Billy Hayes (writer)
Billy Hayes | |
---|---|
Born | New York City, New York, U.S. | April 3, 1947
Alma mater | Marquette University 1964-1968 (withdrew)[1] |
Occupations |
|
Criminal charge | Drug smuggling |
Spouse | Wendy West |
Parent(s) | William and Dorothy Hayes |
William "Billy" Hayes (born April 3, 1947), originally from Long-Island, is an American writer, actor, film director and convicted drug smuggler. Hayes is best known for his autobiographical book Midnight Express about his experiences in and escape from a Turkish prison, after being convicted of smuggling hashish. Hayes was one of hundreds of U.S citizens in foreign jails serving drug charge sentences, following a drug-smuggling crackdown by foreign governments.[2]
Early life and education
[edit]William "Billy" Hayes was born on 3 April 1947, in the Bronx, New York City, the son of William Hayes Senior, a Metropolitan Life Insurance executive and Dorothy E (Dottie) née Banks, a housewife. Raised in a Middle-Class household with a younger brother and sister, Hayes was educated privately at Seton Hall High School, Patchogue, a Catholic high school for boys in Long Island, New York, graduating in 1964.
A major in Journalism, during his senior year at Marquette University, Hayes decided to drop-out from college to focus on travelling, surfing, sky-diving and writing.[3] To pursue these activities unabated, Hayes faked a psychiatric report in order to escape the Vietnam draft.[4]
Illegal drug trafficking
[edit]During the summer of 1967, whilst working part-time as a child psychiatric aide at Milwaukee County General Hospital, a friend returned from Turkey with some hashish that he had hidden in his money belt. Soon after, Hayes got the idea to smuggle some hashish by hiding it in a cast on his leg.[3]
No longer a student, lured by the orient, in April 1969, Hayes travelled to Istanbul. He hid two kilos of hashish in a cast on his leg and went back to the U.S. This was a lucrative endeavour with Hayes buying the hashish for USD $300 and selling the drug back home for USD $ 5,000 to clients with a dealer nickame of "Crazy" amongst participants in the illicit activity.[5]
With the money spent on overseas travel and a new motorcycle, Hayes decided to continue smuggling, first in October 1969 and second in April 1970, but started to get careless. “I seriously thought I was way too smart and good-looking to ever get arrested,” he admitted.
Using different means of transport, Hayes mostly flew from Istanbul to New York, but on his second trip, travelled to and from Istanbul on the Orient Express with connecting flights to the U.S from mainland Europe. The aim was to diversify routes taken in and out of the country so as to blurr the real intentions behind his visits.[5]
Arrest
[edit]At his fourth attempt, at Istanbul airport, after having passed customs, during a hijacking alert, Hayes was caught trying to smuggle the same two kilos of hashish (as on previous occasions) out of Turkey on October 7, 1970. The PLO had hijacked four airliners in September 1970 and the airport had reinforced controls by searching passengers for explosives given that sophisticated devices such as fluoroscopes or metal detectors had not yet been introduced.
Hayes was originally sentenced to four years and two months in a Turkish prison by a Turkish court. However, with his release 53 days away for good behaviour, he learned via the American consul that his sentence had been revised by the Turkish authorities and he was going to be convicted for smuggling.
At the time, President Nixon was adding pressure on the Turks to enforce their drug laws arguing that 80 per cent of the heroin reaching the streets of New York was of Turkish origin. To this end, Nixon successfully managed to get Turkey to ban opium cultivation which devastated Turkish farmers, the latter claiming inadequate compensation from the U.S for lost earnings.[6]
As a show of additional goodwill, the Turkish government, moreover, increased the length of prison sentences to new and existing offenders convicted of the crime of smugling. In effect (and indirectly), the authorities decided to charge Hayes for smuggling (which had been the true motive behind his visits to Turkey) instead of possession which now carried life imprisonment and the court ruling passed on September 10, 1973.[7]
Life in prison
[edit]Hayes was imprisoned at Sağmalcılar prison in Istanbul[8] after having spent one night in Sultanahmet Jail.[9] Following an incident in prison, he was briefly transferred in 1972 to Bakırköy Psychiatric Hospital, described as a 'lunatic asylum'. On several occasions, the United States Department of State pressured Turkey to transfer sentencing to the U.S. Turkish foreign minister Melih Esenbel stated that the U.S was not in a position to dispute a sentence issued by a Turkish court.[10]
Nevertheless, Esenbel noted privately to officials that a release might be possible on humanitarian grounds, if Hayes' physical or mental health was deteriorating, but in a private consultation, Hayes stated to U.S diplomats that his experience at Bakırköy was highly traumatic, and he did not have confidence that the hospital would certify him for early release.[10]
Hayes also commented that he felt attempts to win early release would jeopardize his prospects of being transferred to a more desirable half-open prison. On May 12, 1975, the Constitutional Court of Turkey declared amnesty for all drug offenses, which shortened Hayes' sentence from life imprisonment to 30 years and he was transferred to İmralı prison on July 11, 1975.
