American heiress The wild saga of the kidnapping, crimes and trial of Patty Hearst

Jeffrey Toobin

Book - 2016

Examines the life of Patty Hearst who suffered an unimaginable trauma and then made the stunning decision to join her captors' crusade.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Doubleday, a division of Penguin Random House LLC [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
Jeffrey Toobin (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 371 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, portraits ; 25 cm
Audience
1110L
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [345]-351) and index.
ISBN
9780385536714
  • Prologue
  • Part 1.
  • 1. Nervous Breakdown Nation
  • 2. From Inside the Trunk
  • 3. The SLA
  • 4. The Point of No Return
  • Part 2.
  • 5. Prisoner of War
  • 6. Not Just a Bunch of Nuts
  • 7. Three Hundred Bald Men
  • 8. "I'm a Strong Woman"
  • 9. The Birth of Tania
  • 10. Stay and Fight
  • Part 3.
  • 11. Common Criminals
  • 12. Showdown at Mel's
  • 13. Live on Television
  • 14. Apocalypse on Fifty-Fourth Street
  • Part 4.
  • 15. "The Gentlest, Most Beautiful Man"
  • 16. Jack Scott Makes an Offer
  • 17. Road Trip
  • 18. The Streets of Sacramento
  • 19. Death of a "Bourgeois Pig"
  • 20. Feminist Bomb-Making
  • 21. Freeze!
  • Part 5.
  • 22. "There Will Be a Revolution in Amerikkka and Well Be Helping to Make It"
  • 23. "Your Ever-Loving Momma and Poppa Care About the Truth"
  • 24. More Excited Than Scared
  • 25. The Search for Old McMonkey
  • 26. The Verdict
  • 27. "Favoring the Rich over the Poor"
  • Aftermath
  • Author's Note
  • Notes
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Photo Credits
  • Index
Review by New York Times Review

CAPTIVITY TALES FASCINATE US because they challenge our fantasy of self-determination. From fictional representations, like John Wayne's reaction to Natalie Wood living as a Comanche at the end of "The Searchers," to the real-life P.O.W. Jeremiah Denton blinking his Morse code defiance on television, to Elizabeth Smart's possible bonding with her captor, we wonder: What would we do or become in such circumstances? Perhaps the captivity story that has fascinated us the most is the 1974 kidnapping of Patty Hearst, the subject of Jeffrey Toobin's terrifically engrossing new book, "American Heiress." The brief outline of the events will be familiar to many: Hearst was taken from her Berkeley apartment by the Symbionese Liberation -Army, or S.L.A. (a tiny, slogan-drunk band of revolutionaries so obsessed with guns and publicity that they seem almost pre-satirized). After being held in a closet and haphazardly coached in guerrilla warfare and revolutionary theory, Hearst declared - in a notorious message delivered in a mesmerizing combination of "breathy rich-girl diction" and "pidgin Marxist" jargon - that she was now "Tania," that she had not been brainwashed and that her captors had offered to let her go, but "I have chosen to stay and fight." She then helped to rob banks (in which one bystander died) and plant bombs until she was apprehended in 1975. In custody, she claimed that all of her crimes were committed under duress. Her lawyer, F. Lee Bailey, built his defense on the argument that she had acted out of "coercive persuasion" (Stockholm syndrome was not yet a common concept). She was found guilty and served nearly two years of her sentence before President Carter commuted it to time served. Was Patricia Hearst responsible for her crimes, or was she a victim who did what she needed to do to survive? Or is the truth somewhere in between? The story has been the subject of many books - some dozen are listed by Toobin. Also inspired by the case: two novels ("Trance," by Christopher Sorrentino, and "American Woman," by Susan Choi), a feature film, several documentaries, at least two porn movies and an episode of "Drunk History." Hearst herself wrote a book. Yet the questions remain unresolved, which is one reason for Toobin to investigate. Another is that he sees the episode as "a kind of trailer for the modern world" in terms of celebrity culture, the media and criminal justice. As in his earlier book "The Run of His Life: The People v. O.J. Simpson," Toobin uses his knowledge of the justice system and his examination of the evidence to pierce the veil of spectacle and make sense of many contradictory elements. For his research, Toobin drew heavily on the extensive materials about all the S.L.A.