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Sept. 5, 2024 - Weird Little Guys
01:15:09
Soldier of Misfortune: Frank Sweeney, Pt. 2

In part two of the life of the Forrest Gump of fascism, Frank Sweeney leads the CIA on an international goose chase, befriends and then betrays a serial killer, and just can't stop committing crimes by mail.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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In California during the summer of 1975, within the span of 17 days and less than 90 miles, two women did something no other woman had done before, tried to assassinate the President of the United States.
One was the protégé of Charles Manson.
26-year-old Lynette Fromm, nicknamed Squeaky.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore in her 40s.
The story of one strange and violent summer, this season on the new podcast Rip Current.
Listen to Rip Current on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Ever get the feeling someone's watching you?
Well, in 1971, a group of anti-war activists had that feeling.
I was in the heart of the dragon, and it was my job to stop the fire.
So they decided to do something insane.
Break in to the FBI and expose J. Edgar Hoover's dirty secrets.
We had some idea that this was pretty explosive.
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Binge the full second season of Snafu now on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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Open your free iHeart app and search true story of The Fake Zombies and start listening.
I'm Angie Martinez, and on my podcast, I like to talk to everyone from Hall of Fame athletes to iconic musicians about getting real on some of the complications and challenges of real life.
I had the best dad, and I had the best memories, and the greatest experience, and that's all I want for my kids, as long as they can have that.
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I'm so glad you decided to come back for part two of the story of Frank Sweeney.
If you didn't hear part one, you really need to.
This isn't the kind of story you can pick up midway through.
You missed a cop getting shot with a machine gun in a New Jersey suburb, the Rhodesian Bush War, possible CIA involvement in an Australian political crisis, and we're just about to pick up with our escaped spy.
The second 40 years of Frank's life are just as weird as the first 40.
There's a serial killer, a mafia trial, two different secret wives, and a lot of misuse of the postal service.
I'm Molly Conger, and this is Weird Little Guys.
Now, when we left off last week, Frank was making friends in prison. when we left off last week, Frank was making friends His new friend in 1978 was Christopher Boyce, who'd just been convicted of espionage for selling documents he stole from his job as a CIA contractor to the Soviets.
And then he escaped from prison.
Whether or not Frank was still in custody on the day Christopher Boyce escaped from prison is surprisingly hard to pin down.
Several newspaper articles about Frank's role in the ensuing manhunt for the missing spy put his release a month before the escape, but others put it a month after.
Seems like this detail would really matter, but no one seemed very concerned about it in 1980.
Newspapers that appeared to be quoting the same unnamed source from the U.S.
Marshals published conflicting stories, with some saying Frank flew to South Africa shortly before Boyce's escape, and others putting that trip slightly after the escape, although both of these articles say it was exactly 23 days before or after.
But in my frustrated search through 40-year-old newspapers trying to figure out which prison Frank was calling home that year, I found another surprise.
Another stabbing.
Shortly after Frank was transferred to a state prison in Maine in 1978, he stabbed another inmate in the chest during an argument in the prison library.
And again, we have this problem that keeps coming up in Frank's life.
He loves to talk to reporters.
And he loves to lie.
It's the 70s.
These reporters don't have the internet.
They don't have access to electronic court records.
So a lot of Frank's lies get published.
When he files a lawsuit against the prison warden in Maine about the conditions in solitary confinement, newspapers publish his claim that he was placed in solitary for a stabbing he'd been suspected of.
But he says the investigation cleared him.
A local newspaper in Bangor, Maine, however, had a reporter in the courtroom when he entered a guilty plea to that stabbing.
But regardless of whether he got out in December of 79 or February of 1980, we know Frank flew to South Africa soon after he got out and that he stayed there for a couple of months.
The story of Christopher Boyce's 19 months on the lam is long and strange.
Sean Penn plays Boyce's friend, the cocaine dealer Dalton Lee, in the 1985 film adaptation of the book The Falcon and the Snowman about the entire affair.
I didn't watch it.
There's only so much I can do.
But remember, this is the Cold War.
A missing Soviet spy is a pretty big PR problem for the United States government.
There was speculation that the KGB had helped him escape.
Boyce himself called a reporter from a payphone a few months after the escape and laughed about the idea that he'd had foreign assistance.
He says he just climbed the fence and walked out.
The task force focused on finding Boyce believed all along that he'd never actually left California.
And they weren't too far off.
He was in Idaho the whole time.
But a lot of resources ended up getting expended pursuing a false lead planted by our friend Frank.
No, I can't prove Frank sent all of these letters himself.
I can't even find contemporary in his reporting where anyone ever outright said that they believed Frank sent these letters.
And he was never charged in connection with his meddling in this investigation.
But just a few weeks after Boyce went missing, the United States ambassador in South Africa got a letter.
The postmark indicated that it had been mailed from within South Africa.
And the letter said a known mercenary named Shellhammer had assisted the convicted American spy Christopher Boyce in entering South Africa by way of a fake passport.
Now, who do we know with a history of forging passports, of mailing anonymous letters to officials in Southern Africa implicating himself in crimes, and using the pseudonym Shellhammer?
And he absolutely knew the feds would tie him to that alias because it was the one he had used in those classified ads in 1976 that put him in prison for mail fraud.
And Frank was in South Africa in February of 1980 when that letter was mailed.
It seems he wanted the authorities to know he was involved.
Why else would he write his own pseudonym into the story?
So Feds quickly turned their attention to Frank.
They placed a tracking beacon on his car.
They followed him for months.
And he probably knew he was being followed.
They followed him from his home in New Jersey all the way out to California.
And from a California motel, he made several phone calls to an apartment in Hermosa Beach.
And when they searched that apartment, they found it abandoned, but they found several letters that Frank had sent to a third man, another friend of theirs from prison.
One of which read, somehow they discovered that I helped him get into South Africa.
I suspect an informer has been at work.
But there was no informer.
Frank wanted them to find those letters, and Boyce was never in South Africa.
The only reason anyone thought Boyce might be in South Africa is because Frank was planting false clues all over the world to point them as far away as possible from a little hunting cabin in the mountains of Idaho.
U.S.
Marshals eventually got frustrated following Frank around.
A federal prosecutor would actually say in open court that Frank's arrest in July of 1981 was specifically intended to give them leverage to make him cooperate in the Boyce case.
It seemed like he knew something and they wanted to know what it was.
As a felon, Frank wasn't allowed to have any guns.
And, of course, Frank had guns.
I did find one newspaper article that dropped a sort of suspicious sounding hint that they only picked Frank up for that gun charge because of an anonymous tip.
So maybe that was him too.
But they picked him up in New Jersey at the end of July and he pretended to be very cooperative, telling them that he actually had some documents that would lead them straight to Boyce and he would happily show them to them.
He voluntarily turned over the key to the bank deposit box he was keeping them in.
And inside, they found several letters to Frank that had been mailed from South Africa.
Sounds like more red herrings planted by Frank.
