Disturbing History

Richard Nixon: Watergate Was Only the Doorway

1 h 4 min · 22 mei 2026
aflevering Richard Nixon: Watergate Was Only the Doorway artwork

Beschrijving

Most people think they know Watergate. They don't. They know the headline. The break-in, the tapes, the resignation, the wave from the helicopter on the South Lawn. They know the word. They've seen the photograph. What they don't know is that the burglary was never the story. It was the doorway.In this episode of Disturbing History, we walk back into the White House for another stop on our tour of presidential history you wish we'd forgotten. onight, we open the door at 1:30 in the morning on 6/17/1972, where a young security guard named Frank Wills pulls a piece of tape off a stairwell latch for the second time and decides it's worth a phone call. Five men in surgical gloves are arrested inside the Democratic National Committee headquarters. Across the street, two of their handlers watch through binoculars and run. The story has begun, but only by accident. Richard Nixon had already been building the machine that produced it for years.We pull the camera back from the burglars and walk you through the building behind them. A White House that wiretapped journalists without warrants after the Cambodia bombing leaked in 1969. A secret unit called the Plumbers that broke into a psychiatrist's office in Beverly Hills on 9/3/1971 to dig through the medical files of Daniel Ellsberg. A Committee to Re-Elect the President that ran a nationwide campaign of political sabotage they called, in their own words, ratfucking. A formal list of American citizens marked for harassment by the IRS, journalists and actors and senators and labor leaders whose only crime was disagreeing with the man at the desk. Hush money carried in cash. Tape machines hidden inside the walls of the Oval Office that the staff didn't know about. An 18 and a half minute gap on a tape that nobody to this day can explain.We sit with John Dean's testimony, the Sam Ervin hearings that stopped the country for a summer, Alexander Butterfield's quiet answer that revealed the recording system on 7/16/1973, the Saturday Night Massacre on 10/20/1973, the unanimous Supreme Court decision on 7/24/1974, the smoking gun tape that ended it all on 8/5/1974, and the helicopter that lifted off the South Lawn on 8/9/1974. Brian closes the episode where he started it. With the question that Watergate forces us to live with for the rest of American history. Was Nixon uniquely paranoid, or did the office itself produce a man who couldn't sit in it without breaking something.  Was the scandal the disease, or just the diagnosis. Public trust in the federal government collapsed during the Watergate years and has never returned to where it was before. That's the deeper damage. Not the resignation. The belief. This is the kind of story we built Disturbing History to tell. The headline you think you know, taken apart slowly, until you see the architecture underneath. Settle in, and walk through the doorway with us. Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation? Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past. Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets. Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

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aflevering Jimmy Hoffa artwork

Jimmy Hoffa

For weeks this show has lived in the corridors of power, among presidents and spies and the men who shaped the country from behind closed doors. This time we leave all of that behind and walk into a restaurant parking lot in suburban Detroit, where on a hot Wednesday afternoon in the summer of 1975, the most powerful labor leader in America climbed into a car and was never seen again. Jimmy Hoffa was a coal miner's son from Brazil, Indiana, who watched the company work his father to death and never forgot the lesson.  He clawed his way off a Kroger loading dock, organized the Strawberry Boys, and built the International Brotherhood of Teamsters into the largest, most feared union in the country, more than two million members strong, with his hand on the wheel of the national economy. He could stop every truck in America with a phone call. He also climbed into bed with organized crime to do it, opened the door to the richest pension fund the Mafia ever got its hands on, tampered with a jury, and surrounded himself with the kind of men who eventually decided he was a problem worth solving permanently.  The Depression picket lines and the broken bones. The war with Robert Kennedy and the Get Hoffa Squad. The convictions, the prison years, and the blood feud with Tony Pro Provenzano that started over a pension and ended with a threat against Hoffa's grandchildren. The Nixon commutation that set him free but barred him from his own union, and the stubborn comeback that put a target on his back. Then July 13th, 1975, minute by minute, from the calendar note to the last phone call to the maroon Mercury and the surrogate son the FBI believes was sent to lure him in. We lay out what the evidence actually shows, the scent dogs, the hair in the back seat, the alibis that were a little too perfect, and we separate it from the folklore, the wood chippers and the Florida swamp and the body supposedly buried under Giants Stadium. We weigh the famous Irishman confession against the people who say it doesn't hold up. And we sit with the hardest fact of all: fifty years on, no one has ever been charged, no body has ever been found, and the most famous missing person in American history is still, technically, missing. This is a story about power, loyalty, and the bill that always comes due. Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation? Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past. Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets. Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

