Behind the Bastards - Part Two: Robert Maxwell: How Ghislaine Maxwell's Dad Ruined Science

Episode Date: May 8, 2025

Robert Maxwell makes a full heel turn in this episode, going from badass killer of the SS to not so badass corporate ghoul who murdered science and also spied for Israel and the UK.See omnystudio.com/...listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening to an iHeart podcast. Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley Season 1. Every time I hear about my dad is, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil. I was becoming the bridge between Jeremy Scott and the son he'd never known. At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer. Listen to new episodes of Bone Valley Season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:00:36 It's April, 2020. A woman announces on Facebook that she has COVID and won't be seeking medical attention. I didn't want to be talked out of this plan. Then she disappears. Uh, anyone else think this is strange? I just had to know. How did this happen?
Starting point is 00:00:59 Listen to What Happened to Talina Czar on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. How could a beautiful young first grade teacher be stabbed 20 times, including in the back, allegedly die of suicide? Yes, that was a medical examiner's official ruling. After a closed-door meeting, he first named it a homicide. Why? What happened to Ellen Greenberg, a huge American miscarriage of justice? For an in-depth look at the facts, see What Happened to Ellen on Amazon. All proceeds to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Explore the winding halls of historical true crime with Holly Frye and Maria Tremarchi, hosts of Criminalia, as they uncover curious cases from the past.
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Starting point is 00:02:31 This is Behind the Bastards, a podcast about terrible people. And in part one of the story of Robert Maxwell killing Maxwell's dad, he was pretty fucking rad. And unfortunately, we're now going into part two, where it's wild, this is like an episode where our bastard commits several war crimes, and we're not angry about the war crimes, really? Like it's the other stuff he's gonna do that sucks. So real, so real.
Starting point is 00:02:57 And with us once again is the great Adam Conn over. Adam, welcome back to the show, how you doing? Thank you for having me, I'm just so excited to hear more stories of our cool friend, Abraham, Robert, Ivan. Private. Private. Private, yes. Oh, oh, oh, the best one was Leslie.
Starting point is 00:03:17 Leslie, yes. Yeah, and he's just a great guy. He's just murdering a few more Nazis than he should. Yeah. That's not great. But you know, he's taking his revenge. That's forgivable. Yes. And understandable. Part two is going to be less so.
Starting point is 00:03:35 Although don't worry. He still does get to kill one more Nazi. So we've got that going for us. So the immediate aftermath of the big dub dub dose was a busy time for Robert Maxwell. He taught himself Russian, assuming spycraft would be a lucrative part of his future. He's like, number one, I'm pretty good with languages. Number two, I bet living in Berlin, knowing Russian is gonna be lucrative very soon. And he is correct about that. And then he kind of goes, he takes like a break from his, like a leave of absence and
Starting point is 00:04:12 travels alone to war-torn Prague to try and track down the survivors of his family. And he gets nothing but bad news, really. He is particularly scarred to hear that his 19-year-old sister Shinya had been arrested in Budapest and likely shot and then tossed into the river. One older and one younger sister survived. His younger sister was actually rescued directly by Raoul Wallenberg, who we've covered
Starting point is 00:04:35 in one of our reverse bastards episodes. Yeah, Wallenberg in Budapest was writing, I think it was Swedish, Swedish visas for every Jewish person under 15, and just like lying and saying, they're all citizens, like every one of them. Oh my God, there's so many Swedish people here. Wow, a lot of Swedes in Budapest right now.
Starting point is 00:04:54 And he saved, I mean, again, we've talked about this, he saves like 100,000 people, and one of them is Robert Maxwell's younger sister. So this is obviously about as devastating a road trip as you can go on, traveling through like the battle scars of Eastern Europe to find out basically no one lived in your family. And this is kind of the last time that he directly acknowledges his Jewish roots for decades. When he returns to occupied Berlin to work as an interrogator, he fully inhabits Robert
Starting point is 00:05:22 Maxwell, British officer. He's been promoted to a captain at this point. And it's not like hidden, like he doesn't try to cover up his origins, but he doesn't tell people he starts meeting now about them. And the vast majority of people who know and work with him have no idea that he's Jewish, that he grew up in Eastern Czechoslovakia.
Starting point is 00:05:44 It's one of those things, I don't think he was ever religious. So I think Judaism was never like his faith in a meaningful way, because I think he's just kind of a natural atheist. And I think after this acknowledging that that's his heritage is just too painful, because his family has been annihilated, right?
Starting point is 00:06:00 And so he just really doesn't for decades. He does take care of his sisters. He sends them both to the United States He sends his younger. He pays for his younger sister to go to college So he continues to take care of his family He just I think it's too painful for him to kind of acknowledge his background in any way what kind of like Documentation would one even have at this point, you know, like how like what you know
Starting point is 00:06:21 What is he a citizen of and and is there any such thing as like records given what's happened in Europe? Yes. So, but he is lucky for a lot of people there aren't right. Because of how many states are destroyed and how chaotic the movement is. But he enters the UK as part of the Dunkirk landing. So he has number one papers from France because he's enlisted in the French foreign Legion, and then he gets papers because he enlists in the British military. And so he is an official citizen enlists in the British military.
Starting point is 00:06:45 And so he is an official citizen and he is able to get papers for his family as a result because he's now a captain, he's fairly influential. He's good at meeting and knowing people. He's a war hero and he's able to take care of his family because number one, his legal status is super clear and he's a hero, right? And he does take care of his family, though what little is left of it.
Starting point is 00:07:08 Now he is an interrogator now in Berlin and that is, it is unlikely that his job as an interrogator always stuck to the letter of international law, by which I mean he probably tortured people, right? This is the start of the Cold War. He is in Berlin interrogating people. And initially a lot of former Nazis, but like one has to assume there's some ugliness to this job.
Starting point is 00:07:32 Now this is also a time, 1946, when a foreign occupier could behave more or less any way they wanted to among the captive German population. And Maxwell certainly did for idea of like how, because everyone's starving in Germany. And also most of them had been Nazis so like for example my grandpa is in this at the the exact same period of time and basically the same area I have in my house like two grandfather clocks that he bought for like 50 cents each he bought like a shitload of these like 150 year old
Starting point is 00:08:00 grandfather clocks from starving Germans and just shipped him back to the US because he was like as a poor Oklahoma boy He's like, yeah, I'll take all these formerly rich Europeans grandfather clocks for pennies. Fuck them Hard to blame anybody for that. I consider them war booty and Maxwell's Maxwell does the same thing but with so much more panache because so does the same thing, but with so much more panache. Because he's got this job where he's interrogating old Nazis, he meets Hitler's former dentist, which is first very weird connection.
Starting point is 00:08:34 And so Hitler's old dentist tells Robert Maxwell, I know the guy who bred Hitler's beloved German shepherd, Blondie, that's the dog that he fed cyanide to in the bunker. Like this is his pet. Um, and there's this dude who was like the dog, the kennel operator who bred the dogs that like were Hitler's dogs. And so Robert Maxwell's like, I got to meet this motherfucker.
Starting point is 00:08:56 So he visits this guy. Hitler must've just like the number of people. Yeah. I was Hitler's optometrist. Yeah. Yeah. You know, I used to scrub Hitler's pool. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:08 A lot of personal services the guy needed done. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. A lot of people working with Hitler one way or the other. Yeah. I set up his aquarium. It was like really complicated.
Starting point is 00:09:17 Then he needed me to come out every two weeks to clean. Yeah. Aquarium. My, uh, my aunt, when she was like hitchhiking through Germany and like the fifties got picked up by a guy she later found out was Hitler's aquarium. My aunt, when she was like hitchhiking through Germany in like the 50s, got picked up by a guy she later found out was Hitler's photographer. Like we have a bunch of photos he gave her. Like he just picked her up on the road.
Starting point is 00:09:34 Photos of Hitler? Yes, we have like a lot of weird Hitler photos in my family that she was just like, I didn't know what to do with them. You gotta go on Antiques Roadshow. With my Hitler picks? Oh my God. Yeah, they never have the good shit on there.
Starting point is 00:09:48 You gotta go on with the Hitler picks and the grandfather clocks. Yeah, yeah. I prefer the grandfather clocks to the Hitler picks. But Maxwell's story is so much cooler. So he finds Hitler's dog breeder. And this guy is like on the edge of destitution. Obviously the war was not good for Hitler's dog breeder and this guy is like on the edge of destitution Obviously the war was not good for Hitler's dog guy and he has one breeding male left, right?
Starting point is 00:10:10 This like one German and he's his hope is that like I can rebuild my business with this male, right? You know and maybe get my feet back on and that's like just like a guy man You know that downfall the Third Reich and like the Holocaust and all that Man, you know, the downfall of the third Reich and like the Holocaust and all that. Really bad for my dog breeding business. Yeah, horrible for guys who sell German shepherds. Yeah, you know, I sold German shepherds to Hitler. I thought it was a good bet at the time.
Starting point is 00:10:34 I thought it would keep going. Seemed like he was on the way up, you know. It was the my space of its day. How could it have failed? Oh gee, why won't anybody think of how this affects dog breeding businesses? Yeah, fucking Eisenhower kept awake at night, we never thought of the dog breeders.
Starting point is 00:10:55 So Maxwell, his biographers always say that he buys the dog off this guy, and reading between the lines, I don't think he gave the breeder a choice, right? I think he was like, I'm a British officer, I have a weapon, I'm taking the dog. And I believe this because within days of him taking this guy's last dog, Hitler's dog breeder commits suicide.
Starting point is 00:11:18 The story is so bizarre. Maxwell, he tells his comrades, his fellow soldiers this, and he's like, ha ha, isn't this fucking funny? And they're horrified that he kind of killed Hitler's dog breeder. Well, I mean, also, this man, his entire family was murdered in the Holocaust. The morality of this is, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:11:41 Hitler's dog breeder sounds like a side mission from Wolfenstein, you know, of someone you go murder. Right, you know. Hitler's dog breeder sounds like a side mission from Wolfenstein, you know, of someone you go murder. Right, you gotta kill Hitler's dog breeder? He's got four arms and like a Cerberus, yeah? You need the mini gun for that level. So wait, is it Hitler's dog? Is that what you're saying? No, no, no, this would have,
Starting point is 00:11:58 but I think it was like the sire of Hitler's dog, maybe, or at least related to the sire of Hitler's dog. No, no, no, no, no, this wasn't Hitler's dog. No, no, no, no, no, no. This was the sire of Hitler's dog, maybe, or at least related to the sire of Hitler's dog. No, no, no, no, no, no, this wasn't Hitler's dog. No, no, no, no, no, no, this was the sire of Hitler's dog. Yeah, I stole Hitler's dog's dad. Every Nazi owned dogs who were sired by this dog. Yeah, yeah, it's so funny that he's like, this is a bragging point for him that I destroyed this man,
Starting point is 00:12:22 and his colleagues are like, that's kind of fucked up and I also just have to say if your biographer is like starting a Paragraph with and then he met a dog breeder and arranged to purchase a dog It's not a good dog purchase story like there's not any of those really like a breeder Yeah, dog purchases don't make it in I mean, yeah, you know like Nixon's biography doesn't spend a lot of time on checkers, you know what I mean? Right. So yeah, he couldn't kill Hitler,
Starting point is 00:12:52 but he got the guy who made Hitler's dog, I guess. Wildlife. And he owned the dog. What did he do with the dog? By all accounts, he cared about, he liked the dog. Obviously not the dog's fault He took it takes revenge on literally Everybody who had anything to do with Nazi just people who were just hanging around in Germany for a day
Starting point is 00:13:16 He he slaughters them, but he's like the dog. I like the dogs fight the dogs dogs dad. That's a Nazi I'm okay with. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So Maxwell kind of around this period has a fairly, he works as a spy. He's kind of like a contractor for MI6 probably. It's one of those things where we don't know exactly
Starting point is 00:13:37 who he's working for 100% because it's spy stuff. And because of some other things he does, because he's always a little involved in this world of espionage, this will be mythologized. But what we can confirm is really cool, which is that he befriends a Soviet colonel, because he speaks Russian really well. And you have to imagine they're very drunk.
