On the afternoon of December 22, 1984, shots rang out beneath the streets of New York, from the subway’s 2 Seventh Avenue express train.
A Greenwich Village man named Bernhard Goetz shot four black teenagers who he believed were about to assault him.
The incident made international news, amplified by the city’s shameless tabloid newspapers because it so perfectly embodied all the cultural stereotypes about New York City in the 1980s.

Goetz became a sort of folk hero, the so-called Subway Vigilante, who took things into his own hands because the city’s weakened and inept services could not.
The facts of this case only came to light in the courtroom, playing out over the years. And, if you’re old enough to remember this incident, chances are that you may not be remembering it accurately.
To untangle the truth from the hype, Greg is joined in the studio by Elliot Williams, the author of the gripping new book Five Bullets: The Story of Bernie Goetz, New York’s Explosive ‘80s, and the Subway Vigilante Trial that Divided the Nation.
This episode was produced and edited by Kieran Gannon
LISTEN NOW:
We want to thank Elliot Williams for being our guest on this show. Please run and get Five Bullets especially if you like gripping court cases and insight about life in New York City in the 1980s (which many of you may remember).

FURTHER LISTENING
Other Bowery Boys episodes related to this show
The Disappearance of Judge Crater
Ford To City: Drop Dead
The Subway Graffiti Era 1970-1989
Taxi Driver (Bowery Boys Movie Club)
A few clips courtesy the New York Daily News (via Newspapers.com)


News clip on this show is courtesy Eyewitness News ABC 7. Watch the whole clip here. Movie trailer for ‘Death Wish’ can be watched here.
