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[00:00:00]

Wndyry plus subscribers can binge all episodes of Keolist early and ad-free. Join WNDYRY plus in the WNDYRY app or on Apple podcasts. Outside the front door of a flat, a group of men in Balaclavas are waiting. They're dressed in dark blue with bulky, bulletproof vests and heavy boots. Some of them wear helmets, others hold guns or heavy batons. An eagle crest on their sleeve marks them out as Romanian police. It's the sixth of April, 2022, southwest Romania. One of the policemen hammers the door off its hinges, forcing his way inside. A startled man dressed only in a T-shirt and a pair of boxer shorts is pushed, face down in a hallway, next to a drying rack loaded up with damp clothes. His pale bare feet peak out behind the officer, kneeling on his legs. That same day, at six other homes across the counties of Gorge and Honoduara, more officers break down more doors. Shortly after, the Romanian authorities release a video of the raids and announced that at the In the quest of the United States, they have arrested an organized crime group, suspected of running a Hitman for Hire site. So this is the moment I've been waiting for.

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Finally, it looks like someone has done something about the site and its mastermind era. Now, for the first time, it really feels like an end is in sight.

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What a morning, hey?

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Yeah, I mean, this might be it. I get on a call with my producer, Caroline, as soon as I see the press release. This day really never felt to me like it was going to come for so many reasons. I never thought we'd know who Euro was. I never thought that we would be able to get anyone to act on it. But it is unbelievable to think with that chain of events, almost certainly that we've been involved with it. All these steps have led to these Romanian commandos striding into the flat of a Internet Organized criminal group in Romania. I know. I can't believe we're here at this chapter because we've always had that responsibility of what do we do with the site. So at least some of that is out of control now. But that sense of relief doesn't last long. That evening, around 8:30, I get an email from Chris.

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Change is being made to the site right now. Someone is still running the website and is making some security improvements. It doesn't feel like police action to me.

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If Chris is right, then Euro could still be at large.

[00:03:22]

I'm Raza Jeffrey, and in the latest season of The Spy Who, we open the file on Serge Skripal. The spy who Putin poisoned. When the USSR falls apart, GRU officer Skripal finds himself adrift in the new Russia. The world of espionage becomes his way out and his downfall. Once a double agent, now a pivotal figure in an international mystery, Serge Skripal went from a life of covert operations to a dramatic poisoning that captivated the globe. But what led to this shocking attack? And what hidden truths did Serge uncover? Follow the Spy Who on the WNDYRI app or wherever you listen to podcasts, or you can binge the full season of the Spy Who Putin Poisoned early and ad-free with WNDYRI Plus.

[00:04:19]

I'm Professor Susanne Lipscom, and on Not Just the Tudors from a history hit, we do admittedly cover quite a lot of Tudors, from the rise of Henry VII to the death of Henry VIII, from Anne Boleyn to her daughter, Elizabeth I. But we also do lots that's not Tudas, murderers, mistresses, pirates, and witches. Clues in the title, really. So follow Not Just the Tudors from History Hit wherever you get your podcasts.

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From Wandery and Novel, I'm Carl Miller. This is Kill List, episode 6, Endgame. I'm on the phone to Chris in the aftermath of the Romania raid, trying to find out what on Earth is going on. All right, Chris. After the arrest, when was the When was the first time that you realized that the site was changing?

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Somewhere between 12:00 and 24 hours after the rest. There's a whole bunch of updates to the site.

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Hundreds of posts in the site's public forum have been removed, and Some of the pages on the back end of the site have been moved or removed altogether. These kinds of changes could only be made by someone in control of the site. There's no way this could be the police.

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I do not believe in any way, shape, or form, this is the police doing it. It doesn't make any sense. This looks to me like a member of the gang operating the website who wasn't arrested, changing the key pages that they knew about to lock out other members of the gang who could probably share that information with the police. There's literally even some new website features released.

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If this were the police or the Department of Homeland Security, you might expect to see changes to the security of the site, but you wouldn't expect to see new features. It's the main question, who in the gang have they actually got? It seems like high confidence they've got some people from that gang.

