Episode 5 - Nerds vs Narcos - podcast episode cover

Episode 5 - Nerds vs Narcos

Dec 14, 202325 minSeason 2Ep. 5
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Episode description

Back in the Netherlands, the high-tech unit of the Dutch police works to crack the murder case.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

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Speaker 2

Previously on Hot Money, we discovered how do You Bui became the perfect place for the supercartel to come together. This time, I want to take you back to Dublin to Lower Baggert Street. It's a smart neighborhood close to the city center, filled with Grand Georgian houses. It's April twenty sixteen and Irish detectives have received a tip off one of the apartments on the street is a Kinahan Hotel safe house. But when they get there they find

someone else. A guy with a big belly speaking broken English. He's got some designer shoes, a bunch of fancy watches and several IDs, each with a different name.

Speaker 3

You know, here's this guy who had a number of identities.

Speaker 2

Shamus Boland, chief superintendent in the Irish Police.

Speaker 3

He was arrested for a possession of false documents and there was no certainty about his identity at all. It's following his arrest and US issuing an assistance request across Europe that within a number of errors, the Dutch police were in touch with US and they identified him from the fort of graphs on fingerprints and senior Dutch police officers bordered a plane immediately and flew to Dublin.

Speaker 2

The Dutch police scrambled to get to island because the man they find in the flat is a murder broker who's a top enforcer for members of the Supercartel. He's the one who police suspect arranged the murder we heard about in episode one, a contract killing taken out on a man hiding from the Iranian regime and living undercover

in our mayor ali Ma Thummad. When I heard about this, I first started to see what ali Ma Thummad's death might reveal about the transformation of international organized crime, because it raised a big question, how did a Dutch criminal working with a cocaine supercartel get mixed up in a murder that seems to have been ordered by Iran. At this stage, no one can prove the link to Iran. We still don't know who gave the murder broker his orders.

There's no smoking gun, but something is quietly happening in a high tech unit of the Dutch police that's about to blow the case wide open. It's the start of something huge, a breakthrough that will make the global criminal underworld shudder. I'm Miles Johnson and this is Hot Money the New Narcos episode five Nerds Versus Narcos. Last time, we heard about how the supercartel are ramping up their

operations from Dubai. European police can't touch them there, and their huge criminal operations back home are booming in the Netherlands. The ripples have started to reach Paul Veroks.

Speaker 4

The first five weeks, I didn't tell anyone. I didn't even tell my girlfriend. I was trying to get the heat away.

Speaker 2

Remember Paul, he's the crime reporter with the leather jacket and the gold hoop hearing, the guy who likes to meet with gangsters in public places like bars and coffee shops. It's Paul who broke the news that the electrician killed an al Mayor was actually a man on the run from the Iranian regime. But one day, Paul gets a different kind of tip from a source, and this one's about him. He hears the group of criminals started to

talk about him. They think he's got information, information that links them to several recent gangland killings, so.

Speaker 4

They decided to have me assassinated so that my information could not reach the news or the police.

Speaker 2

I was pretty stunned when I found out about the threats to Paul's life. I've worked in Italy and I've written about the Italian mafia, and I've spent time with state prosecutors living under police protection and reporters who fear for their lives. But a reporter hasn't been killed in Italy for many years, and neither has a judge. Now, in the Netherlands, one of the richest and most politically stable countries in the world, organized crimes seem to be

out of control. More and more murders were happening as the top kingpins tightened their grip on the drugs market and Paul's reporting on it, it landed a target on his back. At first, he doesn't tell anyone. He just keeps trying to figure out what's.

Speaker 4

Going on day by day, week by week. The source it provided new information.

Speaker 2

So Paul's able to keep safe for now, but there's a limit to how long he can go on like this.

Speaker 4

I didn't talk to the police about it, and.

Speaker 2

He faces a dilemma. If he tells the police, he knows he won't be able to do his work. Understandably, criminals aren't so keen on meeting a reporter with a police escort.

Speaker 4

As a journalist, I needed to stay in the It's one of my weapons.

Speaker 2

But he chooses to make a bold move. He reaches out to the criminals directly, the ones who are after him. He sends them a message through an intermediary and tells them he knows about the threats.

