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The Rosenbergs

May 29, 202550 min
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Episode description

Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed for espionage in 1953. Whether or not they were both guilty remains unclear, though most historians believe that at least Ethel was innocent. Learn all about this historical stain in today's episode.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to Stuff you should know, a production of iHeartRadio.

Speaker 2

Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh, and there's Chuck and this is Stuff you should know the podcast.

Speaker 1

That's right that we didn't start the fire edition. It's funny because that may have been the first time I've heard about the Rosenbergs. Rosenberg's H bomb Sugar Ray, panmun jump.

Speaker 2

What was the last part? I've never known what the heck he was saying.

Speaker 1

P A n m u n j o m one word pan muon JOm, Brando, the King and I and the catcher in.

Speaker 2

There all right, back up? What is panmu JOm?

Speaker 1

Well, I don't know, buddy, you'll have to listen to that. We didn't start the fire History podcast because I was like earlier today, I was like, oh man, what a great basis for a history podcast. No, yeah, of course it was a thing. Know, it's got a shelf life because they I guess, went through all of them from one to twenty twenty three.

Speaker 2

So was each each lyric its own episode.

Speaker 1

I don't know. I mean I would, I mean, that's how I would do it, because you can get a lot of mileage out of that song.

Speaker 2

For sure. That's really cool. That's off.

Speaker 1

Yeah I didn't check it out, but.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I didn't check it out.

Speaker 1

There's a man. Surely they didn't do one each because there's so many references and only ran for two years unless yeah, Daily Show.

Speaker 2

Maybe they just got bored after like halfway through they forget.

Speaker 1

This anyway, this is a that's Billy Joel's worst song, probably, And this is a this is a podcast about the Rosenbergs.

Speaker 2

Well, what was his best song? And if you don't say Uptown Girl, you're wrong?

Speaker 1

Probably Miami twenty seventeen.

Speaker 2

I don't even know what that is.

Speaker 1

I've seen the lights go out on Broadway. That's a great song. But I'm a Billy Joel, like super I'm a stand So are you really?

Speaker 2

Oh?

Speaker 1

Yeah, you didn't know that?

Speaker 2

No, I had no idea.

Speaker 1

Yeah, Glasshouses was the first record ever bought that. I've seen him live like a dozen times.

Speaker 2

I had no idea.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I like, it's kind of cool to listen to Billy Joel now. But I suffered many decades of people making fun of me because I would like, go see a Pavement show and then put on Billy Joel the next day.

Speaker 2

Man, people just stink sometimes.

Speaker 1

Hey man, you have a variety of tastes, as.

Speaker 2

Do you, for sure, and people should be left alone and not have their tastes made fun of.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I'll go to bat for Billy Joel in any day of the week, my friend.

Speaker 2

I'll tell you who maybe should have been left alone, and that's Ethel Rosenberg.

Speaker 1

Yeah. I guess we should give us sort of an overview of this before we dig in.

Speaker 2

Yeah, fair enough.

Speaker 1

So the Rosenberg's, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were a married couple. They lived in New York City, were from New York City, and they were convicted of committing espionage in nineteen fifty one and executed and put to death, which was This

is a very big deal for a few reasons. One is because a lot of historians basically say, like, I don't think Ethel did this, and she was probably innocent, even though Julius did, And a lot of people say, and even if he did, and she might have known about it, Like executing these two people with two young sons when no one else was getting executed for this at the time, was a travesty of justice.

Speaker 2

Yeah, And as we'll see, they got caught up in Cold War communists aastaria and we're basically put into a deadly game of chicken essentially, is what it amounts to. And totally it's one of those blemishes on the Department of Justice that's never really gonna go away that they did this. We'll see, we'll explain, but it's just a sad story all around. We want to say, Julius Rosenberg definitely was a spy for the Soviet Union, an enthusiastic

one whose spy career spanned more than a decade. Yeah, Ethyl probably was in some way, shape or format at least abetting it, if not some way minorly supporting it. She may have also played an even bigger role. But I personally do not think that both of them were innocent. Some people say that, just based on the research I've done, it just seems clear as day that they weren't both innocent. But to put them both to death. They were not the only spies who were caught and convicted during the

Cold War. They were the only spies caught and convicted during the Cold War who were executed. And that's what makes the whole thing so significant.

Speaker 1

Yeah, for sure. So let's go back and talk a little bit about their early life. We can kind of re see this first part, but I mentioned they were both born in New York. Ethel was born there in nineteen fifteen, had a few brothers, went to Seward Park

High School. She was big into theater, and this would come up because she loved to sing and dance, and later on, when she started to get a little political and was going to union events, she would like perform sometimes, I guess to you know, just make it a little more fun, Like, Hey, we're at the union meeting, and now here's a song from Ethel. I guess at the time greenngrass.

Speaker 2

Yeah, the Communist blues with a nice little communist tap dance.

Speaker 1

Julius was also born in New York. He's a few years younger, born in nineteen eighteen to Polish immigrants, and he also went to Seward Park High School. But I don't think they knew each other there. It seemed like they met when he was at City College and she was working as a secretary.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and by this time when they met they had both their interests in communism. It definitely blossomed. Yeah, I think Julius is even more than Ethel's by them, but Ethel I think it participated in a strike and was fired from her workplace for participating in a strike, and she was like, I think I'm into workers' rights now. Yeah. So when they met, it was at a charity benefit for the International Siemens Union SEA M E N and so they were both like, I'm a communist, you're a communist.

