Unmasking the Unabomber
The private family drama the media missed
November/December 1998
Journal of Family Life
In 1995, when Ted Kaczynski's brother David revealed to authorities
that his family believed Ted was the Unabomber, the media quickly
seized on the story of brother versus brother. But, in the process,
the truth of how the Kaczynski family solved the mystery was lost.
In August, for instance, when the federal government turned over a
$1 million reward to David for his role in providing information in
the arrest and conviction of his brother, the media ignored the
role that David's wife, Linda Patrik played in the drama. When the
Unabomber manifesto first appeared in the Washington Post on
September 19, 1995, Patrik, a philosophy professor at Union College
in Schenectady, New York, connected what she had learned about Ted
from her husband and the characteristics of the Unabomber as
portrayed in the newspapers. In this interview with Ellen Becker
and Tom McPheeters of the Journal of Family Life, Linda and David
reveal for the first time the real story of how the Unabomber was
caught
Linda Patrik: It took me a month or two to convince David
to take the possibility that Ted was the Unabomber seriously. I had
gone to Paris in the summer of 1995, and because there had recently
been bombings in the Paris subways, the Parisians were fascinated
with the Unabomber and there were newspaper articles on him every
day. It was a time when the FBI was releasing more information to
the public: about his woodworking ability, about the cities he had
lived in, and the fact that he was now considered to be a loner
rather than part of a revolutionary group.
Ellen Becker: Considering what you went through,
you must have experienced a lot of fear
Patrik: I was completely wrapped up in fear. But I knew I
had to tell David about this as soon as he arrived in Paris, after
he recovered from jet lag. I was very scared, to the point of
having paranoid fantasies about people planting newspaper stories
or people following me in Paris because I was so absorbed in the
suspicion that Ted was the Unabomber.
At first David thought I was nuts and didn't take it seriously.
But I couldn't drop it, so we discussed the situation intensely for
a couple of days.
Becker: Did you have any doubts in that period, or
were you pretty convinced that Ted was the Unabomber?
Patrik: In philosophy, you get really complicated notions
of what knowledge is, so that if I had to answer as a professional
philosopher, I'd never say anything of the kind. But if you allow
for the things that Western philosophy doesn't, such as strong gut
feelings, strong intuitions, then you allow yourself to draw
conclusions that don't necessarily appear rational at first. I
couldn't get this thought of Ted being the Unabomber out of my
mind. I was obsessed, and I couldn't tell if it was a realistic
obsession or a fantasy obsession.Tom McPheeters: Tell
us more about how you related to David in this period and how this
process went between the two of you.
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