[00:16.69]飛行員?醫(yī)生?律師?大學(xué)老師?
[00:21.99]不!
[00:24.16]他只是一個(gè)高中還沒畢業(yè)的孩子!
[00:30.64]一個(gè)極具天賦的騙子!
[00:35.82]一個(gè)普通人!
[00:40.03]Frank Abagnale 弗蘭克·阿巴內(nèi)爾
[00:46.87]語言點(diǎn)
[00:49.37]claim 宣稱
[00:51.99]squeeze through 擠過去
[00:55.64]under cover of 在…的掩護(hù)下
[01:00.68]safe-deposit box 銀行保險(xiǎn)箱
[01:05.15]Royal Canadian Mounted Police 加拿大皇家騎警
[01:14.01]While being deported to the U.S.,
[01:16.66]Abagnale claims to have escaped a British VC-10 airliner
[01:22.33]as it was turning onto a taxi strip
[01:25.54]at New York's JFK International Airport.
[01:30.24]By removing the toilet knobs in the lavatory,
[01:33.94]Abagnale squeezed through a two-foot-square hatch cover
[01:39.11]and dropped the ten feet to the tarmac below.
[01:43.70]Under cover of night he scaled a nearby fence
[01:48.23]and hailed a cab to Grand Central Station.
[01:52.77]After stopping in the Bronx to change clothes
[01:57.32]and pick up a set of keys
[01:59.55]to a Montreal bank safe-deposit box containing $20,000,
[02:05.67]Abagnale caught a train to Montreal's Dorval airport
[02:11.31](now Montreal-Pierre Elliot Trudeau International Airport)
[02:17.22]to purchase a ticket to S?o Paulo, Brazil,
[02:21.26]a country with which the U.S. has no extradition treaty.
[02:26.58]He was caught
[02:27.78]by a constable of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
[02:31.66]while standing in line at the ticket counter
[02:35.43]and subsequently handed over to U.S. Border Patrol.
[02:58.64]講解
[04:24.87]語言點(diǎn)
[04:27.24]claim 主張,聲稱
[04:30.99]She claimed that the ring was stolen, not lost.
[04:48.13]claim compensation
[04:50.70]squeeze through 勉強(qiáng)通過
[04:54.18]squeeze 擠,壓榨
[04:58.62]squeeze juice from an orange
[05:03.49]squeeze 擠入,塞入
[05:08.15]Squeezed her books into the briefcase.
[05:14.44]squeeze through 擠過
[05:20.78]squeeze through the crowd
[05:27.12]walk through
[05:29.28]under cover of
[05:30.81]cover
[05:38.57]The criminal escaped under the cover of darkness.
[05:48.78]undercover 秘密的
[05:52.69]an undercover investigation
[06:10.02]purportedly 據(jù)說
[06:12.71]a stroke of luck 一連串的好運(yùn)
[06:16.35]accompanying 伴隨
[06:18.65]undercover 便衣
[06:21.64]inmate 獄友
[06:24.23]vulnerability 弱點(diǎn)
[06:31.03]Before being sentenced to 12 years
[06:34.04]in the Federal Correction Institution
[06:36.72]at Petersburg, Virginia in April 1971,
[06:41.33]Abagnale purportedly escaped
[06:44.06]the Federal Detention Center in Atlanta, Georgia
[06:47.77]while awaiting trial,
[06:49.85]which he considers in his book
[06:52.05]to be one of the most infamous escapes in history.
[06:57.07]During the time,
[06:59.29]U.S. prisons were being condemned by civil rights groups
[07:03.81]and investigated by congressional committees.
[07:07.89]In a stroke of luck
[07:09.36]that included the accompanying U.S. marshal
[07:12.81]forgetting his detention commitment papers,
[07:15.71]Abagnale was mistaken for an undercover prison inspector
[07:21.13]and was even given privileges
[07:23.70]and food far better than the other inmates.
[07:28.10]The FDC in Atlanta had already lost two employees
[07:33.59]as a result of reports written by undercover federal agents,
[07:39.29]and Abagnale took advantage of their vulnerability.
[07:52.81]講解
[09:03.23]語言點(diǎn)
[09:06.40]a stroke of luck
[09:12.52]I thought I had had a stroke of luck
[09:14.87]when I was told
[09:16.12]that I had been promoted to a better job in the firm.
[09:26.67]accompany 陪伴
[09:30.51]He accompanied his friend to the film.
[09:36.42]accompanying 陪伴的,伴隨的
[09:55.12]While being deported to the U.S.,
[09:57.74]Abagnale claims to have escaped a British VC-10 airliner
[10:03.33]as it was turning onto a taxi strip
[10:06.47]at New York's JFK International Airport.
[10:11.21]By removing the toilet knobs in the lavatory,
[10:14.92]Abagnale squeezed through a two-foot-square hatch cover
[10:19.97]and dropped the ten feet to the tarmac below.
[10:24.64]Under cover of night he scaled a nearby fence
[10:29.26]and hailed a cab to Grand Central Station.
[10:33.83]After stopping in the Bronx to change clothes
[10:38.32]and pick up a set of keys
[10:40.54]to a Montreal bank safe-deposit box containing $20,000,
[10:46.66]Abagnale caught a train to Montreal's Dorval airport
[10:52.28](now Montreal-Pierre Elliot Trudeau International Airport)
[10:58.26]to purchase a ticket to S?o Paulo, Brazil,
[11:02.09]a country with which the U.S. has no extradition treaty.
[11:07.94]He was caught
[11:08.87]by a constable of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
[11:12.83]while standing in line at the ticket counter
[11:16.42]and subsequently handed over to U.S. Border Patrol.
[11:22.05]Before being sentenced to 12 years
[11:25.88]in the Federal Correction Institution
[11:28.64]at Petersburg, Virginia in April 1971,
[11:33.05]Abagnale purportedly escaped
[11:35.79]the Federal Detention Center in Atlanta, Georgia
[11:39.70]while awaiting trial,
[11:41.53]which he considers in his book
[11:43.97]to be one of the most infamous escapes in history.
[11:49.91]During the time,
[11:51.20]U.S. prisons were being condemned by civil rights groups
[11:55.69]and investigated by congressional committees.
[11:59.74]In a stroke of luck
[12:01.25]that included the accompanying U.S. marshal
[12:04.67]forgetting his detention commitment papers,
[12:08.27]Abagnale was mistaken for an undercover prison inspector
[12:13.08]and was even given privileges
[12:15.72]and food far better than the other inmates.
[12:20.10]The FDC in Atlanta had already lost two employees
[12:25.57]as a result of reports written by undercover federal agents,
[12:31.13]and Abagnale took advantage of their vulnerability.
[12:47.23]謝謝收聽