He'd flown to South Africa several times in the year and a half since his release, and was probably mailing himself these letters on those visits.
So now, in August of 1981, it seems like there could be some evidence that Boyce really was in South Africa.
Frank says he was promised placement in the Witness Protection Program for his help.
And maybe they did make that promise.
If he really could help them recover their missing spy, that's a reasonable enough deal.
And just a few weeks after all of Frank's help, Boyce was recaptured.
But it wasn't due in any part to Frank's information.
During his year and a half on the run, Boyce obviously couldn't get a job.
So he made money the old-fashioned way.
Bank robbery.
He kept it pretty small time, nothing flashy where you get into the vault, just little stick ups a few thousand at a time from the teller.
He's tied to at least 17 bank robberies in Idaho and Washington State during that time, eventually teaming up with a couple of brothers from Idaho.
And it was one of those men who turned Boyce in for the reward money.
No honor among thieves, I guess.
Boyce was taken back into custody on August 21st, 1981.
And he wasn't in South Africa.
Nationwide flight ended for Christopher Boyce here at the Pit Stop Drive-In in Port Angeles, Washington.
He was eating a cheeseburger and onion rings when eight federal agents jumped him.
Boyce was apparently living a triple life.
So, Frank lied.
Obviously.
He lied pretty egregiously.
He falsified documents.
He led U.S.
Marshals and the CIA on an international goose chase.
And maybe that's why he never got charged for it.
That's pretty embarrassing to put on the record.
But they did still have that gun charge they'd picked him up on to use as leverage.
So they set a sentencing date, but Frank didn't show up.
He was trying to skip the country, again.
Remember back in 1976, he got all the way to South Africa after skipping his sentencing date for mail fraud.
But this time he was picked up just a few days after he missed court when a motel clerk in Montvale, New Jersey recognized him.
When he was finally dragged in for sentencing, the government said they'd hoped Frank was going to be able to help them in the Boyce case, but nothing he said was of any use.
Frank said he had no choice but to flee the country and start a new life on a cattle ranch in Australia with his wife because the government had reneged on their deal to put him in witness protection.
I have to imagine there was some bickering back and forth between an indignant Frank and an exasperated federal prosecutor because in the end, Judge H. Curtis Meener said, I have neither the time nor the inclination to unravel all of the mysteries in this case.
However, they'd all ended up in his courtroom.
Whatever the convoluted backstory is here, this is a sentencing for illegal possession of a firearm.
And that's really all the judge can do that day.
So he sentenced Frank to four years.
Judge Meener said Frank was an explosive type of individual and that he was dangerous and mentally sick.
And he urged Frank to take advantage of the opportunity to get psychiatric help while he was in prison this time.
And yes, I did say wife.
When I first started poking around, trying to build my biographical backstory to sort of sketch out a skeleton of this man's life, I found a New Jersey state record for a marriage in August 1981 between Frank A. Sweeney and Adina M. Madison in Bergen County.
There are other men named Frank Sweeney, obviously, but it was a middle initial match, and it's the right county, and it was one of the rare months that Frank wasn't in prison.
But it didn't seem right, so I set it aside.
But this offhand mention at his sentencing hearing about a wife sent me back to it.
It is him.
After the feds picked him up at the end of July 1981 on that gun charge, he was released from custody.
He was cooperating, he took them to the bank to look at his fake evidence, all that.
And sometime that month, he got married.
I have no idea how they met, or where she came from, or what she thought she was going to get out of any of this, or if she knew Frank was planning on entering witness protection that month, or what on earth she saw in this man.
But I do know how the marriage ended.
Frank went back to prison that very same year, so they didn't have much time together.
I don't know where Deanna was while Frank was away, but by 1985, according to a decision by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, Deanna was living in Texas with her new boyfriend, Danny Lee Strong.
They couldn't have known each other very long before moving in together because Strong had only just gotten out of prison again for another in a string of pretty run-of-the-mill robbery and fraud charges.
And they didn't stay together long before they were arrested for murdering a man Strong said made a pass at Deanna.
She was ultimately only convicted of stealing the victim's car, which they fled the scene in, but Strong got 99 years for the brutal beating and asphyxiation of Robert Eugene Thomas.
Frank doesn't really factor into this story.
He's in prison in another state this whole time, but his name appears in a footnote of an appeals court decision upholding Strong's conviction.
Strong had sent Frank a letter after finding out that Deanna was planning to testify against him for the murder.
I can't imagine what you write in a letter to your girlfriend's husband about a situation like this, but all that to say, Frank really did have a wife that he planned to start a new life with in Australia, but she ended up watching her boyfriend choke a man to death in an apartment in Fort Worth instead.
This summer, a lone gunman on a rooftop reminded us that American presidents have long been the targets of assassins.
Nearly 50 years ago, President Gerald Ford faced two attempts on his life in less than three weeks.
A woman fired a shot at President Ford.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim.
A woman dressed in a long red skirt pointed a .45 caliber pistol at the president.
These are the only two times we know of that a woman has tried to assassinate a U.S.
president.
And the two assassins had never met.
One was a protege of infamous cult leader Charles Manson.
She is 26-year-old Lynette Alice Fromm, nicknamed Squeaky.
I always felt like Glenn Nett was kind of his right-hand woman.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI in the violent revolutionary underground.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
Sarah Jean could enter into these areas that other people couldn't.
A spy, basically.
The story of one strange and violent summer, this season on Rip Current.
Listen to Rip Current on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Hey there, it's Michael Lewis, author of Going Infinite, Moneyball, The Blind Side, and Liar's Poker.
On every season of my podcast, Against the Rules, I take a broad look at various characters in American life.
The referee, the coach, the expert.
My next season's all about fans and what the rise of sports betting is doing to them, to the teams, and even to my family.
I'm heading to Las Vegas and New Jersey and beyond to understand America's newest form of legalized gambling.
Listen to Against the Rules on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Fantasy football fans, the NFL season is here and now is the time to get ready to dominate your leagues.
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Hey, it's Jake Halpern.
We have a new limited series of my podcast Deep Cover out now, all about George Santos, the Republican congressman from New York who told a lot of stories about his life and his credentials, many of which turns out were not true.
It's like, you know, Mr. Ripley meets Catch Me If You Can.
I mean, the guy hoodwinked everyone.
He was very ambiguous and sketchy, quite honestly, about what the company did and how it made so much money overnight.
What prosecutors allege in the indictment is that most of that $12,000 goes directly to Santos' personal bank account.
I would go down these rabbit holes and start thinking about what is the nature of truth?
What can I actually tell the reader is real about this guy's story?
My phone is literally blowing up.
Inquiries about saying, is George going to jail?
What's going on?
And I thought, why are you doing this?
Why?
Listen to deep cover George Santos on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
For decades, the mafia had New York City in a stranglehold, with law enforcement seemingly powerless to intervene.
It uses terror to extort people.
However, one murder of a crime boss sparked a chain of events that would ultimately dismantle the mob.
