Darknet Diaries - 156: Kill List
Episode Date: March 18, 2025The dark web is full of mystery. Some of it’s just made up though. Chris Monteiro wanted to see what was real and fake and discovered a hitman for hire site which took him on an unbelievabl...e journey.Chris Monteiro Twitter: x.com/Deku_shrub, Website: https://pirate.london/Carl Miller Twitter: https://x.com/carljackmiller.Kill List podcast: https://wondery.com/shows/kill-list/SponsorsSupport for this show comes from ThreatLocker®. ThreatLocker® is a Zero Trust Endpoint Protection Platform that strengthens your infrastructure from the ground up. With ThreatLocker® Allowlisting and Ringfencing™, you gain a more secure approach to blocking exploits of known and unknown vulnerabilities. ThreatLocker® provides Zero Trust control at the kernel level that enables you to allow everything you need and block everything else, including ransomware! Learn more at www.threatlocker.com.This episode is sponsored by ProjectDiscovery. Tired of false positives and falling behind on new CVEs? Upgrade to Nuclei and ProjectDiscovery, the go-to tools for hackers and pentesters. With 10,000 detection templates, Nuclei helps you scan for exploitable vulnerabilities fast, while ProjectDiscovery lets you map your company’s perimeter, detect trending exploits, and triage results in seconds. Get automation, accuracy, and peace of mind. First-time users get one month FREE of ProjectDiscovery Pro with code DARKNET at projectdiscovery.io/darknet.This episode is sponsored by Kinsta. Running an online business comes with enough headaches—your WordPress hosting shouldn’t be one of them. Kinsta’s managed hosting takes care of speed, security, and reliability so you can focus on what matters. With enterprise-level security, a modern dashboard that’s actually intuitive, and 24/7 support from real WordPress experts (not chatbots), Kinsta makes hosting stress-free. Need to move your site? They’ll migrate it for free. Plus, get your first month free when you sign up at kinsta.com/DARKNET.
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I used to live and work in Las Vegas.
What a town that is.
I'm so glad that I got out of there.
It's like I had a hole in my pocket all the time and I could never find where it was.
Anyway, I was playing craps one day.
This is where you throw the dice.
It's a big table.
And this frail old man came up and he was playing too.
And he was betting big.
He was getting wild with his money, having a good time.
And I was rolling the dice and he was making money off of my dice roll, so he was liking me and
we started chatting it up.
But there was this dude behind him, a big guy, not a muscular man, but a guy who probably
loves cheeseburgers, if you know what I'm saying.
And I asked him, hey man, you want to get in on this game?
I got a hot roll going.
He didn't say anything.
And the old guy turns to me and he says, oh, don't mind him.
He's my bodyguard.
And I was like, oh, really?
This guy is your bodyguard?
And then the old man told me something that surprised me.
He said, yeah, but I don't actually
pay him to protect me if there's actually a fight.
And I was like, what?
You don't pay him to rescue you out of anything?
No, no, I can't afford that kind of bodyguard.
This guy just stands next to me,
and if something goes down,
he knows he doesn't need to step in.
And I'm like, well, hold on a second.
Why are you paying someone to stand next to you?
And he said, to be my bodyguard.
And I was like, no, but he's not guarding you though.
And the old man said, yeah, but no one knows that.
Everyone sees him next to me, and they don't mess with me because he's there.
I was like, does that work?
And he said, yep, I haven't been robbed yet.
These are true stories from the dark side of the internet.
I'm Jack Reisider.
This is Darknet Diaries.
This episode is sponsored by ThreatLocker.
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I think it was like, man, it was like seven years ago at this point that I was told I
need to get Chris Montero on the show and talk about what he found.
So of course I slid into his DMs and acted all cool and stuff.
Hey man, I heard you're deep into the web.
He's like, can't talk about it.
Too sensitive right now.
So I was like, okay.
And I followed up a year later.
But again, he didn't want to talk.
And he's like, no, I'm done with that. I walked away, okay. And I followed up a year later, but again, he didn't wanna talk. And he's like, no, I'm done with that.
I walked away from that.
And then maybe like another two years after that,
I asked him again.
This time he's like,
the police are investigating this.
We're gonna have to wait.
Then I think another time he told me
there are threats against him
so he needs to stay low for a while.
And it's just been one of those stories
that the longer it goes on,
the more intrigued I am by it.
And I really hoped one day I could talk with him.
And now, now Chris Montero is ready to talk after seven years of waiting for him.
And I can't wait to finally hear what he has found on the deep dark web.
Okay.
Um, yeah, I'm, I'm Chris Montero.
I'm a cybersecurity professional.
Up until now, the main thing I know about Chris is that he spends a lot of time on the
dark net. Basically, the anonymous side of the internet that you need a special connection
to get into. And this seems to be where Chris feels comfortable.
Well, I wouldn't say I lurk that interested in it because I don't I really try not to do it anymore. But back in 2015, 2016,
I did a bit. I got very into things. As I'm sure you and your listeners know,
one of the things that our web is well known for is the dine and market where you can buy drugs
and stolen data. But there's also loads of urban legends and
nonsense and scams out there.
In 2015, 2016, I was really into writing for Wikipedia,
writing definitions for what dark web means,
what deep web means,
what a history of dark net markets,
how does it instigate of tour,
what are the police doing, what are the police
doing, what are the academics saying about the commerce, and ultimately about the scams.
So there was a time where I was very into documenting cybercrime, which I don't recommend.
I mean, there's crime, and then there's cybercrime.
But then there's dark web cybercrime.
And the stuff that happens over there,
well, it all has this veil of secrecy, you know?
And so the stories we hear that come out of there
are a little bit more brutal and ugly
than a normal cybercrime story.
And trying to keep up with all the ugliness
that goes on there, it's rough on your soul.
I mean, starting out, okay, he was learning
about the dark net drug marketplaces and how
they worked and he became an expert in that whole world.
I went a bit too far.
And as I was then and today I am a self-proclaimed expert on darknet markets and the dark web,
I started debunking scams.