Starting point is 00:13:58 He convinces the Soviet colonel to break into Georgi Zhukov's office so they can photograph his papers? Like, so much vodka has to have been part of this story to get this Colonel to like, yeah, fuck Zhukov. Like. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:16 Insane. Yeah, it's nuts. He also carries out clandestine surveillance of his old homeland, Czechoslovakia, which is where he gets noted by the Czech-like Foreign Service as looking like a hotter Clark Gable. He is also described by many who knew him as being a bit of a dick. An article in The Guardian at this time describes him as, "...tall, brash, and not at all content with his already considerable success.
Starting point is 00:14:41 An acquaintance at the time recalled him confessing his greatest desire to be a millionaire. So, you know, what else is there after killing every night, literally getting down to the fact that you're down to Hitler's dog breeder. So you got no more Nazis to kill. Yeah. War war affects everybody so differently. You know, I would think that if I escaped the miserable poverty of, of central Eastern Europe, um, and you know, and the worst war in the history of humanity killed a bunch of people managed to
Starting point is 00:15:13 not die in either the Holocaust or the fighting and then achieved a position of social prominence. I'd say, you know what, maybe I'll take a summer off, you know, maybe I'll just like be content to be alive. Take a break, go to the sea. But ambition, man. Yeah, this ambition is, and maybe he would never have admitted this, maybe there is a degree that it's like,
Starting point is 00:15:36 given what he's experienced, he has to just keep moving. You kinda can't just sit with what's happened to you and what you've done. And that's certainly like what one's left to interpret from where his life goes next. So he talks a lot at the time about how he's going to become a millionaire. And he talks about specifically,
Starting point is 00:15:56 I'm going to find a great unexploited resource and find a way to put myself in the middle of the distribution chain. Right? So again, he has this kind of eye for business and he doesn't know what, he doesn't want to do anything in particular other than find the next great resource and make himself key to it. He's probably thinking this way because both oil and uranium have gotten way more valuable
Starting point is 00:16:19 in very, very recently as a result of some things. But the resource that Maxwell is gonna lasso and use to make his fortune is more dangerous and more valuable than either of those, raw knowledge. So science is a discipline, given how crucial it is to World War II, by the time that war starts, the concept of science as a professional field
Starting point is 00:16:42 that people go into is still pretty new. And in fact, even in like 45, 46, some of the senior scientific minds in the world had grown up and started their careers at a time when science was something gentlemen hobbyists did, right? It wasn't like the product of a national educational and industrial apparatus, right? This was something like men who were like the Earl of such and such and my hobby is figuring out how heredity works or whatever. Like that's kind of how things had worked not all that long ago.
Starting point is 00:17:11 And obviously things have professionalized a lot prior to World War II, but the field is still really new and people are still figuring out stuff like, how are we going to disseminate and spread new discoveries around the world? What is that infrastructure going to disseminate and spread new discoveries around the world? What is that infrastructure going to look like? The Manhattan Project is a major part of that.
Starting point is 00:17:31 There's suddenly this understanding that it's dangerous for countries to not be completely up to date on what's happening scientifically. Particularly the British government is caught off guard a little bit by the success the US has with the Manhattan Project and the scale of the achievement. And even though they're on our side during this, they're like, well, fuck, we do not have a scientific industry that's capable of competing with the Americans in the way that we need to.
Starting point is 00:17:59 They're like, ah, we've been chemically castrating mathematicians. We got shit over here. Oh, fuck, we really should probably stop doing that, huh? Yeah? Stop poisoning our smart guys. As The Guardian writes, quote, top British scientists from Alexander Fleming, who discovered penicillin, to the physicist Charles Galton Darwin, grandson of Charles Darwin, were concerned that while British science was world class, its publishing arm was dismal. Science publishers were mainly known for being inefficient and constantly broke. Journals, which often appeared on cheap, thin paper,
Starting point is 00:18:27 were produced almost as an afterthought by scientific societies. The British Chemical Society had a month's long backlog of articles for publication and relied on cash handouts from the Royal Society to fund its printing operations. So there is no money in scientific publishing. It's like they barely even considered. It's like, oh yeah, you figured out how nuclear energy works. We should probably write about that at some point in a place other people can read it, but not a priority, you know? We'll just let that happen whenever.
Starting point is 00:18:56 You were writing each other handwritten letters and shit going, I discovered something. Yeah, nukes. Yeah, yeah. So by late summer of 1946, Robert Maxwell has talked himself to maybe the sweetest gig anyone gets during the Allied occupation of Germany, which is he starts running the press section of the public relations and information services control organization. So obviously, right after we occupy Germany, we're not letting the Germans have newspapers of their own again. Not that they're running, right? Because that didn't go well last time. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:28 Yeah, German media got a little out of pocket. So he is basically put in charge of all German print media, right? So as newspapers start up again, he is like both the censor, so he's like approving everything that goes out. But he's also figuring out how to make these profitable, and he just turns out to be really good at it. He's shockingly good at knowing how to make a newspaper work financially. He probably got the, because he has no experience in this,
Starting point is 00:19:57 he probably got the job because he was trusted by the intelligence services. He's in with MI6, and they're like, probably good to have a guy who is with us running the papers in post-war Germany. But he launches his first big paper as a social democratic paper that becomes wildly successful and makes a huge amount of money. And it's really hard in Germany, which is devastated, to get enough ink and paper. And somehow he manages to. And no one really knows how. The assumption is a mix of bribery
Starting point is 00:20:27 and his connections with organized crime. And just, he's also, people will say, he was scary. He'd killed dozens of men and he was huge. So if he needed something and he couldn't get it through other reasons, he would just threaten to beat the shit out of you. Wow. And yeah, I probably wouldn't have wanted
Starting point is 00:20:44 to fight 1946 Robert Maxwell. And his articles are all like, it's great to murder Germans actually. Pretty cool. Blowing a mayor's brains out because a tank fired at you is a heroic deed. I wrote a poem about it. This paper, the first paper that he,
Starting point is 00:21:03 his social democratic paper that he starts is owned by a company, a publisher called Springer Verlag. You've heard of Springer. If you've ever read an academic publication, or like, I think they do textbooks too, you have seen Springer on a publication. I can picture the logo. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:18 And this is that company, right? And he gets to know the owner of the company, an elderly man named Ferdinand Springer, quite well. Now, pre-war, Springer had been the world's largest publisher of scientific literature because Germany had been the scientific center of the planet in many ways prior to Hitler's rise to power. But once the war starts, science kept going because obviously the Nazis still funded science,
Starting point is 00:21:42 but Germany was a pariah state. And so they weren't publishing anything for the rest of the world. And so papers would continue to be written, like sort of collecting the whole history of like all of these scientific achievements being made during the Nazi period. And they were just building up in a warehouse that Springer had that he was trying to keep, you know, far enough away that it didn't get blown up by allied bombs. So at the end of the war, Ferdinand Springer is broke, but he has 63,000 books filled with like, the science of rocketry,
Starting point is 00:22:13 which the Nazis had developed to a massive extent, and like advanced metallurgy and medical, like all of this really important, crucial science that's gonna be a big part of the space race, it's just sitting in Springer's warehouse, unpublished, right? And Maxwell becomes this guy's friend. And so while they're talking, Ferdinand explains to him how scientific publishing works.
Starting point is 00:22:34 And he's like, you know, so governments fund scientific research, as do universities, and there's grants, and those grants come from, you know, sometimes from governments, from different funds, from wealthy philanthropists, and they pay for the science. And then the scientists produce these papers about their findings, and then publishers basically get them for free.
Starting point is 00:22:54 And Maxwell's like, wait a second. Free? The most like important valuable resource in the world? People aren't even really charging for it? I got a motherfucking idea. And yeah, part of his idea is that Springer can't do anything with all these papers because German nationals are not allowed to ship things overseas right now.
Starting point is 00:23:17 Like there's a limited quantity that you can mail outside of Germany as a German for obvious reasons, but Robert Maxwell can mail whatever the fuck he wants. Right? Whoa. So he's found his great resource and he's about to start exploiting it. He starts a company with the goal
Starting point is 00:23:34 of shipping Springer's scientific publications over to the UK and finding journals to publish them. Right? He gets Springer, who again is broke, hands him the worldwide distribution rights to all of German science, right? As long as he can find a way to move it. Now, he, Maxwell's comfortable at this point, but he's not rich and 63,000 books worth of stuff is you have to be rich to ship that somewhere.
Starting point is 00:23:58 We don't actually know how he pays for this. Like, because it's expensive, he has no real customers initially. For years, he'll have kind of claimed that like, oh, my wife's family has some money, so I use my savings and theirs, and that funded this. But his family is like, no, we didn't really give him, we didn't like him. Like, we didn't give him anything, because his wife comes from like kind of a bougie family,
Starting point is 00:24:21 and they do know that Maxwell's like a poor Jewish kid from nowhere. They don't care that he's like a poor Jewish kid from nowhere. They don't care that he's like a war hero now. So we find out years later, we don't learn this until after Maxwell dies in the year 2000, a former MI6 officer claims that British intelligence, literally the James Bond agency, funds Maxwell's startup because he had been working undercover for them and they considered it a potentially valuable venture. MI6 is intelligently like, probably good to have a hand
Starting point is 00:24:49 in all of scientific publishing. That might work out for us actually. Here's some money. And the MI6 officer who reveals this says it's the only time MI6 ever like completely funded a startup, maybe that's true, maybe that's not. I don't credit a literal MI6 ever like completely funded a startup? Maybe that's true, maybe that's not. I don't credit a literal MI6 officer with necessarily being honest about everything.
Starting point is 00:25:11 Yeah, they're the ones that fund all those startups that make James Bond's little gadgets, right? Right, right, right. Yeah, there's gotta be a couple of those, right? Q's gotta have some companies he's working with. So as noted earlier, Maxwell starts shipping the stuff to the UK, and while he's working with. So as noted earlier, Maxwell starts shipping this stuff to the UK. And while he's doing this, his plan right now,
Starting point is 00:25:30 his business is just, I wanna get this over to the UK and I'll figure out a way to make it work financially because there's obviously a hunger for this material. But the UK, this just adds to the problem the country has, which is the scientific publishing in the UK can't handle the UK's backlog of unpublished science. 63,000 books worth of added stuff. It's just massively overloaded the system, right?