Declassified telegrams from the State Department indicated that in discussions between the U.S embassy and Vahap Aşıroğlu, Turkish Director of Consular Affairs, the latter believed Hayes would probably be released from prison on parole in October 1978, which in practice meant that a local prosecutor would declare him persona non grata and expel him from the country.[11]
Escape from prison
[edit]After Hayes' sentence was increased and five years in prison in Sagmalicar, Turkish officials transferred the American to İmralı prison on an island in the south of the Sea of Marmara.[12]
After 3 months on the island, Hayes escaped from İmralı on October 2, 1975, selecting a black, stormy night, initially swimming then finding a dinghi and rowing to Bandirma, 27km away on mainland Turkey. He went to Istanbul and checked in at a hotel.[12] Hayes recalls:
"A friend of mine, who had been released from Sagmalicar, was working in another hotel and I hoped he would hide me for a couple of weeks while I found someone to forge a passport and papers for me. But my friend had left the hotel and I was on my own. Then I caught a bus to the town of Edirne on the Greek border. And there I was stuck."[13]
Hayes continues:
"The border is one of the most heavily fortified in that part of the world and I had no papers. The Greeks wouldn't let me in and in Turkey I had all the rights of any escaped convict. None. I still had money that my parents had sent me while I was in prison so I hired a taxi to drive me down a dirt road and finally into a field. I waited until dark, then swam across a river into what I hoped was Greece."[13]
The following day, Hayes further progressed, avoiding farm houses, roads and barking dogs and eventually found himself into a Greek military zone. After over two weeks of detention and interrogation to determine whether he possessed any useful intelligence about Turkey's military, he was deported from Thessaloniki to Frankfurt on October 20 1975.
After interrogation by American authorities in Frankfurt, Hayes spent several days in Amsterdam, and then returned to the U.S, arriving at Kennedy Airport over three weeks later on October 24, 1975.[14]
Life after prison
[edit]Hayes wrote a book on his experiences, Midnight Express, which was later adapted into the 1978 film of the same name starring Brad Davis as Hayes. The film was directed by Alan Parker, with a screenplay by Oliver Stone.
Hayes has since written the sequels Midnight Return (Escaping Midnight Express) and The Midnight Express Letters - from a Turkish Prison, 1970-1975, the latter a collection of the original letters written home to family and friends during his imprisonment.
Three years after his escape, Hayes giving talks to promote his book and realized he enjoyed the limelight and the energy of performing. Hayes started in theatre, and his first role was in a production of The Glass Menagerie in Los Angeles.[12]
He studied with actor William Hickey in New York and later with Eric Morris in Los Angeles. He found that "acting became therapy". In 1982, he starred in the play Bent and other plays in New York.[12]
Hayes became active in the entertainment industry, specifically acting and writing. He appeared in the Charles Bronson 1987 film Assassination, as a hired killer. He wrote and directed 2003's Southside (later released in the US as A Cock and Bull Story), which won numerous awards, including the 2002 L.A. Drama Critics' Circle award.[15]
In 2010, in an episode of National Geographic Channel's Locked Up Abroad, titled "The Real Midnight Express",[16] Hayes finally told his fully accurate version of being sent to the infamous Turkish prison in Sağmalcilar, eventually escaping from İmralı prison on an island in the Marmara Sea.
Hayes travelled the world with his one-man show, Riding the Midnight Express with Billy Hayes, from its premiere at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in August 2013 until theatres closed in 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic.[17] Hayes also presented the TV series "Greatest Prison Escapes" produced by Sky TV. [18]
Return to Turkey
[edit]During the 1999 Cannes Film Festival, Alinur Velidedeoğlu, a Turkish advertiser, met Hayes by chance and interviewed him on the film Midnight Express. Hayes expressed his disappointment with parts of the film adaptation, especially its portrayal of all Turks as bad, and his regret that Turkey's image was negatively affected by the film.