-related trials compiled by Bill Harris, himself a former member of the group. The collection includes information gathered through private investigations, some of it not duplicated in the F.B.I. files on the case. Toobin presents his account chronologically, but inserts back stories of the players and asides on the volatile "cultural crosscurrents" of the time (the wake of Vietnam and Watergate, the congressional hearings on the F.B.I. and C.I.A., the Zebra killings that terrorized San Francisco, the gas shortages and assassination attempts). He also addresses the spectacle itself, particularly the sensationalized artifacts generated by the media-obsessed S.L.A.: the Polaroid of Hearst in a beret holding an M-1 carbine, the communiqués, the security camera images of the bank robbery. His particulate telling is measured and understated, which is the right approach to such a high-mannerist American extravaganza (Guns! Sex! Money! Plus audio!). The book's real power comes from Toobin's ability to convincingly and economically evoke a broad range of people. He makes Patricia Hearst's father, Randy Hearst, sympathetic, describing how he transformed from "an overfed plutocrat whose cosseted existence could scarcely differ more" from the kidnappers into someone who listened closely to anyone who might help find his daughter, including inmates at nearby Vacaville prison. It fell on Randy because the various law enforcement agencies bungled things throughout. He was against confronting the S.L.A., which was the right instinct. The experience brought out a humility in Randy, who, Toobin writes, acted out of "his curiosity, his decency and above all his love for his daughter." TOOBIN EVEN SHOWS compassion for the S.L.A. Their munitions fetish, their inexplicable assassination of Oakland's black superintendent of schools and their delusions about being the vanguard of a revolution show them to be perverse and foolish. But as Toobin presents their individual stories, they become human-shaped and sad. Their origins in the prison-liberation movement led to a tragic case of "metastasized good intentions." Most of them got killed in a horrific shootout with the ever-ready Los Angeles Police Department. (Maybe "dictated, simply," by their DNA, "aggression, not patience, fueled the L.A. cops.") The description of that event - which was the biggest police shootout in American history and was carried on live television across the country - is shocking and definitive. Other people get Toobin's disdain, and it brings out his wittiest writing. About Hearst's fiancé, Steven Weed (who published a quickie book during the ordeal): "If there was one point of unanimity among the protagonists in the kidnapping, including the Hearst family, the F.B.I., even the S.L.A. and eventually the public, it was contempt for Patricia's erstwhile fiancé." About F. Lee Bailey making Hearst sign a release for his book, which he had already sold: "It speaks to Bailey's rugged concern for himself that he would confront a client facing 35 years." On an S.L.A. general's rush to issue a communiqué: "Like approximately no one else on earth, Bill thought the world needed to hear what the surviving members of the S.L.A. thought." As for Patty Hearst herself, Toobin treats her as a person, not a tabloid phantasm. He writes: "The threat of death hung over Patricia. Even though she was only a teenager, she faced her situation with courage and intelligence. She didn't panic or collapse." Hearst wouldn't speak with him, so Toobin gets her point of view from her book, her statements and his interviews with others who interacted with her. As he explains in his author's note, when "the evidence about her behavior and feelings is contradictory," he addresses it in the text and makes his "conclusions in good faith." He sides with Hearst when she says she was raped by S.L.A.-er Willie Wolfe. Former S.L.A. members deny this because their revolutionary feminism would never allow rape. Toobin points out that after someone is kidnapped and held blindfolded in a closet, sex can't be consensual. He suggests that eventually Hearst formed a bond with Wolfe. He also claims that Hearst fell in love with another S.L.A. member, Steven Soliah, which she denies. Toobin uncovers newly found secret letters written to Soliah from Hearst after she was arrested (and therefore not coerced). In them, her love seems unequivocal and passionate, both for him and for the revolutionary cause. Toobin's take on Hearst's state of mind is credible because he doesn't pretend clarity where there is none. On the big question of whether her actions were of her own volition after her kidnapping, there is "conflicting evidence." At first, she acted out of duress. She was traumatized in a number of profound ways. But as time went on, Toobin shows, she embraced the S.L.A. cause. "Patricia would make the same choice again