It sent the message that we can prosecute these people.
Discover how law enforcement and prosecutors took on the mafia and together brought them down.
These bosses on the commission had no idea what was coming their way from the federal government.
From Wolf Entertainment and iHeart Radio, this is Law & Order Criminal Justice System.
The first two episodes drop on August 22nd.
Plus, did you know that you can listen to the episodes as they come out, completely ad-free?
Don't miss out!
Subscribe to the iHeart True Crime Plus channel today, available exclusively on Apple Podcasts.
On January 9th, 1982, The UVA men's basketball team lost to the Tar Heels in a close game, 60-65, at UNC's Carmichael Arena.
I'm not a basketball fan, and I wasn't born then.
But I guess it was an exciting game.
UNC had knocked UVA out of the Final Four the year before.
But Joseph Paul Franklin, an avowed neo-Nazi who'd recently been handed his first couple of life sentences for two of his many murders, didn't care much for basketball.
He was in the rec room at the Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri, and he was trying to watch American Bandstand.
According to Frank, whose time at the Springfield Prison overlapped with Franklin's for a few weeks in 1981 until Franklin's transfer at the end of January 1982, the serial killer became enraged when a black prison guard changed the channel.
Later that year, Joseph Paul Franklin was back in court.
He'd spent years traveling the country robbing banks and murdering young black men and interracial couples, so it would take years to sort out what to do with him.
This time, he was on trial for the unsuccessful assassination attempt on civil rights activist Vernon Jordan.
On May 29th, 1980, the Fort Wayne, Indiana chapter of the National Urban League was hosting a banquet in honor of a visit from National Urban League President Vernon Jordan.
When a volunteer dropped him off at his hotel later that evening, a single bullet from a .30-06 rifle tore through his back.
He survived, but it's hard to build a case against a drifter sniper.
Nobody saw him.
The investigators had some handwriting analysis on a motel registration card, testimony from a grocery store clerk who identified Franklin as a man he'd had a strange conversation with, and a general idea that the crime fit Franklin's pattern, but it was a bit thin.
And then came Frank.
Oh, Frank loves to talk.
He loves to be helpful.
He's still in prison on that gun charge, but he told federal authorities that in the brief couple of weeks he'd been on the same cell block as Franklin, they'd chatted a few times and Franklin had confessed to him on several occasions about shooting Vernon Jordan.
On the stand, Frank testified about that evening in January when the guard changed the channel to the basketball game.
And it's a pretty good detail.
Frank was very specific that it was a UVA-UNC game, though he couldn't recall the date.
They were only on that cell block together for a few weeks, and there was in fact a UVA-UNC basketball game during that time period that would have been on television.
He testified that Franklin was furious about the incident and spent days fuming about it.
The two inmates were walking together in the exercise area a few days later when Franklin spotted that same guard again and turned to Frank and said, I'd like to blow him away like I shot that N-word bigwig in Indiana.
Frank says he also lamented that Jordan just wouldn't die after being shot and that he was, sorry I didn't shoot that white slut first, referring to the white woman who'd given Jordan a ride that night.
Frank was one of three jailhouse informants the government put on during that trial, all men who'd been in jail with Franklin, and all of whom said Franklin had admitted to various aspects of the crime in casual conversation.
Joseph Paul Franklin was actually acquitted at that federal trial.
Jurors said they believed Franklin shot Jordan, but they were hung up on the wording of the indictment, which specifically charged him with the shooting as a violation of Jordan's civil rights.
Years later, on death row for a variety of other murders, Franklin did confess to shooting Vernon Jordan.
When the trial was over, though, jurors who spoke to the press said they'd only believed one of the three jailhouse informants who testified.
Frank.
On cross-examination, Frank Sweeney seemed surprised to learn that the other two men had been paid thousands of dollars for their cooperation.
He wasn't getting paid.
But he wasn't upset.
He didn't need the money.
He'd inherited a quarter of a million dollars, which would be about a million dollars today, when his parents died.
All he wanted was witness protection and a positive letter to the New Jersey Parole Board.
Just like in the Boyce case, he very conveniently had some information the government wanted, and all he wanted in return was witness protection.
And this time, But he didn't get to keep it.
In 1984, Frank filed a lawsuit against the warden of the Alabama prison where he was still serving his sentence on that gun charge.
He said he was not receiving the protection afforded to him as a protected witness.
The warden's response to the suit was that Frank would not stop telling people that he was a protected witness, which was causing a lot of problems.
You're not supposed to do that.
In court, the warden's executive assistant said that the prison was considering contacting the Office of Enforcement Operations, the division of the DOJ that administers the Witness Security Program, to recommend his removal from the program, because they believed he was intentionally causing problems by talking about this constantly.
And it seems he was ultimately removed from the Witness Security Program around this time.
And maybe that had something to do with his decision to testify on behalf of Anthony Spilotro, the hot-headed Chicago mobster who handled the family's business in Las Vegas.
It couldn't have been an attempt to get back in the program.
He was testifying for the defense.
But maybe it was just spite.
He wanted to get somebody else kicked out of the program.
In 1983, when he was still in prison and still considered a protected witness, he briefly shared a cell with another guy in the program.
Frank Culotta was a mobster.
He was a member of Tony Spilotro's Hole in the Wall gang.
If you've seen the 1995 Scorsese movie Casino, it's that.
Quite literally.
Frank Marino, the character played by the guy who played Phil Leotardo on The Sopranos, is supposed to be Frank Cullata.
Joe Pesci's character, Nicky Santoro, is based on Tony Spilotro.
Just watch the movie, it's all very complicated and our friend Frank Sweeney had nothing to do with it.
But in 1983, the real-life Frank Cullata was sharing a cell with Frank Sweeney because they had both turned state's witness against very dangerous men.
Frank Sweeney had just testified against a serial killer, and Frank Cullata had turned on Spilotro after the FBI played him a recording of his friend talking about having him killed.
When Anthony Spilotro went on trial in 1986, Frank Cullata was out of prison and in the program.
And he was the government's star witness against Spilotro.
Frank Sweeney was finally out of prison again and home in New Jersey when he read in the paper that Culotta was going to be testifying.
According to Frank, he felt compelled to contact Spilotro's defense attorney because when they were cellmates, Culotta would often brag about committing perjury.
So the defense flew Frank out to Las Vegas and put him on the stand.
He claimed that after one of Culotta's appearances in court back in 1983, he came back to their shared cell and bragged, Frankie, I just put another one away.
You've heard of the traveling circus.
I'm the original traveling perjurer.
On cross-examination, Frank Sweeney admitted that when he'd been in the witness protection program, he had on several occasions threatened and even faked suicide attempts to get what he wanted out of federal prosecutors.
I wish I had more information on that.
That is incredibly strange behavior, and it does actually happen again later.
In the end, though, his testimony in that mob trial is just a strange little footnote, his third brush with the Witness Protection Program.
His testimony didn't matter much.