There are many dark web scams, or there were people
saying, oh, there are there are secret fights of death between midgets. There are there
are AIs which escaped and will answer you anything. There are rooms you can go to and
you can participate in live stream the murder in so called red rooms. This is nonsense. This is all rubbish. But people don't care
because it's so difficult to talk about cyber crime and the dark web that people on YouTube
and on the internet just make up shit for their own entertainment and no one's interested
in the real answers.
So I found a niche where I was going to start writing about all of these fake phenomena in depth with
the met citations and original research and aggregates of research as possible
and I did that and one of the ones I covered just one of many was hiring a
hitman on the dark web well I thought to myself I know how all this works I know
how reputation systems work with done in markets I know how s-crow, I know how all this works. I know how reputation systems work with darknet markets. I know how s-gray works. I know how the web of trust between the sites work and
how you find them. So it should be very easy to find out what if such a website is fake
or real. And I found I was documenting them. And I found a slightly more sophisticated
website, which again, was, there was, looked like a
darknet market.
You could register, you could apparently hire a hitman and you could pay money for your
escrow and get someone killed.
And it was just like a darknet market, like Silk Road or something like that.
So we looked into this hitman for hire site deeper.
And yeah, he snipped it out pretty easy that it's just a scam.
No actual hitmen are here who you can hire to kill someone for you.
It's just a myth to be able to hire a hitman online.
So he took his findings and wrote it up.
At the time, he was writing articles on Rational Wiki.
And this is a place that debunks conspiracy theories
and explains when something is pseudoscience or real.
So he writes an article there saying,
yeah, hitmen for hire sites on the dark web, they're all scams.
Don't believe it.
I have my rational wiki article vandalized by an IP in Romania saying that, oh yes, the
dark web hitmen sites are scams apart from Vesa Mafia, which is real.
And like, what?
You can't edit my wiki page.
That's not cited stuff.
You can't do that.
And so it began.
And that message was from the person we know
as Yura.
Okay, so this edit explicitly said that dark web hitman for hire sites, Bessa Mafia, is
not a scam. You can actually hire a hitman there. Well, this of course drew Chris's attention.
Naturally, he goes there to investigate it further. He's never even heard of this site before, BESA Mafia.
Yes, BESA Mafia is a hitman's behind the site. You know, this site is run by some
organized criminal gangs. It's just like a real darknet market. You can't get
scammed. There's mediation. And instead of buying drugs, you can buy murder. And I
spent a lot of time dealing with this. Yeah. So your first take on it, or even like your first day of looking at it, did you think
this did look legitimate?
No. Again, I had spent over a year at this time documenting the history of real darknet
markets, darknet commerce, darknet navigation, I knew
very easily that this website was a scam. There was plenty of tells beyond that. But
again, I knew it was a scam.
So I just thought, whatever, I'll write a blog post about it. It's interesting that
someone's made a hit-me-over-higher scam site, but it actually made it look like a market
and made it look real. So I wrote a blog post about it and saying how this website is fake and it has like stopped
photographs on it and bad spelling and doesn't make sense and yeah, there you go. I've added
to my body of research on dino scams. Job done. What's that for?
The administrator of Bessa Mafia, his name is Yura, was quite interested in the reputation of his site.
So much so that he paid people to promote the site, where there would be Reddit posts
about the site, blogs being made and other freelancers hired to just drum up business
for the site. So if you Googled the site, you'd see all these positive reviews of the site.
But then there was this one blog that Chris wrote about how that site specifically is
a scam.
So I had pissed off the site administrator.
So he asked for a true and honest interview with me.
He contacted me via my blog.
And I said, sure, why does a scammer want to interview me about, you know, why his site
is fake?
What's that about?
And yeah, we went back and forth. And he was
saying Sire is real. I would shut him down. He would count with some flimsy evidence.
I would unpick it. He would get aggressive. I would show him as a siren, but he doesn't
know what he's doing about. And he would try, he tried to pay me off. And you know, this
escalates to the point. I'm like, yeah, does this guy just
take himself a hold? His scam is trying to persuade me that at the time at least authority
on.net scams that his site's not a scam, it's not going to work. And yeah, so I published
a whole exchange on my blog. I thought that's all right, you know, debunked and have a site
got some first hand evidence, done some journalism even. And there we go, thought that'd be the end of it.
This is when the narrator comes in and says, it wasn't.
The site administrator, Yura, was not happy with this post and was on a mission to get Chris to
remove it. And if an interview with him didn't persuade Chris, then they're going to have to
take it to the next step. And if you think about it, what kind of persuasive tactics could a hitman for hire site try next?
Yeah, you got it.
Intimidation.
The administrator hired someone to make a video to threaten Chris.
And so Chris gets a message from someone with a link to a video and Chris watches the video.
It starts out on a piece of paper and written on that piece of paper is Chris's blog's website.
Pirate.london, that's the website address.
And then they burn the piece of paper.
And then the camera changes to a car being set on fire,
and it's engulfed in flames.
And like basically torching a car in order to intimidate me.
So in order to say,
look at us, we're real
criminals, we have people in the field, we can trivially commit acts of violence, don't
fuck with us. And I was very confused by this, because this was a scammer. This was a scam
site. There were no hitmen. There were no criminals, as I thought. There was just, it's just a scam to steal money.
But now I'm getting a video of a burning car and yeah,
I would say Ben Benning got weird.
Did it feel intimidating to you? Did you feel like, wait a minute, this is a,
maybe I should just back down from this whole thing?
Um, I mean, I was a bit intimidated. I was intimidated.
But you bear in mind, at this time,
I'm making myself really into the hobby of being the darknet scam debunker guy.
I was drawn in more by this.
I was like, what is going on?
Have I pissed off the mafia? Is this website real?
But it can't be real.
So if it's not real, how are they getting people to torch cars?
And they'd have torched some other cars for some other people on the internet who had
disrespect to them as well.
So it was a whole thing going on.
So I got really, I was intrigued, but I had to go on.
Chris decides to play it safe though, and he hires a lawyer and he informs the police
about this threatening video. I'm like, okay, fine. Chris decides to play it safe though and he hires a lawyer and he informs the police about
this threatening video.
