Darknet Diaries - Ep 39: 3 Alarm Lamp Scooter

Episode Date: May 28, 2019

A talk at Defcon challenged people to find a way to destroy a hard drive. A young man was inspired by this challenge and was determined to find a way to destroy a hard drive. But this is not ...a typical young man, with a typical plan.For pictures of Daniel and his projects visit darknetdiaries.com/episode/39.This episode was sponsored by Nord VPN. Visit nordvpn.com/darknet and use promo code "DARKNET".This episode was sponsored by IT Pro TV. Get 65 hours of free training by visiting ITPro.tv/darknet.

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Starting point is 00:00:39 You need to go underground, into a bunker, a bomb shelter. You search online and see some bomb shelters you can buy. They're not too crazy expensive. You can afford it. You're a millionaire. But remember, secrecy first. If you buy a bomb shelter and deliver it to your house, everyone will know your place is the place to go to during an attack.
Starting point is 00:01:03 So yeah, that won't work. There's got to be a better solution to this, one where nobody would ever know about, but also one that when you put safety second, you risk human life. These are true stories from the dark side of the internet. I'm Jack Recider. This is Darknet Diaries. This episode is sponsored by Delete Me. I know a bit too much about how scam callers work. They'll use anything they can find about you online to try to get at your money. And our personal information is all over the place online.
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Starting point is 00:04:34 So consider yourself warned. This one might be too much for some audiences. This story is about a young man named Daniel Beckwith. He grew up in a house in Bethesda, Maryland. Actually, it was 5212 Danbury Road. And he was fascinated with electronics growing up and decided to go for an electrical engineering degree from University of Illinois. He got a place to stay right on campus and was studying for his undergraduate degree. Now, this was around 2011. He was fascinated with tech at a young age, and as a teenager, he loved to play with phone freaking. This is basically hacking phones. But while at university, he learned about a magical internet money called
Starting point is 00:05:10 Bitcoin. Now, back in 2011, Bitcoin was practically brand new. It had only been around for like a year or two. But still, at that time, you could buy it and sell it and mine it. Daniel started mining Bitcoin. This is where you get some graphics cards together and have them run computations and calculations to keep the Bitcoin network up. And in exchange for doing this, you get to keep some Bitcoin for helping. Daniel had an interesting way of seeing the world. He was a little fearful of the government, and because the government regulated money, he liked the idea of a decentralized currency. He believed this was the money of
Starting point is 00:05:45 the future. So he got more and more into Bitcoins. And once he mined enough of it, he started trading it like stocks to try to get more. Selling high, buying low. And you know what? He got pretty good at this. By the summer of 2011, he felt confident enough about his knowledge of Bitcoin to travel to Las Vegas, Nevada and give a talk about Bitcoin at DEF CON, the largest hacking conference in the world. First, I'd just like to thank everyone for coming out and making this great DEF CON. This has been my first DEF CON and I've really enjoyed it. I had a lot of great speakers here and it's been fabulous attending and just hope speaking is half as fun. Anyway, my handle is Skunkworks, and today I'm going to be talking to you about hacking the global economy with GPUs or how I learned to stop worrying and love Bitcoin. In this talk, he's wearing a pair of sunglasses, maybe to look cool or as a disguise.
Starting point is 00:06:39 He's got short hair and a black shirt. He didn't call himself Daniel, of course. His speaker name was Skunkworks. And back at the time of that talk, the price of Bitcoin was fluctuating between $8 and $30. Jeez, if I only had the vision that Daniel had and bought up a ton of Bitcoin then, I'd be in a Lamborghini right now.
Starting point is 00:06:57 Anyway, the talk was good. He explained Bitcoin pretty well, and he did a good job for his first presentation at DEF CON. At the same DEF CON conference, an entirely different group of guys also gave a talk. So this is a story about how we lost an eye. And just to be clear, that's me with a microscope. The sun's in the air, and I'm looking at a hard drive platter,
Starting point is 00:07:17 which happens to be very shiny. It's really fucking bright. So anyway, that joke fell flat, so we're going to keep on trucking. This one was presented by Shane Lawson, Bruce Potter, and Deviant Olaf. Three veteran speakers of hacker conferences, so they packed the room.
Starting point is 00:07:35 This talk had a premise. They wanted a way to destroy a hard drive remotely, and they wanted to know the best way to do that. What we'd really like to do is have a way to remotely destroy a drive. Just make the drive go away. And we wanted complete goddamn drive destruction, like a pile of slag, like our first thought was thermite.
Starting point is 00:07:57 These guys also talked a little about Bitcoin too, but made fun of it. Someone explained Bitcoins to me the other night in a bar and I thought it was a joke. Anyway, they created a little challenge with the goal of destroying a hard drive. So the rules of the game that we were trying to do up in Anchorage is destroying a drive in the following fashion. One, you have a 1U server. You have 1U above and below
Starting point is 00:08:17 to install whatever the hell you want in the rack. When you fire the hard drive, you have 60 seconds to destroy it. You must not set off fire suppression, smoke sensors, seismic sensors, because we're near banks, must not harm other systems in the rack, and you must not harm the humans that happen to be nearby when you're lighting off your thermite or magnesium or something like that. Well, sure, they could destroy a hard drive by using some kind of wiper virus on it or just deleting everything or encrypting it.