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Yes.

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It seems reasonably low confidence that they've got everyone from the gang.

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Definitely not.

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It seems likely that they've missed at least one of the key players. Is that where we are right now?

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I don't feel anyone has got the complete picture of what's going on.

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Only one thing seems clear. We were right to suspect there could be multiple people running the site. Chris sifts through the site messages looking for clues about what might be happening. At first, there's just silence. Then three days after After the raid, an administrator starts messaging again. One message catches our attention from an administrator to a customer called Time to Kill. Time to Kill had placed a hit, only to realize that no hitmen were coming, and now the admin was reaching out again, but with a very different proposition. Hi. Have you gave up the idea of killing your target when you was a customer? The admin admitted that the Hitman for higher sight was a scam. Then they made time to kill an offer. I can pay you to use the Euro interface to view all customers and fake hitmen and to do maintaining work. I can pay a fixed fee per month for this. If you promise, you don't do anything wrong on the site. Yes, for sure. I'd be happy to work as an admin for you and manage the site. I'm interested and have the time to do this. How much are you thinking about for the fixed monthly payment?

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I'm thinking $400 per month in the beginning. If you help a lot with the site and we get lots of customers, this can be increased. Sounds good. So not only is admin activity starting on the website. It seems like whoever is left running the site is bringing on more help. For every scammer who got arrested in the raid, it seems like someone else is willing to step in to keep the site running. I let the FBI know what we found, but our contacts there still won't talk to us. Neither will DHS, the Romanian police, nor the prosecutor's office. We do end up hearing from the head of the FBI's office in Romania. Yes, you also I would have already expect, I cannot comment on anything specific. But you won't tell us anything that helps us understand what's going on. There are no charges announced, no hearings, and no news of There's so many court proceedings, so we can't even check whether the two people in the IDs we were investigating were picked up in the raids. Considering that the Romanian authorities were so keen to publicize the arrests, this silence now is strange. To make matters worse, there have been more changes to the site.

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Two days ago on Sunday, the server rebooted, and since then, I've lost access to most of the admin pages again. I don't know what to make of this. I've got access to the payments still, but not the messages.

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Our access has been heavily restricted. The messages with the crucial order details are now completely invisible to us. And if we can't see the orders, we can't help the targets. Chris can still piece together a few kill orders, but only if the customer wasn't wise enough to make a public post about the hit in a forum on the instead of just messaging privately. We keep passing anything Chris sends through to our police contacts. But as weeks turn to months, the orders are few and far between. And then it happens. On New Year's Eve, 2022, Chris loses access to the transaction section of the website. Now, we can't see the payments or the messages. We're completely locked out.

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I'm Matt Ford. And I'm Alice Levine.

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And we're the hosts of WNDYRU's podcast, British Scandal.

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Now, our latest series is big, I mean, huge. You could say the biggest scandal ever to happen on British soil.

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It's political, it's religious. It was an extreme act of defiance.

[00:11:26]

We're talking about a next-level assassination attempt. Members of the Royal Family, religious leaders, as well as a load of big names in society.

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And they very nearly succeeded.

[00:11:37]

So close. We're going to be telling you the story of the gunpowder plot and how 13 men set about planning to blow up the Houses of Parliament.

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The stakes were impossibly high. There were rifts in the group, a load of swords, and drunk men swigging beer in hostels.

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Which always ends badly. To find out the full story, follow British Scandal wherever you listen to podcasts or listen early and ad-free on WNDY Plus on Apple Podcasts or the WNDY app.

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Now that we're locked out of the website, I finally have a moment to just catch my breath. It's the first time in two It's been 10 years that I've been able to focus on something other than the next kill order. The first time I've been able to stop and ask myself, what on Earth have we been doing? And part of answering that question is to talk with the people we have been able to help. What did all these years of scrambling around, trying to help people, really amount to? The first person I speak to is Jennifer. Hi there, Jennifer. How are you doing?

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Hi, good. How are you? Nice to see you again. Good to see you, too.

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Her ex-husband, Ron, was arrested in April 2021 after placing an order on the site for her to be kidnapped and forcibly addicted to heroine. Not surprisingly, the press had a field day.