Let's get together and make little communist babies.

Speaker 1

And do the communist shuffle.

Speaker 2

Yeah.

Speaker 1

Yeah, he was definitely more into it. He joined a group called the Steinmetz Society, who was an affiliate of the Young Communist League, and he had a couple of friends that are gonna come up later in a sort of a small issue, but just put pins in the names Morton Sobel and Max Elector, who were buddies he made while he was sort of in this affiliated with a Young Communist League group society.

Speaker 2

Yeah, yeah, yeah, And they had very similar ideas to his. And in nineteen forty did you say that he trained as an electrical engineer. That's what he studied.

Speaker 1

I know, but you're right.

Speaker 2

Yeah, he was hired as an engineer for the US Army Signal Corps. And when he was hired, he clapped his hands and rubbed him together and said, what can I steal and pass along a secrets to the Soviet Union?

Speaker 1

Essentially, yeah, basically he had one miner brush with the FBI. In nineteen forty one, he was called into what's called a loyalty meeting. I guess just sort of sniffed people off the case and see how loyal they were to the United States, because they found a couple of mentions of Ethel in the FBI files, one that she had signed a petition for a communist city council candidate and another that was just someone who gave a tip that

accused her of having Communist leanings. But he was like, I'm not even into politics that much, which is a lie, let alone communism, which was also a lie. And so they pretty much dropped the case, and in nineteen forty two they moved to the Lower east Side to the Knickerbocker Village and started having those baby communists, Like you said, is.

Speaker 2

The Knickerbocker Village still around? Is that like a neighborhood in the Lower east Side.

Speaker 1

I don't hear it referenced. I mean, I'm sure you could tell where it was, but I don't. I don't know if there are any modern references or signage or anything like that, or it might be wrong, but I've never seen it.

Speaker 2

Maybe it's the KBV that all the cool people in New York talk about. What is that Knickerbocker village? Gotcha? Okay, so we've we've laid the foundation. There's Julius, there's Ethel. Their kids have come along. They're both very loyal Communists, especially as we'll see, and Julius's big time into spying and he became a spy. It's not actually clear how that happened. To tell you the truth, there's many different accounts. One is Julius's account, which is that he never spied

and it was framed by the government. Yeah, that's demonstrably untrue. His brother in law, David's account, which will get into more later, but he basically said that Julius would like He actually went so far as to go to the Soviet embassy in New York and said, Hey, can I do some spying for you guys. I'm a big fan, like he would he would basically just he wanted to spy.

He was putting himself out there. And then there are a couple of others that are probably likelier than either of the other two.

Speaker 1

Yeah, one Soviet agent named Alexander Feksilov said he was just introduced to another Soviet agent at a Labor Day rally in Central Park. His name was Semon Semyonov. And then other people said, now it was another intelligence person. So we don't know how he got into it. But to set the stage of why he might have done this, it was a time in the nineteen forties when the US and the Soviets were allied against the Nazis, and there are historians that say, like Julius didn't think he

was betraying the US. He thought he was fighting fascism when he sort of started getting into spying for the Soviets. I don't know about that, but that's what some people say.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I think that's the most polite way you could put it. Another way to say it is maybe be betraying the United States was just an incidental part of it.

Speaker 1

Yeah, that's a good way.

Speaker 2

But I saw that one of the things he was well known for. It's like he hated fascism so much that he would be seen walking down the stream and be like, I hate you fascism and he'd be punching the air. Yeah, he hated fascism, So that was one of his big motives for sure. Yeah, and in nineteen forty two, so he's hired in nineteen forty I guess he laid a little bit of groundwork for people trusting him. In nineteen forty two, he started passing weapons information to

the Soviets, and some pretty big ones too. One of the ones I saw was a proximity fuse, and that is a tiny radio that is used in anti aircraft guns that basically tells the anti aircraft gun okay, that plane is now in range to do maximum damage to it. Fire. Yeah, that's definitely something you want to have on your anti aircraft gun. And he passed that along to the Soviets. That was just one example, and he was He was

first handled by Semyon Semyonov, who you mentioned earlier. He got handed off then to Alexander Feklisov, who you also mentioned earlier. And so those twos account of how he got into spying are probably the likeliest because they were his spy masters when he was a spy.

Speaker 1

Yeah, agreed also during this time, and this is pretty key. He was trying to recruit other people who had that sort of same political leanings as him and recruit them. And one of those people was the aforementioned brother in law. So this is David Greenglass and this is Ethel's Ethel's brother. So in March nineteen forty five he was fired from the Signal Corps. The FBI said, wait a minute, you've got a Communist Party membership card and it's got your name on it. And he was like, oh, okay, so

I don't work there anymore. I'm going to start up my own business with Ethel's brothers, David who I just mentioned, and Bernie, and it's called Pitt Machine Products. And that did not go well. I guess that just wasn't a good business. I think David accused Julius of being a bad business person. He accused David of being a bad foreman. And by nineteen forty eight the company was almost not a company anymore.