Starting point is 00:08:49 But there was something more fun about taking on the challenge of physically destroying a hard drive remotely. Because however it gets destroyed, it's probably going to be fun to watch. It's got to be a spectacle. So their goal was to take a computer mounted in a server rack and somehow physically destroy the hard drive remotely. Okay, but this isn't so easy. Deviant Olaf, one of the speakers at this presentation, went over a few ways to blow up a hard drive using gunpowder and thermite, but he explained all kinds of limitations this would bring. One being you need a big blast to trigger some of these explosives, and thermite is hard to work with because it just melts through everything and can potentially cause explosions. So what have we learned today, kids? We have learned that it's possible to do incendiary things or boomiery things to your drives.
Starting point is 00:09:35 You do not want the emergency crews to come out. We do not want you going home and burning shit down. We do not want you sent to a freaking ER. We do not want you making new friends. At least not if you're going to blame us for it. If you really think this is up your fucking alley, there are plenty of resources online if you want to be stupid. They tried burning the drives,
Starting point is 00:09:55 grinding the drives, used chemicals to somehow melt the drives or other incendiary attempts. But most of these tests were unsuccessful. Hard drives are hard. And they didn't want any leftover data on the drive because even if a few bytes of data were left over that could be the password to something important
Starting point is 00:10:12 like your Bitcoin wallet. But they did find that fire would actually burn the hard drives fairly effectively. The idea that we came up with was affixing a glow plug for like a motorbike to the end of a propane torch and then use a servo to open said propane torch and then lighting the propane torch remotely
Starting point is 00:10:31 with an Arduino and an Ethernet connection. By God, the most difficult way ever to light a propane torch. Yeah. But they just couldn't figure out how to do this. So here's the kicker. We failed. We failed in a big, gnarly, nasty way. And you sat through 45 minutes of fucking failure.
Starting point is 00:10:50 So here's the deal, though. The first person that makes a device that meets the challenge requirements that we have and does not harm themselves or sue us, will get free access to Shmoocon 2012. Daniel Beckwith, the guy who gave the talk on Bitcoin, was in the audience at this talk, watching it, and feeling inspired by the challenge. He thought for sure he could destroy a hard drive better than these guys did
Starting point is 00:11:15 because he was fascinated with chemistry and explosives and electronics, and he had some ideas on how to do this. On top of that, he wanted to win the prize that was free ShmooCon tickets, Which, by the way, ShmooCon is a hacker conference in Washington, D.C., not too far from where he grew up. He went back home and tried a few different things. First, he tried LIE, and to try to do a chemical burn on the hard drives. This didn't quite work. Then he tried to use high voltage electrical shock on it, and he used pieces from a microwave to do this. And remember, he was an electrical engineering student, so he knew his way around this kind of stuff. This would destroy the platters of the hard drive, but when it was in the hard drive case
Starting point is 00:11:53 itself, it didn't destroy it the way he wanted. So he decided to see what he could do with thermite. Thermite's like a metal powder, and if you apply enough heat to it, you can ignite it and it'll burn so hot that it'll melt certain metals. It burns at like 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit or more. It's sometimes used to weld train tracks together because it can heat up a metal to become like molten and then fit like right in between the cracks of the tracks, and then when it cools, it bonds it together. Now, since a hard drive is made of metal,
Starting point is 00:12:22 the theory is that thermite would simply melt the metal and then leave just a puddle behind of where the hard drive was. Daniel found an article on Hackaday of someone doing this and decided to try to follow the instructions. Safety first, though. Daniel purchased a full-fire proximity suit from eBay and a pair of gloves that were rated to withstand 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. For about $170, he had all the PPE, or personal protective equipment, required to do something like this. He also pulled out his chemistry book from freshman year and started to review what exothermic reactions are and that kind of stuff. Then he went online and purchased some thermite. But when the thermite arrived, so did company. The campus police somehow got word that this student was purchasing thermite and paid Daniel a visit.
Starting point is 00:13:07 Daniel showed the police the ShmooCon challenge and that he was only trying to win the challenge. The police saw that the challenge was real and since owning thermite wasn't actually illegal, the police let him carry on. He wanted to be safe with this experiment and was concerned about fire and explosions and things getting out of hand. So he decided to dig a pit in his backyard to do his experiments in. This was like a four foot deep pit, about two feet wide. And he also kept multiple fire extinguishers nearby. With everything ready, he placed the hard drive in the dugout pit, added the thermite on top of it, put on his PPE, and he was all ready. Three, two, one, ignition. Sparks shot everywhere, flames leapt up,
Starting point is 00:13:52 and the iron in the thermite turned molten and grew so hot that it melted right through the hard drive underneath it. It was amazing to watch and absolutely obliterated the hard drive. This was really cool, and Daniel wanted to improve this, so he kept trying it over and over to make it more effective. And after a few attempts, he found that the perfect amount of thermite to destroy a hard drive was one kilograms worth. Great. That's working very effectively, but it didn't quite work within the bounds of the challenge, which was to not set off smoke alarms or destroy anything else in the rack. The thermite reaction produced a lot of smoke, so he began getting deeper into
Starting point is 00:14:30 chemistry and exothermic reactions to try to figure out how to burn something as hot as thermite, but keeping it contained. He found another version of thermite, which was made up of a chemical compound calcium sulfate. This burned just as hot as thermite, but with less smoke. He purchased some of it and took it to his test pit and tried to burn a hard drive. But this wasn't as effective, since it didn't create enough slag as the metal-based thermite, and it's the slag that was turning the hard drive into molten metal. So he started making his own thermite mixtures to try to find something that would be effective. He added various oxidizers and fuels.