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It's weird to think that, Oh, I'm the estranged wife in this story. Out of all people in Spokane, Washington. I don't know. It's an odd feeling.

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On June 11th, 2021, Ron appeared for a detention hearing at the Spokane Federal Court. The prosecuting team told Jennifer it might help the case if the judge could put her face to the story. So she and her dad went.

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I think he was shocked that we showed up.

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Ron made eye contact with Jennifer across the courtroom.

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He was staring at me. He would look at my dad and I with this pitiful face, I didn't do this type of face. I can't believe I'm still in jail. And at one point, when he was being handcuffed and led out of the courtroom, he looked at my dad and said, I didn't do it.

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Ron pled not guilty. He was going to fight all the charges against him. But Jennifer was ready for that fight, too. She kept going back to court again and again and again to show Ron she wasn't afraid.

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There was a few times where I was sitting outside of the courtroom after the hearing, and he'd have to walk past me to to the elevators when he was handcuffed, and we would be just inches away. It didn't bother me. I don't know. It made me feel empowered.

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Ron's attorney argued that the order messages were inadmissible and that Ron was improperly interrogated when they intercepted him at the airport. But that wasn't Ron's only strategy. From jail, he wrote a letter to Amanda, the woman he'd been seeing when he was married to Jennifer. I want us to be married. We can do that now, even with me in here. Importantly, if we are married, we can decide if you testify or not. Ron told Amanda he wouldn't make her sign a prenup, and he'd pay for Amanda's kids to go to private school. At the end, he added, PS, if you love me now or have ever loved me, burn this letter and do not mention it to anyone. Amanda didn't take him up on his offer. Instead of burning it, she passed a letter to the prosecution. Over a year after his arrest, with the evidence against him still mounting, Ron took the stance. Jennifer was in the courtroom that day.

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The judge asked him to say in his own words, What did you do? And he started off saying, Well, I was a broken man. And the judge said, But that's not what I want to hear. I want to hear what you did. And he said that he had gone on there and hired people to try to cause harm to me. I cried because I was shocked that he actually said, I wrote those horrendous messages. And I thought, wow. And my dad was crying, too. I was also angry. I ended up taking the day off of work, and I cried a lot because I was just mad that he put me through all of this for a good year and a half of claiming his innocence and saying that my allegations are false and inflammatory. And he was acting like the victim this whole time. And this whole time, he knows he did it. So it was a lot of emotion, of just anger, but also relief.

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Ron took a plea deal. He was sentenced to eight years in prison. But not every case I've passed to the police has had such a neat resolution. Hi, Ana. So good to see you..

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She's there with her dogs.

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I'm on a call with Anna, Ana Esperanza, the reporter who helped us track Anna down back in late 2020. Someone had paid around $24,000 for Anna to be killed in a car accident. The police arrested a suspect in December 2020. We can't name them for legal reasons, but Anna always doubted they were the real person behind the hit. When the police announced they'd finished their investigation, it looked like Anna might get some answers. But now...

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It's completely stopped. Nothing new. She doesn't have a date for the trial. She called the civil guard and complained about it because they have had zero results since the last time we spoke. She's complaining about how the Spanish justice works Anna can only speculate about the motive behind the hit.

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Can this end for you, Anna? Are you able to get closure, or is this just something which has been dragging on for you?

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You still think there's more people in this case, and the real masters of this case are still out there free. It made me change, and The biggest change it has been in my security because I was never scared or afraid of what would happen to me. But since this case, I don't have that safety on my own, and I get scared Do you wish that you had known about the order or not?

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Because I know that us telling you about this probably in no small degree caused the emotional angst that you went through. So there's a genuine ignorance is bliss possibility here. My question, I guess, to Anna is, were we to go through that time again, whether she'd have rather us actually not decided to tell her about it?

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No, I don't regret, and I don't prefer the ignorance, because things could have gone worse if we didn't know what was going on. I know it was a scam, but it could have been truth. It could have been really something dangerous. The good part is that I got to know the truth and to know you.