7 jun 20261 h 0 min
aflevering George W. Bush: The War On Terror artwork

George W. Bush: The War On Terror

In this episode of the Disturbing History presidential series, we cross out of settled history and into living memory to examine the presidency of George W. Bush through the architecture of the War on Terror. Beginning with the attacks of September 11, 2001, and the fear that reshaped American government overnight, we trace how that fear was translated into law, policy, and ultimately a global apparatus of detention, interrogation, surveillance, and war. We walk through the legal scaffolding built inside the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, where attorneys John Yoo and Jay Bybee drafted the August 1, 2002 "torture memos" that redefined torture so narrowly that only pain equivalent to organ failure or death would qualify, and that advanced the unitary executive theory placing the president's wartime authority beyond the reach of Congress and the courts. We examine the opening of the Guantánamo Bay detention camp on January 11, 2002, deliberately sited beyond the expected reach of American courts, and the roughly 780 men held there, the overwhelming majority eventually released without charge.We follow the CIA's enhanced interrogation program from its first subject, Abu Zubaydah, through the network of secret black sites in Thailand, Poland, Romania, Lithuania, and Afghanistan, including the death of Gul Rahman from hypothermia at the site known as COBALT or the Salt Pit in November 2002. We cover the extraordinary rendition of innocent men, among them Canadian engineer Maher Arar, German citizen Khaled el-Masri, and the Milan cleric Abu Omar, whose abduction led to the in-absentia conviction of more than twenty CIA operatives in Italian courts. The episode then turns to the case for the Iraq War: the aluminum tubes claim disputed by the Department of Energy and the State Department, the mobile biological weapons labs invented by the fabricator code-named Curveball (Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi), and the "sixteen words" about Niger uranium built on forged documents, along with the leak that exposed CIA officer Valerie Plame. We revisit Secretary of State Colin Powell's February 5, 2003 presentation to the United Nations, which he later called a "blot" on his record, and the invasion of March 19, 2003, followed by the "Mission Accomplished" banner of May 1, 2003. We document the conclusion of weapons inspectors David Kay and Charles Duelfer that no stockpiles ever existed.We confront the Abu Ghraib photographs that surfaced in April 2004, the death of detainee Manadel al-Jamadi, and the line connecting low-ranking soldiers to the policies authorized at the top.  We cover the warrantless surveillance program Stellar Wind, the 2004 hospital-room confrontation over its reauthorization, and its eventual legalization. We trace the Supreme Court's slow pushback through Rasul v. Bush, Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, and Boumediene v. Bush. And we close with the December 9, 2014 Senate Intelligence Committee report, its findings that the program was ineffective and far more brutal than disclosed, that at least 26 of 119 detainees were wrongfully held, and that no senior official was ever prosecuted. Throughout, we ask the question that outlives the administration: how a free nation decided the rules were optional, and why the machinery it built has never been turned off.This episode draws on the public record, including the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence report on the CIA's Detention and Interrogation Program, the Iraq Survey Group's Duelfer Report, the Senate's prewar intelligence assessment, declassified Office of Legal Counsel memoranda, and Supreme Court opinions.  Where the historical record remains genuinely contested, such as the question of intent versus error in the WMD case and the British Butler Report's defense of the uranium claim, both sides are presented.   This episode discusses torture, death in custody, and wartime atrocity. Listener discretion is advised. Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation? Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past. Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets. Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

5 jun 20261 h 14 min
aflevering Warren Harding: Corpse Of An Administration artwork

