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Let's Go To Court!

81: The Kidnapping Of Edward Cudahy & A Baker Who Refused To Make A Cake

Let's Go To Court!

Let's Go To Court!

True Crime, History, Comedy

4.84.8K Ratings

🗓️ 7 August 2019

⏱️ 129 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Brandi starts us off with the old timey-est kidnapping of them all! It was the winter of 1900 in Omaha, Nebraska, and 16-year-old Edward Cudahy was walking home from a neighbor’s house. Two men pulled up beside him and lured him into their carriage. They’d chosen their target wisely. Edward’s father owned Cudahy Packing Company. He was a millionaire. He had more than enough money to pay their ransom. But would he?

Then Kristin tells us about a cake maker who didn’t want to make a cake. It was 2012, and Charlie Craig and David Mullins were in love. In fact, they were so in love that they decided to get married. That was a little tricky, though. At the time, Colorado prohibited same-sex marriage. But Charlie and David weren’t going to let legalized homophobia stop them. They planned to get married in Massachusetts and have a reception back in their home state. So they went to Masterpiece Cakeshop to order a wedding cake. There was just one problem. The owner of the bakery, Jack Phillips, refused to make cakes for same-sex couples.

And now for a note about our process. For each episode, Kristin reads a bunch of articles, then spits them back out in her very limited vocabulary. Brandi copies and pastes from the best sources on the web. And sometimes Wikipedia. (No shade, Wikipedia. We love you.) We owe a huge debt of gratitude to the real experts who covered these cases.

In this episode, Kristin pulled from:
“In baker’s case, neither side has much reason to rejoice,” by Jennifer Rubin for the Washington Post
“Colorado judge orders Christian baker to bake gay wedding cake. Will he say no?” by Patrik Jonsson for the Christian Science Monitor
“Colorado cake maker asks Supreme Court to provide a religious liberty right to refuse gay couple,” by David Savage for the Los Angeles Times
“Supreme Court to take case on baker who refused to sell wedding cake to gay couple,” by Robert Barnes for the Washington Post
“Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission,” Wikipedia

In this episode, Brandi pulled from:
“The Bold Cudahy Kidnapping” by David Krajicek, Crime Library
“Kidnapping Edward Cudahy Jr.” NorthOmahaHistory.com
“New Life For The Strangest Of Legends” by Micah Mertes, Omaha World-Herald

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

When your current speed is

0:05.0

current speed is stopped and the kids are asking difficult questions about

0:09.7

flying reindeer.

0:11.5

Remember every good petrol station has Costa Express and a Christmasy coffee,

0:17.0

made with real Costa beans.

0:19.0

It's the perfect treat in the Christmas traffic.

0:23.0

Our sticky toffee range is now in Costa Express machines.

0:27.0

That's Christmas, made a little better.

0:29.0

Costa coffee.

0:30.0

One semester of law school.

0:32.0

One semester of law school. One semester of criminal justice.

0:34.0

Two experts.

0:36.0

I'm Kristen Caruso.

0:38.0

I'm Brandy Egan.

0:39.0

Let's go to court.

0:40.0

On this episode, I'll talk about a cake maker who didn't want to make a cake.

0:46.0

And I'll be talking about an old-timey kidnapping.

0:50.0

Yay!

0:51.0

Oh, I'm taking it back to my roots. I shouldn't say I love kidnappings because I don't but the story. Yeah. I'm always intrigued. This is the old timiest kidnapping that I have covered.

1:05.0

Hmm.

1:07.0

Okay, I'm worried that our mic's certain, okay, pull your mic closer to you,

1:11.5

would you? I'm afraid we're too close. Would you like me to put it inside of my body?

...

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