cover of episode Listen Now: American Criminal

Listen Now: American Criminal

2024/11/12
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旁白
知名游戏《文明VII》的开场动画预告片旁白。
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旁白:Sante Kimes为了实现所谓的美国梦,采取了一系列令人发指的犯罪行为,包括奴役和人口贩卖、诈骗、伪造身份等。她贪婪成性,为了金钱和权力不择手段,甚至在被捕后仍然试图操纵他人,最终从监狱逃脱。她的行为体现了扭曲的美国梦的追求,以及对法律和道德的蔑视。她利用各种手段欺骗和奴役他人,从中获利,对受害者造成了巨大的身心伤害。她的故事揭示了人性阴暗面,以及对权力和财富的极度渴望可能导致的可怕后果。Sante Kimes的故事不仅仅是一个犯罪故事,更是一个警示,提醒人们在追求梦想的过程中要遵守法律和道德底线,不能以牺牲他人的利益为代价。她的行为也反映了社会制度的漏洞,以及对类似犯罪的监管不足。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

What was Sante Kimes' primary motivation?

Sante Kimes was driven by an insatiable greed for money, jewels, furs, property, and influence, willing to commit various crimes to attain her desires.

What were the two major crimes Sante and Ken Sr. were arrested for?

Sante and Ken Sr. were arrested for slavery and human trafficking, involving smuggling young women across borders to work as unpaid maids and tutors.

How did Sante Kimes treat the young women she smuggled into the U.S.?

Sante Kimes confiscated their passports, forbade them from leaving, and subjected them to physical abuse, including beatings and burns.

Why did Sante Kimes refuse to sign the plea deal in court?

Sante Kimes refused to sign the plea deal due to a typo that required her prison terms to be served consecutively instead of concurrently, leading to a tantrum and physical restraint in court.

How did Sante Kimes manage to escape from jail?

Sante Kimes feigned a medical episode to be moved to a hospital with less stringent security, where she slipped past her guard and walked out the front doors.

Chapters
Sante Kimes' relentless pursuit of wealth and influence led her to commit a series of crimes, from fraud to murder.
  • Sante Kimes' greed drove her to commit various crimes including fraud and murder.
  • She was willing to do anything to achieve her version of the American dream.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

What would you do to achieve the American dream? Would you change your appearance? Burn down your own home? Perhaps you'd enslave people? Or maybe just commit a little light fraud? Or you could lie your way into a meeting with the First Lady?

Sante Kimes did all of these things and more because for her, nothing was ever enough to satisfy her greed. Money, jewels, furs, property, influence, she wanted it all, and she was willing to do whatever it took to get it. From Airship, this is American Criminal, a show that takes a deep dive into the dark reality of some people's American dreams. From assassins to con artists, forgers to gangsters, you don't know the full story until now.

You're about to hear a clip from episode three of our five-part series on Sante Kimes. In this snippet, Sante's on the run from authorities over some grand larceny charges, unaware that she's about to be picked up for a much, much more serious offense. I hope you enjoy. And when you're finished, search for and follow American Criminal wherever you listen to podcasts. After her disastrous showing in D.C., Sante decides it's best to lay low for a while.

She and Ken Sr. move around Vegas, switching hotels frequently, staying far away from their own home, lest the authorities go looking for them there. After a couple of weeks of that, though, they're tired of being on the run. Ken Sr.'s closing in on 70 by now, and Sante's not as sprightly as she once was either. So they rent a condo in La Jolla, a neighborhood of San Diego, California.

That's where they are when federal marshals catch up to them on August 3rd, 1985. But the marshals aren't there about the furs. They've got warrants for Sante and Ken Sr. for two much, much bigger crimes. Slavery and human trafficking.

Over the last dozen or so years, Sante's been in the habit of smuggling young women across the border from places like Mexico, El Salvador, and Peru to work as maids in her homes. Only, she never pays them. She confiscates their passports and forbids them from leaving her home. In more recent years, she's done the same to college students brought in to be round-the-clock tutors for Sante's youngest, 10-year-old Kenny.

Like the maids, Kenny's tutors are young women enticed with promises of luxury accommodations, exciting travels with the family, and generous paydays. None of it materialized, though. Instead, what these women got was beaten, burned, and belittled.

