Larry Bader disappeared under mysterious circumstances after a fishing trip on Lake Erie. He was caught in a severe storm, and his boat was later found damaged but without him. Theories range from a tragic accident to a deliberate escape, but the true reason remains unknown.
Larry Bader was earning the equivalent of $120,000 a year as a cookware salesman, which was twice the median income at the time. However, he was $2,400 in debt, had a hefty mortgage, and had not paid taxes for five years, which added significant financial pressure.
Larry Bader had recently increased his life insurance policy to include a payout for accidental death, cashed a $400 check (equivalent to $4,000 today), and took a suitcase with him on the day he disappeared, which raised suspicions of a staged disappearance.
Three days after his disappearance, Larry Bader resurfaced in Omaha, Nebraska, under the name John Johnson, also known as Fritz. He claimed to be a Navy veteran with a new identity and began living a flamboyant lifestyle, working as a DJ and archery champion.
When Larry Bader's identity was confirmed through fingerprint matching, his life unraveled. He lost his job, his marriage was annulled, and he was forced to repay insurance and social security benefits. His family and new wife were left in turmoil, and he moved into a YMCA, working at a bar to support both families.
Larry Bader may have experienced a dissociative fugue, a rare condition causing sudden and significant memory loss. This could explain his new identity and lack of recollection of his past life. The condition is often triggered by stress or trauma, such as his financial struggles or the storm on Lake Erie.
After his identity was revealed, Larry Bader's life fell apart. He lost his job, his marriage was annulled, and he was forced to repay insurance and social security benefits. He moved into a YMCA and worked at a bar, sending most of his earnings to support his two families. He died of cancer in 1966.
Larry Bader's boat was found with life jackets on board, a bent propeller, and some scratches, but it was not capsized or sunk. The gas line was disconnected or the gas cans were empty, but there was no evidence of a struggle or distress, leaving his disappearance a mystery.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio. Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh, and there's Chuck, and Jerry's here too, and this is Stuff You Should Know. That's right. I don't want to give away what this one contains, so let's just say it is the strange tale of a man named Larry Bader. Yes, who went to great lengths to escape Ohio.
Well, you just gave it away. Not really. This guy, Lawrence Joseph Bader, he was an Akron native. So shout out to my people, my wife's folks in Akron, Akron, Akron, Akron, as she says, because of that bridge. If you've been through there, you know what I'm talking about. He was born in 1926 to a Catholic, pretty well-to-do Catholic family. His father was a dentist.
And, um, Livia dug up some dirt from a family friend, uh, who was like, you know, Larry and his brothers and sisters were spoiled little rich kids.
Larry was pretty careless with his money because he could just get more anytime he needed it. But he was a he was pretty funny guy. He's pretty fun, dude. Had a lot of personality. And he used to do weird things like in one of his party tricks. But he would he would eat a whole chicken, like including the bones. Yeah, that's a that's that's special. Yeah. But put a pin in that. We're not just mentioning that strange fact for no reason. No.
So he joined the Navy in 1944. I think he left high school to join the Navy because the United States was in the grip of World War II. And he served for, I think, a little under two years. And when he came back, he graduated from high school and he went to the University of Akron. But school was just not for him. And he dropped out after a semester. Apparently, he was known for money-making schemes more than he was known for acing tests.
I got to say, if you're known for money making schemes after a semester, you must have been doing a lot of money making. Well, highly visible money making schemes. Yeah. Or you wear a suit that's got dollar dollar signs printed all over it. It's a green suit with dollar signs. That's another way to become known for money making schemes. Yeah. All my suits look like that. You know, nothing. You threw me off.
All right. So he's not lasting in college. He didn't last long in the Navy. But while he was in college, he did accomplish something because he got married. He met a woman named Mary Lou Knapp with a K. They got married in 1952 and within five years had three kids with a fourth on the way. And he was doing pretty well for himself. He was making the equivalent of about $120,000 a year these days.
as a cookware salesman. And that was about twice the median income at the time. So he's doing pretty good, but he still had some debts. He had a pretty hefty mortgage. He had a new car and was about $2,400 in debt.
Basically, you can multiply most stuff from this era by 10 and arrive at our modern conversion rate. So, you know, roughly $24,000 in debt is pretty hefty. Yeah. He also like he didn't pay his taxes for like five years, I think.
