager of the **** hotel.
spk_0 In the hope there might be someone who can connect me to the tellers.
spk_0 I spend my days speaking with anyone vaguely associated with the robbery.
spk_0 My name is Mary and I represented in juvenile court.
spk_0 My name is George.
spk_0 I wrote for the **** we stayed there.
spk_0 My name is Jane and I used to be the librarian at **** high school.
spk_0 My name is Veil and I was a police sergeant at the police department there.
spk_0 But no one can recall the tellers.
spk_0 Did you bank at that bank across the street?
spk_0 No, I did not.
spk_0 I wish I could help you, but I don't really remember.
spk_0 Did you know any of the people that worked there?
spk_0 No, no.
spk_0 No, no.
spk_0 Sorry, I can't help you.
spk_0 But then, after two months of phone calls,
spk_0 I call a restaurant across the street from where the bank used to be.
spk_0 The owner of the restaurant is now 84 years old.
spk_0 When I ask if she remembers anyone who worked at the bank back then,
spk_0 anyone she was friendly with,
spk_0 she gives me the names of two people, two tellers,
spk_0 Darlene and Judy.
spk_0 I'm Shankar Vedantam.
spk_0 Here to tell you about a great mystery.
spk_0 That mystery is you.
spk_0 As the host of a podcast called Hidden Brain,
spk_0 I explore big questions about what it means to be human.
spk_0 Questions like,
spk_0 where do our emotions come from?
spk_0 Why do so many of us feel overwhelmed by modern life?
spk_0 How can we better understand the people around us?
spk_0 Discover your Hidden Brain.
spk_0 Find us wherever you get your podcasts.
spk_0 It takes me a few weeks, but eventually I find Darlene and Judy.
spk_0 And as it turns out, incredibly,
spk_0 they were the very same tellers working on the day of the robbery.
spk_0 After months of searching, we found them.
spk_0 Judy is now in her 80s and living in a retirement home.
spk_0 But when I speak with her daughter,
spk_0 she tells me her mother isn't interested in talking,
spk_0 that she wants to leave the past and the past.
spk_0 As for Darlene, at first she seems open,
spk_0 but then her husband grows ill,
spk_0 and she stops returning my calls.
spk_0 I can't tell if it's because her husband is sick,
spk_0 or if she's changed her mind about revisiting that day.
spk_0 Hey Jonathan, how are you?
spk_0 Hey, good, how are you?
spk_0 It's been over a year since I first spoke with X.
spk_0 I tell him the bank tellers don't seem to want to speak with him.
spk_0 X is disappointed, but says he understands.
spk_0 He says it though, like he's starting to feel
spk_0 that maybe this whole undertaking was foolish.
spk_0 To them, I'm just still that same guy that did that thing.
spk_0 It's hard for me to blame them, I guess.
spk_0 I suggest to X that maybe he should try writing a letter to Darlene,
spk_0 since she'd seemed open to talking.
spk_0 This way, maybe he can at least offer her his words,
spk_0 and she could decide what to do with them.
spk_0 Darlene, X writes,
spk_0 I understand that words alone cannot undo the pain I caused you
spk_0 and the others in the bank that morning.
spk_0 Still, X expresses as regret, tells Darlene how he's thought of her often,
spk_0 he apologizes many times.
spk_0 After the letter is mailed off,
spk_0 two years passed during which X receives no response.
spk_0 And that's where I think our story ends.
spk_0 Hey Jonathan.
spk_0 Hey, how are you?
spk_0 A lot has happened since we last spoke.
spk_0 Yeah, yeah, fill me in.
spk_0 But then, in May 2025, X reaches out.
spk_0 A year ago in November,
spk_0 I got a call from one of my brothers,
spk_0 and he doesn't usually call me on the phone,
spk_0 so I picked up, and I found out that my dad had passed away.
spk_0 Oh, geez, I'm sorry.
spk_0 Yeah, I don't thank you. Thank you.
spk_0 X says it was while helping write his father's obituary
spk_0 in listening to his father be eulogized at the funeral,
spk_0 hearing the people who loved him speak about all he'd done in his life.
spk_0 That something happened.
spk_0 It reminded me that this person was more than an unequipped parent,
spk_0 or he was more than just the worst experiences I had with him.
spk_0 Taking a broader view of his father's life helped X to zoom out on his own.
spk_0 There was the day of the robbery,
spk_0 but then there were all the days after, too.
spk_0 If his father's legacy didn't have to be defined by one bad thing,
spk_0 perhaps his own legacy didn't have to be either.