Speaker 2

No, it was just down to the original investors. I just made scare quotes who were Julius and Ethel's two brothers, David and Bernie. Right, So another big part of this problem, I guess we should say what we're describing now is animosity that kind of grew up. Yeah, between David and Julius specifically, there was just some tension, even though they still remained in one another's lives, highly involved in one

another's lives. Some historians point to this specific instance of them going into business together, which is, yeah, all a bad idea to go into business with family. Uh, across the board. Okay again, we'll go back to my original motto, never trust family.

Speaker 1

Never trust family. Man. He's been saying that for years.

Speaker 2

Yeah, Well, Julius Rosenberg would agree with me, so would Ethel. But so David started to become resentful, and there was animosity throughout this period, and some people point to that as the basis of what came later.

Speaker 1

Yeah, for sure, David had borrowed a lot of money from Julius without returning it. So the animosity is building. His wife, David's wife, Ruth, so their sister in law, the Rosenberg sister in law. She in February of nineteen fifty was a lit a fire when her nightgown brushed up against the heater of her apartment. She had a lot of hospitalization and severe burns and high medical bills and gave birth to a daughter while she was recovering

from this. So all this is just to basically set up, like you said that David is he's in a pretty bad place in his life at this time.

Speaker 2

Yeah, he's going through a rough patch.

Speaker 1

Yeah.

Speaker 2

So we'll talk a little bit more about what happened, because there's different accounts depending on who you talk to. But what we do know that happened next was that they started to get caught. So the whole thing kicked off in February of nineteen fifty when a guy named Klaus Fuchs, who was a physicist, he was British. He was discovered by I six as being a Soviet spy,

and he was a big time Soviet spy. Apparently the spying he did is estimated to have helped the Soviets skip ahead an entire year in their development of the atomic bomb. Huge, huge damaging spy. And when he was caught he implicated others, but he didn't know others' names, He only knew their code names, and he mentioned Raymond Well. The FBI, the US government had what are now known

as the Venona Cables. The US had cracked secret cables that were encrypted that the USSR had sent during World War two, and in it it talked about a lot of the spies working for them, and by having these Venona cables and knowing people's different code names, they were able to basically root out at least one hundred spies using these cables. And Klaus Fuchs was first, and then after Klaus Fuchs was Harry Gold, who was the rayman that Klaus Fuchs mentioned in his confession.

Speaker 1

Yeah, that's right, so he was his US contact, Fuchs's US contact. And then eventually that trickled down and Gold led them to David green Glass, the Rosenberg's brother and brother in law.

Speaker 2

Yeah.

Speaker 1

So on June fifteenth, nineteen fifty, the FEDS got David green Glass and they rounded him up, brought him to HQ to question him, and he was, I'm not into espionage at all, like deny, deny, deny, which is I guess the sensible thing to do. But then they said no, this guy, Harry Gold, identified a photo of you, and he went, okay, you got me. I am committing espionage. He was arrested and he said, I passed on this atomic information and we'll get to how he knew this stuff.

In a minute. I passed it on to Harry Gold in June nineteen forty five. I was initially recruited to do this by my wife, Ruth, and Ruth was recruited by no good brother in law Julius. Key to all this is that he never mentioned Ethel being involved at first.

Speaker 2

Yeah. That's a big one right there. Just put that in your pipe and stick it in your hat, right Yeah. Should we take a break down and talk about what came next?

Speaker 1

Yeah, that's a good cliffhanger.

Speaker 2

Okay, we'll be right back. So the FEDS have David Greenglass now, who was one degree removed from the Rosenbergs, and he's already implicated Julius, but not Ethel. So the FBI goes to start talking to Julius. They questioned him in June of nineteen fifty and I guess basically the day after they started talking to David Greenglass's brother in law, pretty quick. Yeah, and they didn't have enough on Julius

to bust him yet. They knew enough because again, remember they had the Venona cables and all of these people are mentioned in the Venona Cables. They had basically figured out who was who, but the Venona cables were so sensitive and so highly cied the FBI, the Department of Justice could not use them in court. Oh yeah, so they could only use them as a background information. And then they had to extract these confessions and piece together

like as if those things didn't exist. So they knew everything, but they had to basically get David Greenglass and then later his wife Ruth to talk.

Speaker 1

Yeah, which they did over the course of a month or so. They started talking to Ruth, kept talking to David and about Yeah, like one month later, July seventeenth, they said, all right, we got enough, We're going to arrest Julius. And then a little less than a month later, on August eleventh, after Ethel participated in the grand jury hearing for her husband, she was also arrested and they

were both charged with conspiracy to commit espionage. And that was under the Espionage Act of nineteen seventeen.

Speaker 2

Yeah. Yeah, for some reason, going and being just a part of a grand jury trial and then getting arrested right after, I can't compare it to anything, but it just seems almost mean, like there should be a break in between, like you think you're going in and you're gonna be fine and then bam, you get arrested on the like as you're walking out.

Speaker 1

It just just mean, It's like the when they invited everyone of the football game the criminals.

Speaker 2

Yeah, that was a good one.

Speaker 1

Operation What was that?

Speaker 2

Uh? No, that was maybe that was the one where they created the corpse that they threw overboard World War two to fool the Nazis.