Starting point is 00:15:05 He would add little bits to see if it helped at melting the hard drive, and if so, he would add a little bit more of that. He actually did around 300 different tests to find the perfect solution, and what he found was a mixture of 37% thermite, 37% calcium sulfate thermite, and 25% potassium nitrate. This mixture would be the best he could find that had an easy way to ignite, it burned hot enough, it created enough slag, and didn't cause a lot of smoke. Excellent. But the challenge is still to be able to set this off in a data center without burning down the whole data center. So he did some experiments with fire-rated drywall. He built a box of this drywall that would fit in a server rack,
Starting point is 00:15:45 and on the box he added a HEPA filter, which filtered out the smoke. And after a few attempts, he got it to work. Within this small box, he was able to set off a thermite reaction and burn a hard drive without producing any smoke or setting anything else on fire in the rack. This satisfied all the requirements of the challenge. So Daniel presented his research to the three guys who laid down this challenge. And sure enough, he won the prize. Free tickets to ShmooCon. Yes. Daniel felt good. On top of that, he got to present his entire experimentation process on how he did it at ShmooCon 2012. My pseudonym is Skunkworks, and today I'm going to be talking to you about hard drive anti-forensics. My talk's entitled, And That's How I Didn't Lose an Eye, Emergency Data Destruction.
Starting point is 00:16:28 So first a little bit about me. I'm an undergrad in electrical engineering at a major U.S. research university. I do a lot of, well, an insane amount of my own R&D outside of school in my basement in suburban Maryland. I'm experienced in basically everything from non-destructive entry to CUDA, VOIP, to Tesla coils. I'm just a tinkerer. I love building stuff. And that's why I took on the Shmoo Group's hard drive data destruction challenge and succeeded in it. I'm cutting glass to speak at ShmooCon. I actually had to cut Friday double E class to make the flight out. Thermite is exciting, and Daniel was excited to give this talk and get recognized for his R&D. Again, he wore the same outfit on stage.
Starting point is 00:17:10 Dark sunglasses, short hair, black shirt. And after the conference, he went back to school, all the way to University of Illinois. He took more classes there and was studying hard. He was 20 years old back in 2012. And I don't know why, but he allegedly caused destruction to school's property. He was taking a course, ECE 329, which stood for Electrical and Computer Engineering, and he put a keylogger on the professor's computer. This is a little physical device that you put in between the keyboard and the computer, and it records every keystroke that computer makes.
Starting point is 00:17:40 It saves them in a file, and Daniel could then retrieve the device later. This gave Daniel access to the professor's email. Sifting through the emails, he found the final exam as an attachment. Daniel tried to jump on this opportunity to make some cash. So using the professor's email, he sent an email to all the students in the class saying, quote, ECE 329 exam for sale. Sale ends at 6 p.m. tonight, and you will be refunded if some white knight snitches to the damn professors, but we can all cooperate, am I right?
Starting point is 00:18:12 End quote. Signed, the ECE hacker. And next, for some bizarre reason that I still don't understand, Daniel allegedly put super glue and metal chips into the locks of the science lab and in the iCard readers, rendering them completely unusable. Maybe he was trying to buy some time or keep someone out of there, or maybe make it so the locks wouldn't shut the door anymore so he could go in whenever he wanted. I don't know. At this point, the professor noticed these emails that were sent from his account, but he didn't write them, and he contacted the campus police. The police investigated and found several posts on Reddit by someone calling themselves ECE Hacker. As they investigated, they found three more computers in the lab that had key loggers on them. The ECE Hacker post led them to a blog of a person called
Starting point is 00:19:02 Skunkworks. The blog listed hacking into schools as one of his hobbies and had a picture of Daniel on it. From here, the police were able to identify Daniel and issue a search warrant for his apartment. The search revealed many more keylogging devices, and they found superglue and metal bits. Daniel was arrested in January 2013. He was charged with criminal damage to government-supported property, computer fraud, and forgery, seven different charges in all. For a 21-year-old, as he was at the time, these were some pretty serious and scary consequences. He accepted a plea deal and agreeing to plead guilty to computer fraud to have the other charges dropped. This got
Starting point is 00:19:43 him a conviction of two years probation, so he avoided a prison sentence this time. In 2013, fresh from his computer fraud conviction in Illinois and now on probation, Daniel moved back to Bethesda in Maryland and to the house where he grew up at 5212 Danbury Road. Still owned by his father, Daniel lived there alone, and it seemed like he had his head down and out of any hacking activity while serving his probation period. Now back in 2013, Bitcoin was hovering at around $100. It was still a new and weird idea, only crazy people were buying it then. And who would ever pay $100 for some fake internet money? Well, Daniel would, and he was still heavy into Bitcoin, mining it and buying it and selling it and trading it and making a profit. And when it was on the rise, he held it. And when it was
Starting point is 00:20:29 going down, he sold it. And for those who remember, 2013 was actually a stellar year for Bitcoin. Between August and December of that year, Bitcoin rose from $100 to $1,000, gaining in value of 10 times in just four months. Anyone who's holding during those four months made out big time. Daniel was holding. But then Bitcoin crashed again. But Daniel would focus on this a lot. So when it went down, he pulled out and then he would buy when it started to come up again. Over the next two years, he became a pretty skilled Bitcoin day trader. He amassed himself a Bitcoin collection equal to $1 million. Daniel, at just 25 years old, was a Bitcoin millionaire.
Starting point is 00:21:12 Around this time, Daniel changed his hacker name from Skunkworks to 3AlarmLampScooter, which is an obscure reference from a Neil Stevenson novel. But he clearly didn't forget and move on from the ShmooCon data destruction contest. In 2016, he presented his second talk at ShmooCon convention in Washington, D.C., this time as Three Alarm Lamp Scooter, again, not using his real name. And when he came on stage, he wasn't wearing the usual sunglasses and black shirt. He came on stage wearing his full fire proximity suit, including a face visor, a hood, gloves, and it was all shimmering and quite a spectacle.