Speaker 4

That's the same the police will do if they know about a plan to kill someone, they'll go to the guys involved and ring the door and tell them we know what you're up to, don't.

Speaker 2

It's not long before Dutch law enforcement also finds out about the threats and one of Paul's police contacts calls them up.

Speaker 4

He told the ball a very bad information, but we need to meet now. So I told him, let's go to my house. I'll arrange some coffee and cookies, and then we'll be having an uncomfortable discussion because you are not going to tell me what you know, Indie Deil, and I won't tell you what I know, Indie deal pulling.

Speaker 2

The policemen sit down and have a chat over coffee and cookies, which is possibly the most dartrous repond you can imagine to any situation. And it quickly becomes clear their information matches.

Speaker 4

Up, and then all kinds of a lot of people from the government got involved.

Speaker 2

He tries to keep working, but it becomes clear that the people who are after him they haven't given up.

Speaker 4

And then one day it was clear that if we wouldn't leave now, we would not be safe anymore.

Speaker 2

Pauland's govern now race to pack their bags because they've been told they have to move to a safe house, a.

Speaker 4

Very luxurious place, much more luxury is than our normal apartment. And I was transported like the king, quite literally, because the same organization that secured me secures the king. So I was in a luxury but it was like a golden cage because I couldn't get out. I couldn't get anywhere without a group of people, well trained, well armed people around me. That's a weird way to live and a weird way to do your job. But they made

it possible for me to work. There hasn't been one day I've not been working because of this.

Speaker 2

And it's not just the threats against Paul. Really crazy things start to happen. Criminals fire a rocket launcher the offices of a Dutch magazine that's been running stories about drugs traffickers. No one is hurt, but the message is very clear journalists and how fair game? And if you choose to report on us, you're choosing to put your life in danger. It's sort of like Paul and his

colleagues aren't just crime journalists anymore. They're on the front line covering a full blown attack on Dutch society and the men behind it all. They aren't even in the Netherlands. They're in Dubai, living the high life and far out of the reach of law enforcement. But police are about to make a breakthrough that will change everything.

Speaker 5

I really got enthusiastic on that day hearing the panic.

Speaker 2

Take a moment to imagine someone who strikes terror into the hearts of the world's most murderous criminals, and I can guarantee you're not picturing Martin. Engbert. Martin's slight and softly spoken, thoughtful. He has a bit of the air of a tech guy as Silicon Valley blue sky thinker in a Steve jobstyle black turtleneck. Martin is the Dutch

public prosecutor for high tech crime in twenty seventeen. He and his team are working on a secret project, one that will turn him into a sort of nerdy batman. It all starts when Dutch beliefs notice a new gadget showing up on the bodies of murdered gang members. They all seem to be carrying a particular and peculiar type of cell phone.

Speaker 5

They don't have a camera, the camera has removed. They don't have a microphone. The microphone is removed.

Speaker 2

These phones are useless for calls and they're only good for messaging. And the phone service runs through specialized companies that offer a particular promise to their clients.

Speaker 5

They advertise police cannot break the encryption on the phones.

Speaker 2

Back in the days before encrypted messages, the criminals were smart, they would meet face to face, and if they were stupid, they speak on the phone.

Speaker 5

Now, I don't want to say famous, but we are well known for wired tepping. But the organized crime groups know that, so the organized crime groups in the Netherlands they don't talk about anything on the phone themselves anymore.

Speaker 2

Technology disrupts every business sector, and drug trafficking is no different. These cryptophones transformed the way people run organized crime groups. You don't need to be in the same city anymore to send an order to an underling. You don't even need to be in the same country. You can now run a vast and complex drug trafficking empire from Dubai

without ever getting your hands dirty. You can connect with suppliers, you can manage your finances, and most importantly, you can order murders and the police have almost no way of seeing what you're up to. Martin and his colleagues are determined to figure out a way to crack these phones, but they're sort of stuck in illegal Catch twenty two.

Martin is certain that the phones are being used by organized criminals, but he can't prove it without access to the messages, and to get access he needs proof that they really are being used for crime. So he comes up with a solution. Don't go after the criminals, go after the phone company. Most of the phones are made by a small Dutch supplier called Enetcom, and most of their servers are in Canada.

Speaker 5

We convinced the Canadian judge that there would be evidence on those servers proving that Enucom was supplying telephones to criminals.