Starting point is 00:25:54 Per The Guardian, quote, "'The British government's solution "'was to pair the venerable British publishing house "'Butterworths with the renowned German publisher Springer "'to draw on the latter's expertise. "'Butterworths would learn to turn a profit on journals, and British science would get its work out at a faster pace. The Butterworths directors, being ex- British intelligence themselves, hired the young Maxwell to help manage the
Starting point is 00:26:14 company, and another ex-spook, Paul Roseboud, a metallurgist who spent the war passing Nazi nuclear secrets to the British through French and Dutch resistance, a scientific editor. When Butterworths decided to abandon the fledgling project in 1951, Maxwell offered £13,000, about £420,000 today, for both Butterworths and Springer's shares, giving him control of the company. Roseboud stayed on a scientific director and named the new venture Pergamon Press after a coin from the ancient Greek city of Pergamon, featuring Athena, goddess of wisdom, which they adapted for the company logo, a simple line drawing appropriately, representing both knowledge and money.
Starting point is 00:26:50 So what starts as a British program to like get scientific publishing up, winds up entirely in Maxwell and Roseboud's hands, because the company that the British government contracts with is like, ah, there's probably not a lot of money in this. Yeah, we'll take 13,000 pounds. For now, being in control of all of scientific publishing for Germany and the United Kingdom.
Starting point is 00:27:12 That's where Maxwell's made himself. He's not 30. He's not 30 years old yet? No, no, he would have been. So he's 23 when the war ends. He would have been like 28 or 29 right now, I think. Wow. He's doing well.
Starting point is 00:27:26 I'm 42 and I haven't like murdered anybody. Haven't murdered dozens of SS men. I haven't killed any mayors. I haven't taken over the scientific publishing of two entire nations yet. Right, yeah. Like the last generation was just stronger and better. I'm sorry, yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:43 The energy this guy had. It's because of the cell phone, you know, that's why I haven't murdered any Germans yet. It's the cell phone. I had a Robert Maxwell secretly invented Adderall. He was just keeping it from everybody for a while. Injecting it into his leg. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:59 It's his only food. So while this business was starting off with a bang, Maxwell is still a serial entrepreneur. And most of his attempts at business don't work quite as well as Pergamon does. A great example of this would be a business deal he sets up in the early 50s. So he gets in bed with his German chemist,
Starting point is 00:28:18 and this chemist has set up a deal to exchange chemicals shipped from Germany for glass, China, and goods manufactured elsewhere, right? Because Germany doesn't have a lot of stuff at the end of the war, except for some raw materials. A decision is made midway through the process that we should probably send all of the stuff through Argentina, because Argentina can pay with pork bellies.
Starting point is 00:28:43 Now look, I'm not an economic expert. I don't know why this made sense to them, but they decide like, oh yeah, pork bellies? Now look, I'm not an economic expert. I don't know why this made sense to them, but they decide like, oh yeah, pork bellies, that's better than cash, that'll really work out. This is settlers of Catan logic. Yes, and I know someone might be saying, well, pork belly futures is probably what they were talking about.
Starting point is 00:29:00 No, no, literal pork bellies. And this becomes obvious because when they try to exchange these pork bellies and this becomes obvious because when they try to exchange these pork bellies to the British government for cash the British government's like well these have gone rancid these are all rancid pork bellies we don't really want these so Maxwell they keep going he keeps trying to sell these rancid pork bellies to different countries. And he finally finds a country that's like starving to death, Austria.
Starting point is 00:29:29 And Austria is like, yeah, we will literally take anything. It's rancid, fine. We'll make it into sausage. We're doing so badly right now. Toxic pork is the best Austria can do. Thanks, Hitler. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:42 Again, there's like a, if you've been to Berlin, you've had like currywurst, right? Which is like a Berlin dish and it's like curry on a sausage or a hot dog. It got started because in this period of time, they're like, sausages were like more than at 50% sawdust and they had curry powder because the British were there. So it was like, people won't notice the sawdust
Starting point is 00:30:01 as much if we put curry on it. Every time we eat a currywurst, you think of Maxwell and his quest to take over all of publishing. All of publishing in the rancid pork business. Jesus Christ. My favorite side fact about this is that they get Austria to buy this rancid pork
Starting point is 00:30:19 by pretending the meat had come from a fake country called Oceania, and nobody in Austria, like in the trade part of Austria, whatever, recognizes that he just made up a country. This is not real. Yeah, that sounds real to me. Wow. Again, we just got out of the Nazi period,
Starting point is 00:30:38 not super knowledgeable about the rest of the world here. You guys don't even wanna know what's been happening in South America, man. There's Oceanas taking over, they make the best pork bellies, you really want some. The freshest pork bellies. Yeah. Wow. So in 1955, back doing their Pergamon business,
Starting point is 00:30:56 we're out of the pork belly thing, Maxwell and his partner Rose Bowd, I also just have to say the fact that like, this scientific publishing starts with like, the guy who murdered a significant portion of the SS and the guy who smuggled nuclear secrets to the French Resistance you'd think this would have ended cooler than it does Yeah, these guys sound awesome At this point and they're arbitraging pork bellies instead of money by the way Maybe the maybe the first clue that they're not as smart
Starting point is 00:31:26 as we think they are, that they're like, hey, we could, you know what would be better than being paid in money, being paid in pork bellies, receiving the pork bellies, and then having to travel around Europe reselling your rancid pork bellies. For Austrian money, the Austrian money can't be great. Yeah, that can't have been like a great profit margin, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:45 So in 1955, Maxwell and his partner, Rose Boud, show up at the Geneva conference on peaceful uses of nuclear power. And this is kind of, we've talked about this before, one of like the inciting events to what becomes the Plowshare program, where the US is like, we should be using nukes to dig big holes
Starting point is 00:32:01 and hydraulically frack, you know? So they show up at this big conference because there's all these scientists who are presenting papers on like cutting edge nuclear research. So they rent an office nearby and Maxwell spends the whole trip, he's just like crashing seminars and luncheons and dinners
Starting point is 00:32:16 and finding every scientist he can who's got a paper out and is like, hey man, sign an exclusive contract with me, I will give you money in exchange for the rights to everything you publish, right? And this isn't a lot of money for him. I think he's giving these people like hundreds to thousands of dollars,
Starting point is 00:32:35 but these are like, scientists aren't like Richmond traditionally, especially in this period. And paper publishing had never really been worth money before, so they're like, this is a great deal, right? You know, suddenly, finally, someone values my work. So Maxwell is just like, he's like, he's basically just going door to door, finding every scientist and being like, what will it take to sign you right now? Right? Like he's like, he's like a Hollywood agent, but for nuclear physicists. You know, going around the open mics, handing out, handing out $5 bills.
Starting point is 00:33:02 Right. Exactly. Yes. And no one had ever done this in the field of science, right? This is still a gentleman's endeavor. And journals tended to be focused on what they were interested in publishing, right? So they didn't seek people out. If you were a nuclear physicist and you had a paper, you'd go to the journal that did that,
Starting point is 00:33:19 and you would send them the paper, and maybe they'd get to it eventually. So Maxwell's coming up with a fucking check. That's shocking to people, right? Don Frank, a competing publisher, considered this dishonest, but it worked. What made Pergamon so profitable was the fact that, and this is something that he realizes as a result of his conversations with Ferdinand, every university and every government scientific organization in the entire Western world needs
Starting point is 00:33:46 access to all of the relevant research in their field as it's being published. This means subscriptions to every relevant journal are a necessity, right? If you're a college and you have a bunch of different scientific programs, you're going to be subscribed to basically every journal there is, right? And the first thing Maxwell realizes is like, well, they'll pay whatever I charge, right? If I have exclusive rights, no one else can publish these things. I can charge as much as I want.
Starting point is 00:34:14 And obviously once he makes money, competition enters, other companies start figuring this out, but he makes another prediction, which is that this will work the opposite of the way most things work. The more publishers there are putting out more journals, the more money we will make, right? Because they can't not subscribe to everything
Starting point is 00:34:34 because all of the research is unique. And in order to stay up to date, they have to buy everything. And at this point in time, all of these universities, all these governments, they're just being funded by these massive amounts of like Cold War era defense cash. So the money is unlimited, right? Like, and that's really what he realizes,
Starting point is 00:34:52 like I can charge whatever I want. I can put out as many journals as I want, and there will be an endless amount of cash for me. And this is not like a huge part of the budget of any one university anyway. No, no. So he could charge an arm and a leg, And this is not like a huge part of the budget of any one university anyway. So he could charge an arm and a leg, but it's just going to be some, like the library has to pay for a little bit of it.
Starting point is 00:35:13 It doesn't cost them as much as their mortgage. It's a hundred dollars instead of $10. Right. Yes. And we're getting all this defense money anyway, because the US government needs physicists, right? Right. Now it was his business partner, Rosebaugh,
Starting point is 00:35:25 who had the idea that would truly make Pergamon into a force to be reckoned with, and Bob Maxwell rich beyond his wildest dreams. Per The Guardian, quote, "'As science expanded, he realized that it would need new journals to cover new areas of study. The scientific societies that had traditionally created journals were unwieldy institutions that tended
Starting point is 00:35:43 to move slowly, hampered by internal debates between members about the boundaries of their field. Rosebaud had none of those constraints. All he needed to do was convince a prominent academic that their particular field required a new journal to showcase it properly and install that person at the helm of it. Pergamon would then begin selling subscriptions to university libraries, which suddenly had a lot of government money to spend. So you're literally walking up to guys and saying, hey, what you do seems new. You should have a journal.
Starting point is 00:36:09 And suddenly every college in the Western world subscribes, immediate profits, right? There are, so a really good magazine is working on like a 10 to 15% profit margin, right? And that's a magazine that's doing very well. His profit margins on these journals are over 50%. Wow. Like it's insane how much money they make off of this. Speaking of insane money, help us get some of that, you know?
Starting point is 00:36:35 So we can subscribe to scientific journals. No, we use SciHub. Everyone use SciHub. Fuck these people. Fuck scientific publishing as an industry. Steal it. Fuck these people. Fuck scientific publishing as an industry. Steal it. Not legal advice. Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley season one. I just knew he was a kid. Long silent voices from his past
Starting point is 00:37:04 came forward. And he was just staring at me silent voices from his past came forward. And he was just staring at me. And they had secrets of their own to share. Um, Gilbert King, I'm the son of Jeremy Lynn Scott. I was no longer just telling the story. I was part of it. Every time I hear about my dad, it's, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil.
Starting point is 00:37:25 I was becoming the bridge between a killer and the son he'd never known. If the cops and everything would have done their job properly, my dad would have been in jail. I would have never existed. I never expected to find myself in this place. Now I need to tell you how I got here. At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer. Bone Valley Season 2, Jeremy. Jeremy, I want to tell you something. Listen to new episodes of Bone Valley Season 2 on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:37:59 And to hear the entire new season ad-free with exclusive content, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple podcasts. I'm Soledad O'Brien and on my podcast, Murder on the Toe Path, I'm taking you back to the 1960s. Mary Pinchot-Meyer was a painter who lived in Georgetown in Washington, DC. Every day she took a daily walk along the towpath near the E&O canal. So when she was killed in a wealthy neighborhood... She had been shot twice in the head and in the back behind the heart.