Starting point is 00:21:51 His talk was titled, This Message Will Self-Destruct in 10 Seconds, and he discussed, once again, effective ways of destroying hard drives. Okay, so why are you all intently staring at some weird dude in a fire proximity suit about to deliver a talk entitled, This Message Will Self-Destruct in 10 Seconds Avoiding Bilateral Nucleation? Well, the short answer it's a little dry and in the weeds. Daniel sounds really smart, but is losing the audience. Here, see if you can follow him. Anyways, reactions proceeding faster than the fuel burning with only atmospheric oxygen required or only your own supply of an oxidizer and the reaction energy is maximized for a given amount of reactants when the fuel to oxidizer ratio is stoichiometric and there isn't a limiting reactant uh well how are we going
Starting point is 00:22:36 to take non-volatile memory and turn it quite literally into volatile memory everything becomes volatile if you heat it up enough. The audience doesn't appear too taken with Daniel, but they do liven up when he does give some demonstrations and videos near the end. But what's interesting about these demonstrations, other than blowing up hard drives with homemade thermite, is where these controlled fires were filmed. This wasn't the same two-foot-wide pit in his backyard from a few years earlier. This appears to be filmed in a tunnel of some kind. The walls were about five or six feet high, and there was dirt all around. And he's obviously been very busy creating more exothermic reactions, and has a new location where he's doing this.
Starting point is 00:23:19 During this time, Daniel started becoming more concerned about the future. With the new president in office and the rising political climate, he was beginning to think that some kind of catastrophic attack against the U.S. might be inevitable. Maybe North Korea or China was going to attack with nuclear weapons. Maybe a terrorist attack would unleash an EMP. For some reason, Daniel could not get these thoughts out of his mind. And his fear and paranoia grew along with his
Starting point is 00:23:46 Bitcoin fortune. creepings by our misguided government toward the Orwellian tyranny of a global panopticon powered by signals intelligence. All right, three alarm way up, scooter out. Someone close to him told me that Daniel had a lot of knowledge about pharmaceuticals. If you say a drug, he could tell you what company makes that drug or what chemical compound was in it. I don't know what this means, but I found it interesting that he has these deep wells of information. He came back to DEF CON in August 2016 to give another talk, and again he used 3ALARM Lamp Scooter as his name and showed up on stage wearing the hood of his fire proximity suit, completely obscuring how he looks. You can't recognize him at all. So I'm 3ALARM Lamp Scooter, and today I'm giving a talk on DIY nuclear proofing. Okay, he's about to give a talk on how to create a DIY nuclear shelter.
Starting point is 00:24:50 There's kind of more fear, uncertainty, and doubt surrounding nuclear weapons than perhaps any other technology out there, especially their hypothetical capabilities in electronic warfare. So to really grok the gestalt of nuclear weapons and the threat landscape that has been there in the past, we kind of have to go back to a little quick remedial physical lesson. We've got two different isotopes of uranium that are kind of important to all this. One of them is uranium-235, the other is uranium-238. They differ by three neutrons, and that is why they have differing mass. And kind of the real short version of this, I had a lot more prepared,
Starting point is 00:25:23 but you can use what's called the kinetic isotope effect to separate, uh, the higher, the lighter from the heavier uranium. And, uh, the lighter uranium-235 actually is what's called fissile material. If you hit it with a neutron, it can sustain a nuclear reaction if it's enriched above around 5% usually. What the heck is he talking about? I've taken physics classes and chemistry classes, and this is like way over my head. Daniel has apparently been very busy studying nuclear weapons and its capabilities. He's now showing us pictures of different bombs. The device on the right there was called Fat Man.
Starting point is 00:25:56 That was a plutonium implosion style device. Again, you need a nuclear reactor to build that. Pretty difficult to come up with the plutonium. He then starts talking about what countries have nukes and giving us a full history lesson on nuclear weapons. He even goes on to talk about what scientists made these weapons and the tacos on and on. He starts talking about EMP and lasers and other weapons that countries have.
Starting point is 00:26:39 It's hard to hear, but he just said that we're up shit creek regarding countries having WMDs. Finally, towards the end of his talk, he starts telling us about ways to protect yourself. Believe it or not, something like a trash can can give you, you know, 40 or 50 decibels of shielding if you tape it up properly so it doesn't act as a slot antenna. High altitude electromagnetic pulse protection.
Starting point is 00:26:58 Oh, we got time? We're done. Okay, shoot. Thank you! Okay, thanks a lot. Wait, what? The moderator at DEF CON just came on stage and cut him off, saying his time was over. And he spent this whole talk explaining about the dangers of nuclear weapons. But just when he was about to tell us how to build a bunker, they took him off stage. And they took him off stage specifically because he was out of time. But his slide did say the only winning move is to dig deeper.
Starting point is 00:27:35 This episode is sponsored by SpyCloud. With major breaches and cyber attacks making the news daily, taking action on your company's exposure is more important than ever. I recently visited spycloud.com to check my darknet exposure and was surprised by just how much stolen identity data criminals have at their disposal, from credentials to cookies to PII. Knowing what's putting you and your organization at risk and what to remediate is critical for protecting you and your users from account takeover, session hijacking, and ransomware. SpyCloud exists to disrupt cybercrime, with a mission to end criminals' ability to profit from stolen data.
Starting point is 00:28:10 With SpyCloud, a leader in identity threat protection, you're never in the dark about your company's exposure from third-party breaches, successful phishes, or info-stealer infections. Get your free Darknet Exposure Report at spycloud.com slash darknetdiaries. The website is spycloud.com slash darknetdiaries. It turns out Daniel had been very busy working on a new project. He obviously did a lot of research to prepare for this presentation, and he studied a lot about nuclear weapons and EMPs.