Yeah. Not good. No. And it was bad enough. He was bad enough with the bills or behind enough that the milkman apparently said, like, I'm not bringing milk anymore until you pay your milk bill. Yeah. So the thing is, is this guy, like you said, family friend from when he was a kid.
was like he was a rich kid but he was actually really charming fun to be around rich kid and apparently as he grew up into an adult he remained essentially the same like basically everyone who met him or had something to say about him later on basically unanimously said this guy was a good guy so if he's like cracking under the pressure of these bills and this debt
It's not showing outwardly to anybody who knew him. One of his friends said that he was a red-blooded American 30-year-old family man who liked hanging out and drinking beer with friends. And his friends liked hanging around him because he was just fun to be around, essentially, without being like a reckless party animal. He was just...
Fun to be around. Yeah. Just sort of your average fun guy. Exactly. And he was also, and put a pin in this, we just, we're not mentioning this for no reason. He was also very good at archery, had won some, some competitions. So he was into archery. He was a fun guy and everything's swimming along in his life, making a pretty good living, little bit in debt. And then on Wednesday, May 15th, 1957, he,
He had collected some bad payment checks from vendors from his business and said, you know what, I got to go to Cleveland to kind of clear up these bad checks with these vendors. He tells this to his wife, Mary Lou, who was, keep in mind, four months pregnant. And he said, so I'm going up to Cleveland. It's going to be the morning. And then I'm going to probably do a little fishing in the afternoon in Lake Erie. And so I'll be home late. And she said, what, any partner?
should say in that situation, which is maybe you could also come home and be a father and husband instead of going fishing after you do your work. And he supposedly replied with, yeah, maybe I will. Maybe I won't. All right. So I'm not saying he's some really bad guy. It may have been a cheeky response. That may have been how things went in their marriage. But he just was a little vague. And that will come into play.
So one of the things he did was he paid some bills before he left. And one of those bills was a life insurance premium. He had recently adjusted or changed the policy to include a nice payout for an accidental death.
And he whistled as he drove off to Cleveland and eventually went to Rocky River, Ohio, which is a little town on the Rocky River, which flows into Lake Erie. And he rented a boat at Eddie's boat dock about a half a mile inland from the lake from a guy named Lawrence Cutler. Cutler. Yeah. Cutler.
Yeah. Anyway, he paid 15 bucks from a big roll of bills. It's also kind of important. And he said, hey, Lawrence, I want you to put some running lights on this boat because I'm probably going to be out after dark. And Lawrence said, OK, I'll do that. But it's going to cost you an extra fiver, I'm presuming here at this time. And Larry Bader paid it.
Yeah, he paid it and he was like, all right, whatever, buddy. He did notice. And this is stuff that, you know, they interviewed Lawrence afterward for reasons that we still don't know because we're keeping this a secret. Well, we know. Well, we know. Yeah, sure. But he did notice that he had a suitcase with him. He thought that was a little bit weird. He said, you know, you got a storm coming. You might not want to be out there after dark. That is not what people in Cleveland sound like. Sure it is.
And like a Stephen King novel about Cleveland, maybe. So people don't go in there. That's why the Browns play. So, yeah.
He warned him about the storm. He goes out on Lake Erie. The Coast Guard sees him and says, hey, there's a big storm coming in after sunset, and I've noticed you have some running lights, so you clearly plan on being out after dark. And he was like, it's fine. And so they said, all right, go about your way. Three hours later, that storm does come in.
And Larry Bader has disappeared. They find the boat the next day about five miles away. The life jackets are all on board. There was a some scratches like it had hit some rocks. There was a bent propeller.
And some accounts say that it was either a gas line had been disconnected or the gas cans were empty. But either way, and I guess it's the kind where the gas line runs directly into like a gas can that's sitting on the boat must have been one of those kind of boats. But basically they were like, but nothing shows the kind of distress where a human would be completely missing. Like it wasn't capsized or sunk or anything like that. No. And the life jacket was in the boat, you said, right?
That's right. So that's a really, that's a, so that's a big point because the Coast Guard was like, that was one heck of a storm on Lake Erie. There's no, no way that anybody could have survived this. Even a strong swimmer like Larry Bader was known to be without a life jacket. Yeah. One of the oars was missing, but you know, just.
Do with that what you will. Right. But the boat was generally in pretty good shape. The thing is, is like this is not an uncommon thing. Like people drown in Lake Erie pretty frequently. It's a great lake. It's a very big lake. And just as a little side anecdote, when I was a kid, we used to vacation on Catawba Island on Lake Erie.
And every week we would go there for a week every summer. And every time we went, I would have to wait on the beach the first half of the week because somebody had drowned. And I was convinced that if I went in the water, they would, their dead body would bump up against me. And I just couldn't even bear the thought of that. So finally I would watch the news every night. And finally, when they announced they found the missing person, then I would start to go into the lake. And you thought, wow.