Hayes also displayed affection for Turkey and the city of Istanbul. Although the Interpol warrant for him had by then been lifted, Hayes explained that while he wanted to return, he hesitated to do so, out of concern that many Turks might blame him for the negative publicity the movie had generated.[19] The video was made available on YouTube.[20][21]
The Turkish order banning him from the country was finally suspended and Hayes was allowed to return to Turkey on June 14, 2007, to attend the 2nd Istanbul Conference on Democracy and Global Security, organized by the Turkish National Police (TNP) and the Turkish Institute for Police Studies (TIPS).
Hayes said it was important to him to return, in order to "apologize and make amends" for the grim depiction of Turkey in the film based on his book. "The film wasn't what Turkish people deserved", Hayes said.[19]
In popular culture
[edit]In the 1996 film "Cable Guy" Jim Carrey's character visits Matthew Broderick in jail and recreates the prison scene in "Midnight Express" by opening his shirt and pressing his chest against the glass separating them, saying "Oh Billy" — a reference to Billy Hayes' girlfriend doing the same thing to him while he was in a Turkish prison.
Bibliography
[edit]- Midnight Express, Dutton, 1977.
- Midnight Return: Escaping Midnight Express, Curly Brains Press. 2013.
- The Midnight Express Letters: From a Turkish Prison 1970-1975, Curly Brains Press. 2013.
- Midnight Express Epilogue: Train Keeps Rolling, Curly Brains Press. 2022.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Contreras, Joe, "Busted at the Border: I'm Billy Hayes...least I used to be.", The Harvard Crimson, November 4, 1978
- ^ "Americans Abroad: The Jail Scene". Time. April 13, 1970. Archived from the original on January 18, 2010. Retrieved January 6, 2009.
- ^ a b "Billy Hayes". The New York Times Biographical Service. 4: 1661–1662.
- ^ "Billy Hayes is Taking the Locals these Days". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. 6: 46. 1984.
- ^ a b Lawrence, Christopher (March 14, 2020). "The ride of his life". Las Vegas Review Journal (RJ) Magazine.
- ^ "Turkish Opium". 162. Memorandum From the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs (Kissinger) to President Ford. August 21, 1974.
- ^ Quinn, Karl (March 24, 2015). "Billy Hayes: Convicted drug smuggler tells the true story behind Midnight Express". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved March 22, 2020.
- ^ INTERVIEW WITH WILLIAM HAYES/CODEL MURPHY / 030925Z MAY 74, U.S. State Department, Ankara, May 1974.
- ^ Midnight Return: The Story of Billy Hayes and Turkey. Documentary directed by Sally Sussman Morina, 2016, (01:22:35-39)
- ^ a b HAYES CASE / 190938Z MAR 75, U.S. State Department telegram, Ankara, March 1975.
- ^ BILATERAL AGREEMENT FOR REPATRIATION OF FOREIGN NATIONAL PRISONERS TO COMPLETE SENTENCING IN OWN COUNTRY / 091243Z MAY 75, U.S. State Department, Ankara, May 1975
- ^ a b c d "'Express' Put Hayes in Fast Lane". Chicago Tribune. February 19, 1987. Retrieved March 5, 2025.
- ^ a b Vernon, Scott (August 2, 1986). "Billy Hayes: From prisoner to performercott's World". UPI.
- ^ Gupte, Pranay (October 25, 1975). "Escapee From Turkey Describes Return". www.nytimes.com. Retrieved June 27, 2024.
- ^ "Riding The Midnight Express With Billy Hayes". plays411.com. Archived from the original on October 17, 2018. Retrieved July 6, 2017.
- ^ [1]Locked Up Abroad: The Real Midnight Express
- ^ "About". Retrieved November 15, 2023.
- ^ "Greatest Prison Escapes". Retrieved July 8, 2024.
- ^ a b Handelman, Stephen, "Revisiting the land of 'Midnight Express'", Toronto Star, June 24, 2007
- ^ Interview on YouTube
- ^ Interview Part 2 on YouTube
External links
[edit]- 1947 births
- Living people
- Marquette University alumni
- Writers from New York City
- 20th-century American criminals
- American cannabis traffickers
- American escapees
- American memoirists
- American people imprisoned abroad
- Cannabis in Turkey
- Criminals from New York City
- Prisoners and detainees of Turkey
- Escapees from Turkish detention
- People convicted of cannabis offenses
- Turkey–United States relations