Speaker 1

Yeah, that inspired a Broadway show. But I think maybe a Broadway show should be inspired by the Redskins football game.

Speaker 2

I agree, And I'm surprised it hasn't happened yet.

Speaker 1

Yeah, or at least a Simpsons episode.

Speaker 2

I'm surprised that hasn't happened yet. No, it did. Remember we talked about it where they had the free boat giveaway.

Speaker 1

That's why I said, wink wink.

Speaker 2

Oh god, I didn't know you were winking at me.

Speaker 1

You're like, I thought you were just alurting, right, all right, So we should tell the story, and this is the official story according to the Department of Justice, on how this all went down. So we're just gonna kind of tell it that way to begin with. Yeah, I mentioned David Grenglass had atomic secrets and how he got those? Was he was in the army in nineteen forty three, and he was transferred to Los Alamos in August of nineteen forty four and was around the work of the Manhattan Project.

Speaker 2

All of a sudden, Yeah, he was rubbing elbows with Oppenheimer. Yeah, so that was August of nineteen forty four when you started working on the atomic bomb project. A few months later, Ruth came to visit David and his wife. Yes, his wife Ruth. So by this time when she came to visit her husband in Albuquerque, she had actually been recruited as a spy by at least Julius Rosenberg, and she essentially went to Albuquerque to convince her husband to become

a spy. All these like, both couples were very much into the Soviet Union, very much into Communism, so they have very similar views. This wasn't like, didn't take a lot of persuading from what I understand, And she basically said, hey, Julius figured out, probably as Soviet handlers told him that you're working on as the atomic bomb project. So he wants you to tell me everything you know about it, and then I'm going to take it back to him.

Then he's going to pass it on to the USSR and our glorious leader Joseph Stalin.

Speaker 1

That's right. January of nineteen forty five, David went back to New York on furlough, and just a couple of days after he got back, Julius came around, knocked on the door of his apartment and he said, Hey, what else you got for me on this atomic bomb? He said, write it all down, anything you can think of that's useful. I'll pick it up tomorrow. His wife, David's wife, Ruth, was like, his handwriting is terrible. You're not gonna be able to read this, and Julius said, according to the

DOJ said, not a problem. Ethel did I mention to he as a secretary, she can type like the wind. She'll type everything up so it's nice and neat and orderly, and we'll all be a working family together in this espionage project.

Speaker 2

All attention will dissolve after we start spying together. And that same furlough visit in January nineteen forty five, David and Ruth have dinner with the Rosenbergs and they're actually introduced to a Soviet operative named Ann Sidorovich and a really interesting plan is hatched here that ultimately leads to the downfall of David green Glass. Julia says, hey, Anne is going to be your contact. Now, she's going to

come visit you in Albuquerque. By the way, Ruth, why don't you move to Albuquerque to be with your husband and you guys can spy more effectively together. But when Anne comes to visit you, just give her all the information and she will give it to me. We should say there were people like Anne, like Harry Gold. Their

entire job was to act as couriers. And the reason why is because the Soviets rightly assumed that the Feds were following all of their operatives in the United States, so they couldn't possibly use an operative to connect two spies. They had to use a third spy to work as

a courier. That's what Anne was doing. But somebody said, what if Anne, like is indisposed, what if she, you know, gets a stomach bug and it's just pooping everywhere, or what if what if she falls in love and runs off and gets married and frig it's all about the USSR. And Julius said, I've got a great idea, a plan B if you will, and That is where the phrase plan B was coined.

Speaker 1

Are you messing with me? Okay? Yeah, So one small detail here is that Anne was in Denver, so Ruth would get the information from David and Alberquerque, then visit Anne in Denver to pass this along and if Anne had that stomach bug. This was the brilliant plan that Julius came up with. He said, hey me that jello box over there, Raspberry, and they were like, we've already uh, we've already had dessert. Why do you want this jello box?

He ripped the jello box open and took one of the cardboard pieces and he ripped that in half, handed Ruth one and said, I'm going to give this other half to someone with a secret identity that you don't know yet. That's our Plan B person. So if you show up to Denver, Ann is not there and somebody shows up with this jello box half that I'm holding and showing you, remember it's going to match. You can

put it together like a locket. Yeah, that will be the confirmation of their identity, which is so low fi it's actually kind of brilliant.

Speaker 2

It is brilliant, And I think that jello box those two pieces are in a spy museum somewhere. They got it, and rightfully so, but it actually came into play because and did get intosposed in some way that I hadn't figured out. And Harry Gold, who again one of his only job was as serving as a courier, he showed up in New Mexico on David and Ruth's doorstep and said, hey,

Julius sent me I spy. And they said, you got the the password, you got the code, you got the I don't know what would you call an object that serves as a password past key.

Speaker 1

They probably said, do you have the rip piece of jello box?

Speaker 2

Right? Or or they said I am the key master? Are you the gate keeper?

Speaker 1

Goeser?

Speaker 2

Sure, So he said, yes, I am the key master. Check this out. And he produced the half of the jello box.

Speaker 1

And what a moment.

Speaker 2

Yeah, Ruth, I think it was one of the other ruthor. David produced the other half and they put it together and they said, let's let's wrap brother.