I'm like, okay, fine.
This is the so-called hitman, the higher side of the dark net.
What's going on with you?
So rather than just browsing the website at this point, I thought, well, okay, I will
register on the website and see how it works.
So I registered as Boaty McBoatface because it was 2016 and Boaty McBoatface was
cool. And I took out a hit on Bob the Builder, a lovable children's character on the website.
And I thought, well, okay, it's okay. The website seems to have a login system, it has
an ordering system, it has a messaging system, and whatnot. It seems quite functional. There's like, you know,
got the trappings of a darknet market. So I thought to myself, that's weird.
But I looked at my order for taking out Bob the Builder, you know, and I looked at the address
bar and I saw that there was an ID in the address
bar at the end, it's like message ID equals 123.
I thought, okay, so that's the message ID.
I wonder if I change the message ID to something else, change it to 122.
And I got someone else's messages.
121, I got someone else's messages.
What?
He can see other users' messages?
Okay, I have opinions.
First, let's talk about this vulnerability.
I would call this URL parameter tampering.
I think that sounds cool, right?
To tamper with a URL.
And that's where you just change part of the URL
to like one number different or something
to see if you can see someone else's data.
But I think the official term is insecure direct object reference.
One user should never be able to access
another user's private data,
such as private messages like this.
Yet here it sounds like it was incredibly simple to do.
A more complex approach might be that you have to go
into the cookies and change which user you are.
And then the site thinks to your different user
without actually validating that.
But this wasn't even that hard.
You just changed one number in the URL.
This vulnerability is number one on the OWASP top 10 vulnerabilities which falls under broken
access control.
But I want to point out something else here.
Just because you're on the dark web, just because you're on a site that is supposedly
very illegal, does not mean it's actually
secure.
You would think if this site was actually a place to hire a hitman that the utmost extreme
privacy would be put in place.
But it wasn't.
Not even close.
The site was a total joke as far as security and privacy goes.
And I want you to keep that frame of mind.
Whenever you're dealing with anything with sensitive data, your doctor, your lawyer,
your bank, your tax advisor, they should all be using the utmost private way of communication,
but their systems aren't always secure or private.
And I just want you to think about that.
If a site should be secure, like a hitman for hire site or your therapist?
Maybe it's not.
Just like in the case of this.
Oh, and it's kind of hilarious that Chris is basically hacking into this site since
it might technically be illegal for him to do that.
But what is the owner of the site going to do?
File a police report and say, hey man, someone hacked my Hitman4Hire site.
So it seems like a safe thing to do.
Anyway, this was a huge discovery for Chris.
To be able to read any message on the site that other users were sending to the administrator.
So he quickly put together a little script to enumerate through all these message IDs
and to save them all into a spreadsheet so he can go through and read all the messages on this hitman for hire website on the dark
web.
Yeah, I've downloaded over 100 messages at this point.
The website's only been in operation for a few months there, but I've downloaded all
the messages and I'm having my mind blown here, because I'm seeing messages, not just like messages
from me, boating my boat face.
There are some trolls and some spamming there, but there are people and they're giving names,
addresses, follow up times, where to meet them, phone numbers, talking about alibis,
talking about timings, negotiating payment, negotiating further payment.
And I'm reconstructing these on my local machine from all the messages. And I'm starting to sort them out, see what's going on.
And what I realized is that, yes, there's some crap going on the website, but there's a subset
of people who are using the website, or so they think, to get people killed, and to arrange money
to get people killed. And well, that's what it looked like to me at least.
Whoa, hold on here. These messages are a bit alarming. Haunting even. A user wants a certain
person dead and lists their name, address, phone number, place they work, pictures of them,
Facebook account and how and when to do the murder so that this person has good alibi.
to do the murder so that this person has good alibi. Not only that, but money is actually being sent
to pay for this.
This is chilling.
I've mostly been completely unable and unwilling
to engage in these cases emotionally
because they are really bad.
I mean, you know, I mean,
I'll quickly give a story of one case which is concluded in
the news now.
There's a case where someone paid $20,000 to kill at the time a 14-year-old boy in New
Jersey.
Interestingly enough, I never had the full details on that until it went to court. It turned out it was Online Groomer who was grooming this 14-year-old over the internet
and having him show pictures and whatnot.
And when he told his parents, the guy was like, oh shit, I'm in trouble here, I better
have him killed.
So not only was this young boy abused, he was almost
killed by this guy. An online groomer put a hit on his victim for telling his parents
and then paid $20,000 to have this boy killed? Whoa, whoa, whoa. And Chris can see the Bitcoin
wallet address in the chat messages and is confirming that yeah, in fact, money did get
sent to the site for this.
This just got way more serious and went deeper than he realized.
Chris was thinking about getting help from someone.
I met Kyle in, what was it, like late 2016 or so.
Kyle, how did that go?
Yes.
Yes, we met in late 2016 just before Christmas, not a meeting that is easy to forget.
It was in a pub in central London, and it was really busy and crowded and I'd not met
Chris before and mutual friends of ours had kind of put us in contact and I was kind of
roving around trying to write a book about power and the digital age, which sounds about
as vague as it was at that point in my mind.
Paul Anthony Carl was looking for a good story and was
interested to hear what Chris was working on.
Carl Anthony I'm Carl.
I'm a writer and journalist.
Paul Anthony Carl and Chris talked.
Carl was very interested in this, but Chris had a hard time making the connection in his
head that the words written in those messages are from real people.
I mean, he's in the business of debunking things online, you know?
And you see so many threats online today.
It's hard to put your finger on something and say,
this is a real threat from a real person,
but then ignoring so many other things.
I mean, gosh, how many times have we all heard,
Jack, if you come into the house one more time with mud on your shoes,
I will kill you.
All right, maybe it's just me, but you get my point.
You hear threats to life all the time in our everyday language.
But on top of that, the dark web is an anonymous place, so people really run their mouth on
there thinking they're private and no one's ever going to know who it was.
So Chris wondered if these were real threats or not.
And he made a good point.
So at the end of the meeting,
Carl had a clear idea of what to do next.