Speaker 2

So one morning, after getting permission from a judge, a team from Martin's office get on a fly from Amsterdam to Canada.

Speaker 5

I remember a lot of details of the day we went to Canada. We copied six terrhabytes, which seemed a lot of data. So everybody was really excited because you think we have six terabytes of emails, which would be billions of messages.

Speaker 2

It's a potentially huge breakthrough, a treasure trove of information and evidence, but it's all encrypted. There are layers and layers of passwords and digital keys, and even if they do crack the encryption, Martin has another problem.

Speaker 5

And had gone try to delete all the information of their clients. After two or three days. So you receive an email, you read the email, you do nothing with the email, and then after two or three days it will self delete.

Speaker 2

The hackers on the high Tech team get to work. They grind late into the night trying to break the encryption on the messages. There's a lot of trial and error. First, the team have to crack the master password, and to do that they have to try millions of passwords, millions of combinations. It takes months, and we brute forced the password.

Speaker 5

So we tried a lot of passwords and eventually we were able to break the password off the key surfer and by doing that we were able to use the private keys. And if you have the private key sing you have to encrypt it messengers yet down it's easy.

Speaker 2

Martin and his colleagues have prized open a vault of evidence about what's really going on inside European organized crime. They can see how conspiracies unfolded minute by minute through strings of chats between gangsters. To really set the cat amongst the pigeons, Martin's team added a little flourish, a sort of middle finger to the criminals.

Speaker 5

We send out a message to all the users of anetcom. We told them the police is now in Canada securing all the information of your foots, and we heard the panic. So in an airleance. The panics within organized crime groups started on that day.

Speaker 2

I've talked about the glimpses we sometimes get of organized crime, and this it was like turning on a floodlight. It sends shock waves to the criminal underworld, but it's about to get even worse for them. Martin's team soon figure out a way to recover the deleted messages, the ones that ener common Its users believed were gone forever, and suddenly a once hidden universe of crime, of alliances and global connections is illuminated.

Speaker 5

A lot more information about assassinations and about the importation of drugs.

Speaker 2

But for Martin, there's something even more shocking. Reading through the messages, the police suddenly see how easy it's become to order murders using these phones. A crime boss can order a contract killing as easily as they would order a pizza.

Speaker 5

In an Ellens there were multiple groups that you could hire to assassinate someone. My work is hyder Chrome, so for me it was really strange to see that there wasn't one group or multiple groups that you could hire to kill someone.

Speaker 2

And buried inside the millions of messages on the enitcom servers is one brief conversation from November twenty fifteen. It's a set of simple and chilling instructions sent from one user to another. The first message reads, got a nice job for you bro. The response, who needs to go to sleep? Then it's a tug. He works in the electricity company and drives a white van. Why he has to go to sleep? I don't know, and I don't even want to know.

Speaker 6

Every murder case deserves a solution, and you know people should be brought to justice in Trinal but a foreign government, especially the country's so dictatorships, or the killings in another Western country. You know, this is a thing.

Speaker 2

We met with Elia in episode one. He's the local councilor and our mayor the Dutch town where Ali Mtummad was murdered, and thanks to Paul's reporting, Ulasse now knows that the electrician was in fact a man on the run from the Iranian regime. He also knows that the people who pulled the trigger were Dutch criminals, but he still doesn't know who gave them orders, who hired them,

Ulisa has a strong theory though. He thinks it has to be the Iranian regime, the same regime that forced his father to flee Iran decades before, but he can't prove it. So Ulasee does everything he can to raise awareness of the murder. He lobbies local politicians, he starts doing radio and TV interviews about it, including with the Dutch state broadcaster nosdag dot Ilon.

Speaker 6

So I was like, Okay, thanks for moving in the right direction. I'm getting attention for this very important murder case.

Speaker 2

You were kind of going out a little bit on your own saying something which sounds like a crazy story. You know, as you said, it is crazy. It is it is, and so was anyone saying you're wrong or where's the proof?

Speaker 6

You know. The weird thing in politics is the official response you get. It's like, we won't tell you anything about an individual case. We don't know, there's no information, don't bother. I was like, I'm not going to take that for an answer.

Speaker 2

Because for Uler, say, this is about a lot more than just one murder.