I don't think anyone believed it, and the case ended in a mistrial over allegations of jury tampering, and Anthony Spilotro went missing before they could retry the case.
The mobster and his brother were later found buried in a cornfield in Indiana.
Frank Cullata stayed in the Witness Protection Program for years, and Scorsese hired him as an on-set advisor when he shot Casino.
Cullata died of COVID in 2020.
And in 1989, Frank went back to prison for mail fraud.
Again.
The court record is too old to get any documents without haggling with an archivist, but the docket sheet does say that in addition to another 57 months in prison, the judge also banned Frank from ever offering anything for sale by mail.
So at first I assumed he was pulling the same scam he ran in 1976, where he placed ads for guns he didn't actually have and then ghosted would-be buyers after they sent him the money.
But it's much weirder than that.
I wish it was guns.
It wasn't guns this time.
He was running what one journalist called a cat scam.
He'd cut the tails off regular house cats and then run ads offering them as exotic purebred cats for $300.
If he really was as independently wealthy off his inheritance as he claimed, did he really need $300 for a mutilated cat?
Maybe he was just addicted to mail fraud.
As for the cats, one of the earliest mentions I could find of Frank in the newspaper archives was a 1958 article about the embalmed cat he got for his 15th birthday.
He was looking forward to dissecting it and adding it to his collection of oddities that already included a cat skeleton.
So, I hope all his fraudulent cats found happy homes even if their buyers were unhappy about losing $300.
But it's in an appeals court decision related to a parole violation in this second mail fraud case where we find the details of a campaign of terror against his neighbors that foreshadows the events at the end of this long, strange tale.
He was paroled in 1992 after serving about half of this sentence, and he was on probation for three years.
Just days before that three-year period ran out, he was charged with a probation violation.
He'd been convicted in New Jersey of sending obscene materials through the mail to a minor.
I know, I know, this show is starting to feel like a tour of America's weirdest sex crime, guys, but to be honest, I don't think there was anything sexual in his motivation for sending porno mags to a nine-year-old.
I know that doesn't sound possible.
Bear with me.
But after he got out of prison, he's living in an apartment back in his hometown of Tenafly, New Jersey.
A family of Russian immigrants moves into the apartment next door.
They have children.
Children are noisy.
Frank says he asked them to keep it down, but the noise continued.
In what the Second Circuit Court of Appeals would later call a rather bizarre set of circumstances, he decided to get back at these noisy children by engaging in a lengthy harassment campaign against the entire family.
At least twice, he shut off their electricity.
On multiple occasions, he filled the lock on their front door with staples, making it impossible to open.
He had the family's mail forwarded to Des Moines, Iowa.
The father of these noisy children was a doctor.
One of his colleagues received a letter purporting to be from an AIDS charity, informing the recipient that the doctor, the father of those noisy children, had tested positive for HIV.
And along that same line of thinking, he also sent a letter to the children's school, informing them that the nine-year-old boy had been exposed to HIV by his father.
And he sent letters to the Jewish Community Center, where the family were members, informing them that the entire family had been exposed to the virus.
Remember, this is 1993.
Telling people that this doctor has HIV could ruin his career.
The school could call social services and they probably wouldn't be welcome in the sauna at the community center if people believed this.
And in what would be his ultimate downfall here, he signed their nine-year-old son up for catalogs that sold pornographic materials.
It seems like he believed that the child's father would get the mail, which apparently wasn't going to Iowa anymore, see the catalog, believe his son had signed up for it, and would punish the boy.
And if the boy was grounded, he wouldn't be so noisy.
But it backfired and Frank was discovered as the culprit.
Police searched his apartment and found the typewriter he'd used to write all the letters and he quickly confessed.
He got four months in jail in New Jersey for sending obscene materials to a child, but the parole violation landed him back in federal prison for another year.
And maybe this trip back to prison gave him a chance to test out his own advice.
You see, between getting out in 1992 and going back in 1995, Frank was profiled in the New York Times.
The journalist, Charles Strum, actually used to write for the Bergen Record, the local paper Frank used to end up in every time he got arrested in the 60s, but Strum didn't come home from college and start at the Record until after Frank's armed standoff in the front yard.
And they weren't talking about their shared hometown.
They were talking about Frank's new consulting business.
In 1994, Frank put a classified ad in USA Today that read, Going to federal prison for the first time?
We will tell you what to expect and how to survive.
Our consultants are graduates of the federal prison system.
Frank A. Sweeney & Associates, Box 15, Demarest, New Jersey, 07627.
Frank told Strom that the idea came to him while he was reading the paper one morning in September 1993.
Lawrence Powell, one of the LA police officers convicted for his role in the beating of Rodney King, was quoted in the paper as being terrified at the prospect of going to prison.
Strum writes that Frank told him, I thought to myself, my God, there's probably a lot of people going to prison who's never been in jail before, primarily white collar criminals.
And they're probably terrified too.
They're just as frightened as he is.
So I thought maybe I can use my misfortune to help people and maybe make a profit doing it.
The article says Frank claims to have 27 clients after just a few months of running his new consulting business.
Though the author also prints without question Frank's claim that he left high school in the 11th grade because he was bored with it, not because he was in a youth correctional facility for bank robbery.
In the article, Strum writes out all of Frank's crimes and convictions, but that 1962 bank robbery is missing.
But again, they didn't have the internet then.
Of his criminal record, Frank told the reporter, I remember it was Nietzsche who wrote, The crime is not in the act, but in the stupidity of being caught.
I was caught.
And stupid.
And he'd get caught a few more times in the coming years, but he stays humble.
That Nietzsche quote is still his favorite to this day, according to his Facebook profile.
He had to take a break from his new consulting career when he went away for a year in 1995, but he picked right back up when he got out.
A 1997 Newsweek article about his business claims he was up to 87 clients now, with white-collar criminals paying Frank $1,000 for assistance in getting favorable placement.
So not only did Frank promise that he could advise you about the differences in food, facilities, and culture at different federal prisons, he claimed he had connections and could influence your placement.
A Bureau of Prisons spokesman denied Frank had any ability to arrange transfers or promise placements at specific facilities, but at least one client told the reporter that prison officials had denied his request for a transfer during a five-year sentence for embezzlement.
But after he wrote Frank and included a check for $1,000, his transfer came through.
Now, promising these transfers seems like it would put Frank back in mail fraud territory.
But if he had stopped short of fraud, this isn't actually a terrible way for a guy like Frank to make a living.
He really had been in a significant number of our nation's federal prisons.
He'd been in facilities all over the country, spanning decades.
He's in a great position to offer advice about how to get through your sentence as smoothly as possible.
So if he'd stuck to lifestyle advice for the incarcerated, I might say that this could have been a success story for Frank.
There was another article about his consulting business in 1998, but then he kind of disappears.
I'm not sure what he was up to.
He pops up briefly in a couple of articles in 2000 and 2001.
An old prison friend of his called him from a jail in Reno to ask for help exposing an alleged smuggling ring run by one of the guards out there in Nevada.