Starting point is 00:38:34 The police arrived in a heartbeat. Within 40 minutes, a man named Raymond Crump Jr. was arrested. He was found nearby, soaking wet, and he was black. Only one woman dared defend him, civil rights lawyer, Dovey Roundtree. Join me as we unravel this story with a crazy twist because what most people didn't know is that Mary was connected to a very powerful man. I pledge you that we shall neither commit nor provoke aggression.
Starting point is 00:39:07 John F. Kennedy. Listen to Murder on the Toe Pat with Soledad O'Brien on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. It's the early days of COVID, April 2020. A woman in a small town in Oklahoma makes a strange post to Facebook and then disappears. I'm on day nine of this virus and I am pretty sure it has reached my lungs. I made the decision at the onset that if it got bad enough, I would not go to the hospital.
Starting point is 00:39:47 Pretty quickly, a ragtag group of women on the internet start their own investigation. It felt like I was living out one of my fantasy dreams of being a detective. But the world they uncover is beyond their wildest imagination. How did this happen? Listen to What Happened to Talina Czar on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:40:29 Have you ever wished for a change but weren't sure how to make it? Maybe you felt stuck in a job or a place or a relationship? Join me, Emily Tish-Sussman, over on She Pivots, where I explore the inspiring pivots of women, dig deeper into the personal reasons behind them, and leave you with the inspiration you need to make your next pivot. In honor of Mother's Day, we have some very special guests. I'm Elaine Welteroth. And I'm Caitlin Murray. Both women pivoted out of their careers
Starting point is 00:40:56 after having their kids, proving that motherhood is just another chapter in our journey, not the end. It's like, it's kind of like, will you have more babies? Yes. Will I always be me? Yeah, will you have more babies? Yes. Will I always be me? Yeah. And will I continue growing?
Starting point is 00:41:08 Yes. Because I was really in the trenches, and I knew my worth and my value as a mom. Come on over to hear their full stories. You can listen to She Pivots on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And we're back.
Starting point is 00:41:30 SciHub is a website that collects most of the journals you might want. If you like find a journal that's paywalled, you go to SciHub, Google it, there's a bunch of different mirrors, put the DOI number or just the URL link to the study you want, and SciHub will generally return it for free. It's great
Starting point is 00:41:47 anyway I'm pretty sure I'm not that's not illegal for me to say I mean, I think pretty much every grad student in the world is using it, right? Right, right, and they should be and it all of this should be free. Yes. Yeah, cuz it's oh you mean Scientific knowledge the the birthright of mankind that our taxes paid for the only in fact, the only permanent and important thing humanity does on the entire planet to discover how the universe around us works. Yeah, that should probably be a free public resource should probably be everyone's property. Yeah,
Starting point is 00:42:19 the collective genius of mankind. I don't know. Anyway, so Rose Boud, he has this idea, which is very mercenary, but he also has like a conscience. He is a scientist and he starts to feel ashamed as Maxwell runs with it and is like, oh man, I really don't, I don't feel good being in business with you in doing this. I may be contributed terribly to a great evil. And he leaves.
Starting point is 00:42:44 And so Maxwell's in sole charge of Pergamon now. And once he grasps Roseboud's idea, he runs with it like fucking Usain Bolt. He's launching new journals off the strength of like somebody, he's having like drinks and some guy mentions a new idea. And he's like, bam, journal motherfucker. You know, if a researcher, yeah. Like that, like that's literally how it's happening.
Starting point is 00:43:04 By the late fifties, he brought us sort of sleazy, he's like the first 80s guy, like he's amazing. And he brings this energy to scientific publishing. And the fact that he is this way is so out of time that it's shocking to his new peers. So who show up at these scientific conferences in like these fine tailored Italian suits, he's got his hair slicked back like a gangster.
Starting point is 00:43:26 He described the journals that he owned as you lambs and himself as King David, like cutting them up for parts. Basically. That's such a, again, this is why Rosebowd quits in 56 is he's like, I don't know, maybe this feels gross. I also have to say like, there's been a lot of talk in the last 20 years about, you know, uh, for-profit journals and, and, you know, the problems in scientific publishing. I always thought that that profit motive was relatively recent.
Starting point is 00:43:52 I didn't realize it was rapacious even at the dawn of this shit. Yes. And it, Maxwell invents it now, obviously would something similar, maybe, but like it's him, he's the one who starts this. And presumably somebody could have started a version of academic publishing that didn't work this way. That was like, you know, a lot of people say like, what if Jimmy Wales had not started Wikipedia, right?
Starting point is 00:44:18 We would have maybe had a different business model. There could have been a business model that went a better way. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And you just don't know. And you you know, I think we're probably, uh, doing better with Wikipedia than most things on the internet these days. Oh, a hundred percent. No, I mean, that's the good example. If that hadn't existed, something bad could have taken its place. There could have been a better version of
Starting point is 00:44:39 scientific publishing. Yeah. Yeah. File costs a hundred dollars a month or some shit or whatever. Yeah, and it tells you that Elon Musk, you're gonna get a hyperloop in your city soon or whatever. Yeah. So the next Geneva conference, now working alone, Robert Maxwell rents a mansion on the lake and he starts whining and dining the best minds of the scientific world.
Starting point is 00:44:58 Again, he's taking these guys who have spent their whole, and ladies who have spent their whole careers with their nose in a book, generally don't have much money, begging for grants, and he is treating them like movie stars or pop musicians. Like at one point, he gets a bunch of these guys together to start a journal, and he puts them on a chartered boat tour of the Greek Isles to figure out how to make the journal. Like it is like classic Hollywood era shit, right?
Starting point is 00:45:23 Where you're like, go hang out in Italy for three months and write this movie together or something like that. Like that's what he's doing with these scientists. And like, yeah, they're like, this is much better than being a poor scientist. This would work on me. Yes, yes, of course. If I was a scientist, I'd be like, this guy is so great.
Starting point is 00:45:41 He's treating me the way I deserve to be treated. Of course. I mean, I study ants, but of course I should go on a free, all expenses paid trip of Europe. Yeah, and one thing people say, to be fair to Maxwell, he introduces the mercenary capitalism to this, but he's always centered on the science.
Starting point is 00:45:58 And one thing the scientists he work with will say is, whenever we had a disagreement, he would always ultimately side with the scientists, right? So it's after him that things do get much more evil and it's with another company, Elselvia, where things get a lot worse, but he makes that process inevitable, even though he is really dedicated to the scientists
Starting point is 00:46:17 in this period of time. And also, I just wanna add to what Adam said, if anyone wants to put me on a chartered boat tour of the Greek Isles to start a journal, I'm in. You've got me. You bought me, I'm paid for. Like. Yeah, so he told his deputy director at Pergamon,
Starting point is 00:46:36 we don't compete on sales, we compete on authors, right? So this is a talent driven business. And that's what, again, it's very, it feels very similar to like Hollywood, at least at this time. I don't know how much that's an influence to him, but he is kind of working that way. His attitude is that like drawing in more authors exclusively means like more journals that he owns
Starting point is 00:46:57 and thus more sales. In 1959, Pergamon had 40 journals. By the mid-60s, it would publish more than 150, which is like almost like 10 times as many as Elselvier, which is, again, the most evil of these companies today, but at this point is just barely keeping up as like a competitor to Pergamon. Maxwell is not like a particularly patriotic businessman. He does not see national borders.
Starting point is 00:47:22 He has really good connections with the USSR. It's always considered weird and part of why people are wondering about his spy credentials. Whenever he visits Moscow, the Soviet government like puts him up in a mansion. Like they really like him. And I think, I mean, he definitely is doing some spying
Starting point is 00:47:39 and I'm sure they're also putting them up in the mansion because it's like wired and they want to spy on him. But he has really good connections too. He speaks really good Russian. He knows a lot of prominent people in the Soviet Union. And the evidence for that is that when like the USSR launches Sputnik, he negotiates within days an English language deal with the Russian Academy
Starting point is 00:47:59 of Sciences to become the exclusive English language publisher of like Russian science, right? All of like these, yeah. So he is connected. He sounds like a blast to spend a weekend with. He sounds like a shitload of fun, right? And there's so many quotes about this guy, like all of the scientists who work with him are like,
Starting point is 00:48:18 he was a piece of shit, lot of fun though. Like, yeah, he was an asshole. Through great parties. Yeah, like I really enjoyed spending time with this guy who sucked. Yeah. Now, obviously, Maxwell does not make this as I said, as evil as it becomes. But the downsides of what he starts are very obvious today. The modern field of scientific literature is cripplingly expensive for institutions like
Starting point is 00:48:40 libraries and colleges, the latter of which pass their costs on to students. And while Maxwell initially wowed scientists with promises of payouts, by the mid-60s he'd helped to normalize a system where individual researchers were more reliant on journals than journals were on them, per The Guardian. Scientists create work under their own direction, funded largely by governments, and give it to publishers for free. The publisher pays scientific editors who judge whether the work is worth publishing and check its grammar, but the bulk of the
Starting point is 00:49:07 editorial burden checking the scientific validity and evaluating the experiments, a process known as peer review, is done by working scientists on a volunteer basis. The publishers then sell the product back to the government-funded institutional and university libraries to be read by scientists who, in a collective sense, created the product in the first place. It is as if the New Yorker or the economist demanded that journalists write and edit each other's work for free and ask the government to foot the bill. And like, nothing works like this industry does. And that is, by the way, a description of how it is now.
Starting point is 00:49:37 That's an incredible summary of how it works. And like, peer review, you know, we're taught in college at any rate that this is a good thing. The fact that it's free labor and not just free labor for science, but free labor for the journals themselves, like it begs the question, like what exactly is the publisher even doing other than, you know, hitting start on the printing press. Which is the easiest part. Like fucking Random House does that shit. Like what is the power that these companies have?
Starting point is 00:50:16 Like why wouldn't a university system just start their own journal and do this themselves? Yeah, well I mean they do, there are some cases of that, but like you also, I mean, it's just how kind of everything works in capitalism, there are economies of scale. By the time this gets underway, the big companies are so big, you and your dinky journal, like they'll probably just buy you, right?
Starting point is 00:50:37 And if the college gets offered money for our journal, well, it's money, right? Everyone's thinking short-term about shit like this, not how it fucks you in the long run, you know? And again, like no industry works the way scientific publishing does. It is such a fucking grift. It's all a grift.
Starting point is 00:50:54 It's a huge fucking evil grift. God damn, you got me mad. This is the kind of thing I normally do segments about. You got me mad about it. You can find very good quotes and articles about this, including some that we'll have linked in the show notes where there are prominent scientists being the primary barrier to scientific progress
Starting point is 00:51:10 is the way scientific publishing works. Right? Like it's, I mean, maybe not right now, given the administration's doing. Yeah. These are a little older articles, but it's a massive problem. Now, the ultimate result of the system
Starting point is 00:51:23 that Robert Maxwell built is one in which as long as the government maintains a priority in funding sciences, the industry is super profitable, right? The US or whoever pays for research, yada yada yada. And so we'll see what happens to publishing now that some of that's starting to change. But yeah, it's interesting. It's also such a classic example of, you know, rent seeking as economists call it, because again, the government is funding it. The journals are making money off of it.