I won't run into that body now. I might become one, but it's worth the risk. Right. Yeah, because no one had any business swimming in Lake Erie back when I was a kid. What's Catawba Island like? What do you do there? Oh, you play mini golf and putt-putt. We stayed at this place. It was just like a block of...
Um, like I guess little condos or apartments or something like that. And everybody had beach towels, like drying over like the railing. And it was like on the beach, like the sand came up into your little front stoop. And, uh, it was just great. It was wonderful. I remember my oldest sister went on a date with a dude. She met there and they went and saw top secret at the drive-in. Oh, the vacation date. That's always great, man. That's a nice, I love young Josh stories.
All right. So they look for Larry Bader for a couple of months. The Coast Guard was like, no one's going to survive that storm if they don't have a life jacket. But they looked anyway. And they were also were like, well, he was a strong swimmer, though. So it's a little weird that like the boat wasn't that damaged and he's just nowhere to be found. Some people thought, you know, he had this big wad of cash. I don't think we said, but he cashed a four hundred dollar check.
So if you do the math, you know, that's probably like four thousand bucks. A lot of dough. So he may have been, you know, robbed and murdered or something. And also the suitcase was gone. So that could also explain that. But either way, they said, we just got to put this one to rest. And so in 1960, he was declared dead and his wife got that forty thousand dollar impunity.
insurance policy and social security started rolling in. She went kaching. That's right. And I believe that's where we should take a break and see what happened to Larry Bader. This is S.Y.S. Kessler. This is S.R.E.C.K.
Okay, Chuck, where we last left off, Larry Bader's missing. He's disappeared, but enough years have gone by, I think roughly three, that he's officially declared dead. His insurance policy has come in. His wife has said, this is what you get for telling me maybe I will, maybe I won't when I tell you not to go fishing. And if we rewind just a little bit to the day that Larry Bader went out on the lake and add...
Usually people say about three days. Zoom on over from Lake Erie over to Omaha, Nebraska. We sit down at a little bar called the Round Table Bar in Omaha. What we will see on May 18th, 1957 is a guy walk in and his name is John Johnson. Take it, Chuck. That's right. Oh, I was so busy trying to work up a Saturn joke about that 800 miles, but I couldn't do it in time.
We'll wait. I'll give you an hour. 800 miles between Omaha and Akron, roughly one-third the size of the distance between, and then I couldn't remember what it was on Saturn. The Cassini Division? The Cassini Division. So that's not a joke. That's making fun of my hard work. I know.
So here's what happens. Three days after Larry Bader disappears, 800 miles away, a dude shows up in Omaha at the Roundtable Bar. You said his name was John Johnson. He said, I got this driver's license here. It's got my name on it. I was a 14-year veteran of the Navy. It's a Navy license, as you'll see. I got out because of a bad back injury.
And I go by the name Fritz. And there was a bartender there named Betty who said he was a really well-dressed guy. He clearly had money. He was really sort of fascinating and charming. He asked me out like the second he met me, which is, I assume, what you do if you three days after you have left your wife and soon to be four kids. Oh, well. Probably ask out the first woman you see. Well, we haven't said it yet, but OK. John Johnson bore a really striking resemblance to Larry Bader also. Yeah, I mean.
Didn't people see that coming? I don't know. I mean, now they do. Okay. So this guy, John Johnson, a.k.a. Fritz, gets a job not there, but at Ross's Steakhouse. And basically it was like, hey, I came from an orphanage in Boston. There were 22 boys in this orphanage. They named us all John Johnson and gave us all nicknames so they could tell us apart instead of just naming us different things.
It's very strange. But they called me Fritz because I reminded them of a character from a comic, the Cats and Jammer comic, Cats and Jammer Kids comic. Different times during that period, he also would say that his Navy buddies thought his haircut made him look like a German soldier. So he went by Fritz. But either way, this is some new dude in town. And he was like, all of a sudden, the talk of Omaha.
Yeah, Betty Johnson's impression was not isolated. Apparently, people who met Fritz Johnson felt essentially the same way that she did. Like, he was a cool dude that you wanted to be around. Debonair, you could say. But he also was a bit of a character. And by a bit, let me just say that he bought a hearse and...
rearranged the back so that it was like a little lounge area for him when he picked up women on dates. And I saw one place, but it was a legitimate source, like a contemporary newspaper article that said that it, he had somehow gotten it licensed with the city as a hunting vehicle. Can you imagine anything more 1957 than that? 1957 bachelor. Yeah. I mean, he was an avid hunter.