Starting point is 00:28:52 He was very knowledgeable about this. But somewhere in the process of all this, he started figuring out ways to protect against it. He started reading things like the Army Technical Manual 5-858-6, which has a full section on underground nuclear tunnel experiments. He went on to study what the different layers of soil are and what different soil types there are, and he studied more about excavation, specifically how to make tunnels and how to fortify their walls, and he found research papers from the University of
Starting point is 00:29:21 Washington that went over various kinds of earth retaining structures. He examined the field manuals on how to dig through certain kinds of soils, and he started learning about the difference between lateralite, humus, and subsoils. And he looked up where the water table was, and how deep the bedrock was, where he was living. And when Daniel combined his fear of major attacks happening to his city and his knowledge of digging, he came up with a new plan. While living alone at his father's house on 5212 Danbury Road in Bethesda, Maryland, he was going to turn his house into a nuclear bunker. Either Daniel or his father, or probably both of them, were collectors. When they acquired pretty much anything, they kept it. Buckets, chairs, toys, pots, pans, clothes, building materials, tools, light fixtures, paintings, hoses, computers, trash, you name it.
Starting point is 00:30:11 This was all stuff that you would find at Daniel's house. Upstairs in the house, downstairs in the house, in the basement, piles of this stuff were everywhere. Sometimes five feet high, sometimes all the way up to the ceiling. A lot of it was just trash, too. If you saw the photos of his house, you might even say a hoarder lives there. And he began collecting even more stuff to prepare for a disaster, like food and survival gear. He loaded all this into his basement, but this wasn't enough. He wanted something that could withstand a blast and
Starting point is 00:30:39 protect him in the event of a major nuclear incident or an EMP blast. So to make a bomb shelter, he decided he needed to go underground and not just in his basement. I don't know for sure what happened, but I did look at a lot of pictures and I could take a pretty good guess at what I think happened down in his basement. I think to start, he went to a far corner of his basement and brought like a jackhammer or some sort of concrete saw or something with him and began chinking out a hole in the concrete foundation. It looks like he knocked out about like a three foot by three foot square into the basement floor. And under the concrete floor of the basement was dirt. So he started digging it up, filling bucket after bucket with dirt and bringing it outside,
Starting point is 00:31:21 dumping it out, and then going in and digging up more. This had to be a very slow and painstaking process that would tire him out. By October of 2016, Daniel was most definitely in full swing of building this secret tunnel. And to Daniel, this needed to be extremely secret. Nobody would be allowed to know what was going on here, not any neighbors or friends. And he would take extra precautions to make sure no one was aware of his operation, allowed to know what was going on here, not any neighbors or friends. And he would take extra precautions to make sure no one was aware of his operation, probably doing things like dumping buckets of dirt out at night and buying tools with cash and unloading equipment in the dark. As Daniel dug up the tunnel, it started to go deeper and deeper underground.
Starting point is 00:32:00 At first, a light in the basement was all he needed to see what he was doing, but as the hole got deeper, he needed to shine the light further down there. So he had to get like an extension cord and lower a light down into the hole. But as the hole grew deeper, the air down there got worse. But because digging is one thing, yeah, you get dusty. But I bet sometimes he'd hit like a solid rock. And I've seen what happens when you try to break through rock. There's a lot of dust.
Starting point is 00:32:24 So Daniel rigged up some ventilation ducts, perhaps one to push fresh air down in there, and one maybe to suck that dusty air out. Eventually, he dug the hole deep enough, around 15 feet down, and like two or three feet wide. Just enough to fit a ladder and himself to get down in there. But this would just be the entry, though. From here, he made a turn. Instead of going down, he started digging in another direction, probably still filling bucket after bucket, hoisting them up into the basement
Starting point is 00:32:52 with ropes and pulleys, and then probably emptying it out in the yard and then coming back down for more. This process was slow and painstaking, but he was making progress. Before long, he had two branches to the tunnel down there, and one was big enough to make into a livable space. So he dragged a bedroll down there and
Starting point is 00:33:11 brought some food and water and tested to see if he could live down there. He had clean air, extension cords bringing him electricity, and food and water down there. It was rough at first, so Daniel improved it. He rigged it up with Wi-Fi and brought a TV down there. He even added a door to one arm of the tunnel for privacy. He brought some extra blankets to be warm, and eventually it became a comfortable enough living space. Something that would suit him in case there was a major attack. And he was becoming happy with it. It was a good start, and the vision was starting to take shape, but Daniel wanted something bigger. I imagine this process was agonizingly slow.
Starting point is 00:33:52 If he had help digging, it would go a lot faster. So he decided to hire someone to help him. But he was very fearful that whoever he hired would then know the location of this bomb shelter. And in a disaster, he didn't want them coming over. Daniel really didn't want anyone to know about this. So he hired a guy named Douglas to come help do some digging and somehow blindfolded him so he wouldn't know where the tunnels were. Douglas was a 20-year-old guy and had an old dog and agreed to help dig the tunnels if he could bring his dog with.
Starting point is 00:34:18 So in the fall of 2016, Douglas and his dog worked down in the tunnels, digging out more space and expanding their reach for about six months. Douglas liked Daniel and thought he was clever and smart but by April 2017 Douglas had enough. He was bored of the work and was getting concerned for the health of his elderly dog so he parted from Daniel and the tunnels on friendly terms. This left Daniel with a problem. He needed a new tunnel digger.