Most eventually escaped the horrors on their own. Some of them managed it with Kent's help, and a few even went to the authorities to report Sante and Kent Sr. But nothing was done for years. Even when a 14-year-old girl showed up to the U.S. Consulate in Guadalajara to talk about the time Sante threw a pot of boiling water over her, the information was simply filed away for later.

But now, the sheer number of complaints against Sante has become impossible to ignore, and the feds have finally moved in. When they crash through Sante and Ken's rented condo door, they even find a final, terrified young woman who's just the latest maid in Sante's employment. After the arrest, Sante and Ken Sr. are transported to Las Vegas to answer for their crimes.

Kent's wife is called in to look after Kenny, but Kent is in for a treat of his own. Even from jail, Sante's determined to keep pulling the strings on the men in her life. At this stage, Kent's graduated from flight school and is on a training exercise when he gets a call from his mother, who orders him to come back to Las Vegas and help her.

When Kent resists the summons, Sante goes over his head, telling his superiors that her husband's had a heart attack and that she needs her son to come home to help care for him. Despite Kent's protest, he's ordered to return to his family. Sante's continued manipulations delay his return for so long that Kent gets an early discharge. He'll never fly a helicopter again.

Not that Sante cares about her son's life. She's staring down 85 years in prison for 17 charges, including involuntary servitude and transporting people across the border. Ken's only slightly less complicit, so he's looking at 75.

Of course, local news sees on the story of the millionaires who've been using slave labor in their mansions. And out come the old stories about the time Sante and Ken Sr. crashed government parties in D.C. and Ken's fake ambassador title. And all the rest. Pretty quickly, it seems like there's not a single person outside the family who wants to take Sante's side.

In fact, people are lining up to take their shot. An attorney in Hawaii assembles a group of Sante's former maids and tutors to file a civil suit against the couple, asking for $31 million in damages. So even if Sante and Ken Sr. somehow beat the criminal charges, they'll have to fork out millions in legal fees. And that's even if they win the suit.

It's not looking good. So it's a minor miracle when Sante and Ken Sr.'s lawyers manage to work out a deal for their clients. He just has to plead guilty to one count of misprision of a felony, which means that he knew a felony was being committed and didn't report it.

In exchange, he'll get off with probation and a felony record. Sante has to plead guilty to more than Kent Sr., but her sentence shouldn't be more than two years. They're astoundingly good deals, considering the charges. Still, both of them have to be talked in to taking those deals.

Both Sante and Ken Sr. believe there's a conspiracy against them, that they've been set up by crooked lawyers and a corrupt justice system. Ken finally sees reason when he's reminded that court cases are expensive. He could easily lose his fortune fighting the charges in court. Sante, meanwhile, believes that a guilty plea will set them up for catastrophe in the civil suit. It'll lose them everything.

But, like Ken Sr., she's finally talked into taking the deal. Then comes the big day, when Sante and Ken Sr. appear in court to actually sign the papers. Ken's goes off without a hitch, but then it's Sante's turn. And, surprise, things go very differently.

It turns out there's been a typo in Sante's deal, so now it says that the various prison terms she'll be given have to be served consecutively instead of concurrently. Seeing that, Sante starts throwing a tantrum right there in the courtroom. Instead of calmly asking that her lawyer and the prosecutors rectify the mistake, she starts screaming and crying and has to be physically restrained.

She's like an angry toddler, only there's nothing and no one that can get Sante Kimes to calm down. So she refuses to sign her deal, which means she's going to trial after all. And in the meantime, she has to stay behind bars. At least, she's supposed to stay behind bars. But as always, Sante has something else in mind.

On December 30th, 1985, about three months after her courtroom freakout, the news breaks that Sante Kimes has escaped jail. A couple of days after Christmas, she feigned a medical episode so that she'd be moved to the hospital, where security was much, much less stringent.

There, she easily gave her guard the slip and just walked out the front doors. So now, all of Las Vegas is on the lookout for the Liz Taylor lookalike who's on trial for slavery. The headlines don't get much wilder than that. Well, not yet they don't. Follow American Criminal wherever you listen to podcasts.