That is not what he was going for. You think? I mean, I don't know. Yes, you don't put a lounge area in the back of your hearse for dead deer. No, no, no. I know. But do you think he had it licensed as a hunting vehicle because like he was hunting ladies and he just want to be able to tell people that? Yes, I do. I don't agree. OK, that's fine. But either way with UPI, buddy.
He's an eccentric dude. He wears a leather beret. His apartment apparently was just a bunch of beanbags and throw pillows. He had champagne parties. He had Siamese fighting fish.
He was an archer. He said, you know, I hurt my back. And so archery really helps strengthens the back. And so I took up archery. And then five weeks later, he's won a state championship in Nebraska and then won 13, I believe, 12 more, 13 total archery titles in the state.
And at parties would do the eat the whole chicken, including the bone trick. And the last three listeners went, oh, that's right. So he's he's working at the bar, but he buddies up with a guy that works at a radio station, KBO in. And he lets him come in there to kind of just monkey around because he was interested in broadcasting.
And he's monkeying around enough to where he figures it out and dears himself like he seems to be doing to everybody. Gets a job as a DJ reading the news. Yeah, I want to just backtrack a little bit and specifically say there is nobody in any interview or any article that I read about this who seemed to think that Fritz Johnson was a creep.
or like a jerk or like a sicko or anything like that. I know we've kind of painted him a little questionably, but there doesn't seem to be anybody who had any kind of weird vibes from him at all. He was just a fun guy to be around and just living up the bachelor life. Apparently he was saying like,
I spent, you know, my youth in an orphanage having to listen to the people who ran the place tell me what to do. I spent 14 years in the Navy listening to them tell me what to do. And now I'm finally free. I'm living it up. So that's essentially, I think, the best way to paint his character is that he was living it up, his newfound freedom.
Yeah, for sure. He, I mean, we can talk about some more of his flamboyance just because it's simply really funny and interesting. When he wrote a personal check to someone, he would sign it Fritz only. And then he wouldn't put it in a date. I don't know why I love this so much. He wouldn't put a date. He would just put a season. So he would write a check to someone on the date of, you know, autumn. And then he would just sign it Fritz. Isn't that weird that they would cast that? I think it's...
Well, it's the 1950s, I guess stuff like that would happen. It was also the 1950s. So you could collect your tip money as a bartender and a milk bottle and then just go hand that milk bottle to the uncounted to the person working at the bank and fill out the deposit slip one quart of money.
And I'm sure they thought, oh, he's such a character, but like, now I got to count on this stuff. Thanks a lot, dude. Every time he made that deposit, he'd think to himself, are you going to withhold the milk delivery? Yeah, exactly. So one of the other things that he was known for is
being a little unkind to friends who were engaged or married or about to get married. He was like, marriage is just another way to trap a fella. Yeah. Whoever gets married is a sap. Probably said something along those lines. That old thing. And then a few years after he appeared in Omaha in 1961, he got married. Yeah. Uh,
He got married to a model named Nancy Zimmer, who was 21 at the time. And she had a daughter from her first marriage. She said later that they were just too young. And not only did Fritz Johnson adopt her daughter, they also had their own son. So he had a family all of a sudden within just a couple of years.
Yeah. So he's working part time at the radio station, eventually works full time there and then transfers over to TV when he got a job at KETV, the local affiliate there, eventually getting promoted up to sports director. And also on the side, he was advising like consulting, I guess, for archery companies because he was just so good at it. He's like, well, maybe consider making the arrow straight. Yeah.
I did some archery at the camp. We took a big family trip with a bunch of families and I got the archery set out and it was quite fun. And I'm a pretty good shot. Oh, yeah. Any bullseyes? Yeah, I was hitting some bullseyes on the rag and I've never even done much archery. I just it just seems intuitive, you know, just kind of hold it steady and aim at the thing and then let it go. You're like, I'm just as surprised as any of you. I really was.
How far away, though? Are we talking like five feet? I mean, I don't know what standard archery is. I was shooting, I bet, from about probably from about 35 feet would be my guess. Oh, that is good, man. I don't know what standard is, but everyone's like, oh, yeah, you come up here all the time and do this. I was like, I actually never do this. I'm just good at it. Yeah. You just have to say that out loud with every shot. I know. Like, don't don't compliment me because you think I've worked at this. Right. This is all blind luck. That's right.