spk_0 You know, when we initially started talking,
spk_0 my hope was that I would be able to speak to the people who were there
spk_0 and that didn't work out.
spk_0 And it was hard for me, I think,
spk_0 because I almost felt like until they forgave me,
spk_0 I wasn't allowed to forgive myself.
spk_0 That that was like a luxury that I didn't deserve or something like that.
spk_0 Over the past three years,
spk_0 I've sought out the tellers, the customers,
spk_0 and even the policemen who almost shot X,
spk_0 all in service to X-finding forgiveness.
spk_0 But there was always one person's forgiveness that he discounted.
spk_0 I was a kid. You know, my head wasn't on straight,
spk_0 and I was dealing with a lot of pain,
spk_0 and I felt like that's what I needed to do to get out of that pain.
spk_0 And I think the closure I've come to realize needs to happen here is my own.
spk_0 That's the little mini-journey I went on was like,
spk_0 I don't have to keep lying or hiding or running from this,
spk_0 or pretending like this was a different person.
spk_0 When X-first came to me,
spk_0 he was trying to figure out how to tell a story.
spk_0 But in everything from witness accounts to confessions,
spk_0 from great expectations to Moby Dick,
spk_0 stories begin by asserting who the person telling the story is.
spk_0 How can you tell your story if you can't even say your name?
spk_0 You know, I'm going through the trouble of asking you not to call me by my name
spk_0 and worrying about people finding out,
spk_0 but it's me. It's my story.
spk_0 And I'm not proud of it,
spk_0 but I'm also not trying to run away from it.
spk_0 I've done it for long enough.
spk_0 That's really wonderful to hear you say that.
spk_0 And I don't think it's such a mini-journey, you know?
spk_0 Yeah.
spk_0 So do you think all that being said,
spk_0 you think you're okay with just coming out and saying it?
spk_0 My name is John Paul,
spk_0 and when I was 14 years old,
spk_0 I robbed a bank for $40,000.
spk_0 Yeah. How does that feel?
spk_0 Um,
spk_0 like there's a lightness in it.
spk_0 I don't know that I've ever said those exact words.
spk_0 I almost hesitate to say it,
spk_0 because it's like I said,
spk_0 I felt like I wasn't allowed to not wallow and shame,
spk_0 but I feel relieved, I guess.
spk_0 Yeah. It's really, uh,
spk_0 uh, John Paul,
spk_0 that's a very nice thing to hear.
spk_0 Thank you.
spk_0 Yeah, it's kind of surprising to me how I've just been saying words, right?
spk_0 Like I'm just talking,
spk_0 like how could words make that much of a difference?
spk_0 Words allow us to tell the story of who we are,
spk_0 and telling that story can feel like a burden,
spk_0 but it can also help lay that burden to rest.
spk_0 It feels like a new chapter in my life or a new story,
spk_0 and I'm kind of allowing myself to be excited about it.
spk_0 Now that the furniture's returning to its goodwill home,
spk_0 now that the last month's rant is skiing
spk_0 and with the damage deposit,
spk_0 take this moment to decide.
spk_0 If we meant it if we tried,
spk_0 we felt around for five days.
spk_0 From things that accidently taught us.
spk_0 This episode of Heavyweight was produced by Supervising Producer Stevie Lane
spk_0 and me Jonathan Goldstein, along with Phoebe Flanagan.
spk_0 Our senior producer is Kalila Holt,
spk_0 editorial guidance from Emily Condon.
spk_0 Special thanks to Sean Cole, Chris Neary, Ben Nattov Halfrey,
spk_0 Lydia Jean Cot, Connie Williams, Catherine Reinhart,
spk_0 and especially Mojini Medgalker.
spk_0 Emma Munger mixed the episode with original music
spk_0 by Christine Fellows, John K. Samson, and Bobby Lord.
spk_0 Additional scoring by Blue Dot Sessions.
spk_0 Our theme song is by the week or than's courtesy of Epitaph Records.
spk_0 Follow us on Instagram at Heavyweight Podcast or email us
spk_0 at heavyweightatpushkin.fm.
spk_0 We'll be back with a brand new episode in two weeks.
spk_0 Short
spk_0 music
spk_0 Ukrainian We Love You
spk_0 Ład James Chakoen
spk_0 I call it baby Jop. I'm like this is baby Jop. You could come to jail because it's easy, right? But to get out is hard is real hard to get out.
spk_0 You know we're on a constant loop and this loop never ends. I don't think it's gonna end.
spk_0 The Loop. A new series from your hustle.
spk_0 Comment October 8th.
spk_0 This is an I Heart Podcast.