David Wayne is described as one of the most dangerous inmates in the state prison system after a variety of escape attempts and prison riots involving Wayne holding hostages.
And in 2000, he wanted Frank's help leveraging this information about a corrupt guard to get a better placement.
So friend or client, hard to say, but the guard did end up charged with smuggling a handcuff key to an inmate, and Frank spent about a year advocating for Wayne's transfer.
Considering he had once held two prison nurses hostage for 12 hours by rigging up a Rube Goldberg-style contraption that would stab the women's eyes out with scalpels if anyone opened the door, and had successfully escaped at least once, a low security placement for David Wayne was out of the question.
But then, quiet.
Frank moved out to Idaho and stayed out of the paper.
He's not a very good driver, so I know he moved to Ada County, Idaho around 2001, because that's when he started getting a lot of traffic tickets there.
In 2008, he was charged with battery and convicted, but he only served five days in jail and successfully completed his court-ordered anger management class.
The docket indicates the victim, a woman who appears to be a nursing assistant in the Boise area, got a restraining order.
But the Frank Sweeney who tried to rob a bank and fought in the Bush War and had a mob boss fly him to Vegas and bragged about being able to influence prison officials?
That Frank seems to be gone.
He's just an old man living in Boise.
until 2015. - This summer, a lone gunman on a rooftop reminded us that American presidents have long been the targets of assassins.
Nearly 50 years ago, President Gerald Ford faced two attempts on his life in less than three weeks.
A woman fired a shot at President Ford.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim.
A woman dressed in a long red skirt pointed a .45 caliber pistol at the president.
These are the only two times we know of that a woman has tried to assassinate a U.S.
president.
And the two assassins had never met.
One was a protege of infamous cult leader Charles Manson.
She is 26-year-old Lynette Alice Fromm, nicknamed Squeaky.
I always felt like Lynette was kind of his right-hand woman.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI in the violent revolutionary underground.
Identified by police as Sarah Jane Moore.
Sarah Jane could enter into these areas that other people couldn't.
A spy, basically.
The story of one strange and violent summer.
This season on Rip Current.
Listen to Rip Current on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Hey there, it's Michael Lewis, author of Going Infinite, Moneyball, The Blind Side, and Liar's Poker.
On every season of my podcast, Against the Rules, I take a broad look at various characters in American life.
The referee, the coach, the expert.
My next season's all about fans and what the rise of sports betting is doing to them, to the teams, and even to my family.
I'm heading to Las Vegas and New Jersey and beyond to understand America's newest form of legalized gambling.
Listen to Against the Rules on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Fantasy football fans, the NFL season is here and now is the time to get ready to dominate your leagues.
The best way to crush your opponents this season is to listen to the NFL Fantasy Football Podcast.
Come hang out with me, Marcus Grant, and my pal, Michael F. Florio, as we give you all the info you need to absolutely steamroll your fantasy league and bring home a championship.
You don't need to spend hours each day breaking down every stat and every stitch of game tape to set a winning lineup.
That's our job.
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All you need to do is listen to the NFL Fantasy Football Podcast when it drops five times a week.
If you're looking for a smart, fun, and entertaining path to dominating your fantasy leagues, then look no further than the show straight from the source at NFL Media.
Hey, it's Jake Halpern.
it's too late.
Subscribe now and listen to the NFL Fantasy Football Podcast on the iHeartRadio app, on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, it's Jake Halpern.
We have a new limited series of my podcast Deep Cover out now, all about George Santos, the Republican congressman from New York who told a lot of stories about his life and his credentials, many of which, turns out, were not true.
It's like, you know, Mr. Ripley meets Catch Me If You Can.
I mean, the guy hoodwinked everyone.
He was very ambiguous and sketchy, quite honestly, about what the company did and how it made so much money overnight.
What prosecutors allege in the indictment is that most of that $12,000 goes directly to Santos's personal bank account.
I would go down these rabbit holes and start thinking about what is the nature of truth?
What can I actually tell the reader is real about this guy's story?
My phone is literally blowing up.
Inquiries about saying, is George going to jail?
What's going on?
And I thought, why are you doing this?
Why?
Listen to deep cover George Santos on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
For decades, the mafia had New York City in a stranglehold, with law enforcement seemingly powerless to intervene.
It uses terror to extort people.
However, one murder of a crime boss sparked a chain of events that would ultimately dismantle the mob.
It sent the message that we can prosecute these people.
Discover how law enforcement and prosecutors took on the mafia and together brought them down.
These bosses on the commission had no idea what was coming their way from the federal government.
From Wolf Entertainment and iHeart Radio, this is Law & Order Criminal Justice System.
The first two episodes drop on August 22nd.
Plus, did you know that you can listen to the episodes as they come out completely ad-free?
Don't miss out!
Subscribe to the iHeart True Crime Plus channel today, available exclusively on Apple Podcasts.
In December of 2015, Frank went to the post office near his home in Garden City, Idaho.
In the end of the day, Frank went to the post office near his home in Garden City, Idaho.
He parked his truck in one of the accessible parking spots out front.
A woman saw him get out of his car, which did not have a placard indicating he was supposed to be parked there, and said something to him.
We don't know exactly what she said.
Now, me personally, I probably wouldn't have said anything.
For the most part, it's not worth it.
It's not your business.
There are plenty of people who are not visibly disabled who really do need those parking spots.
And Frank was in his 70s at this point, so even if he didn't have a state-issued parking placard, he's old.
Just leave him alone.
But she made a comment about it, and the situation escalated.
Pretty seriously.
Court documents only say that they had a verbal altercation, so at least she didn't get stabbed, which he's done at least twice to people who offended him.
But whatever she said, and for whatever reasons she chose to say it, she didn't deserve what happened next.
The victims in this case are referred to only by their initials in the court record, for obvious reasons.
But it can be tricky to keep track of people with just a letter, so I've given them all fake names just to make this a little easier.
We'll call the woman from the parking lot, Ellen.
Her husband will be Sam, and their adult daughters will be Kayla and Lucy.
Again, it is possible to figure out who these people are, but please don't.
They've been through enough.
Two weeks after that heated exchange in the post office parking lot, the postcards started.
The probation office in Boise got the first one.
Ellen's adult daughter Kayla was, at the time, on probation for a misdemeanor DUI charge.
The letter writer claimed that he had just the night before been in the car with Kayla and she was so drunk that he had to jump out at a red light for his own safety.
Ellen's husband Sam received a postcard at his dental office the same day informing him that his wife had been in the post office the week before and she was so drunk that she was falling down.
The letter, though very brief, contained a lot of really specific personal information.
The fact that the couple had very recently purchased a new home, including the name of the suburb where they now lived, the city where their other adult daughter lived, the names of both of their daughters, and information about Kayla's arrest that year.
Ellen received a third postcard that week addressed to her at home.
This one contained her social security number and an allegation that her daughter Lucy was engaged in acts of prostitution at her place of work, which was named.
