Heists, Hustles, and Homicide

"Bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 (Part Two): The Verdict, the Theories, and the Fallout"

29 min · 16. Mai 2026
Episode "Bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 (Part Two): The Verdict, the Theories, and the Fallout" Cover

Beschreibung

In Part 2 of our Pan Am Flight 103 story, we move beyond the explosion and into the decades-long search for answers. This episode digs into the investigation, the forensic evidence, the trial of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, and the many questions that never fully went away. We look at how a tiny fragment of evidence helped shape the official case, why Libya became the center of the prosecution, and why so many victims’ families and investigators believed the full story was still bigger than one man. We also break down the major conspiracy theories and alternative explanations that have followed Lockerbie for years, including the Iran revenge theory, the PFLP-GC angle, the CIA drug-route allegations, and the claims that Libya may have been framed or only part of a larger plot. This is the part of the story where the wreckage is gone, but the mystery gets deeper. In this episode: * The massive international investigation after the bombing * The bomb suitcase, the radio, and the key forensic discoveries * How Libya became the focus of the case * The Camp Zeist trial and why the verdict remains controversial * The families who kept pushing for more answers * The later charges that proved the case was still alive * The conspiracy theories that continue to surround Lockerbie Pan Am Flight 103 was not just a tragedy. It became one of the most debated terrorism cases in modern history. Thank you for all the love and support, and for listening to Heists, Hustles, and Homicide. If you enjoyed this episode, please share it with your friends and family. That support means everything and helps the podcast keep growing. Stay tuned for next week’s episode, when we dive into one of the strangest legal battles ever: Leonard v. PepsiCo - the fighter jet controversy that made people ask whether Pepsi really owed someone a Harrier jet. #HeistsHustlesAndHomicide #PanAm103 #Lockerbie #TrueCrimePodcast #AviationTerrorism #UnsolvedMysteries #ColdCase #TerrorismCase #PodcastRecommendations #LeonardVsPepsiCo

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Episode The Wrap Sheet: Leonard vs. PepsiCo - The Harrier Jet Hustle Cover

The Wrap Sheet: Leonard vs. PepsiCo - The Harrier Jet Hustle

Welcome back to Heists, Hustles, and Homicide, Crime Crew. In this Wrap Sheet episode, Steve dives back into one of the most ridiculous, brilliant, and legally bizarre corporate showdowns of the 1990s: Leonard vs. PepsiCo, better known as the infamous Pepsi Harrier Jet lawsuit. This is the story of a Pepsi commercial that most people saw as a joke, a parody, a goofy marketing stunt, and maybe the most obvious “please don’t actually try this” moment in soda history. But John Leonard saw something different. He saw an opening. He saw fine print. He saw Pepsi Points. And somehow, through a perfect blend of confidence, legal curiosity, and absolutely unhinged commitment to the bit, he turned a soft drink commercial into an actual federal court case. In this episode, Steve breaks down the genius and lunacy of Leonard’s hustle. Because let’s be honest: most of us watched that ad and thought, “Ha, funny jet.” Leonard watched it and thought, “I’m going to need investors.” And that is what makes this case so fascinating. Was it absurd? Completely. Was it bold? Absolutely. Was it maybe one of the most creative legal Hail Marys ever launched from the snack aisle of American capitalism? Crime Crew, you better believe it. Steve walks through how Leonard gathered Pepsi Points, sent in the now-famous order form, included a massive check, and essentially told Pepsi, “Go ahead and send over that military aircraft whenever you’re ready.” Then comes the moment we all wish we could have seen: the Pepsi mailroom opening the envelope. At first, you know somebody laughed. Somebody probably passed it around the office. Somebody probably said, “Can you believe this guy?” But then the laughter slowed down. The room got quiet. Somebody realized Leonard wasn’t kidding. And somewhere deep inside Pepsi headquarters, a corporate lawyer’s soul left his body for approximately three business days. This Wrap Sheet digs into that delicious corporate panic. How did Pepsi go from “obviously this was a joke” to “we need legal strategy immediately”? What was it like when the case actually started moving toward court? And how close did Leonard really get to pulling off one of the strangest promotional hustles in American history? Along the way, Steve explores the big question at the center of the case: when does an advertisement become a real offer? Could a reasonable person really believe Pepsi was offering a military-grade Harrier jet in exchange for soda points? Or was Leonard simply trying to force a billion-dollar corporation to defend its own ridiculous marketing campaign under oath? This episode is funny, weird, legally fascinating, and packed with the kind of “wait, this actually happened?” energy that makes Leonard vs. PepsiCo such a perfect Heists, Hustles, and Homicide story. Because no one was murdered. No bank was robbed. No diamonds disappeared. But one man looked at a Pepsi commercial, saw a fighter jet, and said, “I’ll take one.”

23. Juni 202625 min
Episode “The Harrier Jet Hustle: Leonard vs. PepsiCo” Cover

“The Harrier Jet Hustle: Leonard vs. PepsiCo”