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Anna, thank you. I'm so sorry about this case for you. I mean, this is such a horrible one where the people doing this can still remain in the shadows. It's never been possible, really, to get closure, but it's always been so nice to talk to you, and despite the horrendous subject matter that we've had to discuss. I wish you all the best.

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All the best. Bye, bye. Thank you.

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Bye.

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Bye.

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It's hard not to feel frustrated that justice isn't moving quicker for Anna. Living under the uncertainty of not knowing whether the person who tried to kill you will be brought to justice must be utterly draining. And Anna isn't the only person going through that right now. So far, I've only been able to tell you about a handful of the lives touched by the kill list. In total, Still, my team and I have passed over 175 kill orders to law enforcement agencies around the world, but only a minority of them have resulted in an arrest or a conviction. Anna is representative of the majority of the cases where people still haven't got the answers, nor perhaps the safety they were looking for. Having the kill list taken out of my hands is something I have accept. The years of dealing with it have been terrifying, but at least I had the power to actually make a difference. Now there's a feeling of impotence. I can't warn any new people on the list. I can't help any of the targets I do know about find justice, and I can't force the police to take control of the site.

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Things have ended, but it just doesn't feel like an ending. But then one morning, I've just finished eating breakfast, ready to start my day job, writing articles and giving talks on tech subjects far less grim than the kill list, when I open up my inbox, it's a link to some news, and it's going to answer almost all the questions that I have about what happened to The Kill List. I'm Mike Bubbins. I'm Alice James. And I'm Steph Guerrero. We're convinced that our podcast, The Socially Distant Sports Bar, is going to be your new favorite comedy podcast with just a little bit of sport thrown in. You don't have to love sport, like sport, or even know anything about sport to listen. Because nobody has conversations which stay on topic. And it's the same on our podcast. We might start off talking about ice hockey, but end up discussing, I don't know, 1980s, British Hiccup, a low, a low instead. How do you use the word nuance in your pitch for a low, low? He's not cheating on his wife. He's French. It's a different culture. If you like me and Mammoth or you like Alice in fantasy Football League, then you love our podcast.

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Follow the socially distance sports bar wherever you get your podcasts. The socially Distant Sports Bar, it's not about asymmetrical overloads. James podcasting from his study, and you I have to say that's magnificent. At first glance, what Chris has sent me is a news article. In April 2023, the Department of Homeland Security received a tip off from a foreign law enforcement agency. It needs to seem random or accident or plant drugs. Do not want a long investigation. The article announced the arrest of someone who had placed an order on your website totaling $9,750 for the murder of a woman in Prattville, Alabama. She recently moved in with her new husband. She works at home in an office. They have three dogs that bark and jump, but nice dogs. Using the order details, Homeland Security managed to obtain a phone number that had been used to buy the Bitcoin for the hit. Photographs from an ATM used to buy the cryptocurrency confirm the identity. On the 18th of May, a woman in Knoxville, Tennessee, was arrested. It's the same murder for hire site we've been monitoring, the same back-end messages, the same accusation, and the same methods of investigation.

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But with one difference, we didn't pass this case on. We I've been locked out of the site for months. I've never seen these messages. However, Homeland Security got this information, it wasn't through me or my team. I get on a call with Chris to try and figure out what might be going on.

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I believe the only way this information could have been obtained is through a law enforcement agency, seizing the server, monitoring it, and with that server access, of course, you can extract information however you need to.

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Chris Chris believes the police have figured out their own way into the hitman for higher sight. If Chris's theory is correct, it doesn't matter whether Euro or his accomplices are still at large. The police would still be able to intercept every kill order.

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They should have been doing all of this. None of this should be us begging and pleading different agencies to take it on, right?