I kind of concluded that there was no way that
I could write about any of this until the police at least
had investigated whatever it was they could investigate.
So I think me and Chris have slightly different relationships
to the police and thoughts about them, to put it mildly.
I've spent some time embedded in a cybercrime investigations unit in a local police force in
the UK, and I felt like I had a pretty good relationship with them and other police forces.
And so I kind of broker a meeting between Chris and the National Crime Agency.
So Chris goes to this meeting, but it's just weird from the get-go.
Oh yeah, so, yeah, Carl set me up this sort of super shady meeting with the National Crime
Agency.
I'm doing this clandestine meet here where I'm turning up to a location last minute and
I'm being followed and, you know, it was all very hush-hush, etc.
But I had a successful meeting where I outlined what I had, I gave them a prioritized list of
cases around the world, the sorts of money being paid, the jurisdictions involved in seriousness
and said, look, I can't deal with this. This is, you know, I'm just some bloke, you know.
deal with this. This is, you know, I'm just some bloke, you know. Can you please investigate these what looks like attempted murders around the world, or at least the ones in the US or in
Europe where, you know, where I speak of some success? And the meeting was successful. They
said, great. Yes, this is brilliant. This is the sort of thing we're looking for. We'll be in touch.
And, you know, I have no reason to doubt the words of the people who I met.
I think they would have probably got around to doing something eventually and we should be nice.
But circumstances are conspired otherwise. One of the people who's using the website back in 2016
goes under the username dogdaygod was trying to get someone called Amy Alwine killed.
Amy Alwine lived in Minnesota.
And somehow the FBI got the private messages that were from the Bessa Mafia website and
started investigating this.
The FBI had information that someone put a hit out for Amy Alwine.
So they paid her a visit.
And when they arrived, both her and her husband were home and they sat them both down to explain
the situation.
This hitman for hire website, Bessa Mafia, someone has paid them $12,000 to have you
killed.
And she was shocked and had no idea who was doing such a thing.
Well, it was her husband who paid to have her killed.
The very man who was in the room when the FBI was telling her that someone is threatening
to kill you.
The FBI didn't question the husband at all.
They just notified them both and left.
Her husband, Steven Alwine, who was a deacon at his church, went on the dark net, bought
some scopolamine, which causes a person to become very disoriented,
and gave her a huge dose of it,
and then shot her and killed her.
He then tried to stage the whole thing
to look like a suicide.
And then when Amy, and I think this is the clearest evidence
that they really weren't investigating this,
when Amy was reported to the police as having committed suicide, and Stephen Alwine phoned
the police and said, my wife shot herself, the investigating officer had no background,
didn't know that this order existed, didn't know, I think, that Amy had been warned, and almost closed
the scene down. He went to the house, and he was about to declare it a suicide and about
to close down the crime scene. It was only at the last minute he paused, felt like something
was wrong, and then decided to get the luminol out, so a substance that allows him to see
cleaned up blood, and then realized the house was full of so a substance that allows them to see cleaned up blood and
then realize the house was full of it and that Amy had been moved and then, you know,
and then scopolamine was found in her blood and basically a whole tumble of additional
evidence that suggested that she had been drugged and then murdered.
I mean, can you imagine how differently you would investigate a suicide if you knew that someone had paid to have this lady killed?
But the FBI never informed the local police when they did their investigation.
And even after all that, they had a hard time finding evidence that Steven, her husband,
is who killed her.
It was only after they looked at his computer and found his bitcoin wallet was in fact the
one that sent the money to the website.
And of course, the defense attorney was trying to say, well, you only know about that transaction
because you illegally hacked into the messages of that website.
So that should not be admissible to the court.
Stephen Orwine was eventually convicted of first degree murder and is currently serving
life in that parole.
It was a tragic and awful event that the FBI bungled big time. But it gets worse. The FBI
were like, man, what is this Bessa Mafia site? What is going on there? Who's running that?
And they wanted to take it down.
The FBI jumped into action. And they, what they did, they Googled a website. And they,
I still have this ongoing feud with the guy behind the website, Yura.
He's paying a guy in India to write shitty blogs about me.
He's adding my names and metadata on the website.
He's really looking to drag my name from the mud for criticizing his website.
But I don't care.
Because who's going to believe that I'm running a website? I'm a person, I use my own name, I have a blog, I have a job,
I live in London. I'm not running some secret murder, but I have a website. What sort of
person would think that? Turns out the FBI thought that. And between the FBI, they liaised
with the National Crime Agency in the UK, and within literally, I
think it's a case of hours or days of this being processed by the FBI, the NCA were breaking
down my door and arresting me for running this Murder for the High Level website.
Chris was able to get out of his arrest but it did affect him. Clearly this Euro
guy is doing a lot of work to get Chris to shut up about this website and is
willing to frame him or get him arrested. Investigating this site was becoming too
much of a burden. I did take the opportunity to quit as having one's door broken down and being arrested
for something which doesn't seem to be real wood.
I'm like, I'm out of this shit.
I'm done.
They've handed over my information to the police.
Job done.
Never want to hear about the website again. But the more Chris and Carl thought about this, the gravity of it just started to sink
in. These are very real threats to life. And already one person has been killed. They had
lots of time to help Amy, but they didn't. They could have saved her life, but they trusted law enforcement to do it instead, and that
failed.
So maybe, just maybe, they can save the next person's life.
We're going to take a short break here, but stay with us.
This dark web adventure is just getting started.
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The police weren't completely incompetent. Carl and Chris gave the police all the messages that they found on the site.
And this did lead the police to be able to find people who were planning murders.
And the police were arresting people and putting them in prison.
Because if you pay someone to kill someone else, that's illegal.
It's called solicitation of murder.
And you could get life in prison for doing that.
Even if you're sending the money to a scam hitman who's
never going to do it, it's still illegal.
In fact, someone who got arrested in Spain
tried to give that exact defense.
They were saying, this whole website was fake,
so my client should not be in trouble.
But they still got put in prison.
Well, the initial idea was that me and Chris
would do a short, sharp, nice, quick,
kind of eight-week-long retrospective looking at the assassination market.