Starting point is 00:51:53 Like Maxwell made so much money that his daughter is an heiress. Billions, billions. And so they are profiting off of it, but they do not put money back into the system. Like, absolutely not. If they are making money off of the production of science, why not fund some fucking science, but they don't do that. Yeah, yeah. Why would they do that?
Starting point is 00:52:12 Why would they give any money to anybody? That's not what they're going to do. They're going to take it to, as Maxwell's about to do, buy a palace. And again, he's not as bad as the guys who replace him, because he does, ultimately, he makes a lot of times, he will make decisions that cost him money because a scientist says it's the right thing to do.
Starting point is 00:52:31 And he does ultimately side with his scientists. And he's able to do that because there's so much flex, there's so much extra profit he can afford to. But the guys who replace him aren't even gonna have that little level of scruples, right? They're just not gonna give a fuck. And this is gonna disrupt the timeline of these episodes a little bit,
Starting point is 00:52:48 but in order to talk about kind of where things are today with scientific publishing, I wanna quote once more from another Guardian article. The publishing business is perverse and needless. The Berkeley biologist Michael Eisen wrote in a 2003 article for the Guardian, declaring that it should be a public scandal. Adrian Sutton, a physicist at Imperial College, told me that scientists are all slaves to
Starting point is 00:53:09 publishers. What other industry receives its raw materials from its customers, gets those same customers to carry out the quality control on those materials, and then sells the same materials back to the customers at a vastly inflated price? Today, every scientist knows that their career depends on being published, and professional success is especially determined by getting work into the most prestigious journals. The long, slow, nearly directionless work pursued by some of the most influential scientists of the 20th century is no longer a viable career option.
Starting point is 00:53:35 Under today's system, the father of genetic sequencing, Fred Sanger, who published very little in the two decades between his 1958 and 1980 Nobel prizes may well have found himself out of a job. That's actually, I think a really important point is that so many of the foundational discoveries of modernity as we know it, were not the result of like a team of people working in, you know, for profit for a company in order to make a thing.
Starting point is 00:54:02 It was the result of a scientist who had an interest and kind of In a meandering way pursued it for decades until he changed life for every human being yeah, right Jonas Salk had a personal crusade against polio. You know like that doesn't happen It can't happen and this is part of why right and that's really bad for all of us Well, and part of it is the social or career pressure of having to publish, which is, I'm gonna guess is an entirely different problem,
Starting point is 00:54:31 like that is what scientist careers are based on, is the pressure to publish, but it feeds, again, back into this system. Like, you don't last long in a tenured position if you never publish anything. Right, exactly. Maxwell, we're back to him now. I really felt we should go to like,
Starting point is 00:54:51 yeah, this is how bad things end, right? But that's after his death. So Maxwell moves out of London. We're still in the 60s here. He purchases the Heddington Hills Hall Estate in Oxford, which had been built in 1824 and become one of the most iconic residences in the country. I'll have Sophie pull up the picture. The noble family who'd
Starting point is 00:55:09 had to live there sold it off in 1953. And Maxwell buys it in part because like, again, he's not English, he's not naturally part of high society, but by buying this palace, he can kind of force himself to be, right? Now he can throw these kinds of parties that everyone in high society will show up at. And he makes this both his home and the headquarters of Pergamon Press, right? And that's kind of the way things work in the UK. I think still to this day that like,
Starting point is 00:55:36 you can skip a bunch of levels of the social hierarchy if you buy the right house, you know? He and Betty had nine children ultimately. And this is, his life is never, his personal life is never easy. For all that he's like a wealthy monster, he really has a tough life. In 1957, he and Betty lose their three-year-old daughter
Starting point is 00:55:59 to leukemia. In 1961, their oldest son, Michael, is in a car crash that leaves him coma bound for seven years. He dies finally in 1968. And that nearly a decade, and this is during his most productive period as a businessman, his son is just in a fucking coma dying. It kind of breaks everyone.
Starting point is 00:56:19 Like his family is sort of ruined as a result of this. He and Betty stop talking, really. Like their relationship is sort of ruined as a result of this. He and Betty stopped talking really. Like they don't, their relationship is never the same. And normally when we say that for a man this rich, it's because, and he does cheat on her a bunch, but like in this case, it's because, you know, it's just, this just breaks their relationship. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:38 And it breaks their ability to kind of care for their other kids. Like he stops talking to his surviving children until, and I hate to make anyone sympathetic to Gillan Maxwell, but in 1961, his youngest daughter, Gillan, at age three tells her mother, mommy, I exist in an attempt to get attention because like after this accident,
Starting point is 00:57:01 they're just ignoring their kids so much. Like she has to like state to her parents, I am a person at age three. So- Who reported this? This was in his biography by Preston. And I believe this was reported by one of the Maxwell brothers.
Starting point is 00:57:17 And again, this is well before the scandal. So- No, no, I know. I'm just like, well, Gillen wouldn't remember this and the parents don't know the kids exist. So they probably wouldn't remember it. His brothers are old. One of the brothers was like, oh man,
Starting point is 00:57:27 that was a real bummer when our three year old sister said, mummy, I exist. Yeah, that really fucked us all up actually. Yeah. I still don't feel bad for her. I didn't say this. I'm not saying you should feel bad for her, but this should tell you like how bad things are
Starting point is 00:57:41 in his personal life. Not great. Still don't feel bad for her. Yeah, yeah. He does start to smother her with affection from this point forward, right? Partly as a result of this. And she's kind of the only one in his immediate family
Starting point is 00:57:53 that he acts with love towards after this. He will lash out at his sons and at his wife for the rest of his days, but he never really does it. Gillan, she becomes coddled and is obviously his favorite. So again, there we go, there we go. Sympathy ended. We're good now.
Starting point is 00:58:09 Don't have to think about that sad three-year-old anymore. Now if you recall, Maxwell had promised his future wife, Betty, that during the war he would one day be rich and become the prime minister. He had obviously already become rich and in the mid-1960s he starts to work towards political power. He had obviously already become rich and in the mid 1960s, he starts to work towards political power in 1964 he runs for parliament in the constituency of Buckingham and He wins as a member of the Labour Party and this is a weird aside. He identifies as a socialist his entire life Really? He identifies as a socialist. Yep. He strongly identifies as a socialist. So he he thinks that like
Starting point is 00:58:42 He strongly identifies as a socialist. So he, he, he thinks that like, uh, public goods should be available to the public at low or no cost subsidized by the government. Yeah. Here's the thing, but not scientific research, not scientific research. That doesn't count. And also unions don't count. Um, I think he identifies as a socialist cause his mom did. And he, he isn't one, he never acts as one, but I think that identifies as a socialist because his mom did, and he isn't one, he never acts as one,
Starting point is 00:59:08 but I think that's just a part of his ego is like, he probably knows his mom would not like what he's done with his life at this point. But yes, and he is a part of the Labor Party. And he plays a role in the switch from labor to new labor, right? Which is when the British Labor Party jettisons the unions, right? Like Robert Maxwell is part of that process.
Starting point is 00:59:32 How? What does he do? We'll talk about that. We'll talk about that. Speaking of things we'll talk about, here's ads. Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley Season 1. I just knew him as a kid. Long silent voices from his past came forward. And he was just staring at me.
Starting point is 01:00:00 And they had secrets of their own to share. Um, Gilbert King. I'm the son of Jeremy Lynn Scott. I was no longer just telling the story. I was part of it. Every time I hear about my dad is, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil. I was becoming the bridge between a killer
Starting point is 01:00:20 and the son he'd never known. If the cops and everything would have done their job properly, my dad would have been in jail. I would have never existed. I never expected to find myself in this place. Now, I need to tell you how I got here. At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer. Bone Valley, Season 2. Jeremy.
Starting point is 01:00:41 Jeremy, I want to tell you something. Listen to new episodes of Bone Valley, Season 2, the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to hear the entire new season ad-free with exclusive content, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. I'm Soledad O'Brien, and on my podcast, Murder on the Towpath, I'm taking you back to the 1960s. Mary Pinchot Meyer was a painter who lived in Georgetown in Washington, D.C.
Starting point is 01:01:12 Every day, she took a daily walk along a towpath near the E&O Canal. So when she was killed in a wealthy neighborhood... She had been shot twice in the head and in the back behind the heart. The police arrived in a heartbeat. Within 40 minutes a man named Raymond Crump Jr. was arrested. He was found nearby soaking wet and he was black. Only one woman dared defend him. Civil rights lawyer Dovey Roundtree. Join me as we unravel this story with a crazy twist,
Starting point is 01:01:48 because what most people didn't know is that Mary was connected to a very powerful man. I pledge you that we shall neither commit nor provoke aggression. John F. Kennedy. Listen to Murder on the Toe Path with Soledad O'Brien on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 01:02:14 It's the early days of COVID, April, 2020. A woman in a small town in Oklahoma makes a strange post to Facebook and then disappears. I'm on day nine of this virus and I am pretty sure it has reached my lungs. I made the decision at the onset that if it got bad enough, I would not go to the hospital. Pretty quickly, a ragtag group of women on the internet start their own investigation. It felt like I was living out one of my fantasy dreams of being a detective. But the world they uncover is beyond their wildest imagination.
Starting point is 01:02:56 How did this happen? Listen to What Happened to Talina Czar on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Have you ever wished for a change but weren't sure how to make it? Maybe you felt stuck in a job or a place or a relationship? Join me, Emily Tish Sussman, over on She Pivots, where I explore the inspiring pivots of women,
Starting point is 01:03:32 dig deeper into the personal reasons behind them, and leave you with the inspiration you need to make your next pivot. In honor of Mother's Day, we have some very special guests. I'm Elaine Welteroth. And I'm Caitlin Murray. Both women pivoted out of their careers after having their kids,
Starting point is 01:03:50 proving that motherhood is just another chapter in our journey, not the end. It's like, it's kind of like, will you have more babies? Yes. Will I always be me? Yeah. And will I continue growing? Yes.
Starting point is 01:04:02 Because I was really in the trenches and I knew my worth and my value as a mom. Come on over to hear their full stories. You can listen to She Pivots on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. So Robert has now gotten himself into parliament, is part of labor, and you have to remember, again, he's a socialist, and he's also a business owner, though. And so, he hates unions because they compete with his power. And so, when interviewed after the election, he tells everybody, I come from a very humble
Starting point is 01:04:42 farm-laboring family and would rather cut off my arm than betray my class. And it's true that he does come from a humble farm laboring family, but there is no bigger class traitor than this fucking guy. His political peers who knew him claim that he also told them he wanted to become prime minister and one colleague cited in the book Fall later quoted him as having admitted, well, of course I'm conservative, but I'm not a member of the establishment, so I've got to become labor. Which is a very Trumpian comment, right? That like, I'm not a member of the establishment, I'm a billionaire, I own all of science,
Starting point is 01:05:15 but I'm not part of the establishment fundamentally. So I'm a conservative, but I'm with labor, right? I'm actually a progressive somehow. It's like an Elon Musk statement, yeah. It's an in-group, out-group somehow. It's like an Elon Musk statement, yeah. It's an in-group out-group thing. They were mean to me growing up. I'm not a lord, I'm not a lord and lady.