Speaker 1

So, uh, he's now the guy David writes up as much as he knows at that point, you know, the extra stuff about the bomb that he you know, since the last meeting, and also like, here's some other people that you know, they're always trying to recruit people within Los Alamos and elsewhere, and Gold said, great, thanks a lot. Here's five hundred bucks. Which is interesting because they, I mean, these thing weren't doing it for money, right, Was this just a bit of a bonus for being a good soldier?

Speaker 2

I think so?

Speaker 1

I don't jump change back then nor now.

Speaker 2

No, I mean they were definitely true, true believers in communism and fighting fascism, so maybe it was just a little a lene yap.

Speaker 1

All right, So they gave him five hundred bucks. September of nineteen forty five, he went back to New York. David did on another furlough, and here he provided information right to Julius's face, said, here's some more notes. I even drew a sketch of the atomic bomb. Julius is like, this isn't very good, and he said, no, trust me, it looks basically like that. And he claims that ethel typed up the notes, and then Julius burned those notes in a frying pan, gave David two hundred bucks for

his troubles. And that's where we find ourselves.

Speaker 2

Yeah, when I saw that frying pan detail. I was like, God, how long did they have to heat those up to get them to catch fire? And then I realized that they were using the frying pan as like basically a fire. Yeah. I got it now, but it took me a couple of days.

Speaker 1

That'd be very funny in the movie though. It's just like just another forty five minutes? What's the flashpoint for jello boxes?

Speaker 2

Right? So are we at another stopping point?

Speaker 1

Yeah, let's do it.

Speaker 2

Okay, we're gonna stop everybody if we just hanched down.

Speaker 1

All right, we're back to the contemporaneous present when everyone had been arrested, basically right out of the gate. David and Ruth, the husband and wife team the Green Glasses, hired an attorney named O John Rogue or rog or Rogie, I don't know you pronounce that r O gge. And so they had a pretty good attorney, and he said, Hey, here's what you gotta do. Let me ask you this question. First, how much do you like your sister and her husband?

He said, because what we should really do if you want to get out of this is we should blame the Rosenbergs. And if you can make a case against them, then they're probably going to let you off pretty light. And he was right on the money with that line of thinking.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and the Green glasses said, sure, why not. I have a pet theory that if David and Ethel had been closer in age, she was seven years older than him, you may not have betrayed her quite as easily. But seven years is a pretty decent amount of distance between you and an older sister, and I think that makes the betrayal all the all the easier.

Speaker 1

My sister's six years older, and I would totally sell her out.

Speaker 2

There you go, So my pet, my pet theory is correct.

Speaker 1

That's right. So they this led to basically a different account. Some people may say it was an account that shifted. Other people might say, no, David just basically lied about Ethel's involvement. Yeah, and you might be wondering, like, well, what's the rumpus here? Like they had Julius dead to rights,

Like why did they need to get Ethel involved? This is because they were living in a time of the j Edgar Hoover FBI and prosecutors like Roy Kohane who basically were like, hey, if you want to get Julius. You got to get his wife involved and use her as leverage, basically.

Speaker 2

Yeah. And the other thing too, is even though they had Julius dead to rights, he was not cooperating in any way, shape or form. He maintained his innocence until the very end. And they wanted more spots. They wanted to flip him and get more and more and more people. Yeah, so they used Ethel, like you said, as leverage and they ended up picking her up. Based on the green Glasses testimony. Remember when David green Glass's first first question,

he does not mention Ethyl. He mentions Ruth, his own wife, He mentions his brother in law, Julius. He does not say Ethel was part of the spy ring. Now, all of a sudden he is saying she definitely was. And then even more damning before the Department of Justice came and said like, hey, why did you just touch a

perjury to help our case out. He gave that grand jury testament, the same grand jury that Ethel was arrested right after, rather unfairly, and he said, point blank, Ethel was not involved in this.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and we know all this is true because in two thousand and one, David Grenglass said, Yeah, I lied about my sister because I wanted to save my own wife.

Speaker 2

Yeah, he lied. During the trial, he perjured himself. He admitted it. So not only did he perjure himself, he perjured himself to implicate his sister, which a lot of people think she was basically innocent, if not fully innocent. So that's a really hard thing to swallow. But we're still not done with the d Jane and what they did here.

Speaker 1

Yeah, for sure, Julius and Ethel were tried together, along with Julius's college classmate that I mentioned at the beginning that I just had to put a pin in Morton, Sobell, you can take that pen out now. So the three of them are being tried. And if David and Ruth hired an attorney that had a pretty great idea to blame it on the Rosenbergs, they did not hire well because they hired Emmanuel manny Block, and I think that

was Julius's attorney. They had separate attorneys, and Ethel's was his father, Alexander, and neither one of these people were criminal attorneys at all.

Speaker 2

Now, Alexander specialized in facilitating the sale of bakeries I don't get it. I don't understand why they hired them. I didn't see I don't know.

Speaker 1

There had to be some connection. I doubt if they just yellow page that, you know.

Speaker 2

Yeah, maybe they were trying to help their careers. I don't know, but it was.

Speaker 1

Somebody probably knows. I bet someone will let us know.

Speaker 2

Yeah. So the prosecution had a bunch of federal prosecutors led by Irving Sapaul, who time called the nation's number one legal hunter of top communists. Not who you want prosecuting you if you are a spy for the Soviets. And then the judge was also not the judge you wanted to draw. His name was Irvin Kaufman, and he was known for hating communists and he used his bench to essentially punish them as harshly as he possibly could.