Starting point is 00:34:46 He went online and found a helper willing to dig tunnels, a 20-year-old man named Askiya Kafra. Askiya had dreams. He had a great idea to start an online business and needed some cash to get it going. Daniel agreed to invest $5,000 into his online business if he would help dig the tunnels. And this was on top of some kind of daily pay. But there was a catch. Because Daniel was so paranoid about anyone knowing about the underground bunker, he went to great lengths to keep the location secret from Askia. First of all, Askia only lived four miles away from Daniel's house, where the tunnels were being dug.
Starting point is 00:35:23 But Daniel wouldn't just give him the address. Instead, he'd drive him over blindfolded. But Daniel knew that if he blindfolded someone and just drove them four miles, that person would know the tunnels are nearby and might even be able to sense the exact location based on the turns. So Daniel had a trick. Daniel would pick Askew up from his home four miles away and drive him out to Manassas in Virginia, 39 miles away. And once there, Daniel would then give Askiya a pair of blacked out goggles, which he was to put on for the rest of the journey. With Askiya wearing these, he couldn't see anything or where they were driving. And Daniel would then drive Askiya almost right back to where they started at his house in Bethesda. And he would then take Askiya out of the car, lead him into the house and down into the basement,
Starting point is 00:36:05 and only then he could take the goggles off. By this point, the tunnels were even more elaborate. First, they'd go down and below Daniel's house about 20 feet, and then they'd stretch out in different directions like arms. There were a few different corridors and passageways and rooms, basically. Inside the tunnels was lighting, heating, air circulation, and there was a couple dedicated spaces for like a fridge, a bed, a TV, a microwave, a computer, video game consoles, Wi-Fi systems, and some areas were even locked and kept secret, and there were different levels that had floors that could be raised or dropped down. The tunnels were so long at this point, to get proper lighting and electrical tools down in there, they had to daisy chain some extension cords to make them reach. With all the refrigerators and
Starting point is 00:36:49 TVs down there, this put a big load on the cables. So he sent Askia down there and showed him the ropes, literally. You had to practically rappel down into the tunnel to get to know how the operation worked. Dirt and rocks were likely filled up in buckets, and then Daniel would empty those and bring them back. Oh, and one more thing. Daniel took even more steps to hide the location from Askia. Askia had a phone, but it didn't work so well underground like that, so Daniel provided Wi-Fi. But he set the Wi-Fi up with a VPN, which made Askia believe he was in Virginia.
Starting point is 00:37:19 And with the hours of driving to get there, this seemed logical. Askia thought he was in Virginia. So Askia got to work digging, and he thought it was okay work. Every now and then, he'd snap a photo and post it to Facebook or send it to his girlfriend of him down there. In these photos, he's wearing full protective equipment. He's got a helmet on, a respirator to keep the dust out, eye protection, hearing protection, and gloves. I think he went down there and worked for like a few days at a time. I think he slept down there, ate down there, watched TV down there, played video games.
Starting point is 00:37:50 And when he had to go to the bathroom, there was a bucket system for that. Because he was absolutely not allowed to come upstairs to the regular bathroom. Daniel's paranoia was just too much for that. And after a few days of digging, Daniel would put the blacked out goggles back on and drive him back home. Asuka's parents and girlfriend knew what he was doing for Daniel, but were not that keen on it. Asuka's parents tried to persuade him to stop seeing Daniel and stop working in the tunnels. They didn't like the strange routine that Daniel kept carrying out with Asuka to get him there and that he had to live down there. Askia described the tunnels to his girlfriend as 100 feet long and 15 feet deep. He said there was areas that were locked and he wasn't allowed to go in, but Askia kept going
Starting point is 00:38:36 back to help Daniel dig. The earth that far deep was in some places very rocky, if not solid rock, and this likely meant that the tunnel was fairly secure. It was a huge pain in the neck to break the rocks to dig, so Askia didn't think that the tunnel would probably collapse. Because Daniel provided good personal protection equipment and there was decent entertainment and food down there, it was good enough for the now 21-year-old Askia. On September 10, 2017, at about 2 p.m., Askia was working in the tunnels while Daniel was upstairs in the house. Askia smelled smoke in the tunnels and sent Daniel a text message telling him about it. Daniel came downstairs into the basement and looked around. He saw that a circuit had tripped
Starting point is 00:39:21 in the electrical box. This made the tunnels dark, and Asuka couldn't see what he was doing down there. Daniel inspected the wiring and tried to find the source of the smoke, but remember, Daniel's house and basement is a bit cluttered, you could say. Stuff was piled everywhere, and it wasn't easy to move things around and inspect the job site. It's unclear, and I'm not exactly sure, but I think Daniel couldn't locate the problem and just switched the circuit breaker back on and went upstairs. About two hours later, now 4.30 in the afternoon, Daniel smelled smoke again and went back down to look. This time, a fire had erupted in the basement, and the piles of stuff all over the basement and other things started catching fire.
Starting point is 00:40:04 Daniel tried to put the fire out, but it already had grown too large to manage it. He tried to get Aski out, but it was too much. It was too hot. There was too much smoke. Daniel was choking on the smoke. He was coughing, gagging. His lungs were burning. He tried to get down low, but it didn't help much. Maybe he should just get out of there. He shouted for Aski. And when the smoke just grew too he should just get out of there. He shouted for Askia. And when the smoke just grew too much, Daniel ran out of there and called 911. I think at this time, Askia was down in the tunnels washing up after a long day of work, and so he had taken his clothes off, and he was in the middle of putting new clothes back on when he heard Daniel shouting out that there's a fire.