[00:25:51]

Yeah. I suppose we'll have to sit and wait and watch to see whether this replicates itself. We don't have to wait long. Only weeks later, Chris sends over another article. It's a new arrest, this time in Austria. The article says a man was arrested for trying to hire a hitman to kill his wife after a tip-off from the British authorities. Again, it was about the website we were tracking. Again, we had nothing to do with the case. The The Austrian authorities report that 130 investigators and five different police agencies were involved in the operation. The scale of it is staggering. It's in stark contrast to the reactions I got from police when I first started handing over these kill orders. A few weeks later, my producer, Caroline, gets an email. It's from a British police officer from DICE, the Dark Web Intelligence Collection and Exploitation Unit. She calls me so we can read the email together. Okay, here we go. All right, it says, forward, hitman dark web. It says, morning, guys. Hope you're well. I just wanted to... Whilst I cannot talk about ongoing operations. I know that in the past, you've struggled to perhaps always elicit the response from law enforcement that might have been warranted.

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Hopefully, when things do get reported like this, it gives you some assurance that this crime type is now being taken seriously. It is you guys who deserve full credit for highlighting this particular Dark Web threat through the work you have been doing. Oh, wow. That is really sensational news. I mean, it feels good, doesn't it? It's about as much of a nod and a wink and another nod and another wink as you can get. They're in the market. To have someone else keeping an eye on this actually properly in a way that's not just, we'll take cases whenever you send them, but in a way that is proactive and in a way that probably it always should have been. Well, I've become used in this world to never being very sure about anything. There's so many grays and murkynesses in there, and this actually is about as clear as you can ever get of them saying, Hi, we're in, and we're in because of the stuff that you've all done. That That is as much a ending of this chapter, maybe, of this story as we can get. Since this began all the way back in the middle of 2020, there have been 34 arrests across 11 countries.

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In 28 of these cases, the suspect has already been convicted. So far, over 150 years of prison time has been handed down. The Kill List has offered me a window into the cruelty people are capable of when they think nobody's watching. The people behind the orders, just like their targets, look like you and me. They live ordinary lives, or at least it seems that way from the outside. But they're willing to do something almost none of us are, to have another human life snuffed out. I've seen all kinds of motives: money, jealousy, fear, lust. But to me, it seems what really drives most customers to Euro is a desire for control. Control over a person, over a situation, over a relationship. The moment they order the hit is often also the one where they feel that control slipping. They're spiraling, and this is their desperate attempt to finally call back command. I wasn't prepared to bear witness to all of that. Every time I sat down to open my email, I'd face a prospect of a new kill order sitting there in my inbox. New payer, the subject would announce, and then one click, and I'm launched back into a world brimming with violence and fear.

[00:30:29]

My team and I did our best. We never had enough information, we never had enough time, and the stakes, they were always ludicrously too high for it to ever feel normal. To be in situations where what you do can be a matter of life or death is, well, for me at least, traumatizing. Not that I'm a victim in this story, far from it, but grappling with the list has had a profound, probably lifelong impact on me and everyone in the small team we threw together to cope with it. The kill list still exists, and whilst it continues to save lives, long may it. But we don't hold it anymore. Me, Chris, Caroline, we've been a chapter in the story of The Kill List, a chapter that has now, thank God, come to an end. With the police now in all likelihood operating their own international investigation of the site, it feels like, finally, we can move on. We're going.

[00:31:40]

Yeah, I just wanted to talk to you about what it is that we're about to do.

[00:31:44]

For something to have begun on the dark net, a realm which is so digital and so anonymous, and you can hear, now we're in the physical world, and there are pigeons, and there are tourists. There's traffic all around us, and there's people cycling. It's a It's a sunny day in London, and I'm at the busy tourist hub of Mubble Arch. Elaina, the first person on the kill list I was able to actually help, is in town. To London. You had a nice time.

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We arrived early yesterday morning and we're going back late tomorrow night.

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We find a table outside a café on a side street and sit down. Elaina smiles as she peers at me over the rims of her glasses. When did we last speak? Over a year ago, isn't it? More than a year. Much more. Well, it's very weird to meet someone in those circumstances and now to be in a place which is so normal and so conventional.

[00:32:42]

Yeah, exactly.

[00:32:43]

Elaina is as a matter of fact as ever.

[00:32:46]

It would actually have been quite easy to kill me. He could have followed me, you know where to park my car and just wait there, just shoot through the window. I read a lot of thrills.