and again - to remain with her comrades and avoid law enforcement." Were her actions voluntary during the bank robbery she was convicted of? That seems doubtful. But later, when she had a chance to escape during another robbery, she instead shot 33 rounds and saved her comrades from arrest. And in the following months, she made choices and committed crimes that reflected her "conversion from victim to perpetrator." What is also true, however, is that none of that would have occurred if she hadn't been kidnapped in the first place. So should she have been held responsible? Toobin doesn't condemn her for what she did. She converted to the S.L.A. to survive and then, after being arrested, converted back to being a Hearst to survive. But he does condemn "her sense of grievance, and of entitlement" when she campaigned for a presidential pardon even though her sentence had already been commuted. He points out how unjust it is that she succeeded: "Patricia Hearst was a woman who, through no fault of her own, fell in with bad people but then did bad things; she committed crimes, lots of them. ... If the United States were a country that routinely forgave the trespasses of such people, there would be little remarkable about the mercy she received following her conviction. But ... the prisons teem with convicts who were also led astray and who committed lesser crimes than Patricia. These unfortunate souls have no chance at even a single act of clemency, much less an unprecedented two. Rarely have the benefits of wealth, power and renown been as clear as they were in the aftermath of Patricia's conviction." In the end, Toobin returns to the specific mystery of Patricia Hearst, whom he finds fascinating even when incredible. Now an establishment matron attending dog shows, with all evidence of "Tania" seemingly erased, she remains complex, capable of simultaneously being a sincere convert to her surroundings and a savvy protector of her own interest. DANA SPIOTTA'S latest novel, "Innocents and Others," was published in March.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [September 14, 2016]
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* On February 4, 1974, two women and one man burst into the Berkeley, California, apartment that Patricia Hearst, heir to the fortune of newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst, shared with her fiancé, Steven Weed. They clubbed Weed and dragged a thrashing, screaming, 19-year-old Hearst into the trunk of their car. This was the start of a prolonged, violent, and sometimes absurd cross-country odyssey that led from cramped, filthy safe houses to isolated rural farmhouses. The kidnapping, travels, and trials of Hearst and her companions would draw in a variety of willing and unwilling characters, including a radical sports journalist; a greedy, alcoholic, but brilliant defense attorney; and even a high-school baseball player. The saga transfixed the nation as key moments played out on national television, including a horrific shootout and fire in which some of the kidnappers died, and during which Hearst, rebellious and unhappy about her impending marriage, appeared to embrace the cause espoused by her abductors, members of the Symbionese Liberation Army. With access to previously off-limit documents, best-selling Toobin (The Oath, 2012), New Yorker staff writer and senior legal analyst for CNN, has written an outstandingly detailed and insightful account of the Hearst case and its impact. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Toobin's high media visibility and a major national campaign, including an author tour, will ensure that this book is in the news.--Freeman, Jay Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Audiobook veteran Michael brings his considerable skill to Toobin's sprawling biographical narrative tackling one of the most controversial criminal cases in American history. Michael adroitly moves back and forth between Toobin's expository elements and the colorful dialogue among the principal players involved. As Patricia Hearst shifts from diffident young heiress to fiery revolutionary to celebrity defendant eager to return to her former life, Michael doesn't miss a beat, consistently maintaining vocal mannerisms and personality quirks in his portrayal of her. Michael's chilling turn as career criminal Donald David DeFreeze leaves a lasting impression. His rendering of crime-scene detail-including multiple bank robberies and Hearst's infamous sporting-goods store shootout-never fails to enthrall. Yet he also hits the right notes in undertaking the soap opera elements of Hearst and her captors turned comrades, especially the constantly bickering husband-and-wife team of Bill and Emily Harris. Toobin's writing and Michael's performance make for an enthralling listening experience. A Doubleday hardcover. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