Starting point is 01:05:31 I'm not invited to social functions. Therefore, I must join this party. Yeah, yeah. And he also considers, so a big thing once he gets into labor is he's telling, he starts telling everyone else we have to modernize the labor party. And what he means by that is our pro-union attitudes are outdated
Starting point is 01:05:47 we have to stop being pro-union right now this is not initially super popular a lot of unions voting in this period of time still they have not been crushed by Thatcher entirely eventually he switched out his chauffeured Rolls-Royce for an old Land Rover to try to portray himself as a man of the people. And like, buddy, a Land Rover is still an expensive car. Like, that's like, no, I'm gonna trade my Maserati for a Lambo so people know I'm a working man, right?
Starting point is 01:06:16 I'm like, I don't know, man. It's not chauffeured. Now I just mow over the peasants under my own power. Yeah, yeah. So this did not have the intended effect. And although he was reelected in 1966, he ultimately lost his seat in 1970 and failed to win it back during the next cycle.
Starting point is 01:06:35 Still, Adam, you'll be happy to hear this, he achieved the goal of every politician in the 60s and 70s, having an awkward photo taken with Henry Kissinger. Just look at the two of them. Just look, and Maxwell's over in the corner there. He's just like smiling in the corner, looking like a mob boss next to Kissinger.
Starting point is 01:06:51 Eh. Eh. So I love this picture. That guy's a wheeler dealer. He's drunk already. He is, yeah. Like I can smell him based on this photo. Does that make sense?
Starting point is 01:07:02 Absolutely. He smells like mothballs and vodka. Yeah, and maybe a little aquavelva in there too. Oh yeah. Yeah, he smells like the back room of an Italian deli that's actually a mob front. He's going, how you doing sweetheart? He's like patting the waitress's ass,
Starting point is 01:07:17 like this guy is such a piece of shit. It's shocking to me, again, that he's like a Czech, Ruthenianian Jewish guy, because if you had told me this man was the most Italian fellow ever, I'd be like, yeah, that guy is Italian as shit. Look at him. Like he has the face of a mob boss.
Starting point is 01:07:36 Like you could have put him in the Sopranos. It really is the 20th century dream, right? Of starting in this little backwater and becoming a sort of like Polly national, uh, Wheeler dealer, billionaire, uh, player asshole. Yeah, he does it all. And he is like, again, a monster, but the only guy I've ever heard of who you can really say like, yeah, he is kind of was a self-made billionaire. Like, like he did come from nothing.
Starting point is 01:08:04 Yeah. Um, and come from nothing. Yeah. And then destroyed science. Great. I think that was more possible after an event like World War II where everything gets scrambled and you can rush in and pick up the pieces. Yeah. Well, I mean, yeah, I mean, think about it.
Starting point is 01:08:19 Both Maxwell and Kissinger really are both like, they both start their lives as like shrapnel from this horrific conflict persecuted by the Nazis and then the the world of possibilities that opens up in the wake of the Second World War Allows both of them to reach these incredibly high levels of power So yeah, I mean, I think you've got a really good point there that like the the way the world opens up after World War two Makes a lot of these guys' improbable lives possible. I can't wait for World War III. It's gonna be great.
Starting point is 01:08:49 It's gonna be great. Just think about all the new billionaires we're gonna get. And I'm gonna be like, I wish I was a younger man. Yeah. I wish I was just trying to get my start after World War III, you know, after the nukes go off and I could build the nuclear mitigation business. Yes, yes.
Starting point is 01:09:05 But maybe we'll get a chance to fight some SS guys on a farm, you know? At least there's that, Adam. Could happen. It could happen here, yeah. Through the late 1960s, Maxwell repeatedly tried to expand his empire into news media.
Starting point is 01:09:20 He attempts to buy News of the World in 1968 and The Sun in 1969, and Rupert Murdoch beats him both times. This enrages him. He considers himself Rupert Murdoch's nemesis. Rupert Murdoch is always like, oh, I've never even heard of that guy. Who are you talking about?
Starting point is 01:09:34 Nemesis? Nah, nah. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha I'm a little bit apathetic though by this part. Nativism does play a role in him losing news of the world because an editorial when he's trying to buy it declares this is a British newspaper run by British people. Let's keep it that way. What was he considered at the time? He was British.
Starting point is 01:09:56 Yeah, but they figured, they found out he'd been born yawn. He hadn't been born yawn, but that's what they thought. This guy's a Ruthenian. He's a Ruthenian, yeah. So his political career is uneven at best. Business seemed to be a welcoming place for him, at least until late 1969, after he negotiated what should have been a great deal to sell Pergamon Press to a wealthy American investor, Saul Steinberg.
Starting point is 01:10:18 Unfortunately for our boy, Maxwell illegally concealed the true value of the company, basically pretending it was a lot worth more than it was, via what writer Robert Philpott calls smoke and mirrors accounting practices. He gets removed from the board of directors and the UK starts an investigation in his activities that concludes in 71. After finding huge amounts of fraudulent payments
Starting point is 01:10:38 moved from one department to another to hide the cost of other investments that went bad and prop up segments of his business that were struggling. The report concluded, Robert Maxwell is not, in our opinion, a person who can be relied on to exercise proper stewardship of a public company. And that's the end of the story, right? Obviously, you know?
Starting point is 01:10:55 Yeah. Yeah. No, five years later, he takes control of Pergamon again. He's running it all. And his Southern Rise and Fall earns him the nickname the Bouncing Check, like CZEH, which is not bad. That's not bad. Great work.
Starting point is 01:11:13 The Bouncing Check. Good at some things. Yeah, I love that shit. And for the next 10 years after this unprobable rise back, he goes from strength to strength. He buys Europe's largest printing company. He becomes owner of The Mirror, Britain's largest left-leaning paper. And now that he finally owns the paper, this is how he really plays a major role in the
Starting point is 01:11:34 shift to new labor, because he starts using it, the biggest left-leaning paper in the UK, to attack union organizers. He runs what the socialist worker described as a smear campaign against Arthur Scargill, head of the Mine Workers Union. This is during a big fight between the Mine Workers and Thatcher, I believe. Quote, Scargill and the socialist values he represented
Starting point is 01:11:56 were seen as a barrier to the modernization of the Labor Party. The vile attacks, which lasted for the better part of a year, were baseless, yet they did terrible damage. And he does this over and over again, right? He has like a one-man war against the unions in the UK, wielding the left-wing paper to execute it. He just has animus for unions because he's a business owner,
Starting point is 01:12:18 and that's the way the wind is blowing? And that's the way I think the wind is blowing doesn't hurt. I think he is a personal, I should be able to, I think he is a personal I should be able to I know what's best I should be able to make all the decisions and if you got a union the boss doesn't make all the decisions, right? They're restricted to some extent. No, that's so that's what anti-unionism is fundamentally about It's about anyone else having power unions are about workers having power and right the people on top don't want them to have the power Right exactly and, the socialist, uses this big left-leaning paper as an engine to push labor against unions.
Starting point is 01:12:52 And unfortunately, while he does this, the paper grows in circulation and becomes more profitable than ever. Because again, he's really good at the nuts and bolts of running a newspaper. Like he's just, he's like, he's like almost like LeBron, right? Like he's just got this built in skill he was born with
Starting point is 01:13:07 for knowing how to make a paper profitable. I don't know why. We could use a little bit of that right now to be quite honest. Yeah, we need another one of those who's not evil. Yeah. Now he's got Bezos and Patrick Soon-Shong. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 01:13:24 So he buys more publications. He becomes a media maven on such a scale that Bob Bagdikian, the Dean of Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism, declared, neither Caesar nor Franklin Roosevelt nor any Pope has commanded as much power to shape information on which so many people depend. Wow.
Starting point is 01:13:40 And Murdoch is obviously his rival at this time, but this is kind of before Murdoch has done most of what he's going to get famous for, like Fox News isn't really a thing yet. And Murdoch to a degree, cribs a little bit from this guy's notes in terms of like, oh, really, like he's taking some notes.
Starting point is 01:14:00 Not that he's not doing any of this before, but he's influenced a little bit by the degree to which Maxwell is able to turn these publications he owns to push his own agendas. And he is a famously terrible guy to work for. Per a biography in the Times of Israel, he bullied and humiliated staff relentlessly,
Starting point is 01:14:18 calling his ludicrously titled chief of staff at 4 a.m. one Sunday morning to ask him the time and instilled a culture of distrust and rivalry. He bugged his staff, by which I mean he bugged them with surveillance devices, spending hours alone listening to the recordings for evidence of disloyalty and even had them followed. Thank Christ.
Starting point is 01:14:40 Like, dude, you're obsessed with me, you're spending hours alone listening to the recordings of me? Yeah, it's kind of flattering. You are, what you're obsessed with me. You're spending hours alone listening to the recordings of me. Yeah It's kind of flattering you are what you're really pulling into focus now is this man is a long-lost succession character. Yes Yes, nailed it. Where is the Holocaust surviving Ruthenian Czech Jew? You know who managed to survive and build an empire on that show. That's a wonderful character. He would have participated in Bor on the Floor. There's no way.
Starting point is 01:15:08 He sounds like he created Bor on the Floor. Yeah, he is Bor on the Floor, yeah. Yeah, Bor on the Floor. We missed a flashback scene if you have machine gunning the SS. Alas. So this is, again, to kind of play on the succession vibes, his sons are, he puts in his business, right?
Starting point is 01:15:28 And he fires them. He fires his son, Ian Maxwell, because like, he doesn't have, he's not like waiting for him when he lands on a plane one day. He instead like sends a chauffeured vehicle. And so Maxwell fires his kid. And Ian's first words when he gets fired are, thank Christ, I'm finally out of the madhouse.
Starting point is 01:15:45 And then three months later, he hires Ian back on half his salary. He's just such a piece of shit. Yeah, this is very successful. You're in, you're out, you're up, you're down. Dad loves you, he doesn't love you. You never know where you stand, except you'll never be free.
Starting point is 01:16:01 Yeah, yeah, you definitely will never be free. Now that quote comes from a massive piece on Maxwell in the times of Israel. And the times of Israel is covering it in particular because in the mid 80s, after decades of really ignoring his Jewish heritage, he meets a guy who's like, you should go to Israel. And he becomes all in
Starting point is 01:16:20 and starts investing massively in the Israeli economy. His wealth gives him instant access to the prime minister, Yitzhak Schmir, and he announces his intention, I'm gonna put a quarter of a billion dollars into Israel, and he normally lies when he says stuff like this, but he does this. And he uses his profits from the mirror in order to do this.
Starting point is 01:16:39 And I'm gonna quote from his biography. Over the next four years, thanks to his mirror group profits, Maxwell pumped millions into the country, buying newspapers, investing in high tech and pharma companies, and in the process becoming the largest single investor in Israel's economy, Maxwell also began to pass on useful information to the Mossad. And boy is he useful to the Mossad. In 1986, he tips, so there's this scientist, this Israeli scientist, Mordecai Venunu, who's part of Israel's nuclear program, that Israel still does not acknowledge that they have
Starting point is 01:17:10 nukes, right? We know they, like everyone knows, but it's like kind of- They don't acknowledge they have them now? I don't believe, I still don't believe they've officially acknowledged their nuclear capacity. I should actually double check on that. I know it took a long time, but they have not at this point, right? Like it is not officially stated. It's just kind of a thing everyone knows. And Mordecai goes to the British press
Starting point is 01:17:33 with inside info about Israel's nuclear program. And one of the papers he goes to is the Mirror. And so he leaks to Maxwell's paper and Maxwell gives him up to the massage and he's jailed for 18 years, which is like in journalism terms, bad. Yeah. To give somebody up to a foreign intelligence service and then they're jailed? Yes.