LEONARD VS. PEPSICO: WHERE’S MY HARRIER JET? Welcome back to Heists, Hustles, and Homicide, Crime Crew. In this episode, we dive into one of the strangest legal battles in advertising history: Leonard v. PepsiCo, better known as the Harrier Jet case. In the mid-1990s, Pepsi launched its bold “Pepsi Stuff” campaign, where customers could collect Pepsi Points and redeem them for branded merchandise like shirts, sunglasses, and leather jackets. But one commercial pushed the joke to another level when it showed a teenager arriving at school in a military Harrier jet with the price tag: 7,000,000 Pepsi Points. Most people laughed. John Leonard did the math. After discovering Pepsi’s rules allowed customers to buy extra points for ten cents each, Leonard gathered investors, collected a handful of real Pepsi Points, and sent Pepsi a check for more than $700,000 - officially requesting his Harrier jet. Pepsi said it was clearly a joke. Leonard said it looked like an offer. And just like that, a soda commercial became a federal lawsuit. This episode breaks down the wild story behind the commercial, Leonard’s loophole, Pepsi’s response, and the courtroom fight over whether a joke in an advertisement could become a legally binding contract. IN THIS EPISODE: We cover the rise of Pepsi’s 1990s marketing machine, the famous “Pepsi Stuff” commercial, John Leonard’s bold attempt to claim the jet, the legal battle that followed, and why the court ultimately ruled that no reasonable person would believe Pepsi was actually giving away a military aircraft. We also look at why this case still matters today, especially in an era of viral marketing, social media stunts, influencer campaigns, and brands constantly trying to blur the line between joke, hype, and reality. KEY THEMES: Advertising gone too far Fine print vs. big promises The power of loopholes Contract law meets pop culture Corporate marketing and consumer expectations The difference between a joke and an offer BEST LINE FROM THE EPISODE: “Dear Pepsi, I have your points. I have your form. I have your money. Where is my jet?” LISTEN FOR: The moment a funny commercial turns into a legal headache, why Leonard’s argument was clever even if it failed, and how Pepsi learned that when you put a number on the screen, somebody out there might just try to redeem it. NEXT WEEK ON HEISTS, HUSTLES, AND HOMICIDE: We’re heading into a much darker case: the Xerox Credit Union murder, a robbery, a disguise, a cold trail, and a 13-year hunt for justice. Stay sharp, Crime Crew.

17. Juni 202643 min
Episode "Bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 (Part Two): The Verdict, the Theories, and the Fallout" Cover

"Bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 (Part Two): The Verdict, the Theories, and the Fallout"

In Part 2 of our Pan Am Flight 103 story, we move beyond the explosion and into the decades-long search for answers. This episode digs into the investigation, the forensic evidence, the trial of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, and the many questions that never fully went away. We look at how a tiny fragment of evidence helped shape the official case, why Libya became the center of the prosecution, and why so many victims’ families and investigators believed the full story was still bigger than one man. We also break down the major conspiracy theories and alternative explanations that have followed Lockerbie for years, including the Iran revenge theory, the PFLP-GC angle, the CIA drug-route allegations, and the claims that Libya may have been framed or only part of a larger plot. This is the part of the story where the wreckage is gone, but the mystery gets deeper. In this episode: * The massive international investigation after the bombing * The bomb suitcase, the radio, and the key forensic discoveries * How Libya became the focus of the case * The Camp Zeist trial and why the verdict remains controversial * The families who kept pushing for more answers * The later charges that proved the case was still alive * The conspiracy theories that continue to surround Lockerbie Pan Am Flight 103 was not just a tragedy. It became one of the most debated terrorism cases in modern history. Thank you for all the love and support, and for listening to Heists, Hustles, and Homicide. If you enjoyed this episode, please share it with your friends and family. That support means everything and helps the podcast keep growing. Stay tuned for next week’s episode, when we dive into one of the strangest legal battles ever: Leonard v. PepsiCo - the fighter jet controversy that made people ask whether Pepsi really owed someone a Harrier jet. #HeistsHustlesAndHomicide #PanAm103 #Lockerbie #TrueCrimePodcast #AviationTerrorism #UnsolvedMysteries #ColdCase #TerrorismCase #PodcastRecommendations #LeonardVsPepsiCo

16. Mai 202629 min
Episode "Bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 (Part One): Murder Over Lockerbie" Cover

"Bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 (Part One): Murder Over Lockerbie"

On December 21, 1988, Pan Am Flight 103 took off from London bound for New York and never made it across the Atlantic. Less than an hour after takeoff, a bomb hidden inside the plane exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland, killing all 259 people on board and 11 people on the ground. In this episode of Heists, Hustles, and Homicide, Steve dives into the horrifying timeline of the Lockerbie bombing, the chaos that rained down on a quiet town, the massive international investigation that followed, and the theories, twists, and unanswered questions that still surround one of the deadliest terrorist attacks in history. This is the story of a flight destroyed in midair, a case that crossed continents, and a tragedy that still echoes decades later.

17. Apr. 202640 min
Episode "The Wrap Sheet: The Brinks Diamond Heist - Nap Time, Snacks, and $100 Million Gone" Cover

"The Wrap Sheet: The Brinks Diamond Heist - Nap Time, Snacks, and $100 Million Gone"

In this Wrap Sheet episode of Heists, Hustles, and Homicide, Steve breaks down one of the most unbelievable heists in modern history - the Brinks Truck Jewelry Heist, where tens of millions of dollars in diamonds and luxury jewelry were stolen… because security quite literally fell asleep on the job. This wasn’t Ocean’s Eleven. This wasn’t a high-tech operation. This was a perfect storm of lazy decisions, bad timing, and unbelievable luck. In this episode, Steve dives into: 1. The infamous gas station stop that changed everything 2. The moment a Brinks guard decided nap time > security 3. The criminals who basically walked into the easiest heist of their lives 4. The shady possibility that jewelry companies may have undervalued the shipment to save money (and paid the ultimate price) 5. Where the stolen diamonds likely ended up - and why they’re almost impossible to recover 6. And the most unbelievable twist of all… 7. How one of the suspects in the largest jewelry heist in U.S. history somehow left the country due to a breakdown in coordination between agencies This episode is equal parts true crime breakdown, dark humor, and “you can’t make this up” insanity. Because sometimes the biggest crimes don’t happen because criminals are brilliant… They happen because everyone else dropped the ball.

24. März 202616 min