The bones of Patty Hearst's story are relatively well known-pampered heiress kidnapped by radicals joins their ranks, famously helping them rob a bank at gunpoint-but as Toobin (The Run of His Life: The People v. O.J. Simpson) here shows, the details that flesh out the saga of Hearst and the group calling themselves the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) are weirder and more compelling than any work of fiction. For instance, while the group was among the most wanted in America, SLA leader Donald DeFreeze decided to recruit new members by going door to door in San Francisco's Western Addition Neighborhood. (Not only did no one he spoke to report him to the police, but he actually brought on board people who would turn out to be crucial allies.) The narrative is peppered with appearances by such recognizable names as Jim Jones, Joan Baez, future judge of O.J. Simpson's criminal trial Lance Ito, and Sara Jane Moore, who would later attempt to assassinate President Gerald Ford. Toobin's meticulous research is the book's bedrock, but his flair for dramatic storytelling makes it a pleasure to read. Though the author never states directly whether he believes Hearst's conversion was real, he provides all of the pieces needed for readers to assemble the puzzle for themselves. VERDICT An essential purchase. [See Prepub Alert, 2/29/16.]--Stephanie Klose, Library Journal © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Prologue The doorbell rang at 9:17 on the evening of February 4, 1974. From their perch on the sofa in the living room, Patricia Hearst and Steven Weed looked at each other and shrugged. No one was expected. But it was Berkeley, so who knew? Still, visitors were unlikely. Their cozy duplex was one of four apartments at 2603 Benvenue Avenue, a sturdy, well- made structure covered in the chocolate- brown shingles that were a signature of the neighborhood around the University of California, where both Patricia and Steve were students. The apartment offered an unusual degree of privacy. There was no door to the street, only a pair of garage doors, which were open. To enter, one had to walk up an outside stairway along the side and then find the entrance to apartment 4 on an interior walkway. Few did. With some trepidation, Patricia and Steve walked to the front hall. Weed pulled open the door a crack and saw a woman he did not recognize. Her clothes appeared slightly disheveled. "I'm sorry but I think I backed into your car," the woman said. "I'm sorry. Can I come in and use the phone?" Patricia turned away in disgust, thinking that the visitor had damaged her beloved MG roadster. Then, as she headed back toward the living room, she heard a crash. Three people, all bearing weapons, burst into the apartment. The woman at the door was named Angela Atwood, and she had not had a car accident. She was acting, and she was, as it happened, an actress who had recently played a leading role in a local production of Henrik Ibsen's Hedda Gabler . On this night, however, she was using her talents to initiate a kidnapping. Two men rushed in behind Atwood. Later, Weed would insist that both were black, but only one was-- Donald DeFreeze, who had recently applied a political filigree to a lifetime of petty and not-so-petty crime. The other man was Bill Harris, an agitated, compulsive talker, also a theater person at one time as well as a Vietnam veteran, and currently a revolutionary. DeFreeze knocked Weed to the floor, and Patricia fled toward the kitchen, in the back of the apartment. "Where's the safe? Where's the safe?" DeFreeze demanded. He had an almost quaint conception that rich people kept their money at home in safes. Steve and Patricia did no such thing, and Steve protested that there was no safe. "Take my wallet," Weed said. "It's all the money I have. Take anything you want!" DeFreeze, unhappy with this answer, belted Steve across the head with a homemade sap-- a leather- covered piece of lead. The pain knocked Weed almost unconscious. Atwood chased Patricia into the kitchen and put a black automatic pistol in her face. "Be quiet and nobody'll get hurt," she said. Harris ran after Patricia as well and then dragged her back toward the front door, where he placed her facedown on the floor. Atwood began tying Patricia up. She fought back-- Patricia was stronger than her delicate, barely five- foot frame suggested-- but Atwood managed to get some nylon cord wrapped around her arms and