He was the kind of judge who would actually add ten years onto whatever sentence the DOJ was asking for in trials of communist spies. He was that kind of judge, and that's who they drew, you know.

Speaker 1

To be funny, as if who let us know about the connection to those attorneys was Billy Joel. What if he sent us an email said I know this guy's then attached you'll find an additional verse that I cooked up for you.

Speaker 2

Oh my god, to we didn't.

Speaker 1

Start the fire where I explain about the bakery guy.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and he'd be like, ps, what's this with my worst song craft? Right?

Speaker 1

Oh man, I can't believe I said that out loud. Yeah, I have to edit that out, which is just what I meant to say was there is no bad Billy Joel song.

Speaker 2

That was perfect. There you go. We'll just clip that out and put it over what you said originally.

Speaker 1

No, I'm going to leave it in. I'm gonna stand by it. Hey, listen, there's a big hit Billy. If you're listening. I love almost everything you ever did, but you can't win them all.

Speaker 2

That's a great lesson to learn. Billy Joel really is.

Speaker 1

Okay. So one thing we should point out, getting back on track here, about this trial and the prosecution, which hated communist. The jury of twelve had one black man, one white woman, and no Jewish members on the jury. The other were ten white Christian men who all were in favor of the death penalty.

Speaker 2

Yeah, which you know in their defense, like you can't be on a capital jury if you are in favor of the death penalty, but still it was not the kind of position that you would want to find yourself in, like this is.

Speaker 1

I never thought about that. I guess that's true.

Speaker 2

Huh, yeah, I think we talked about it in the jury episode. I'm pretty sure that's that's where I got it from, which means it could be wrong.

Speaker 1

But yeah, well, if you were against a death built, you just come up the works. They don't want you in there.

Speaker 2

Exactly, exactly. Yeah, so they're in a pickle, I guess is what you want to call it. And they're still like, this is all wrong. We're just we're maintaining our innocence. And the prosecution said, oh yeah, we'll sit there while we trot out a bunch of witnesses against you. Guys. They brought Max Elector, who was a classmate with Morton, Sobel and Julius. Remember Ruth's brother in law, lewis Abel and I guess that was from I guess she had

a sister. I didn't see that anywhere. George Bernhardt, who was Julius's doctor, Harry Gold, the courier for the Soviets, and Elizabeth Bentley, who was also a former spy, and each one had quite a story to tell.

Speaker 1

Yeah, And if you're wondering, like why did they get Julius's doctor in there, it's because he testified that Julius had inquired about going to Mexico and like, what inoculations do I need to get if I go to Mexico, like very suddenly? And the prosecution was like, hey, and I just made up for the very suddenly part, But the prosecution basically took it that way and was like, hey, this is evidence he was gonna flee, he was going to go to Mexico. Get that doctor in here.

Speaker 2

Right, So let's see Elizabeth Bentley, the former spy. She said I saw him or somebody who looked like him once talking to Jacob Golos, who was a known Soviet operative and the head of the Communist Party of the USA in Knickerbocker Village. The KBV no less in nineteen forty two. It's a little thin. Some of the other ones were a little more damning too. Yeah.

Speaker 1

By the way, I know, I sounded very dumb earlier when you said KBV right after Knickerbocker Village, and I didn't pick up on that. In my defense. I thought it would have been kV because knickerbucker is one word. That's what can be.

Speaker 2

Yes, but people like to like.

Speaker 1

No, I agree, I'd like three eating everyone. No, I'm not a not a one hundred percent more on. I'm just fifty percent more.

Speaker 2

No one thinks you're a moro on or even a more on.

Speaker 1

You should read the internet.

Speaker 2

Uh, people, there's plenty of people who don't like me either. Oh no, people take it personally. They're people that hate us.

Speaker 1

No, I don't. I don't read that stuff.

Speaker 2

Good Again, they can soak their heads.

Speaker 1

That's just that's right, kick sand, touch grass, all those things.

Speaker 2

So like so, like I said, touch grass, you haven't heard that. No? Is that like you they've been knocked down?

Speaker 1

No, I think touch grass is a more modern thing. Like when people are just social media fighting, someone will say touch grass, like, you know, get off the computer.

Speaker 2

Go outside. Yes, yes, yeah, okay, I think that's what Weirdly, I came across that for the first time within the last couple of weeks, and I promptly forgot it.

Speaker 1

Yeah, well you know what they should say, smoke grass, Quit internet fighting, go smoke some weed.

Speaker 2

So what about Max Elektor.

Speaker 1

Uh who was that? Oh he was the former roommate I think. And he came out in testimony against him too.

Speaker 2

Right, Yeah, he said Julius tried to recruit me as a spy.

Speaker 1

Yeah, that's right, not good.

Speaker 2

Lewis Abel, Ruth's brother in law, said, hey, I got some money from Ruth and David, And if you know David, that is weird. So I asked him where they got it, and he said Julius gave it to them, and I suspect for spying, and and Manny Block stood up as aid objection, and the judge said, overruled. You call me, you call me lover.

Speaker 1

Yeah, his dad's over there rolling some biscuits out.

