Listen

Description

Send us Fan Mail

Episode 266

In the crowded, fluorescent-lit corridors of mid-20th century American power, few figures moved quite like Roy Cohn. He was not a president, nor a general, nor an elected official — and yet he seemed to orbit all three, leaning in close to the machinery of government, law, and ambition as if he had a private key to its inner doors.

To some, he was a ruthless legal strategist who understood how to win at any cost. To others, he was something closer to a warning: a man who treated politics as a battlefield with no rules, only outcomes. From the McCarthy hearings of the 1950s to the glittering, transactional world of New York real estate decades later, Cohn remained a constant presence in the background — advising, influencing, and shaping the ambitions of those who believed they were in control.

But behind the sharp suits, the courtroom victories, and the carefully constructed image of certainty, there was something more complicated — and far more unsettling — at work.

Support the show

Insta@justpassingthroughpodcast
Contact:justpassingthroughpodcast@gmail.com