legs. She also tried to put a gag (actually a racquetball) into Patricia's mouth and a blindfold over her eyes, but her fierce resistance left both restraints hanging loosely around her head. Still, with Weed semiconscious and Hearst trussed, there was a brief moment of silence, which was broken by the arrival of a new face at the door. Steve Suenaga, also a Cal student, lived in one of the apartments across the walkway. He was heading out to see his girlfriend, when he noticed some unusual activity inside apartment 4 and poked his nose in the door. DeFreeze grabbed Suenaga and told him to get on the floor, facedown. Atwood tied him up, too. Suenaga heard Hearst whimpering, "Please leave us alone . . ." "Quiet!" Harris said to her. "Or we'll have to knock you out." Atwood said to DeFreeze, who seemed to be in charge, "They've seen us, we've got to kill them." Suenaga raised his head, and DeFreeze struck him on the head three times with his weapon-- an M1 carbine converted into a machine gun. A moment later, Weed was able to rise from his stupor. He made a wild rush at Harris, who blocked his advance with the sawed- off automatic he was carrying and slammed Weed to the ground. Weed then bolted for the back door. He pushed through the screen, busting it off its base, fled into the tiny yard, ran past his marijuana plants, vaulted the fence, and disappeared into the night. Two hostages-- Hearst and Suenaga-- remained tied up on the floor by the door. Lying facedown, Patricia began to realize that she was confronting more than a robbery. These people had demanded a safe but didn't look for one. They didn't even take Steve's money. What did they want? Why would mere thieves take the trouble to tie her up? She soon found out that her fears were justified. Atwood left first for the getaway car, a 1964 Chevrolet Impala convertible that the kidnappers had carjacked earlier in the evening. (In the backseat of the car, tied up and dazed from a pistol- whipping from Atwood, was Peter Benenson, the owner of the vehicle, covered by a blanket. He had been accosted after leaving a nearby market in Berkeley.) Camilla Hall, a poet as well as a terrorist, was at the wheel of Benenson's car, which she had backed into the driveway of 2603. The trunk was ajar, awaiting human cargo. The commotion had started to draw attention. In the house next door, a Berkeley student named Sandy Golden and three classmates were studying for a bacteriology exam in his apartment. When they heard a woman scream, they ran onto a small porch that faced 2603. For a moment, they stared eye to eye with DeFreeze, who lifted his weapon and fired two quick bursts at the students. He missed. Atwood jumped in the passenger seat. Harris, meanwhile, was half dragging, half carrying Patricia down the stairs along the side of the building toward the waiting car. She was kicking, screaming, and wearing nothing but a bathrobe, a pair of panties, and fuzzy blue slippers. Harris raised the trunk with one hand, but it bounced up and slammed shut. He groaned in frustration. He now had to put Patricia down and retrieve the key from Camilla Hall, in the driver's seat. While Harris went for the key, Hearst . . . disappeared. The kidnap victim had wiggled free from her bonds, for Atwood's training for the stage had yielded few insights about knot tying. After a few panicked seconds, Harris located Hearst, who had scampered into the garage, near her own MG. Harris again lifted her up and this time managed to deposit her in the trunk and close the lid on top of her. Then, for Patricia Hearst, chaos yielded quickly to darkness and silence. And cold. The temperature in Berkeley had dropped into the forties, and she had only her bathrobe for warmth in the trunk. A trunk? What was she doing there? What did they want? Why was this happening? In a way, she already knew: it was because of her name. It is difficult, at a remove of several decades, to conjure what the name Hearst still meant in 1974. Fame, wealth, and power on a grand scale. Her grandfather William Randolph Hearst (who died several years before Patricia was born in 1954) was a newspaper publisher, but that barely captures the scope of his renown. The Chief, as he was known, built the grandest private residence in the United States, San Simeon, and his life inspired perhaps the greatest American film, Citizen Kane . Patricia was just nineteen, restless and unformed, the product of a lonely childhood in a big wealthy family. She was the middle child of five daughters, the rambunctious one, the one the governess (that was the term the family used) disciplined with a hairbrush. She was sent off to boarding school when she was only