Warren Harding: Corpse Of An Administration

The nation wept for Warren G. Harding in August 1923. The funeral train crawled home through crowds that stretched for miles, mourners singing hymns by the tracks, certain they were burying one of the most beloved men ever to hold the office. They had no idea what they were really putting in the ground. Within a year, the floorboards of that respectable house started to creak, and the bodies that had been piling up around the president began to make sense. This episode walks you back into the White House and down into the rot. We start with Harding's sudden death in a San Francisco hotel room, the autopsy his widow refused, and the papers she burned in the fireplace afterward. From there we meet the Ohio Gang, the cronies who understood that the presidency could be sold off one favor at a time out of a little green house on K Street. We sit with the wounded men of the Great War, gassed and shaking in their hospital beds, while Charles Forbes turned their bandages and their medicine into bribe money and bled the Veterans Bureau of more than $200 million. And we follow the oil. Teapot Dome is famous in name, but the truth is dirtier than the half-memory: a broke Interior secretary named Albert Fall, the strategic oil reserves of the U.S. Navy handed in secret to two billionaires, $100,000 delivered in a black bag, a herd of cattle, and a Senate investigator from Montana who would not let it go.What ties it together is not the money. It's the man at the top. Harding wasn't evil. He was kind, generous, and weak in the one place a leader can't afford to be, and he filled the chairs that controlled oil and veterans and justice itself with the friends who flattered him instead of the men who would have made him better. He told a friend once that his enemies never gave him any trouble. It was his friends who kept him pacing the floor at night. He died before he had to watch them dragged out of his house, and he got the easiest exit of anyone in this story. The administration he left behind died slower, and uglier, exposed piece by piece long after he was in his grave. Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation? Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past. Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets. Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

3 jun 20261 h 10 min
aflevering The Corpsewood Manor Murders artwork

The Corpsewood Manor Murders

This week we step away from the corridors of presidential power and head into the North Georgia mountains, to a hand-built stone castle on Taylor's Ridge and one of the most misunderstood crimes in the state's history. On December 12, 1982, Dr. Charles Scudder, a brilliant former Loyola University pharmacology professor, and his partner Joseph "Joey" Odom were robbed and shot to death inside Corpsewood Manor, the off-grid medieval-style home they had built brick by brick after leaving Chicago behind. Their killers, 17-year-old Kenneth Avery Brock and 30-year-old Samuel Tony West, had convinced themselves the eccentric couple was hiding a fortune, and that two openly gay men, one of them a documented member of the atheistic Church of Satan, were the kind of victims nobody would mourn. They were wrong about the money, and history has proven them wrong about the men. This episode hits especially close to home, Brian grew up just a few miles away and was only eight years old the winter the murders happened, and who has spent a career learning to tell the difference between rumor and evidence.  We trace the whole arc, from Scudder and Odom's search for a simpler life and the truth about what the Church of Satan actually believed, through the rumors and the Satanic Panic that turned two kind hosts into the county's boogeymen, to the night of the killings, the murder of Navy Lieutenant Kirby Key Phelps during the fugitives' flight through Mississippi, the manhunt, the confessions, and a trial where a defense attorney argued in open court that a murdered man had bewitched his killer with a glowing golden harp. Brock remains incarcerated to this day; West died in prison. Listener discretion is strongly advised, as this episode contains descriptions of violence, murder, and the bigotry of the era. More than a true crime story, this is a study in how a frightened culture decides who deserves to be called a victim, and how easily fear becomes permission. Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation? Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past. Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets. Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

31 mei 202659 min
aflevering The Fourteen Men Before George Washington artwork

The Fourteen Men Before George Washington

Everyone knows George Washington was the first President of the United States. Technically true. But it's also a sleight of hand, because fourteen men held the title of President before him, and almost no American today can name a single one. Tonight on Disturbing History, we walk through all fourteen, the men who chaired the Continental Congress and the Confederation Congress during the years the country was being fought into existence. This is not the marble version. This is slave traders and Tower of London prisoners. This is the general who walked an American army into the worst slaughter the United States ever suffered at the hands of Native warriors. This is the plot to throw George Washington out of command in the middle of the Revolution. This is the merchant who tried to invite a Prussian prince across the ocean to come be king. This is a major general accepting Washington's resignation after once helping scheme against him, then dying so broke the state had to bury him. These are the men the textbooks left out, and the reasons they got left out say almost as much about America as the founding itself.  Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation? Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com. Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past. Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets. Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

29 mei 20261 h 5 min