Which I, you know, I mean, if...
I'm the, by far, the least brave person talking right now,
and I'm, like, really not drawn to this sort of stuff.
And quite a lot of my instinct was telling me
not to go back into this world,
and I'd only dipped my toe in, nothing like Chris.
But I did feel, to me, it all felt,
those years from 2016 onwards,
very much like unfinished business.
The site was still operating.
The person running the site was still making money from it. And Amy Orwell had been killed.
Suddenly Chris kind of brings us into a Zoom call,
and then tells us this kind of fateful discovery that he's consistently in.
He's beginning to scrape these kill orders and that the site is...
and that we're essentially going to be receiving them in near real time.
And that was then the beginning of the Kill List.
Kill List is an amazing podcast that Karl made,
which pretty much starts at this point right here.
With new kill orders coming in, what should they be doing about this?
Chris is the dark web hacker, Carl is the investigator.
Ultimately, I was able to access the administration page on the website.
So this is the page the administrator uses to correspond with the users of the website and to scan them.
So that page can see everything on the site.
There were some other pages as well, like pages that showed payments and so on and so forth.
So once I discovered these through technical means,
I basically have a small cron job.
I'm pulling them down fully as is.
I'm actually then building parsers,
do parser them into a constituent component,
put them into a database,
and ultimately I'm building a web front end to categorize, browse, and report each of
these cases and annotate them all.
Which today I have, you know, I have it in one of my windows, my right hand side now.
I have my Hitman analysis website where I have all the cases in there categorized by harm, by fraud,
by country, by personal information, annotated with Facebook links, address links, phone
numbers, et cetera.
So but I was able to focus on getting the data legible, clean, and comprehensive, and handing this
over to Carl and the podcast team. That was a good division of labor. I had the technical
tasks and Carl and the team had to deal with everything else.
We went to the police again, the Metropolitan Police. They did believe us, but there were no UK cases.
They basically decided that because there were no UK cases,
it wasn't their problem.
And they disclosed this kind of initial tranche of orders
that Chris had compiled and handed over to us to Interpol.
And we thought about that for a while
and thought that this is very likely
to lead to additional bungled police investigations or no investigations at all. They won't know
who we are, the police. We won't know who the investigating officers are. There'll be
no way for us to exchange information. And it will very likely lead to police officers
kind of in the same way that had happened with Amy Alwine
maybe receiving some kind of warning, maybe making contact,
but not in any kind of position to like effectively investigate,
much less gather the evidence they need to actually get someone into a courtroom.
Chris would read through these kill orders and sometimes try to figure out who it was that made the kill order.
So often they'll approach with some brief information saying, hey, you know, can you
do this sort of service in my location?
And the answer is always of course, yes, we have hit men around the world, we can do it
within one week.
That's always the answer because it's a scam.
And then they usually say, then there might be some more information like, oh, yeah, well,
I'm thinking of doing something special.
Can you give a message?
Can you, in this case, good can kidnapping?
Can you say something like that?
And then the answer is yes, yes, we can do that.
Often it's followed up by here's the initial order.
Here's a name, the address, the social media, the car they drive, etc, etc, where they work,
where they can be found. Often they give a bit of
information about why they want the person killed, which usually gives them away like,
oh, this person should return to their husband. It's like, yeah, I wonder who posted that order,
or this person should be given the message, you know, that's for being a cheater. It's like,
well, I wonder who that person could be. That has to happen sometimes.
And after you order, there's firm negotiations and there's always a price. How much is it? Oh,
it's always usually $5,000, $10,000. But it's depending on how much money you have.
Sometimes there's a negotiation about, oh, how can you make sure you don't take the money and run?
And they say, oh, no, you can't take the money and run because we have an escrow system. And if the hitman wants to take the
money, we wouldn't give it, we would not let's take the money and not do a new killing. We
wouldn't give them the money. So that way you are safe. But of course, the escrow system
is designed to stop you from a high flow hitman scamming you like you would a Dynet drug vendor
scamming you. It doesn't protect you from the site
itself being a scam. And then, I mean, he even has like dedicated third party escrow
sites which are independent or apparently independent, where you can go to this independent
site and you can broker your legal transaction and a further broker can handle this for you.
It's all run by him, of course, And of course, he directs everyone to use this independent website, and it all uses the same backend.
And then you go say, I've put my money in the escrow system. And it's like, oh, I see
we are locked this, we're now going to send a hitman. But then of course, what happens
is, oh, actually, it turns out you need a higher class of hitman, or you need to pay
more. Or the hitmen went there, but they failed. or you need to pay more or the hitmen went there but they failed so you need to make them need to pay more money or it turns out
you need to you know this is more complicated so you need to pay more money and this is
how it goes down in general.
Chris would sometimes be able to identify who put the kill order in because it might
say something like it's my wife who I want killed or something.
And then they have the wife's information in the kill order to easily figure out
who did this.
So they decide to try to phone up the targets to see if they can warn them.
But the FBI mishap with Amy Alwine was top of their mind.
What if they call up someone and the person who's trying to kill them answers
the phone or is listening in and it just escalates the whole thing and they get someone killed?
The plan was to try to call the person but then get them alone so that they can tell
them this information in private.
But man, how do you call someone out of the blue and try to get them to listen to the
information you have but they need to be alone first before you and try to get them to listen to the information you have, but
they need to be alone first before you're going to tell them.
It sounds impossible to deal with.
But Carl gave it a try.
No, I don't want any information.
I'm trying to give you information.
No.
Hey, I don't get it.
I'm sorry.
Okay.
Well, thanks for your time anyway.
Do give me a phone back if you'd like more information.
And then he tried again.
Would we be able to arrange a time to be able to talk to you at greater length about that?
Okay.
So you don't...
Carl was extremely nervous on these calls.
He's got the target on the phone, which is hard to begin with,
but he's trying to be as sensitive as possible to avoid any further harm.
He decides to try again to be more direct.
I understand you don't want to work with me on the story,
however, I'm actually duty-bound to say that the information that we have
might relate to you being in danger,
so I'm kind of duty-bound as a journalist to disclose it to you if you like me to.