ten and was in and out of five schools before she graduated from high school. She was never exactly expelled-- Hearsts were not expelled-- but it was suggested that she would be happier elsewhere, especially by the nuns who ran the Catholic institutions chosen by her mother. Mrs. Hearst was displeased, often. Catherine Campbell Hearst was a regal presence, as austere as the limestone mansion in Hillsborough where she and Randolph Apperson Hearst presided. In temperament, she differed greatly from her husband. Catherine was tightly wound, a stickler for proprieties, a Georgia beauty who persuaded Randy to make a kind of halfhearted conversion to Catholicism. In contrast, Randy liked nothing so much as a long day in a duck blind followed by a big meal fueled by scotch and red wine. He was a businessman of sorts, the publisher of the family's flagship newspaper, the San Francisco Examiner, but his role there was mostly that of a figurehead. Still, Randy possessed a kind of journalistic curiosity about how the rest of the world lived. Patty was his favorite; he related to her spunk and moxie as well as to her aversion to formal education. And she, in turn, loved her dad and allowed him to call her Patty without complaint. For others, she preferred Patricia. As for the Hearst name or her family's history, Patricia had little interest. She made a point of never seeing Citizen Kane . Her final high school had been the Crystal Springs School for Girls, in Hillsborough, which aspired to be a finishing school in the mode of Madeira or Miss Porter's, where the daughters of the San Francisco elite would prepare graduates for a women's college and, more important, for marriage. But by the early 1970s, the turmoil of the era had penetrated the manicured hedges of Crystal Springs, and the girls there began wanting something more than the lives of their mothers. Some wanted careers. Patricia wanted Steve. After graduating from Princeton, Steve Weed took a job teaching math at Crystal Springs, and his shaggy good looks generated more than academic interest among the girls in his classes. Patricia began driving her MG to his apartment for, she said, extra help with her geometry homework. They began sleeping together right around her seventeenth birthday. Steve was twenty- three. Patricia accumulated enough credits during her peripatetic education to graduate from Crystal Springs after the eleventh grade. A year at a local junior college followed. When she told her parents she was staying with girlfriends, she was actually spending most of her nights at Steve's. Upon her return from a long trip to Europe, she announced to Randy and Catherine that she would be moving in with Steve. Her mother wanted Patricia to enroll at Stanford, which was more socially prominent, but Patricia preferred the University of California at Berkeley, where Steve had started graduate school in philosophy. There, abruptly, the fun stopped for Patricia, even if few people knew the depth of her despair. In those days, as always, she spoke in a kind of lock-jawed monotone that gave away little of what she was feeling. That fall, in their first days together in the apartment, Patricia pinned her hope for happiness on an actual marriage, or at least an engagement, and she hinted that she expected a ring. (In the manner of most unmarried couples who lived together in those days, they felt compelled to sign the lease as "Mr. and Mrs. Steven Weed.") In time, Patricia got a ring-- sort of. For Christmas, in 1973, Steve gave her a pair of moccasins and a piece of paper with the word "ring" written on it, as a kind of promissory note. Hardly a romantic gesture. Steve thought Patricia was sarcastic. Patricia thought Steve was condescending. (Both were right.) Patricia enrolled as a sophomore at the university, and when she told Steve she was thinking of becoming a veterinarian, he informed her that she could never master the math and science requirements. She chose art history instead. Reluctantly, Patricia lapsed into the life of a proto- housewife. She bought furniture and crammed every surface with knickknacks-- little vases, ceramic shoes and bunnies, glass jars with stoppers, tiny sculptures. Tasteful prints, mostly Impressionist, lined the walls. (Patricia's mother, in a forlorn nod to Catholicism for a daughter living in sin, gave the couple a sixteenth- century stations of the cross bas- relief.) Above their bed, on the second floor, in an oval frame, was the photograph of the couple that had run in the newspaper to announce their engagement. The decor matched their lifestyle-- middle- aged. (Still, in a couple of ways, their tastes did reflect those of their generation. By