Speaking of blind luck, one of the other things that kind of made Fritz Johnson a noted character around town is that he ended up donning an eyepatch.
And he was one of those eye patch wearers who really needed one because they found a tumor behind his eye, I think his left eye. And to remove the tumor, they had to permanently remove his left eye. So he wore an eye patch rather jauntily from what I can tell. And that just made his legend even more. So like one of the local...
beloved TV announcers now wears an eye patch with his little pencil thin mustache. And everybody just loves this guy so much. Let me ask you something. Are you saying that there are people who wear eye patches just for attention that don't need them?
Yeah. I mean, I've never met one, but yes, I'm sure those people are out there. I mean, they're the same people who wear glasses. That's how they start. It's the gateway drug is like wearing glasses that don't actually work. You know that I did that. Well, you're just an eye patch wearer waiting to happen. Oh, man. I hope someone writes in that knows somebody or maybe that even did that for a time. If you did this in middle school, you get a pass.
Like it seems like something John Hodgman might have done in middle school. Yeah, for sure. For sure. But yeah, also not as a pirate. You can't be dressed as a pirate. No, no, no. Just be like normal street clothes. Yeah. Amazing. That's the rules. Should we take a break now? Yeah. I think there's no other place to take our second break on this. All right. We got another big reveal coming up right after this. This is S.Y.S. Casting. This is S.Y.S.
All right. So I promised a big reveal. Things are going great for old Fritzy. He's in a town. He's scoring with the ladies in the back of a hearse.
He's eating chickens through the bone and people think it's the best thing they've ever seen. He's on TV, for goodness sakes, with an eye patch. Can I say one more thing about the chicken eating thing? Yeah, like how do you eat bones? No, I mean, I can get that. If you cook a chicken enough, like it can be... Just dissolve it, sort of? Yeah, essentially. The thing is this.
That's not a party trick that you do quickly. People have to stand around you for possibly dozens of minutes while you do this trick. Everybody watch this. Right. Stop what you're doing and come over and quietly watch me. Like it takes a real showman to hold people's interest while you're eating a whole chicken.
Yeah. I mean, the only party trick I ever did is that thing with the hat against the wall, and that takes like two seconds. I don't know what that is. You put a baseball cap on backwards, and then you kind of get up against a wall, and then you act like you're blowing your cheeks out. And what you're doing is putting the brim against the wall such that the hat kind of levitates off your head like you're blowing it off your head. Oh, I want to see that. Why have you never done that for me? Hey, buddy. Next time I see you, the only...
I mean, I haven't done it for years because I refuse to put a baseball cap on backwards because I'm a human adult. But I'll do it for you. OK, thank you. OK. The guys out there with their hat on backwards right now are like, what's wrong? Is that not cool? No, it's not. My only party trick was holding my breath until I fainted. Did you ever do that?
Yeah, we used to do that where you'd hold your breath, like you bend over and hyperventilate yourself and take that last breath, cross your hands over your chest and your friend would just push as hard as they could on your chest and you'd just faint. I did it once and this is something you should not do. It's dangerous. Yeah, I shouldn't have that tone of voice right now. Like it was super fun? Yeah.
Did you ever actually pass out? Yeah. Yeah, I did one time and that was the only time I had ever passed out up into that point. And it was very, very strange. It was very strange. I remember feeling like I was dropping in on a half pipe on a skateboard as I went down. Oh, cool. I was kind of like, this is all right. We didn't do it for very long. Yeah, do not try this. It is such a bad idea. I can't believe we were even talking about it. Yeah, we should probably edit this out. Yeah. I'm sure Jerry will with her responsibleness.
All right. So, like I said, he's living his best life. Then on February 2nd, 1965, a guy who knew John Bader, disappeared man, saw Fritzie and
at an archery demonstration at a sporting goods show in Chicago and was like, that's Larry Bader. Like I would bet my life on it. And his niece lives nearby. And I know this. So I'm going to call her. She's 21 years old. Her name is Susanna. She drives over and she's like, Uncle Larry, basically. Pretty much. Yeah. Her quote was, pardon me, but aren't you my Uncle Larry Bader who disappeared seven years ago? Yeah.
And he was like, ho, ho, ho, no, I'm not. Go away. Actually, supposedly he was super polite. Yeah. But was quite insistent that they had the wrong person. He said, would you like to see my hearse? But the... Right.
But the resemblance was enough that then Susanna turned around and called her uncles, Larry's brothers. And they, I think, got on the phone with this guy and his voice enough convinced them that they should fly out to Chicago. They flew out to Chicago. Suddenly this guy's like, man, I wish I didn't have to work this convention. People are surrounding me and telling me I'm another person.