Speaker 2

Oh. I'm glad you said that, because I have to get this out there. I don't know where it came from, but it will not leave my head. Sir, mix a lot buttermilk biscuits song. It's just I don't know that song. Parts of it are you don't.

Speaker 1

No and I love Sir mexical, I just don't know.

Speaker 2

It's a weird like novelty song that he had like very early on surely like.

Speaker 1

The rest of his serious work exactly.

Speaker 2

It's even more novel than his later stuff.

Speaker 1

Yeah, oh man Seattle's own what a legend.

Speaker 2

I didn't know he's from Seattle. Yeah.

Speaker 1

Yeah, because when they did the do you remember the Judgment Night movie and that amazing soundtrack.

Speaker 2

I remember the movie.

Speaker 1

Well, the movie wasn't great, but the soundtrack was great because they paired rock bands with the hip hop artists because that was a big thing. Oh yeah, and Sir Mix a Lot and mud Honey repaired because they were seattleites and their song was awesome.

Speaker 2

Nice remember body Count with Iced Tea?

Speaker 1

Oh yeah, I saw them at the first Lollapalooza.

Speaker 2

Nice.

Speaker 1

That was when Iced Tea was still making music. And was it like he's on that He's on that cop show forever now right?

Speaker 2

Yeah? I mean this is a rapper who had a song called cop Killer. Yeah, and he plays a cop, and apparently he's gone through some like metamorphosis in the eyes of police and people who support police. I bet from hating him to being like, hey, he's actually kind of a good guy because he plays a cop on TV. So well, it's really interesting.

Speaker 1

No, I remember the time, boy, he was persona non grata for law enforcement.

Speaker 2

For sure, and Icy didn't care. He's like, just watch, I'll be back in the most surprising way you can possibly imagine.

Speaker 1

As literal iced tea.

Speaker 2

He's like, well, not that surprising.

Speaker 1

Right, the second most surprising thing? You mean you play a cop on a TV show?

Speaker 2

He said, yep, bingo, that's what he was naring to say. Bingo.

Speaker 1

Oh man, we're getting really sidetracked. This is a fun one. Who knew the Rosenbergs are going to bring this out?

Speaker 2

I did not know.

Speaker 1

So it was a three week trial in all, like you said, they till the end said they were not guilty. The trial concluded in March of nineteen fifty one guilty all three defendants sentenced. The third guy, Morton Sobell, to thirty years in prison, sentence the Rosenberg's to death, saying their crime was worse than murder and that their work caused the communist aggression in Korea, so they were really

taking the fall for a lot here. There were a lot of appeals that were launched by Manny Block and company, petitioning the Supreme Court delayed things by a couple of years. All of those failed, but he did launch a pretty successful media campaign that got a lot of people very interested in the Rosenberg's sentence.

Speaker 2

Yeah, he finally got a newspaper to agree to look into the case. It was the National Guardian, a very left wing paper, and they investigated it and produced a very sympathetic, what I take to be, long form article on the Rosenberg's case, and that that article created a bunch of other press which spread further and further, really drummed up public sympathy to the point where they were holding vigils where a thousand people would show up in cities around the world in support of them, and people

thought like, this is this is not right. Pablo Picasso, Albert Einstein, the Pope, they all said like these people should not be executed, certainly not Ethel should be executed. And the judges like, I don't, I can't hear you. He had his fingers in his ears, like la la la.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and their historians to say like this all just sort of organically came about because of this press. The DOJ, of course, was like no, no, no. The Communist Party of the United States and the Communist Party overall launched a propaganda campaign on behalf of the Rosenbergs. So you know, it's a bit of a he said, she said, or they said they said in this case. But here's the

deal on the execution. You said it was a game of chicken early on, and I'm sure people that noticed that that mentioned were like, what is Josh talking about a game of chicken? And this is what you were talking about. Was the idea was even Herbert Hoover did not want to execute them, and it was all a ploy to try up until the last moment. And there were supposedly people on the on the walk to the electric traier that were like, don't want to change your mind,

because you don't have to die right now. If you want to give up some names.

Speaker 2

Yeah, yeah, So the execution was essentially leveraged, just like they used Ethel. They railroaded Ethyl into a conviction to use his leverage against Julius to get him to flip on other spies. They used the death sentence in the exact same way. And they expected one or both of them to be like, Okay, yeah, okay, that's fine, it's not we got two young kids at home. Let's all just cool off. We'll give you some names and some information. And Ethel Rosenberg and Julius Rosenberg did not do that.

And in fact, there was the head I think he was a deputy Attorney general at the time, who said Ethel Rosenberg called our bluff. So rather than one party the DOJ or the Rosenbergs veering off at the last second, they crashed head on and Ethel Rosenberg and Julius Rosenberg were put to death, even though essentially no one thought that was the right thing to do. And that's how they went down.

Speaker 1

Yeah, And I mean didn't you find too that Hoover even himself got in touch with a judge and was like, hey, listen, we don't want you to install the death penalty here, and the judge was had his fingers in his ear.

Speaker 2

Yeah, the FBI took an official stance that that Ethel in particular should not be executed. That was the official stance of the FBI, and it still happened anyway.