the front door, there was a rack of their favorite wine, called Romance, which retailed for ninetynine cents a bottle, and they always maintained a generous stash of pot, which Steve also tried to grow in the garage as well as in the backyard.) Patricia cooked and cleaned; Steve did neither. They did everything, including have sex, on his schedule, not hers. Patricia made the beds or left them unmade, as she did on February 4. Their evening together on that occasion was typical. Dinner was chicken soup with tuna fish sandwiches, followed by Mission: Impossible on television, then schoolwork in silence on the downstairs sofa. Bathrobe and slippers had become her home uniform. At nineteen, this was her life? On the eve of her kidnapping, Patricia later acknowledged, she was "mildly suicidal." Now, incredibly, those fuzzy slippers were evidence of her struggle to escape from Bill Harris. Police photographers would note the presence of one on the stairway and the other on the driveway. And where was Steve, the man of the house? Her fiancé? Her protector? He had run away. "Take anything you want!" Steve had told the kidnappers, and indeed they had. They had taken Patricia Campbell Hearst, and now she was locked in the trunk of a car. The kidnappers brought three vehicles to 2603 Benvenue that night. There was the stolen convertible with Hall at the wheel, along with the kidnap team of Atwood, Harris, and DeFreeze; one hostage, Benenson, was in the backseat, and the other, Hearst, was in the trunk. Emily Harris (Bill's wife) and Nancy Ling Perry parked a stolen station wagon parallel to the front of Hearst's apartment. A sometime sex worker turned terrorist, Ling (as she was known) was volatile even by the standards of her colleagues; when she saw DeFreeze firing at the students on the porch next door, Ling stuck her automatic weapon out the window of her car and shot two quick bursts at them as well. She also missed. Waiting on the other side of Benvenue, facing 2603, was a blue Volkswagen Beetle driven by Willy Wolfe, the youngest in the group and the least experienced criminal. He was joined by Patricia Soltysik, known to all as Mizmoon, the name given to her by her occasional lover the poet Camilla Hall. The plan was for Wolfe to lead a three- car caravan away from the scene, followed by Hall driving the kidnap vehicle and Emily Harris and Nancy Ling Perry in the rear. The plan nearly failed at the outset. Wolfe made a left onto Parker Street, with the two other cars following close behind. Suddenly a Berkeley police cruiser appeared from nowhere and flashed its lights at the Volkswagen. The officer walked slowly to the driver's side to talk to Wolfe. Were they caught? The kidnapping itself was over quickly, but the gunfire prompted several calls to the police. DeFreeze and Harris, with automatic weapons splayed across their laps in the Chevy, faced a moment of decision. With eyebrows more than words, they asked each other, could we waste a cop? If the officer was questioning Wolfe about the kidnapping, it was only a matter of minutes until the whole plan unraveled. The only way to protect their mission-- their "action," in the military argot they favored-- was to kill the cop right now. DeFreeze was a killer, as he had proven just a few weeks earlier. But Harris was bigger on talk than violence; in Vietnam, he'd never even removed the rifle from beneath his bunk. But that was then. In unspoken accord, DeFreeze and Harris prepared to open their doors and turn their guns on the officer who was questioning their comrade. Just then, DeFreeze and Harris saw the police officer walk away from Wolfe's window, return to his vehicle, and drive away. Later, they learned that the officer had only stopped the Volkswagen to tell Wolfe to turn on his lights. And so the three cars headed off into a future that was nearly as mysterious to the captors as to their captive. There were just eight of them-- Donald DeFreeze, Bill and Emily Harris, Angela Atwood, Camilla Hall, Nancy Ling Perry, Mizmoon Soltysik, and Willy Wolfe-- but they called themselves an army, the Symbionese Liberation Army. As they drove off into the California night, with Patricia Hearst as their unwilling passenger, their unofficial motto might well have been "What now?" Excerpted from AMERICAN HEIRESS: The Wild Saga of the Kidnapping, Crimes and Trial of Patty Hearst by Jeffrey Toobin. Copyright © 2016 by Jeffrey Toobin. Excerpted by permission of Doubleday, a division of Penguin Random House Excerpted from American Heiress: The Wild Saga of the Kidnapping, Crimes and Trial of Patty Hearst by Jeffrey Toobin All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.