And so to kind of settle the whole thing, he's like, how about this? Well, let's go get my fingerprints taken. And they were like, that's a capital idea because our brother was in the Navy, too. So his records, his fingerprints will be on record. So they went to the local police department. They took his fingerprints. They handed them over to the FBI. The FBI compared them to the Navy fingerprints on record of Larry Bader. And the FBI looked up and said, this is a perfect match.
That's right. So Fritzie said it came as a literal physical shock. He said, I don't know anything about that other fellow. And he said, why would I have volunteered to give my fingerprint if I was trying to get some scam new double life and new identity? Like I wouldn't have gotten fingerprinted. It seemed genuinely like he didn't know and didn't realize this. He's like, I've got all these memories. I remember the orphanage. I remember growing up as Fritz Johnson.
Um, you're saying these memories are all fake and this is really starting to bum me out to be quite honest. Yeah. Like if he knew he was hiding from his family and he was found at this, um, sporting goods convention, he would have shot like a smoke bomb tipped arrow at the floor and then it vanished as the smoke just choked everyone out. Yeah.
Oh, I could literally smell that. I was so in that scene. But he didn't do that. And that is a really significant thing. Like he... So not only... Remember, if he was Larry Bader, who had assumed a new identity, to agree to fingerprints is a dumb move to begin with. But he could have been calling a bluff or something like that. Who knows? Maybe. But he also didn't have... It wasn't like he had some awful family life. Like everyone...
By all accounts, he liked his wife and kids and enjoyed being around them as much as any dad did in the 1950s. I'm not saying he was doting, but he wasn't like...
Oh, God, I hate these kids and my wife's a real drag. Right. Yeah. It didn't make sense. Yeah. A little a little bit in debt, but it wasn't like his his world was crumbling down around him such that he had to escape. It was all debt that he could get out of with a little bit of work. So none of this was making any sense. No. Plus, also, one other thing, Chuck, if you're on the run and a new with a new identity, you're
Usually the last thing you do is become a local TV personality in a large-ish city in the United States. Yeah. Let me see if the largest city, Omaha? I said a large-ish. Oh. I was like, oh, man, that's not what I know. The largest city in Nebraska. Yeah.
Yeah. So none of this is adding up. He yeah, you would want to keep a low profile. So it doesn't make sense. Well put. I think that was much more succinct than my whole jam. No, I liked it. The whole Omaha thing was great. So he hires an attorney, a guy named Harry Farnham. This attorney gets a team of psychologists on board. They examine Larry and test him along with the neurologist over about a week and a half.
They used hypnosis on them. They were like, we can't see anything medically wrong with this guy. It doesn't seem like a scam. Back home, Mary is or I'm sorry, Mary Lou is she gets this news and she was like, oh, I mean, I'd kind of moved on with my life. I'm I'm engaged to somebody new who I've been dating for a few years. Yeah.
But I can't like I'm a good Catholic. I'm not going to like divorce Larry, who is seems to be back in my life now.
Yeah. And initially she said that she wished he'd never been, he'd never turned up again, that they had gotten used to life without him. They'd accepted that he died and yeah, she moved on. And now all of a sudden her life to say it was complicated is a real understatement. Like a handful of people's lives were ruined when that guy, the acquaintance of Bader saw Fritz Johnson at that sporting goods convention.
like ruined. Not only do you have like Mary Lou Fritz slash Larry, Larry's wife, Nancy, their kids. Um, you also have like the, the nameless fiance that was engaged to Mary Lou. Like people's lives were completely upended by the news of this. And apparently, uh,
The whole time, Fritz Johnson is like, this makes zero sense to me. But the FBI said that my fingerprints match this other guy. And everybody else from Akron is telling me that I'm this other guy. I think I'm Fritz Johnson. But he resigned himself to be like,
maybe this is right. Maybe they're right. He wasn't just, he didn't deny it the whole time and he did not seem fishy at any point. He was also more than willing to talk to the press as this was going on, but he was not an attention hound.
Yeah, no, not at all. So Mary, all of a sudden, her life is upended with, you know, every regional news outlet is banging on her door. The insurance company was like that 40 grand, which will be $400,000 in 2024, basically life changing money. We're going to need that back. All those social security payments, we're going to need that back. Even Eddie and his boat rental company, it's like you owe us for boat damages.
Johnson, Fritzie, he loses that job. The TV station fires him. He gets that marriage annulled. He moves into a YMCA and starts working at the bar again, making 100 bucks a week.