After the family received the first postcards in December of 2015, they met with detectives at the Ada County Sheriff's Office in Boise.
And despite investigators' best efforts, the family would continue to receive increasingly bizarre and frightening postcards for three full years.
Their neighbors and nearby schools received postcards that appeared to be from the state sex offender registry informing them that Sam was a sex offender.
Specifically, that he had sodomized a nine-year-old boy in 1978.
It probably goes without saying, but I will say it anyway, that is not true.
But it does kind of remind you of what Frank did to that doctor in 1993, doesn't it?
Adding to the victim's distress, Sam passed away unexpectedly in January of 2016, just a few weeks after all this started.
And obviously Frank knew one of his victims was dead.
Some of the letters sent to the man's daughters taunted and blamed them for driving their father into an early grave, but oddly, some of the letters pretended otherwise.
While most of the postcards were signed Carson Wells, the name of Woody Harrelson's character in the movie No Country for Old Men, some were signed with the names of her own children.
Ellen received one of those just two months after her husband's death.
Purporting to be from her daughter Lucy, who lived out of state, it said, Dear Mommy, my blood test just came back and yes, I am HIV positive.
I'm sure I was infected by one of the two Crips with whom I was having an affair with.
Regrettably, I will never be able to give you and Daddy the grandchildren you so desired.
But we know now that Daddy is a pedophile.
He may have harmed the grandkids.
Has he been released from jail?
And again, this is a woman who just lost her husband.
She knows this postcard isn't from her adult daughter.
Even if she hadn't already gotten a dozen other bizarre postcards, she would know that.
No one's writing their mother a postcard on a typewriter.
It's not 1932.
And again, the recently deceased man was not a pedophile, nor was he in jail.
He had just been buried by his family.
Ellen and both of her daughters continued getting postcards, even after Ellen moved.
And Frank was also sending the postcards to other people pretending to be members of the family.
The Idaho Black History Museum received one signed with Ellen's name, address, and phone number that was so laden with racial slurs that you can barely tell what it's supposed to be trying to say.
Lucy's boss received one advising him that his employee was having rectal intercourse with black men.
Although Frank described that in more vivid terms.
Now, for as strange as this man's life has been, you'd be forgiven if you forgot where we started.
Frank is a Nazi.
He was a member of the American Nazi Party and he fought as a Rhodesian mercenary.
He's not just a guy who loves doing mail fraud and hates his neighbors, he's very racist.
And a lot of these postcards fixated on the idea that Ellen's daughters were engaged in interracial relationships, very graphically and racially describing specific sex acts that they were, in his mind, having with black partners.
And he was particularly upset that Ellen, a Latina, had married a white man.
He called her racial slurs and wrote to her daughters calling them mongrels.
It seems the only time he wasn't sending postcards was when he was out of the country.
You see, he might have another wife.
It's not entirely clear.
But several times a year, Frank would travel to Erfurt, the capital of the German state of Thuringia in central Germany, to visit a woman he's known for a very long time.
Ute Schoenig, who performs semi-professionally as a belly dancer under the name Madame Shamila, has on several occasions referred to Frank as her husband.
This may be literal, it may be a cheeky little joke, my German is not good enough to really read tone, and it may just be that they've been in a relationship for so long that they think of each other this way.
My research game is strong, but a potentially non-existent German marriage certificate evades my grasp.
Nevertheless, he does own a home in Erfurt, and she lives in it.
She refers to him occasionally as her Hausbesitzer, which you could translate as landlord, but you wouldn't really.
You'd call the person you rent your home from your Vermeeter.
Hausbesitzer just means he owns her house.
And he occasionally calls her Liebchen, my love, and she calls him Frankie.
When he visited in 2015 and they went to see her mother in the nursing home together, her photo captions are about Frank's visit to his mother-in-law.
As with so much in Frank's life, it's hard to pin this down.
I have a handful of photos of Frank with this woman that appeared to be from the 80s or early 90s based on the photo quality, Frank's apparent age, and, to be honest, her hair.
But we're talking about Germany, so dating by the fashion could put us off by a decade or more.
No offense, you know it's true.
But at least in the present era of his life, he's visiting Germany every now and again.
She breeds and shows Mexican and Peruvian hairless dogs, some of which have been quite successful internationally.
Some of her show dogs list Frank Sweeney as a co-owner.
In September of 2016, his victims had a brief reprieve from his letters because he was in Germany attending a seminar on dog genetics with Ute.
These rare breed dogs are very prone to genetic problems and inbreeding, so I'm glad they're staying on top of best practices, I guess.
But when he was at home in Idaho, the campaign of harassment was relentless.
He even found a way to outsource the terror.
Frank sent postcards to inmates in prisons all over the country.
He signed them with Ellen's name and address and requested that the men write her back.
She received at least 75 letters, all addressed to her at home, from murderers.
And as if she might not get it, like maybe she didn't put two and two together here, like maybe she thought this was some totally separate, unrelated new problem she just happens to be having, Frank made sure she understood that he did this.
He sent her numerous postcards explaining the situation.
Every creep, every social degenerate who has written to you has your address, social security number, and date of birth.
Likewise for Lucy too.
Some of these freaks have already passed this information on to their criminal friends outside of prison.
Last month, I visited your house twice in the early morning hours while you slept.
Naturally, I've removed my license plates so that street cameras could not identify my car.
And I still patrol the post office daily in an effort to spot you.
You only have your big mouth to blame for all of this.
In December of 2016, after the first full year, he wrote to her saying it was their anniversary.
Telling her, I intend to be with you for life.
The letters just kept coming, reminding her that he was watching her outside her home, that he waited for her at the post office almost every day, and sending her postcards containing her own personal information, like her license plate number and information about her family.
Just so she knew he had it too.
He continued writing to Ellen and both of her daughters, calling them racial slurs, sluts, whores, threatening to report them for assorted imaginary crimes like tax fraud and drug dealing, and always remembering to write them on their birthdays.
Investigators were stumped.
They knew the letter writer was the man from the post office parking lot.
He said as much in his letters, but Ellen didn't recognize him.
She had only a vague description of his vehicle and she didn't get the license plate.
Why would she have thought she needed to?
Postcards were always wiped clean of prints.
They were perfectly generic.
United States Postal Service issued materials that he always bought in small quantities and paid cash.
He may truly have tormented this woman until one of them died if he hadn't done what he's always done.
More crime.
And here's that beginning of the end.
It's not the end, but I told you the story that began outside of a bank in New Jersey in 1962 would start its final chapter outside of a bank in Idaho 56 years later.
On October 13th, 2018, Frank got into another argument in a parking lot.
These victims, too, are only identified by their initials in the court records, so I'm going to call them Liam and Denise.
They were in their car outside the Wells Fargo in Garden City, Idaho.
Frank honked at them.
There was, again, some kind of verbal altercation.
Maybe they gave him the finger or shouted.
Who knows?
You know, this is the kind of thing that happens every day.