Starting point is 00:40:47 Askia ran to the tunnel entrance and looked up into the basement. There he could see the smoke and he could hear the fire and he didn't want to be trapped in the tunnel with a fire going on. So he climbed up the 15 foot tall ladder into the basement. Naked, he almost immediately started coughing. The smoke was thick. He had seen this basement before to get down in the tunnels, but the smoke and fire and junk everywhere just disoriented him. He didn't know exactly how to get out. And now he's in a smoke-filled room that's on fire. It's full of garbage and trash and old bicycles and clothes and just a ton of junk.
Starting point is 00:41:22 There's no windows in this place. He tried to make his way out of the basement, but he was lost, and he had to jump through flames to make it to the other side of the room, which would just scorch his body. It wasn't easy to get around. He started to panic, and the smoke grew thicker. It was dense, ugly smoke. Askia was coughing hard. The heat was intense. His lungs were burning. Askia kept looking for a way out through the maze of burning junk and trash in the basement. One of the neighbors was named Bruce LeSean, and he happened to be a news reporter for WUSA 9 and saw the smoke and ran over.
Starting point is 00:42:07 And he tells us his story. I was the first person on the scene of the fire. I tried to get into the burning house to rescue Khafre, but it was just too dangerous. And when I yelled in, are you in there? Is anybody in there? There was no response. When the fire department arrived, they found Daniel outside breathless and panicked. He was telling them, there's someone inside who I couldn't get out. Daniel was suffering from smoke inhalation and some skin burns. The fire crews frantically made their way into the burning house looking for Askia. They went down into the basement and just feet from the exit, they found his naked body laying there. The firefighters tried to help Askia, but it was too late. The smoke and fire was all too much for him, and he died just minutes before the firefighters found him.
Starting point is 00:43:00 Days after the fire, the county came to the house and boarded it up and put a notice on the door that said this building is unsafe to enter. The tunnels were believed to be 200 feet long at this point, so the neighbors were concerned that the tunnels were under their house, and the city was concerned the tunnel was under the road. But it was too risky to go down there and map it out. I imagine Daniel felt terrible that this electrical accident caused young Askia to die. But after all, it was just an accident, so what more can you do? Askia's parents didn't accept that, though, and they pressed charges against Daniel.
Starting point is 00:43:35 Eight months after the fire, on May 25, 2018, Daniel was arrested and charged with second-degree depraved heart murder, an involuntary manslaughter. Depraved heart is an unusual charge. So a second-degree murder is a murder that is not premeditated or deliberate. And a depraved heart murder falls under this second-degree charge. But to be found guilty of a depraved heart murder means you have had to take an extreme risk with someone else's life,
Starting point is 00:44:03 taking a risk you are aware of that could result in injury or death. life, taking a risk you were aware of that could result in injury or death. Now, if that risk you are aware of is extreme enough and someone dies from that, then you could be found guilty of a depraved heart murder. So this is what Daniel was faced with. Was he aware that the conditions he made Askia work under were extremely risky? Was Daniel showing reckless disregard for human life? A jury would have to decide. A month later and Daniel secured a bond for $100,000, his defense attorney said the fire was a tragic accident and not a criminal act and that Askew was not forced into the tunnels. Here's his attorney. He was not held against his will. That guy posted pictures
Starting point is 00:44:46 of him in the tunnels in his garb and shared with his friends on Twitter and Facebook. Look at those things. I've looked over some of the presentations Daniel put together. Specifically, the one on DIY nukeproofing was really impressive. In this presentation, Daniel listed a lot of safety precautions that must be considered, such as what kind of soil types need support and what kind of support works best, and that egg-shaped tunnels have the least likely chance of collapsing. He mentioned that you have to constantly be checking for any deformations on the ground above where the tunnels are and always be looking for cracks in walls and add support whenever you see one. He talked about what kind of ventilation you need, especially when running gas engines down there,
Starting point is 00:45:27 and what kind of water pumps are required in case of flooding. He even mentioned in his research that it's highly recommended that you call 8-1-1 to get someone from the city to come show you where the gas lines are on your property, because digging into one of these will probably kill you. It's really impressive how much safety precautions Daniel was aware of. I can't say for sure how much of this was put into practice, but I feel like he probably did most of it, since he didn't want any tunnels to collapse himself. At the same time, Daniel faced a wave of further legal action. Montgomery County filed a lawsuit to get the tunnels filled in and
Starting point is 00:45:59 the house demolished. Askew's parents filed a civil wrongful death lawsuit, blaming Daniel for his actions for the death of their son. The lawsuit filed by the county revealed some pretty interesting information about the tunnels. Not only does the county believe the tunnels extend beyond the edge of Daniel's property, but they fear the tunnels reach under the public road. And how far do they go towards neighboring houses, they're asking. Investigators still felt it was too dangerous to investigate the tunnels. They just can't get themselves in there properly to take a look. So really, no one but Daniel knows how deep and long these tunnels are.
Starting point is 00:46:34 State Attorney John McCarthy called these tunnels a danger to life and limb, and he said that even robots can't be used to explore them because the tunnels were designed on different levels. Robots need a nice level surface to roll on. Montgomery County, desperate to know the state of the tunnels, wants Daniel to employ an experienced structural engineer to assess them. They want a 3D model made to show the extent of the tunnels, and they want markers put above the ground to highlight exactly how far the tunnels go, and a clear plan to get them safely filled and the house torn down. On April 10th of this year, 2019, 18 months after the fire killed Askia, Daniel went on trial. Twelve jurors listened to seven days of the prosecution's case. The state prosecution
Starting point is 00:47:18 alleged that Daniel's tunnels, hoarding and haphazard electrical chain providing power to the tunnels were all to blame. As far as the prosecution was concerned, Daniel knew the risk and was fully aware of the dangerous situation in the tunnels. A situation that he had put Aska in, but still didn't do anything when it was clear that the danger was imminent. This, they said, made Daniel responsible for Aska's death. Firefighters who attended the scene described Daniel's house as a hoarder's paradise. County firefighter Don Boyd said that both the first and second floors were piled with three to four feet of items and debris. Down in the basement, these piles rose to five to seven feet with narrow pathways, which made moving difficult and doorways hidden. He told the jury it took over three weeks for a 24-man team of firefighters to clear everything out.