Starting point is 01:17:58 Real, real bad. Yeah. Usually they try not to do that. Yeah. Bad publisher move. Hey, Robert here. And I just wanted to come in and note that the story of Mordecai Venun
Starting point is 01:18:10 it was a lot more complicated than just Robert Maxwell or the Mirror. The Mirror is not the first publication that he linked to. I think he went after the Sunday Times first, but Robert Maxwell is involved. It's a little bit unclear. It seems like a situation where it would be more than one person kind of went to the massade about what he was saying.
Starting point is 01:18:30 But yeah, Maxwell definitely was involved when somebody else sold the story to the Sunday Mirror and he went to the massade over it. So anyway, Mordecai is a very interesting guy, obviously very courageous guy. Story's really worth looking into. I also did want to note, because we had a question about this earlier, Israel still does not officially admit that they have nuclear weapons,
Starting point is 01:18:52 although they're believed to have somewhere between like one and 400 warheads. It's that their kind of official defense posture strategy is to neither confirm nor deny that they do. It kind of became clear in the late 70s that they did, but this is not something that is like officially admitted. So anyway, just wanted to add that clarification. Now there are allegations,
Starting point is 01:19:13 unfortunately because he's involved in the Mossad, and he definitely is, there's also insane allegations, right? Like you can find every conspiracy connected to this guy, and he's basically framed as like having been a major Mossad agent, and that's just really not accurate. One of the big things you'll hear is that, and this comes from the book Robert Maxwell,
Starting point is 01:19:32 Israel Super Spy, which is, let's say, somewhat exaggerated. And they allege that he stole a piece of surveillance software called Promise, without an E, which was programmed to let law enforcement agencies track criminals and having a back door installed in it. And the Baltimore Sun sums up their argument. They report that Maxwell sold the program to most of the important government intelligence services in the world at a personal profit of more than half a billion dollars.
Starting point is 01:20:00 Into the program, they write, Israeli technicians collaborating with Maxwell implanted an electric trap door that allowed Israeli intelligence to tap many of the highest state secrets of the Soviet Union, Britain, the US, and other nations. And this is not true, it's also not true in a way that is blaming, is denying what the US government did, because promise is a real thing, and it really was used to tap a bunch of governments, but the US government was the inciting agent here, right? This is one of ours. Now, Maxwell is involved, I'm gonna have to explain what happened.
Starting point is 01:20:36 So this software was designed by a software developer in Washington called Innslaw, so prosecutors could monitor case records and keep track of different people in the system, right? Like that is the purpose. So prosecutors can monitor the progression of cases against different accused criminals. It was developed under a Department of Justice grant. So the DOJ was licensed to use it, but the license said the government cannot modify, create derivative versions of it, or sell it. And the Reagan administration's like, well, fuck it. What if we just do that anyway?
Starting point is 01:21:05 Right? Per an article in the New Statesman, under the Ronald Reagan administration's covert intelligence initiative known as Follow the Money, the NSA misappropriated promise to for sale to banks in 1982. The version of promise sold by the NSA had been espionage enabled through a back door in the program, allowing the agency to covertly conduct real-time electronic surveillance of the flow of money to suspected terrorists and other perceived threats to U.S. national interests. A letter from the U.S. Department of Justice in 1985, later obtained by Innslaw because the company sues the shit out of the government for this, documented more plans for covert
Starting point is 01:21:39 sale and distribution of the espionage-enabled version of PROMIS, this time to governments in the Middle East, which would surreptitiously allow the US to spy on foreign intelligence agencies. The letter outlined how sales of the software were to be facilitated by the late Saudi billionaire Khalid bin Mafouz and the arms dealers Adnan Khashoggi and Manuchar Gorbanafar. PROMIS should be delivered without paperwork, customs or delay, it stated, and all of the transactions paid for through a Swiss bank account. So, number one, this is on us. The Mossad does not start this program,
Starting point is 01:22:12 and they don't put the back, it's not Israeli technicians who put the back door in, Reagan's guys do, right? A bunch of the shadiest, now Israel does get involved in this, and they do profit from this, but it starts with us. A bunch of the shadiest oper- Now Israel does get involved in this and they do profit from this, but it starts with us. A bunch of the shadiest operators in the 1980s are allowed to sell pirated versions of promise.
Starting point is 01:22:30 Basically the attorney general under Reagan, Ed Meese, will give you the, like basically license you to sell pirated compromised versions of promise to foreign governments if you're his friend. Like that's how, that's part of how this works. It's like a way the Reagan administration is like rewarding loyal people. It's like, hey, you've got a good,
Starting point is 01:22:50 hey, you did us good and you've got a good connection over in, you know, Ecuador or whatever. Why don't we let you sell this to their government? And then we get a back door into the government and this guy gets to make some money, right? And one of the people who gets tapped as a result of this program, because they want to sell
Starting point is 01:23:05 Promise to Iraq, Libya and several other Middle Eastern countries and this is hard So they enlist the help of a Mossad guy named Rafi Aitan and that guy in the Mossad is like Maybe a guy at the Mossad isn't the best dude to sell to Iraq, but you know who can sell shit to anybody Bobby Maxwell, baby, and that's where he comes into this, right? Now, Gordon Thomas, who's the author of that Israel super spy book, will claim, he's the source of the claim that Maxwell makes half a billion in licenses doing this.
Starting point is 01:23:36 I don't know how much Maxwell really makes, but he doesn't start, like he is, he's kind of a middleman in the process. And Thomas portrays him as like at the core of the process, but this is like fucked up. And he does sell, he sells, I think to the Soviet Union, he sells to a shitload of governments that allows the US to spy on them.
Starting point is 01:23:52 And he profits personally from this. So this is like a lot of skullduggery it's involved in. It's just a lot more centered on Ed Meese and the Reagan administration than some of these other claims make. And obviously Israel profits from this too because they are using Maxwell to sell it to countries that they want intel on, right?
Starting point is 01:24:10 So that is happening, that is a part of this story. It's just not the start of it. Now, there are numerous allegations of Maxwell's fingers in arms dealers that the Israeli government found useful to and some of these are true, but it's not, it's often portrayed as he is an arms dealer. He's not, he is a guy who knows logistics. And so when a friend is like, hey,
Starting point is 01:24:31 we need the shipment to get through this port, he's like, I know guys there, I'll make sure it moves. Right? He's a, you know, that's the kind of thing he's useful for. And so he is connected to the Mossad because he's a powerful rich businessman who desperately wants to prove his loyalty to the country, to like to Israel, and has connections
Starting point is 01:24:52 everywhere. And that's kind of his use. And there's a much more accurate look at his spying and his involvement in intelligence agencies in the book, Foreign Body, The Secret Life of Robert Maxwell, by Russell Davies. And Davies outlines the dimensions of these shady dealings in a way that I think is a lot more accurate. Because he argues it's hard to imagine Maxwell himself doing an arms deal directly, right? Quote, but he could certainly have been of use securing the cooperation of foreign governments when it came to routing illicit cargos through their unadvertised and outlawed destinations. Maxwell, he argues, would have been insulted to have been accused of working as a common
Starting point is 01:25:29 spy or agent. Because again, he is on first a first name basis with every prime minister of Israel during this period of time, right? Like he's not like an employee of the Mossad. He is incredibly, he's so highly connected. By 1988, Maxwell estimated his own net worth at about $4 billion, and the parties he threw, attended by everyone who was anyone in UK politics,
Starting point is 01:25:51 were legendary. John Preston describes his 1988 birthday, an event that had to take three days because more than 3,000 people attended. There's like tiers of guests in terms of like which day you're allowed to be at. Wow. It's fucked up.
Starting point is 01:26:08 It really seems like, you know, he did some bad shit, but he wins me back with the parties. The parties sound great. The parties sound great. The arms dealing, the spying on every foreign government in the world for the CIA and the Mossad. I don't love that, but the parties. There's one, like Margaret Thatcher gives a speech
Starting point is 01:26:25 at his birthday this year, where she talks about how awesome she is, because he doesn't like her. They're like enemies in public, but she's like, I think he secretly likes me and then explains all the ways that she thinks she's cool. Like it's such a fucking Thatcher moment. Oh man.
Starting point is 01:26:42 It is sick. I want to read a quote from John Preston's book that sort of gives you a description of the vibe of this party. On the night of the first party, guests passed down a receiving line where they were greeted by Maxwell, Betty, and all seven of their children. Some of the guests arrived bearing birthday presents. The broadcaster David Frost turned up with a 500 pound bottle of wine. Unaware of how much it had cost, Maxwell's chef later tipped it into a beef stew.
Starting point is 01:27:07 As guests sipped their drinks, the band of the Coldstream guards marched back and forth across the lawn. Before dinner started, Robert and Betty made their formal entrance into the marquee to an announcement from the master of ceremonies. Ladies and gentlemen, would you please welcome your host and hostess,
Starting point is 01:27:22 Robert and Elizabeth Maxwell, and a fanfare of herald trumpeteers. Everyone stood to applaud. Along with a row of medals pinned to his black tailcoat, Maxwell was wearing a large white enamel cross on a chain around his neck. This was the Order of the White Rose of Finland, a decoration normally given to foreign heads of state
Starting point is 01:27:39 in recognition of outstanding civilian or military conduct. Betty Maxwell wore a dress made of gold embroidered tulle over yellow taffeta silk. So like, parties parties. Like real rich people parties. See, I missed the boat with World War II. If I had just been able to murder a couple Germans. Couple dozen Germans.
Starting point is 01:27:59 I could have been on the road to being covered in silver taffeta. Yeah. And having Margaret Thatcher sing my praises. Yeah, kind of, we'll sing her own praises at your birthday. Yeah, classic Thatcher. Make it all about her.
Starting point is 01:28:14 The greatest generation though. Yeah, definitely the greatest generation. There's like a really funny moment from this where like one of his friends goes like during this party kind of like finds his way walking around like the back of the house outside of like the areas they're supposed to be partying in and notices that like well all of the furniture outside of like the big public areas kind of looks like shit and all of the books on his bookshelf are fake like they're made out of
Starting point is 01:28:39 cardboard they're like fake books now Preston says only the book's concealing hysteria system were fake. I don't know. But this is kind of evidence that as rich as he was on paper, and this is the thing, he's worth 4.4 billion on paper or something like that, he's not actually doing as well as it seems, right? And 1998 is nearer to the end of his time in the limelight than the beginning. That year, the same year as this fucking party,
Starting point is 01:29:11 he spends $2.6 billion buying US publisher Macmillan. And that's a billion dollars more than its own shareholders value to that. Like he kind of does a Musk where he's like, I'll offer you 2.6 billion. And they're like, we were not gonna ask for that much, but oh fucking K, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:29:29 He had to borrow from 44 banks to afford it. And he does this not because again, he's got profitable businesses. Preston says this is out of desperation because Murdoch is buying more and more publishers and he's like desperate to win. He doesn't want Murdoch to get Macmillan. So he kind of endangers his entire empire buying it
Starting point is 01:29:49 in order to beat Rupert Murdoch. And again, all Murdoch will say about this guy is like, who, huh, what guy? That must make him even angrier. I don't know her, says Rupert Murdoch. Yeah, I don't know what you're talking about. Anyway, back to being evil. In March of 1991, he started making a series
Starting point is 01:30:12 of ill-advised acquisitions in New York media. He purchased the New York Daily News, which was like the oldest daily paper in New York at the time, but also in disastrous financial condition. There's like a horrible strike going on. It is not a good buy. It's such a bad buy.