Speaker 1

It wasn't a good look. I mean, they were worried about the optics for sure, of especially because they were Jewish and you know, coming off the heels of World War two and they're like, they got two young kids. You cannot execute this woman.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and even more so Manny Block, Remember he was like an appeal machine. He had one last Hail Mary.

Speaker 1

Appeal that that was on the billboard on the highway.

Speaker 2

Yeah, exactly, with somebody holding a check for a million dollars that he got for them for their bakery. So he filed one last appeal and he basically said, dude, you're going to execute two Jewish people at the beginning of the Sabbath. Do you know how bad that's going

to upset the Jewish community worldwide? And Judge Kaufman, who was Jewish himself, said, you know, I hadn't really thought of that, And Manny Block's like, great, so let's postpone this indefinitely, And Judge Coffin said no, no, we're just going to move it three hours earlier before the Sabbath starts.

Speaker 1

Yeah. They were put to death at eight pm, and that judge was a real sob. They had a funeral in Brooklyn in June twenty first, nineteen fifty three, where

ten thousand people reportedly attended. They were buried finally accepted after some closer cemetery said no, at the Wellwood Jewish Cemetery in Long Island, and the boys it's just still hard to believe they didn't know that one of them, didn't, you know, for the sake of being a parent to their kids, didn't recant, But they didn't, And those boys, Robert and Michael, were adopted by Anne and Abel mirror Pole. Little interesting side note here. Abel wrote the song Strange Fruit.

Speaker 2

Which have you ever heard the Susie and the Banshees version of that?

Speaker 1

Oh no, but that's great.

Speaker 2

Yeah, it's really good. That's how I first heard that song.

Speaker 1

Another reference to the first Lallapalooza. Even who knew?

Speaker 2

Wow, that's really something.

Speaker 1

Wow, I know, right, did not expect that. Billy Joel is spinning in his piano stool right now.

Speaker 2

He's like, I know, I should have accepted that offer. I know.

Speaker 1

Michael got a PhD In economics, and Robert Rosenberg became an attorney.

Speaker 2

And both of them, they've dedicated their lives of trying to clear their parents' names. Finally, after years and years and years, they admitted, like, Okay, dad was a spy, but not mom. Yeah, and you said that. They were criticized by some people for basically choosing loyalty to Joseph Stalin over their two children and leaving them behind, and David Green Glass again who lied to and got his sister and brother in law killed. I said they were stupid.

He said, that was a really stupid thing for them to do, to not accept some sort of bargain to take the death penalty off the table. That's his opinion on the whole thing. Wow, that's what I said too. Yeah, and oh, I should say real quick, the reason that the brothers the sons finally were like, okay, Dad was a spy was because those Venona tables we talked about earlier.

Speaker 1

Yeah, they were.

Speaker 2

Finally released starting in the nineties, and it showed quite clearly that Julius was a very enthusiastic spy for the Soviet Union and probably Ethel definitely knew about it. But she may have been involved in recruiting Ruth, and if she did that, she was definitely a spy. But again, that doesn't change most people's thoughts that they probably should not have been executed.

Speaker 1

Yeah, yeah, totally, because I mean that's a whole differferent argument. You know, it's like, maybe they were guilty, but you should not have put them to death. That's what a lot of people seem to think.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I mean, including people from their own spiring didn't even come close to the death sentence. It was just specifically leverage that just never got taken away because the government wasn't about to be like, okay, you got us, all right, we won't kill you.

Speaker 1

Yeah.

Speaker 2

Yeah, yeah, it's just crazy.

Speaker 1

Boy. Yeah, this is a fun win. And there was a lot of jokes. I hope it didn't come across as insensitive. I mean that's kind of what we do here, so not be insensitive. Try to you know, kind of make jokes about stuff.

Speaker 2

Yeah, if you can't laugh about everything, then what can you laugh at?

Speaker 1

Nothing?

Speaker 2

Exactly? Actually I don't know if that's exactly true, but still yeah, since Chuck said exactly.

Speaker 1

That's not to examine that way exactly.

Speaker 2

It's listener mail time.

Speaker 1

That's right. This is about we heard from a lot of our Canadian friends. We love it when Canada points out something that they know that we don't, and in this case, it's about Cole's Notes. A great episode about the Cliffs Notes guys. The name rings of Bell to me probably through American movies and TV, but as a millennial Canadian, I'm far more familiar with Cole's Notes. Cole was a legendary bookstore across Canada, and so every location had a stand of Cole's Notes booklets focused on books

and plays covered in the Canadian school curriculum. I even remember reading them in school alongside Shakespeare plays to understand the better. Yes, they were often used to cram before a test without reading the material. They're also used as coal intended chapters. Slash Indigo is the big Canadian book read tailor now and they bought out the Cole's locations, but they still print and sell Cole's Notes today, so that guy did alright in the Canadian market. Thanks for

making me a little smarter each week. And that is from Natalie gud orm Son Catormson, great name from Alberta, Canada.

Speaker 2

Thanks a lot, Natalie, Thanks for making us a little smarter this week. We appreciate it big time. Yeah. And if you want to be like Natalie and tell us something we didn't know. We love that kind of thing. You can send it off to Stuff Podcasts at iHeartRadio dot com.

Speaker 1

Stuff you Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts myheart Radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows,

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