And he's sending money to Mary Lou and Nancy. And I think keeping about what, like 70 or 30 bucks for himself to live on. And it's just it's upheaval everywhere you look. Yeah, for sure. So a few months later, it's funny. She waited a few months. Mary Lou took her four kids and they went to meet him in Chicago, I guess, like a neutral city.
And they spent the weekend together. And she told the press later that she was like, he was a great guy, good with the kids, but we're strangers to him. So it was a bit of an awkward weekend, essentially. The thing is, is she didn't really have a choice now. Like she was a Catholic, like you said, she didn't believe in divorce. And now her husband was all of a sudden back. So she has to figure out how to work him back into her life and their kids' lives.
as, uh, minimally disruptive as possible. And she's just completely just lost by this time. Nancy also, she is, she was saying, you know, I'm going to stand by my husband Fritz. Um, at some point she even said, I'm willing to go back to work to help pay Mary Lou child support if he, if he's going to stay with me, but it just,
that did not, it didn't work out as well. So Nancy took her kids and kind of went back into the background to leave Fritz to deal with this whole Akron thing. Yeah, the whole Akron thing. Yeah, I mean, and his kids, I don't think we mentioned their ages. They were two, four, six, and unborn when he disappeared. So,
Maybe that six-year-old has a memory. The others probably had not even any memory of former dad. Right. So again, he's not denying this. He's saying, I don't get this. This doesn't make sense to me. But he's not like, he stopped denying it after the fingerprint thing, but not like, oh, you caught me kind of thing. He seemed genuinely baffled by this. There's a really good kind of like one of the authoritative articles on this whole thing that
That was written by the Akron Beacon Journal in September of 1965. Beacon? Beacon. What did I say? Akron Beacon. The Akron Beacon Journal. I say it like a local. Yeah, sure. And it's funny because the journalist who wrote this clearly had just read...
Hell's Angels by Hunter Thompson. Oh, really? He was trying his hand at it. Oh, no. So like the whole thing starts in this jet flight that he's on on his way to Omaha. It ends on the jet flight too. And like he's talking about them walking through the town to the YMCA. It's just like he wrote himself into this article. It was just kind of funny to see.
The drugs started again around Barstow. Right. But what are you doing at Barstow? Right. But there was a quote in there that stood out to me that Fritz Johnson told this guy. He said, I've begun to think that God might solve the problem. And it turns out he was right because a year later he died from cancer. Wow. I did not see that quote. Here's just the tip.
Don't I'm not a big superstitious guy, but if you believe stuff like that, don't say it out loud. Right. You don't want to tempt God to kill you. No, because he'll do it just for laughs. Just to show you who's boss. September 16th, 1966 is when he died. Did you say it was the tumor? No, I said cancer. He moved to his liver, I think. Yeah, that tumor came back.
Passed away. First Methodist Omaha had a memorial for him. Then he was transported back to Akron, buried in his family plot. And now how many of these explanations do you want to go over? Because I almost feel like we should just skip to the one that you dug up. That sounds the most plausible to me. I agree wholeheartedly. There's just one other thing I want to say about his two funerals.
In Omaha, the funeral was given for Fritz Johnson. In Akron, the funeral was given for Larry Bader. But it was the same body. They moved from one city to the other. Yeah. I think that's cool. That is super cool. And a nice little footnote. But like we said, there were some theories that don't seem to hold water about different kinds of amnesia. But then you did some digging. And then I went back and did some further digging once you gave me what you dug. Yeah.
And it seems like a lot of people on the Internet and of course, these are Internet people. So it's not like like science isn't studying this. It's just sort of one of those things that's left to smart people on on Reddit. But what the general consensus seems to be on the Internet is that he suffered from what is known as a disassociative fugue, which is a very strange syndrome that.
in which you can have very, very sudden, really significant retrograde memory loss that can't be attributed to like being hit on the head really hard or something. Like other kinds of amnesia can be explained away in other ways, and this one can't. Right. Yeah, fugue state, I mean, it's basically like they are describing what happened to him.