Actually I don't have time for this even if you're asking me for a survey that has
something to my relationship to the job or to professional work.
It's not a survey. I'm a journalist. We've come across information which indicates that
you might be in danger.
I'm in danger?
Yes.
People trying to protect me. Keep me to face my dangers. Thank you.
Okay.
Thank you. Bye.
Goodbye.
Wow.
Leave me to face my dangers.
He's not having any of it.
I'm very surprised by that. I mean, if someone phoned me up saying you might be in danger, I would want to know what
it was regarding.
Yeah.
This is turning out to be a lot harder than it sounds.
Absolutely.
We knew the whole thing was this like ethical kind of minefield.
And I was really afraid that I would do something which meant that I could never live with myself
again.
You know, we had this information that Chris was passing us that was unbelievably powerful.
I mean, it had the power to save lives and destroy them.
And we didn't know what to do.
We had no real frameworks.
We didn't know what the safest thing to do often was.
We were having to kind of make it up in urgency as we were
going along. And I didn't, you know, I mean, we could have made one, it's kind of easy
now to kind of talk about all of this in retrospect. But at the time, like you don't know what's
going to happen. Like you don't know that this call is going to turn out okay, or that
person's going to be okay. And, and like every single time I made that call, and remember, nine times out of ten,
they just hung the phone up on me or they wouldn't talk or it would be a wrong number
or something like that. But every single time I dialed that number, I'd be having to work
myself up into this, I was working myself up into this kind of state of mind where I
thought, well, this could be the moment where I commit some like ethical, crushing
kind of mistake that haunts me for the rest of my life.
I think it's at this point where I was listening to the Kill List and I was happy that Chris
was working with Carl on this story.
Like I said, I was tracking what he was working on and hoping we could talk and I was tapping
him on the shoulder again and again for years trying to get him to tell me the story.
But man, Carl is an amazing journalist, and he has a whole team, and seemingly like he
has connections all over the world, to try to do something about this.
And I wouldn't have done even half as good of a job as what he did on Kill List.
It's truly an amazing podcast.
As we're doing all this, making this extremely significant decision
to contact the people on the kill list directly,
we're increasingly actually not really behaving like journalists anymore.
Like, journalists don't normally step into stories like that.
They don't normally contact victims and, like, drive stories or even create them.
They normally kind of try and be as least kind of disruptive as they possibly can.
That's definitely not what we're doing there.
So that was also like very disorientating, like stepping like further away from at least
this kind of anchoring professional identity that I and the team would have,
and becoming something else and not really having a word for it.
Oh, you know there's a word for it, Kyle. You know what I'm saying?
Well, if you're going to say vigilante, then I don't think we were ever vigilante,
because we were desperately trying to get the police to step in, not replace them.
At least I was. We were handing over everything we did to the police.
So yeah, I mean, I never thought we were vigilantes.
That wasn't the right word in my mind for it either.
It was like some weird gap of like being
a really proactive journalist or investigator.
And you might be thinking,
but Interpol is handling it, just let them do it.
But there's a reason that they felt it was important for them to continue to do something.
It was because we were thinking about this disclosure route that had just appeared where
Chris was passing it to us, we were passing it to the Metropolitan Police, they were passing
it to Interpol, and then Interpol would presumably pass it to the police
forces around the world. There was one in Switzerland, there was one in Italy,
there's one in Amsterdam, you know, all over the place. The problem with that was
that we knew that Interpol would basically like denude the disclosures of
any identifying information of us and we would have no idea who the
investigating officers were. So this kind of us. And we would have no idea who the investigating officers were.
So this kind of cut or like breach would happen.
There would be no link.
Like they would just receive this word document
that Chris had created,
plus maybe some like Bitcoin information.
They would have no way, as the Metropolitan Police did,
of actually checking to see whether I was mad or not,
which they genuinely did. And we would have no way of disclosing additional information to them.
And Chris was passing over updates all the time. These were live conversations that were happening.
So sometimes there'd be more Bitcoin and the urgency would have changed or a specific moment
or time and place were being mentioned
in the order, you know, which would change how dangerous we thought it was. And we would
have no way of kind of passing that on in a reasonably swift manner to the people on
the ground that could actually do something about it. So that's why ultimately we decided
that we needed to go to them directly.
While investigating all this, they would run into news articles that would chill them to
their bones.
There's many instances, many cases, I'm sure we could be touching as many as you like,
but will be pressed to time here.
Like for example, there was one case where there was there was this against this young
man in America and a couple someone paid $5,000 to kill him.
Two weeks later, he's dead by gunshot, self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Was there insurance involved?
Was there foul play?
It's hard to say.
I won't go into too much of this, but during the course of our investigation, there was
one of these major cases come through where someone paid a hell of a lot of money to have
them killed. And
again, within weeks, that person was killed. With information like that, plus all the rest
information, which always gives the hideous backstories on people's story of stalking,
of drugging, of coercive behavior, or marital breakdown or relationship breakdown of people sending death threats,
people putting hidden cameras, people really ruining lives. We realized that this is really
horrific, this stuff. And I just happened to have to sneak peek into the worst of it,
as is Carl. And yeah, it's very, very hard to digest.
And all this just adds a level of urgency to it all.
So I phoned maybe a dozen people, maybe two dozen,
over the course of about a week, maybe a bit longer.
And it is dramatically unsuccessful.
It's like, oh, Carl, don't say that.
I know it is. It really is.
I mean, like, it doesn't work.
Everyone thinks I'm a scammer.
It turns out we were solving the wrong problem.
So we thought the problem was going to be how to reach them safely over the phone,
how to disclose in a way that wasn't going to crater them psychologically.
The actual problem was that no one was going to believe me.
And so people hang up, they phone back with their friends,
and they prank me and they pretend it's a big joke.
More often than not, they literally just
don't pick up the phone, though.
This is in the middle of COVID, remember,
so people are kind of getting scam calls all the time.
And so we change up what we do,
and we decide to send out local journalists on the ground
to physically go and try to reach the people
that were on the list.