Speaker 6

If this is true, what is the implication for Iranian people living in the West who fled the country and are speaking out, what's the implication for them. The key message from the regime, it's a message to all of Europe, We're going to find you because you know, let me emphasize this once more. This guy, they were looking for him for thirty five years.

Speaker 2

So after all of this, you were going on you know, TV, you were giving interviews, you were you were pressing the importance of this case and what you thought, what you believed based on your evidence, and you're thinking about it, what you thought really was the case. And then in twenty nineteen, suddenly boom boom Uleas was shouting about the Matomid murder to anyone who would listen. He'd lobbied his local mayor, the police, even national politicians, and no one

gave him answers. It felt like he was banging his head against a brick wall. And then one day.

Speaker 6

And I was in my office working and then boom, my telephone like exploded, like boom, this Bush messages and I was like, finally we're doing something back to the regime, showing like okay, don't do this.

Speaker 2

The Dutch Foreign Minister has announced that, based on classified information from the Dutch intelligence services, the government believes that Iran was responsible for the Matomid murder and another murder as well.

Speaker 6

I remember his words were like for ninety nine percent, for sure we know that Irani has did this. It was of course we because formerly the minister could not conclude officially it was d Raniers. But it was like ninety nine percent, we know we expelled them.

Speaker 2

The expulsion of diplomats. It might sound well, a bit diplomatic slap on the wrist, but in foreign relations this is a big deal, a rare move, and for Uda say it's his own country, finally agreeing that he was right all along, the people behind Mtammid's murder were in Tehran.

Speaker 6

These are important moments, but then this quite rapidly changed to something something ugly for me.

Speaker 2

When Unasa does another round of news interviews linking Tehran to the Mtummd murder and to the murder broker known as Noofel, Novel is not happy, and even though he's in prison awaiting trial, he finds a way to let Ulusay know about it. A lawyer working for mister now ful Fassi that's Novel's full name, files a legal complaint against Ulas. He says he's abusing his position and making false allegations about his client's connections to Iran.

Speaker 6

And I remember, you know, I'm sure you can relate this feeling. Sometimes unfortunately this happens in life. You get really cold and you feel the energy flowing from your head to you. It just drains your energy. And I got really cold, and I was like, okay, I know who missed the fuss is. It was clear for me this is pure intimidation. Like you know, fifteen years ago, people through a rock at your window. This is the modern form of the intimidation. We know who you are.

Stop talking about this connection.

Speaker 2

RELI say, tells the Dutch security services about the letter. They decide that his life and his family are in danger. So Ulas, just like Paul and like his own father decades before, is now put the police protection. Yeah.

Speaker 6

But then they made one mistake. They didn't study my character or my family history. So I immediately went out to publicly and said I will not be intimidated. Go to Hell. I will never be intimidated.

Speaker 2

Ulas isn't shutting up because he still has too many questions about the murder. He knows that now full Fasci novel was found in it in a hand safe house in Dublin, and that Nophel was the one who arranged for Alia mctomma to be murdered. And now he knows that the Dutch government believes it was Iran who was ultimately behind the assassination.

Speaker 6

But someone spoke to mister Fassi. I don't know who. It's not like someone from Tehran is calling mister Fussy. That's not how things work.

Speaker 2

So how do things work? The supercartel seems to be connected to this murder, but what does that connection mean? What links these two things together? Looking into all of this, pulling on threads, I came across a case that might help us begin to understand.

Speaker 7

Somehow we established our credibility. At that point, she already knew we were high leveled gold claff cours, probably multiaton. We have connections to the military, which cost have developpened the door for us.

Speaker 2

That's next time on Hot Money. Hot Money is a production of The Financial Times and Pushkin Industries. It was written and reported by me Miles Johnson, and if you've got any leads or information about this story, you can email me at new narcost ft dot com. The series producer is Peggy Sutton. Edith Russello is the associate producer. Fact checking is by Arthur god engineering by Sarah Bruguerer, Sound design from Jake Gorsky. Jeremy Walmsley wrote the original music.

Our editor is Sarah Nix, and the executive producers are Jacob Goldstein and Cheryl Bramley. Special thanks to Laura Clark, Marshall, waroven Alistair macke, Breen Turner and Arlie Adlington

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