[00:33:03]

Well, I mean, you don't need to. I mean, sometimes life is strange in the section, right? I mean, you've lived for a Twitter. You don't need to necessarily just read about it.

[00:33:12]

Yeah, but I do. I love it.

[00:33:15]

The last time I spoke to Elaina was after her husband, who we're calling Bruno, had been arrested. That was when the police discovered he'd rented a room full of weapons near her house. I had nightmares about that room and about Bruno. I can remember the tension in her voice then. I always thought she was tough and practical, but I'd never heard her sound happy. Now Elaina is ticking things off her bucket list. That's why she's here in London. The night before, she went to see Fantom of the Opera, and she's booked two days of back-to-back afternoon high tees at the Ritz and the Dorchester hotels.

[00:33:55]

And in September, I'm going to Brazil.Oh, my God.Amazonas.Oh,Oh my gosh. Yeah, I always wanted to do that. I wanted to do that 30 years ago. And that's also been very long on my bucket list.

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Elaina gathers her things, and we walk back to the hotel together. White clouds pass quickly across the blue sky as people push past us in the building rush hour traffic. And by the way, just once again, to reiterate how lovely it is to see you in such a great mood in the sun in London. Yeah. And saying My life has moved on. That's so wonderful to hear. Have you learned anything from this?

[00:34:37]

It just made me realize I can take anything.

[00:34:40]

Yeah.

[00:34:41]

I'm still standing. Yeah. That's what I think is surprising. You know, anything that you throw at me, I'm just still standing.

[00:35:32]

If you like Kill List, you can binge all episodes ad-free right now by joining WNDRI Plus in the WNDYRI app or on Apple podcasts. Prime members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music. Before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey at wndri. Com/survey. From WNDRI and Novel, this is episode 6 of Kill List. Kill List is hosted by me, Kyle Miller. It was written by me, Caroline Thornam, and Tom Wright. Our lead producer is Caroline Thornam. Our producer is Tom Wright. For WNDYRI, our story editor is Chris Siegel, and our senior producer is Russell Finch. Our assistant producer is Emalia Sortland, and our researchers are Megan O'Yinca and Lena Chang. Additional research from Chris Monteiro, Kuzmen Maya, Attila Biro, from the Context Investigator Reporting Project Romania, and from Aniik Mosu, Fuca Postma, and Brenna Smith at Bellingcat. Additional reporting by Dylan Brogan, Rachel Christiansen, Franziska Engelhardt from podcast Schmida, Esperanza Escribano, Janina Fyndaisen, Jonathan Glover, Jonathan Gruber, Amber Singer, Anna Holigan, Mário Lumbardo and Rodrigo Rodriguez from Loro podcast, Adeli Ozman Pontey, Alexander Richie, Sheroma Silver, and Sarah White's Koda Check from Reckon South. Fact checking by Fender Fulton. Our managing producers are Cherie Houston, Sarah Tobin, Alexander Richie, Sheroma Silver, and Sarah White's KodaChek from Reckon South.

[00:37:13]

Fact checking by Fender Fulton. Our managing producers are Cherie Houston, Sarah Tobin, Alexander Richie, Alexander Richie, and Lata Pundia for Wandery. Original music by Skyla Gorderman and Martin Linnebell. Music supervision by Nicolas Alexander, Max O'Brien, and Caroline Thornam. Sound design and mixing by Nicolas Alexander. Additional engineering by Neil Kempison. Would special thanks to Mandy Gornstein, Alex Wade, Jason Phipps, Jeff Oswald, Joe Wheeler, Jake Otaevitch, Saskia Edwards, David Waters, Neil Krishnan, Julia Bronberg, Cribs, Carly Frankl, and all the team at WME. For Novel, Willard Foxton is Creative Director of Development. Our executive producers are Sean Glyn, Austin Mitchell, Max O'Brien, and Craig Strachan for Novel. Executive producers for Wandery are George Lavender, Marshall Louis, and Jen Sargent. When you're done with the first six episodes, I go deeper into the kill list, revealing never before told stories of more victims. New episodes roll out weekly. Thank you for listening.