And that really changes things.
So it's only then really that we begin to make meaningful contact, reach people, be
believed and begin to kind of develop the next phase in the Kill List really, which
is talking to them, supporting them and working with the police to try and find out who put
them on the list.
The podcast Kill List does an amazing job of documenting their adventure.
Calling people, talking with police, going to houses, talking with Eurra even,
it's a wild adventure and you really should go and listen to it.
But one person in particular that they contacted stuck with me.
They discovered that there's this guy named Ron Ilg who paid for the murder of his wife in Spokane, Washington.
Okay, yeah, so obviously I'm the first person to see this,
and I actually worked out his identity because,
so this guy is a neonatal surgeon,
he's literally a surgeon for babies.
He's also looking to break the hands of a surgeon.
And it's like, and he's paying something upward
of $50,000 for this.
He's got like multiple step plans of where the kidnapping should take place and taking
photographs of it and how she should be brainwashed and how she should be broken and where she
should be taken to and how he'll get to see the information about this whilst remaining at a distance.
I don't usually use this word, but it's sick and it's messed up. And in his mind, when
he paid that $50,000, it's very much real. He was going to do this.
I was able to quickly work out between these identities of this woman and this surgeon
mentioned that the person who seemed related to them was this character called Rod Ilg.
And I said, this is sort of information I send up, send over to Carl and the team.
And I'm like, this guy, they've got to do
something about it. Are the FBI working, helping at this point? Are they going to do something?
Because this is just crazy. I can't believe this guy is going around making his plans
and no one's taking it seriously. That's terrible.
In addition to that, Chris is seeing that this guy, Ron Ilg, is trying to get his wife
addicted to opioids so she'll call off the divorce proceedings. He seems extra diabolical.
Chris's subject in the emails would normally be new payer, which would always cause my
heart to sink a little bit. But this one stood out from the very beginning for all the reasons Chris has already said. There was a bonus
structure. I mean, the guy had literally already loaded in all the money for a whole series
of things that had to happen to Jennifer, which were all about the use of drugs, and
they were all about control. And it stood out for that. It stood out actually
weirdly and grotesquely because it wasn't about murder, which somehow made it worse.
But then it also stood out because the amount of money, a huge amount of money had been paid. It
was the largest payment. So we reach out and get hold of Jennifer and speak to her and realize that she's in the middle of a
relationship which she's leaving which involves Ron who's very dangerously spiraling out of control.
He seemed to have some extremely worrying behaviors to do with control. He'd probably been tracking her. He'd been kind of
allegedly as putting drugs into her drink. There was another
woman in the marriage that he'd kept in a septic tank under his
house. It was horrifying.
And I think the septic tank was more of a kind of a, I don't
think it was a handle elective situation per se. it was more of a temporary BDSM handle.
Well, I mean, he sets the whole thing up as BDSM. He dressed all of this controlling behavior up as, hey, this is just my kink. Yeah, I mean, he let the woman wasn't in there the whole time. It was it was part of a, he had a dungeon, I believe in his house.
it was part of a dungeon, I believe, in his house. And it was just all coming together as a man who was really, really, really committed to controlling
the women he was in a relationship with and didn't seem to be able to deal with his wife leaving.
And this was the first time the FBI really moved in and we could see an investigation
rolling out.
So Ron left for Mexico on the day that Jennifer was to be kidnapped, possibly as an alibi,
who knows.
And when he returned, there were 10 FBI agents waiting
for him in the airport under cover.
So he lands, he's immediately interviewed.
His house is being searched at the same time.
And he makes quite a serious error
in a thumbprint safe in his house,
a safe that only he could access. There is a serious error in a thumbprint safe in his house, a safe that only he could access.
There is a sticky note and on that sticky note is both his username and the password
for the site that Chris has been surveilling.
Okay, and the police are able to get in the safe and see that?
They do.
They drive him to his own house and he opens a safe for them. Yeah, and then
so what happens to him? Well, he's released by the police that night. He makes a suicide
attempt, quite a serious one, as I understand it. I think that night or the next day, and
is then placed under protective, well he's placed under custody
and then arrested.
I just want to say that really upset me that he tries to kill himself.
I got into this to stop people being murdered and even if horrible people try and kill themselves
over this, this is not what I want.
I want to make the world a better place and it's not always clear whether I'm achieving
that, though overly in this, I think I did.
But Ron is not confessing to anything.
He's pleading innocent and is working tirelessly to try to make a case to free him.
It's a long story and we don't have time to go into it all.
But he's now convicted and sentenced and is in prison for a pretty significant stretch.
Think about eight years.
prison for a pretty significant stretch. Think about it, yes.
And it's wins like this where they can get a dangerous person put in prison
that makes it all seem worthwhile.
The Kill List, this whole experience, has been a very difficult one.
It's had some very bleak, very dark moments, but it's also got those
moments of feeling like it's really meaningful and worthwhile. And the sentencing and conviction of
Ron and Jennifer's kind of emergence from that has definitely been, for me anyway, one of those.
So it was 2020 when they started taking action on these kill orders, and they've been documenting
it all along. And there's just so many cases that they researched. I still feel it barely scratches the surface.
It's nearly a YF. It really does. This current situation, what's
happening now with the site? Is it still operational or has it been shut down by
the police or what? There were a series of arrests in Romania which behind of
the site operators or police people affiliated with them. I believe the US authorities had
something to do with that. And following that incident of the remaining
arrests, the website underwent technical changes, it was shut down for a
bit, came back again. I intermittently lost bits of access until we reached a
point now where I have almost no access.
And so I've had no new cases come in for the last year and a bit. But in that period, we
have seen basically arrests on the website in the US and Switzerland and Austria. So
we have evidence that some law enforcement, to other is either cooperating with or
has infiltrated the website and is making some arrests.
Of the people who run the website?
No, people using the website.
The website continues to operate and for all I know, continues to scam people up money
and continues to enrich Romanian scammers. You talk to the admin of the site over over chat.
What is the reason why they run this or do this?
He does a scammer.
I believe he used to be a carder, someone who deals with stolen financial data and
whatnot, and was familiar with darknet scams.