But essentially what happens is you have this amnesia, but it wipes out your episodic memory, your biographical memory. And to the point where you accidentally, inadvertently,
move away from home, depending on how long it lasts, you're going to travel fairly far away from home. When you get to where you're going, you're going to set up a new life, the new identity, make new relationships, and you're not going to have any memory whatsoever of the life that came before this. That's a fugue state. And apparently it is actually real. I looked all over for like, like fake, this is made up, this is not.
like this is a crackpot theory that some psychologists came up with. No. Dissociative fugue is a widely accepted, very, very rare medical condition that they do not know how to explain. There's a struggle between neurology and psychology or psychiatry. Like, is it brain-based or is it, like,
like a break from some traumatic experience. And apparently it usually is prompted by some negative experience, but it's not something like seeing your family killed. It can be something like being $2,400 in 1957 dollars in debt and stressed out from that. Or I mean, here's what I think.
I think it could that whole boat trip and fishing expedition was just on the level. And that's really just what he was doing. He had all that cash and the briefcase, the suitcase, because maybe he just didn't want to keep that stuff in the car. And he went out in a really bad storm and had a traumatic event happen out there, like maybe being tossed overboard. I think that could have been the stressful event.
So that's one thing. Another thing, too, is when this disassociative fugue ends, you will probably remember your real life, but you're not going to remember what happened in the fugue state. My explanation there is that he died of a tumor, so that might have happened to him given enough time. And he just died before that memory of the real life came back to him. So I guess kind of what you're saying is he died in a fugue state, like he never emerged from the fugue state, huh?
Yeah, that's my theory. Okay. I think that's a pretty good theory, actually. I mean, it does seem like he was not malingering. He was not faking. This was not a con. It's a just genuine mystery because also like he just checks so many boxes for a fugue state, but it's just, it usually goes on for what weeks or months, right? Not years.
I don't know. That's what I don't know. That's what I saw. Oh, really? Yeah. But in that time, you're so convinced of your new identity that you can form relationships that now all of a sudden are jeopardized around the rocks because you don't remember these people anymore. And you're like, what am I doing in Omaha? Yeah. Well, when did he die? 1966. And when? 1965. Yeah. So it was only like a year. Right.
I mean, that seems plausible for what little I know about it. Yeah. Hopefully we figure out more about fugue states because then we'll understand a little more about Larry Bader. And if we don't, then we're never going to know what happened. Like, it's just a mystery. Yeah. I was wondering if this could be a movie, if there's enough there.
And then I decided it probably couldn't be a movie, but it could be like probably like a 10-part Netflix show Yeah with with tons and tons of archery montages, oh man so many So you got anything else about Larry Bader? I got nothing else. Thanks to Olivia. This is a interesting one. Yeah. Thanks a lot How'd you hear about this? I meant to ask you that I am convinced that
I know that this came from a listener, but I could not find it anywhere in email. So I don't think it did, actually. I think I might have just been searching for like, you know, kind of crazy stories or something. Or it came to you in a fugue state. Maybe. Maybe I'm not even Chuck Bryant. Well, Chuck seems like he's having an autobiographical crisis right now. And that, of course, unlocks listener mail.
I'm going to call this Rare Shoutout. We don't really give shoutouts on Listener Mail because we get inundated with people saying like, hi, can you say my sister's name? But we're going to grant this one because it is for a nana. And we like to honor the nanas of the world. Oh, that's sweet.
Hey, guys. Hope this message found you well. I'm reaching out to request a shout-out for Nana, my Nana. She's such a huge fan of you both. Every time I call, she always mentions your show, and you would think you guys are family members. If you get into her car, the Bluetooth speaker automatically starts playing an episode. Your show has brought her so much joy over the years and kept her sharp at the age of 81 and has given us something to connect over.
because Nana's high praise has got me hooked as well. That's awesome. For the last few years, she's always dreamed of going to one of your live shows, but it's never worked out. Now with her age, it would be difficult for her to travel to any future potential shows. My Nana is the most important person in my life, and I know it would mean the world to hear a message from you guys. It might be a shot in the dark, but I thought I would try. Thanks for your time and for considering the request. And that is from Nori Schall's.
or Chalice, I'm not sure how you pronounce it. But Nana, we just want to say thank you and you're great and we appreciate you and I'm not sure where you live. Maybe either you or Nori can write in and we can find out kind of how close you are and
and get you to a show somehow. Maybe we'll go do one at your house or something. Yeah, I was going to say the same thing. A show in Nana's living room. That'd be fun. Especially if it's in Omaha. I've always wanted to see beautiful Omaha. Wouldn't that be something? Well, thanks a lot, Nana. Thank you very much for not only listening to us all this time, but also for turning Nori on to us. That's pretty great stuff.
And if you want to be like Nori and tell us about your awesome grandparent, we want to hear about them. You can wrap it up, spank it on the bottom, and send it off via email to stuffpodcasts at iheartradio.com. Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.