You know, you don't pull forward fast enough, the guy behind you honks, you tell him to fuck off.
Nobody's being their best selves.
But life goes on.
But not for Frank.
Frank can't take it.
He stabbed a guy in the guts for splashing him in 1975.
So, two weeks after Liam and Denise experience this angry driver at the bank, they start getting postcards.
Like Ellen and her family, this family too starts hearing that their neighbors and nearby schools are getting postcards that pretend to be from the State Sex Offender Registry, alerting people that Liam is a pedophile.
He's not.
And specifically, the postcards say that he sodomized a nine-year-old boy.
That is a very specific and very gross detail to recycle from one victim to the next, right?
Like, that has to mean something.
But I can't figure it out, and maybe that's for the best.
These postcards, too, are generic ones from the post office, typed on a manual typewriter.
And again, some of the postcards are signed Carson Wells, and sometimes they're signed with the name of Liam's adult son.
And again, there were letters to the family from murderers answering requests for pen pals.
But, you know what the bank has?
A lot of security cameras.
And unbeknownst to Frank, shortly before he started terrorizing his second set of victims, his case wasn't just a local matter anymore.
In September of 2018, the United States Postal Inspector Service started looking into the postcards.
That's right, the Mail Police.
That is a very real federal law enforcement agency with jurisdiction over mail crimes.
According to their most recent annual report, the USPIS initiated more than 5,600 investigations in 2023.
And during that year, 4,100 cases related to their investigations ended in convictions.
Most of those numbers are things like mail theft and people mailing drugs.
Also, though, a couple hundred people a year are assaulting postal employees.
Knock that off.
Don't do that.
Be nice to your mail carrier.
So now we have the male police on the case.
And as soon as they start trying to figure out what's going on here, again, this is September of 2018, they're just looking at the postcards to Ellen and her family.
But within a few weeks of them opening the investigation, the Idaho State Police let them know that someone is sending postcards pretending to be from their office.
And these are these postcards about how Liam is a pedophile that are being sent to schools and neighbors.
And because these postcards are made to look as though they are coming from the State Sex Offender Registry, which is run by the state police, people are contacting the state police about them, and now the state police are talking to the male police, and now the male cops see that there are more victims.
And all of these postcards seem to be from the same person.
When postal investigators speak to both families and compare the letters, it's clear they're all from the same person.
All of the victims say they know who is sending them these postcards.
They just don't know who he is.
Ellen knows it's the guy from the post office.
Liam knows it's the guy from the bank.
And they both describe some kind of older truck and an older man who's thin with a stiff gait and a very terrible distinctive scar on his face.
They're describing the same man.
And surely a bank teller or a postal service clerk would recognize a description like that.
Local cops had shown Ellen photo lineups on multiple occasions over the last three years as they're investigating this, but Frank was never a suspect, so he was never in any of the photo arrays.
So each time they showed her photos of potential suspects, she said, he's not here, because he wasn't.
And so she never picked out any other possible suspect.
But once the postal investigators zeroed in on the man in the bank security footage, both Ellen and Liam separately identified him in photo lineups.
And bank employees did know who he was.
So by Christmas of 2018, the mail police have Frank's bank records.
He's been paying a private investigator.
That's how he knew so much personal information about all of his victims.
Information about their real estate transactions, what kinds of cars they drove, where they worked, where their adult children lived in different cities and states.
He's paying a PI.
Idaho is one of several states where you don't actually have to have a license of any kind to offer your services as a PI, so she doesn't have one that can be taken away.
And she hasn't been charged with anything.
Maybe she only helped Frank with information that didn't cross a line, and maybe she didn't ask enough questions about what he was doing with it.
It remains unclear how he got everyone's social security numbers, though.
But the PI he was paying is a woman in her 80s who seems to still be in the business just for the love of the game.
Barbara Jacobson describes herself on her website as a cross between Nancy Drew and Jessica Fletcher with the tenacity of Columbo and credits her success to her Christian faith and divine intervention.
An article in a 2017 issue of Christian Living Magazine quotes her as saying, God is my business partner.
Now again, this woman has not been charged with a crime.
But it seems like a bad sign that she either didn't know or didn't care that the client asking her for a lot of personal information on people had a five decade long rap sheet that included convictions related to harassment by male.
You're either deeply unscrupulous or very bad at your job and I'm not sure which is worse.
Either way, this investigation is rapidly coming together.
The postal investigator has Frank's bank records, he's been identified by the victims, they're closing in on him.
And maybe he knows, maybe he doesn't.
He did move very suddenly in February 2019, leaving the house he'd been renting for over a decade, right as they got the warrant to search it, and renting a different house nearby.
But he's still sending the letters.
So if he knows they're onto him, why is he still sending the letters?
On February 13th, 2019, six weeks after they know Frank's their guy, right around the time that he's moving to his new house, a clerk at the post office calls the investigator to say that an old man with a terrible scar on his face just bought a stack of postcards with cash.
And the last postcard arrived on February 19th, 2019.
It signed Carson Wells, but the writer identifies himself as the man who blew his horn at them in the parking lot.
And then he reminds Liam and Denise that all the murderers who'd been writing to them had already forwarded their personal information to criminals on the outside.
But it was already over.
Two weeks later, they searched Frank's home.
They took his typewriter and his list of federal inmates, the ones he'd been writing to as his victims, and they found portraits of Hitler and Nazi memorabilia and white supremacist literature.
And two live rattlesnakes.
Rattlesnakes don't live in Idaho.
These aren't snakes that he got outside.
These are snakes that he is breeding?
Frank has a lifelong interest in reptile breeding.
I think he's a member of the Idaho Herpetological Society, or at least he was before he went to prison.
And shortly before his arrest, he commented on an online obituary for an old high school classmate, reminiscing fondly about how they used to collect snakes in the woods together in the fifties.
And once he's in custody, Frank confessed immediately, telling investigators on the day of his arrest that he'd sent the postcards because he felt like these people had embarrassed him, and it made him feel better to know he was causing them emotional distress.
Shortly after his arrest, he wrote to the judge to ask the court to intervene in what he felt was an inadequate response by the jail to what he called many of the infirmities that affect the elderly, and says he has the urge to commit suicide if his demands aren't met.
And I don't want to sound like I'm brushing this off.
I'm not saying that this couldn't possibly be a valid concern.
People die in jails and prisons every day because employees don't care or don't have the resources to provide adequate care.
This is a very real problem and the urge to harm yourself is always very serious.
But this isn't Frank's first rodeo.
Remember, in the 80s, he used to threaten suicide and would even fake suicide attempts in order to manipulate employees of the Witness Protection Program.
So this may not be a brand new issue for Frank.
At any rate, within months of his arrest, he entered into a plea agreement.
So once the male cops got on the case, they actually sorted it out pretty quickly, right?
The USPIS got on the case in September of 2018, and within three months, they knew it was Frank.
Maybe they should have called the guys who solved male crimes earlier?
I don't know.