Starting point is 01:30:29 The owners pay him $60 million to take it. And they pay him that because it's in a lot more debt than that. Wow. Right? It's such a bad buy. So they're getting off scot-free by paying a different dude to own it. Yes, yes.
Starting point is 01:30:45 Please take this shit and all of its debts off of our fucking hands. Wow. And again, his assumption is, because in the past, every time he's got a paper, he's been able to turn it around, right? And make it super, he's got this skill. So he sails his yacht, the Lady Gillen,
Starting point is 01:31:00 named after his daughter, into the city harbor to take control of the paper. He gives this like grand speech on the street and like there's all these articles in New York papers being like the savior of New York media, you know? And there's also a bunch of people who had worked for him in different papers in the UK being like, he's actually a giant dick.
Starting point is 01:31:17 No one can stand to work for him. This is not going to end well for any of you. And it sure as shit doesn't, right? So the 80s comes to an end, sadly, I know we're all still mourning that, and suddenly there's a big economic pop, right? And interest rates skyrocket, and all of this debt that he had taken on
Starting point is 01:31:38 to keep building this, he's always robbing Peter to pay Paul, like a certain guy that we all know about right now. Like, he's always in debt to a lot of banks for all this stuff. And suddenly it gets a lot more expensive to service that debt. And so in 1991, he has to sell Pergamon Press in order, like, and that's his, like, baby, in order to keep everything else afloat. And that's also the profitable part of his empire. So he has now sold the golden goose
Starting point is 01:32:08 to pay for the shit that's horribly in debt that he can't make a profit on. Not a great move. So what do you do? If you're a guy who sucks ass and hates unions and hates your employees, and suddenly you're out of money and you need to keep funding all of this debt, where do you go when interest rates are fucked and you simply can't take any more loans from
Starting point is 01:32:28 banks? I'm racking my brain. Where do you go? Well, you know where there's a lot of money in any given company that's been around this long with a large workforce. The pension plan. He raids the pension plan. He raids the pension.
Starting point is 01:32:42 He steals nearly half a billion dollars from the pension plan. Now I'm mad. Now I don't like him. Yeah, oh yeah. Now I don't like him. He destroys so many people's lives and retirements. He fucking robs this pension plan, right? Wow.
Starting point is 01:32:56 And it's not even enough because his debts are well over a billion dollars. Banks are hounding him constantly. He starts gambling in London casinos. All he'll do is like gamble and then watch James Bond movies while leading takeout. And this is kind of his mental state. He's in this period of collapse.
Starting point is 01:33:14 And also right around this time, it becomes known that he is being investigated for war crimes in World War II. Cause he like wrote letters to his wife and talked about him, like to journalists about like, again, I machined gun prisoners. And again, it's the least bad thing he ever did. But so he's got that too.
Starting point is 01:33:34 He's got all these debts. His whole empire is about to collapse when he set sail on his yacht, the Lady Gillen on November 1st, 1991. He's getting letters constantly from different banks being like, hey, this is overdue. Can you even prove that you're solvent in anymore? Swiss bank is threatening to go public and it like has told the London police that he's broken a bunch of laws. So he's in a lot of trouble. And around 5 a.m. on November 1st, I think it's November 1st, 1991,
Starting point is 01:34:06 he falls overboard off the stem of his yacht as it passes towards Tenerife. And his body is fished out of the ocean about 12 hours later by the Spanish National Rescue Service helicopter. Nobody knows precisely what happened. The thing that you will encounter most commonly is that the Mossad had him killed.
Starting point is 01:34:29 And I don't see any reason to believe that. For one thing, he receives a hero's funeral in Israel, like attended by the prime minister and the Israeli president, Shimon Peres is there, right? They give him like, okay, so this is what the Israeli president says at his funeral. "'Kings and barons besieged his doorstep. "'He was a figure of almost mythological stature.'"
Starting point is 01:34:52 But there are like allegations that basically he tried to blackmail the Mossad to get them to pay him $400 million. And it, I don't know, doesn't seem like the kind of move he'd have made. Again, he's a steal the pension plan guy. People treat these like spy agencies as though like they always have reason to kill anybody at any time. Yes, that like there's some they're like a deus ex machina that people use for a simple explanation to make themselves seem smart.
Starting point is 01:35:21 We're like, why would they? Why? Like for what they, Israel wasn't angry at him. It's the most annoying thing in the history analysis is people making this claim. Well, the Masada had him killed. Why? What does that explain? Again, he was the number one investor over there.
Starting point is 01:35:39 He was extremely popular there. He had destroyed the pensions of huge numbers of people in the UK. Like if anyone wanted to kill him, it's a bunch of them. Yeah. And he was about to fuck up a lot of US publishing, but like, yeah, it's just one of those things where there are three different coroner reports
Starting point is 01:35:56 and they don't agree. And so that'll often get like, and none of the coroners could agree. But what the coroners can't agree on is did he have a heart attack or did he jump in? And both are, he's 60 and he was in bad health. It's also, it's perfectly possible either he knew that he was fucked and he wanted to die, right?
Starting point is 01:36:14 Or that he had a heart attack because he was super stressed out and 68 and not in good health and he fell off his boat. Yeah. Both of those are just likelier to me than like the massage poisoned him with an untraceable poison on his boat. So it would of those are just likelier to me than like the massage poisoned him with an untraceable poison on his boat.
Starting point is 01:36:26 So it looked like he fell over. Why? Like, again, he's being hounded by all of the governments. He knows he's heading to prison. Maybe he kills himself. Maybe he has a heart attack. I don't really have trouble believing either. He is initially mourned as like this great figure because all of this hasn't come out
Starting point is 01:36:44 yet. But a few weeks after his death, everything I've told you is published that he stole 400 million pounds from pension funds, that there were 763 million British pounds missing from his companies. He is described as the crook of the century by Newsweek Magazine. Wow.
Starting point is 01:37:01 And not a, yeah, maybe he's one of them. Like things finally caught up with old Bobby Maxwell. Yeah. Murdering innocent people. No, destroying scientific publishing. Nah, he's fine. But stealing pension funds, that'll get you. Which does suck. Like that is really bad.
Starting point is 01:37:19 Yeah. It is one of his worst things. Yeah, no, absolutely. No, that made me, up until now, he was sort of like a debonair ne'er-do-well, you know? I was enjoying the story. Now I'm pissed off. Now I'm pissed off.
Starting point is 01:37:33 Yeah, and so his sons who are declared innocent of any involvement in the conspiracy, maybe they were a part of it, but I don't have trouble believing that he just didn't respect his kids enough to tell them what he was doing, right? Yeah, of course not. They have to take over and they're left with like 400 million pounds or so.
Starting point is 01:37:48 They've got to like figure out how to put together. His assets are sold off. Most of like the, what are called the Maxwell pensioners, right? And these are the people who lost their retirement savings, get half or less of what they were owed, you know, as a result of kind of this liquidation process. But Gillen stays comfortable for a while, you know, a while.
Starting point is 01:38:07 Well, I didn't think, I didn't think I could end with a lower opinion of Gillan Maxwell. I didn't anticipate that this is. Shocking, right? Yeah. Oh, she's also a criminal nipple baby. Okay. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, I also didn't really call her dad being so cool up until age 23,
Starting point is 01:38:30 because he's really knocking it out of the park up until age 23. Yeah! Great first act. Oh my God. Yeah, yeah. It's like one of those movies that really falls apart in the second half, like, ah, you could have used more editing. I was really on board.
Starting point is 01:38:45 Well, it's funny how much it tracks sort of the standard, you know, it's a citizen Kane or a What's His Face From Succession style story where it's like inspiring in the beginning, all turns wrong, you know, larger than life, all these insane details, he's present at every moment in history, like, the sort of figure who, you know, if I read a novel about this guy, I wouldn't believe it, you know? No. No, no, no. Yeah, it is like, and again, he did lie about a lot of it. Unnecessarily.
Starting point is 01:39:15 Yeah. So, that's where we are. You know, that's this guy's life. Thanks for sitting and learning about it. Incredible. What a bastard. I'm now behind him. Yeah, yeah, we're now behind him. Well, got any pluggables to plug? We've kept you here long enough. I do. Once again, my podcast is called Factually. I do that on YouTube. I also do video monologues. And yeah, you can check out my standup special
Starting point is 01:39:48 on medicated on dropout right now. Yeah. Awesome. Well, awesome. Check out that, check out dropout. And you know, if you're going to machine gun the SS, don't go on to destroy scientific publishing and then hundreds of millions of dollars in pension funds.
Starting point is 01:40:05 That's my advice to our listeners. Yeah, and don't tell people you did it so proudly. Don't be like, I committed a war crime. Yeah, maybe don't destroy your whole life competing with Rupert Murdoch and being a dick. Such a weird way to blow your life up. Oh man, so funny. Competing in an asshole contest with Rupert Murdoch, not a good way to go.
Starting point is 01:40:29 Not even being noticed. Oh man. Murdoch was like, who? It is, I don't want to ever give it to Rupert, but there's some of the great hater moments are just Rupert being like, who are you talking about? All right, well that's the episode everybody. Good night and good luck. Thank you so much for having me. This is awesome.
Starting point is 01:40:48 Thank you, Adam. Really appreciate you. Can't wait to get these episodes out. And we're done. Goodbye. Behind the Bastards is a production of Cool Zone Media. For more from Cool Zone Media, visit our website, coolzonemedia.com or check us out on the iHeartRadio app, visit our website, coolzonedmedia.com, or check us out on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Behind the Bastards is now available on YouTube. New episodes every Wednesday and Friday. Subscribe to our channel, youtube.com slash at Behind the Bastards.
Starting point is 01:41:23 Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley Season 1. Every time I hear about my dad, it's, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil. I was becoming the bridge between Jeremy Scott and the son he'd never known. At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer. Listen to new episodes of Bone Valley Season Two on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. It's April 2020. A woman announces on Facebook that she has COVID and won't be seeking medical attention. I didn't want to be talked out of this plan.
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Starting point is 01:42:52 in-depth look at the facts, see What Happened to Ellen on Amazon. All proceeds to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Explore the winding halls of historical true crime with Holly Frye and Maria Tramarchi, hosts of Criminalia, as they uncover curious cases from the past. The legend of the Highwayman suggests men dominated the field. But tell that to Lady Catherine Ferrer's, known as the Wicked Lady, who terrorized England in the mid-1600s. Her legend persists nearly 400 years after her death.
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