And, you know, he told me that he saw a niche for doing believable darknet scams. And, you know, he told me that he saw a niche
for doing believable darknet scams.
He didn't tell me, he told a persona,
I was, had to take it over at the time.
But yeah, he just thought there was a niche
for a believable, effective darknet murder scam
to be lucrative.
And he's not wrong. There are some other sites out there doing this, but I believe he's the most successful
financially, the most search engine optimized, has the highest traffic, the highest number
of users.
And considering he's been at this since 2016 and dealing with money in Bitcoin, he will
be a multi-illionaire by now. And you know,
it is me going around, you know, basically with like legal fees and doing this in my
evenings and the like. It's not really, you know, it's, it's, it's, it's helping hard
to keep hard to keep it up. but yeah, it's still going on.
And you know, people say, oh, but you know, what if you get him?
What if you get him?
Will it be over?
I'm like, no, it won't be over because I've been on the website for years.
They delete the messages as they go along.
So you seize the website, you don't get years back with messages.
You get very little.
I'm the only one of the years worth of messages.
So unfortunately, there's going to be no end to it in terms of the website getting shut
down. For me, it's only over when I've actioned the remainder of Kill List.
The way that dark web websites work is that they're designed to be private.
You can't tell where the website is hosted or where it is in the world.
So you really need to wait for the website administrator to screw up and reveal something
about themselves in order to take the thing down.
So it's a whole time.
The only thing they can do is just keep blogging and podcasting and publishing articles about the site being a scam
There was no way for them or even the police to take this website down since they don't have enough information
To know who's running it or where it's hosted
Well, I think the story profoundly changed the lives of all of the people that were involved like me Chris Caroline
You know everyone it kind of, it did
everything. I mean, it was and is like the most, for me anyway, by far, the kind of most important,
meaningful, worrying, sometimes isolated and disgustingly urgent work that I've ever found myself having to do.
And it started a thing back then in 2020, which is, you know, is still going now.
Like, people are still going through court cases, people are still in danger.
It's the most important thing I'll ever work on, I'm sure.
And I really, really hope, actually, that I don't have to do anything like this ever again.
And I really, really hope, actually, that I don't have to do anything like this ever again. Chris has lost access to the private messages on the site in 2023,
which means they haven't seen any new kill orders come in since then.
Which, for Carl at least, means he's stepped away from investigating more cases.
But Chris still feels there's old kill orders that are still worth looking into.
So he continues to make it his duty to investigate every single person who's on the list.
Again, I don't think people believe that I'm still doing this by myself.
They'd rather believe some comforting truth that no one uses these websites or it's all
in hand and nothing can be done.
But that's not the case at all.
There are people being murdered on the list right now
who I haven't got to in time.
There's probably dozens of people on the list who are dead
and of those, half of them I could have saved.
And I feel like people need to know this.
And I don't know, I would like some support in this, but it's a difficult position I'm still
in.
To date, they have seen over 900 people show up on the kill list.
And they've taken action on hundreds of them.
And for the most part, Chris does it alone now.
He sometimes hires private investigators to help him, but that's expensive.
And since his work leads to more arrests than if the police simply handled it by themselves,
it uniquely positions him to do good in the world.
And he's a bit disappointed that there aren't more journalists or police that are taking
him seriously that want to work with him to help him.
But since he knows lives are at stake here, and he has all kinds of information on them,
he can't simply ignore it and walk away.
To follow the latest on what Chris is doing, you can visit his website, which is pirate.london.
And I should probably tell you something.
In my research for this episode, I have discovered that every single Hitman for Hire website
on the internet has been fake.
Most are operated by scammers.
Some are operated by the police.
But what's more is that hitmen in general are pretty much a myth.
One of the things I did to prep for this episode was to watch the movie Hitman by Richard Linkletter.
It's based off a true story of a fake hitman.
And even in the movie they say hitmen aren't real.
Take a listen. People feel almost disappointed to learn
that hitmen don't really exist.
This idea that there are people out there
at a retail level you can just hire
to eliminate your worst relationship issues
or facilitate some money scheme
or the usual combination of both.
It's a total pop culture fantasy,
but because hitmen have been a staple of books, movies,
and TV for the last 50 years, good luck getting anyone to believe their existence is all a
myth.
Hollywood really has planted this idea in our head that seems impossible for us to undo.
So I urge you to be skeptical of any such idea. But I also want to say that if your relationship with someone has gotten so bad
that you want them killed, you need to get out of there.
You're not acting like you, you know?
That's your emotions that have taken over.
And you won't be happy with yourself until you find peace.
You need to find yourself again. Killing someone isn't
going to give you the peace you think it will. You need to remember what makes you happy
and seek that instead of violence. It's sometimes hard to see the light at the end of a tunnel
during bad relationships or big breakups, but the future is so much brighter than you realize.
Don't let them turn you into a monster.
You're not a monster.
Dig deep and find the strength to rise above it and be that amazing person that you actually
are. A big thank you to Chris Montero and Karl Miller for sharing this incredible story with
us.
I highly urge you to go find and listen to their podcast, Kill List.
The phone calls with the victims are incredible.
There's one lady that they call up and they tell her, hey, your life might be in danger.
And she just laughs and she's like, oh, it's probably my husband, but don't worry, he'd
never harm me.
And it's just wild to hear how these people react to such news.
So go check out the show wherever you listen to podcasts.
And also keep up to date with what Chris is doing by visiting his blog, pirate.london
is the website.
And hey, if you want to listen to this show ad free, or if you want bonus episodes, I've
got 11 bonus episodes now available for you to listen
to right now.
All you got to do is go to plus.darknetdiaries.com.
This episode is created by me, the neon specter, Jack Reciter.
Our editor is the glitch guy, Tristan Ledger.
Sound design by the executable Andrew Merri glitch guy, Tristan Ledger. Sound design by
the executable Andrew Merriweather, mixing by Proximity Sound. Our intro music is by
the mysterious Breakmaster Cylinder. My computer is so broke, it ran out of cash. This is Darknet
Diaries.