But if there had been more communication between different law enforcement agencies, the whole situation could have been resolved when he sent a single letter to a third victim, which he signed with his own name.
But when a U.S.
marshal searched Frank's house two years before his eventual arrest, I guess they didn't bother to check in with the local police.
Because in April of 2017, Frank sent a single letter to Gerald Scher, the man who founded and for many years ran the Witness Protection Program.
I can't think of a worse guy to pick if you're going to send a threatening letter?
Sure was long since retired by 2017, he passed away in 2020 at the age of 86, but is there anyone on earth who had more chips to call in with the U.S.
Marshals?
You think a U.S.
Marshal isn't going to come to your house if you sign your full legal name to a threatening letter to the guy who invented witness protection?
You think you're going to scare the guy whose job was protecting mobsters from other mobsters?
Truly a stupid move, even for Frank.
You poisonous, licentious old Jew.
I thought that you would have been long dead from cardiovascular disease due to obesity.
I was very much hoping to sit shiver for you, to pray Kaddish over your fat corpse, you loathsome s***.
I will remember you, although it's doubtful you will remember, from WITSEC units in Otisville or San Diego, parading with your entourage depraved s***ing women from the Office of Enforcement Operations.
In 1984, you expelled me from the program, leaving me to fend for myself as a known informer, a rat in the general populations of very dangerous prisons.
It had been more than 30 years, but Frank never got over getting kicked out of the program.
He flew all over the world helping a spy in 1980, trying to leverage information on Christopher Boyce to get placement in the program.
And it didn't work.
The information he gave was not only not helpful, but by fabricating unhelpful information in order to get something from the government, he made things worse.
And when he finally got what he wanted by testifying against a serial killer in 1982, he couldn't keep his mouth shut about it.
And so he was removed from the program in 1984.
In his letter to Schur, he claims that as a result of losing his protected status in 84, he was attacked by another inmate the following year.
And he does, without a doubt, bear a huge scar all down one cheek to this day.
Somebody cut Frank's face open pretty bad.
He takes care to mention in his letter that the assailant was black, though he chooses different words to say that.
And who knows why Frank got cut?
I'm not making light of the violence that happens inside jails and prisons, but you'd have to do some real mental gymnastics here to come up with a satisfying explanation for why a black man would cut Frank up in retaliation for Frank's testimony against a Nazi serial killer who traveled the country shooting black men?
I just don't think that they would be mad about that.
But I can think of a variety of reasons why a black man who encountered Frank in prison might get into it with him.
I mean, race aside, Frank's just kind of a hothead.
Not a great guy to hang out with.
Always getting into it with people.
But also, he loves saying racial slurs.
So I can think of a variety of reasons why this might have happened that had nothing to do with him testifying against a serial killer.
We can't take Frank at his word, and I couldn't find any reporting from the time about a prison knife fight in 1985.
So, who knows?
After Sher received the letter, which Frank had signed venomously yours, Frank Abbott Sweeney, a U.S.
Marshal was sent out to Idaho to speak with Frank.
And Frank admitted that he sent the letter, but he said he meant no harm by it, and he allowed the Marshal to search his home.
It seems like if anyone had compared notes, Frank could have been identified as the Garden City postcard writer far sooner.
The language in this letter was very similar to some of the postcards.
If they had just showed this letter to the sheriff, maybe they would have recognized it.
But I guess they didn't, because he wasn't.
The local police in Pennsylvania, where the letter was received, charged Frank with terroristic threats, but that's a non-extraditable misdemeanor in Pennsylvania, so they couldn't bring him back to face the charge.
So he's got an open warrant in Pennsylvania if he ever goes there willingly, but he probably won't, and with Schur now deceased, it doesn't seem like that's likely to amount to anything.
On December 16th, 2019, Frank Sweeney was sentenced to 51 months for six counts of stalking.
A few days later, his German wife posted a photo of her Christmas Eve dinner.
A friend asked her if Frank would be celebrating with her that year.
She replied that, no, Frank has been ill for several months and can't fly right now.
She didn't say that he was back in federal prison for at least the fifth time.
Frank Sweeney was released from prison in December of 2022.
I just noticed as I'm writing this that it's his 81st birthday today, but it won't be by the time you hear this.
He's still in Idaho, he's still playing the violin, and he still co-owns a few Mexican hairless dogs on the show circuit in Germany.
In that 1994 New York Times article about his prison consulting business, Frank quipped that his favorite quote was, I think, regardless of your stance on the philosophical nature of crime and punishment, though, there are better quotes from Frank's thousands of appearances in the newspaper over his six decades of crime.
Maybe Judge H. Curtis Meener had it right in 1981, when he cut off the bickering in the courtroom over exactly what the hell happened with Frank's mysterious South African letters about the missing spy, saying, I have neither the time nor inclination to unravel all the mysteries in this case.
Because we never really will unravel all the mysteries of Frank's past.
He played a bit part in so many much bigger stories.
They've made whole Hollywood films out of so many of these little slices of history that Frank passed through.
From Cold War spy thrillers to Scorsese dramas about organized crime, Frank's there.
He's not in the movie.
He's just out of frame while history happens, doing something really goddamn weird.
Weird Little Guys is a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more from Cool Zone Media, visit our website, coolzonemedia.com, or check us out on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts.
In California during the summer of 1975, within the span of 17 days and less than 90 miles, two women did something no other woman had done before, tried to two women did something no other woman had done before, tried to assassinate the President of the One was the protégé of Charles Manson.
26-year-old Lynette Fromm, nicknamed Squeaky.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore in her 40s.
The story of one strange and violent summer, this season on the new podcast RIP Current.
Listen to Rip Current on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Ever get the feeling someone's watching you?
Well, in 1971, a group of anti-war activists had that feeling.
I was in the heart of the dragon and it was my job to stop the fire.
So they decided to do something insane.
Break in to the FBI and expose J. Edgar Hoover's dirty secrets.
We had some idea that this was pretty explosive.
I'm Ed Helms.
Binge the full second season of Snafu now on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Back in 1969, four young musicians from Texas were hired to impersonate the British psychedelic rock band, The Zombies.
It was one of the most bizarre and audacious cons in rock and roll history, and now the entire story has been uncovered in a new podcast.
All episodes are available now.
Listen to the true story of The Fake Zombies on America's number one podcast network, iHeart.
Open your free iHeart app and search true story of The Fake Zombies and start listening.
I'm Angie Martinez, and on my podcast, I like to talk to everyone from Hall of Fame athletes to iconic musicians about getting real on some of the complications and challenges of real life.
I had the best dad, and I had the best memories, and the greatest experience, and that's all I want for my kids, as long as they can have that.
Listen to Angie Martinez IRL on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
What happens when a professional football player's career ends and the applause fades and the screaming fans move on?
I am going to share my journey of how I went from Christianity to now a Hebrew-Israelite.
For some former NFL players, a new faith provides answers.
You mix homesteading with guns and church.
Voila!
You got straightway.
They try to save everybody.
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