Starting point is 00:48:06 And that just says a lot about how much stuff was collected in that house. In trial, the prosecutors also pulled up Daniel's talk at ShmooCon, and they were especially keen to point out his descriptions on how to make thermite and destroy computer data that had been obtained by hacking. A lesson on how to get away with computer hacking, they said, all presented while wearing his full fire retardant suit. After the fire, investigators found various materials, liquids, and chemicals inside the house. Now chances are a lot of that was used in his data destruction
Starting point is 00:48:35 experiments for ShmooCon, but the authorities, taken with Daniel's past, were really wondering what Daniel was up to. The local media in Maryland really jumped all over this case. Throughout the two-week trial, there were a ton of articles, and they called Daniel a wealthy stock trader, a millionaire, a computer whiz, and a paranoid computer hacker. Even his own defense attorney, Robert Bonsib, described Daniel as being a very interesting person. He said, quote, Mr. Beckwith is an unusual individual. He participates in online communities with interesting theories on world events. Some could call him conspiratorial, end quote. The defense actually submitted a motion to the judge for Daniel to be acquitted and the trial
Starting point is 00:49:15 be dismissed. The judge denied this immediately, saying this case was similar to employers who must provide a safe working environment for their employees, so the trial continued. In explanation for building the tunnels, Daniel's attorney said Daniel had concerns about intercontinental ballistic missiles, so he started this project to create a secure bunker. He compared Daniel's vision to this nuclear bomb shelter, similar to what people would build in their backyard during the Cold War. Douglas Hart, the guy who worked on the tunnels before Askia, testified for the defense. He revealed too that he was led into the basement to the entrance of the tunnels wearing dark glasses with tape over the lenses.
Starting point is 00:49:51 And this was after being driven around in a car, so he couldn't identify the locations of the tunnels. But Daniel himself did not take the stand to testify. And I'm quite sure the risks of what the prosecution would ask him while up there on the stand, considering his past and his paranoia, were just too high to be chancing. The defense kept their case pretty simple. They said these events were a terrible accident, and they repeated that Daniel cannot be held criminally responsible for an accident. Montgomery County prosecutors, on the other hand, told the jury that Daniel's behavior showed a total disregard for public safety. Not only that, but his actions created a death trap, which he walked ASCIA right into. On April 23rd, 2019,
Starting point is 00:50:31 the jury retired to deliberate, and in just 24 hours, they came back with their verdicts. They found Daniel guilty of both second-degree depraved heart murder and involuntary manslaughter. In June 2019, the judge sentenced Daniel Beckwith to nine years in prison for the death of Askiya. Now that the criminal trial is complete, the civil lawsuits filed by Montgomery County and Askiya's parents will move forward. They're probably going to knock down his house and fill in those tunnels soon. So Daniel has a few more legal battles to go. Looking over all the information I have, I still feel like something is missing. Hearing that the tunnels were dug just for a bomb shelter doesn't feel like the whole story. I feel like there was something more to those tunnels, and there's still more secrets that Daniel is holding. I've been in a lot of tunnels myself, and the pictures of this one remind me much more
Starting point is 00:51:29 of the mines I've been in, and less like bomb shelters. It just makes me think maybe Daniel was digging for something else down in the dirt, looking for something down there. Daniel has a lot of raw intelligence. It's very impressive, actually. But fear and paranoia can bring down even the smartest and brightest among us. Fear divides us. It's what makes our neighbors and friends enemies. Basing your beliefs because of fear or finding friends because you share the same fears seems normal, but it can tear us apart. Daniel built his tunnels based on fear, and it was a lot of work. Imagine if he spent that energy on something positive and not out of fear. He could have made advancements in chemistry or helped hundreds of
Starting point is 00:52:16 people with something. Prepping for an emergency is a good idea. Everyone should be ready to handle a few weeks without water and power. But Daniel took this prepping too far. If 200 feet of tunnels weren't enough, what was? And if you keep building tunnels DIY style like this, eventually something will go terribly, terribly wrong. Daniel's work while under the influence of fear ended up with him in prison and Asuka dead. I like to quote the truth wherever I find it. And here's something that Master Yoda taught me about fear. Fear is the path to the dark side. Fear leads to anger. Anger leads to hate. Hate leads to suffering.
Starting point is 00:52:58 And here's another thing Buffalo Springfield taught me about paranoia and fear. Paranoia strikes deep Into your life it will creep It starts when you're always afraid Step out of line, the man come And take you away, we better stop Hey, what's that sound? You've been listening to Darknet Diaries.
Starting point is 00:53:33 If you find this show valuable, please consider donating on Patreon. You can get an ad-free feed there and bonus episodes are starting to roll out. Donating there really helps this show a lot. This episode is created by me, your friendly ticket jockey, Jack Recyder. Research and writing help for this episode was by Fiona Guy. Editing help by the Dark Duchess Damien.
Starting point is 00:53:52 Theme music was created by the head-bobbing Breakmaster Cylinder. See you in two weeks. So

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