Forbidden History - The Murder Bureau

Episode Date: November 16, 2022

It is August 1978; Georgi Markov is in his London flat when the phone rings. He’s greeted by the sound of a cold and distorted voice. “Georgi Markov you’re going to die”.   Markov is used to... these death threats; he could set his watch by them. And so, he replies in his usual laconic way, “Killing me will only make me a martyr”.   He is about to hang up but for once the voice has a comeback.   “Not this time. This time you will not become a martyr. It will look as if you died of natural causes. You will be killed by a poison that the West can neither detect nor treat”.   A month later, Markov would be dead. But little did the murderer know that by giving Markov this warning they would turn what looked like a natural death into a full-scale murder inquiry.   It would become the most famous assassination of the Cold War, and yet to this day no one has been charged with his murder. However recently declassified documents may shed light on who was responsible and uncover the shadowy work of a mysterious organisation known as Service 7 or, more bluntly, the ‘Murder Bureau’.   In this episode we re-examine the case files of this long unsolved assassination, explore the tactics and gadgetry used in a secret war played out across Europe and unravel the history of the illusive Murder Bureau.    Cast List:  Guy Walters  A British author, historian, and journalist, he has written several books on WWII. As a journalist for The Times, he writes on historical topics for the national press.  Boris Volodarksy  A former officer in Russian Military Intelligence, now a historian and author specialising in Soviet intelligence operations. He is the writer of several works, the most notable being “The KGB's Poison Factory: From Lenin to Litvinenko”.   Alexenia Dimitrova  A Bulgarian journalist and author with 27 years experience in journalism. Her books include “War of the Spies” and “Murder Bureau”.   Richard Felix  A historian and lecturer specialising in local and paranormal history.   Natalia Mehneva  The daughter of Traycho Belopopski, a former target of the Murder Bureau. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:02 It's August 1978, and Georgie Markov is in his London flat when the phone rings. He's greeted by the sound of a cold and distorted voice. Georgie Markov, you're going to die. Markov is used to these death threats. He could set his watch by them. And so he replies in his usual laconic way. Killing me will only make me a martyr. He's about to hang up, but for once, the voice has a comfort.
Starting point is 00:00:36 back. Not this time. This time you'll not become a martyr. It will look as if you died of natural causes. You will be killed by a poison that the West can neither detect nor treat. A month later, Markov would be dead. But little did the murderer know that by giving Markov this morning, they would turn what looked like a natural death into a full-scale murder inquiry.
Starting point is 00:01:03 It would become the most famous assassination of the Cold War, and yet to this day, no one has been charged with his murder. However, recently declassified documents may shed light on who was responsible and uncover the shadowy work of a mysterious organization known as Service 7, or, more bluntly, the Murder Bureau. The Murder Bureau was a top-secret cell within the Bulgarian Secret Service that was tasked with carrying out assassinations throughout the world. They pursued more than Bulgarian defectors
Starting point is 00:01:47 to try to poison them, to kill them, to kidnap them. They were under complete control of the Russian KGB and all operations were coordinated by Moscow. There were spies, super spies, and the whole damn thing could have, for want of a better word, blown up big time into World War III. You're listening to Forbidden History. The podcast series that explores the past darkest corners,
Starting point is 00:02:14 sheds light on the lives of intriguing individuals, and uncovers the truth buried deep in history's most controversial legacies. I'm Janine Haroni. And this is the Murder Bureau. In the latter half of the 20th century, the world is in the midst of the Cold War. The capitalist West and the Communist East exist in an uneasy truce. The world's leaders gaze at each other warily with the most powerful weapons in history at their disposal.
Starting point is 00:02:49 And their people live with the specter of the nuclear Armageddon they could deliver. But what few people realized is that on their streets, and hidden in plain sight, a covert war is underway. Guy Walters is an author and historian. There are spies running around the world bumping each other off, literally bumping each other off, just as we see in Len Dayton books, Ian Fleming books. Those books may be fiction, but they describe a lot of very true type of events
Starting point is 00:03:20 in which spies are using skullduggery to outwit each other, people are being poisoned, shot, stabbed, they're being seduced by Romeo or honey-trap methods. The intelligence world is very much a very much, dark counterpoint to the kind of gaudy flower power that we tend to associate with that time. It is to this secret war that Georgie Markov becomes a victim a month after the phone call warning him of his impending death. Historians Guy Walters and Richard Felix talk us through Markov's final moments.
Starting point is 00:03:56 He was standing on a street near Waterloo Bridge. And he waits by the bus stop just at the top of the bridge to get his bus to to the BBC. Suddenly he feels this prick in the back of his thigh. Thought he'd been stunned. Nothing more than that. And he turns round, you know, bewildered as you might be, to see a man who's dropped an umbrella, then races across the road and gets into a cab and scuttles off. Little red pimple turned up. He started to feel ill. Over the next few hours, he begins to feel more and more sick, more and more unwell.
Starting point is 00:04:32 Made a comment when he went home that he thought he may have been poisoned. Off to hospital. No one knows exactly what is happening to him. Four days later, he was dead. Wared not for the phone call threatening his impending death, and the claim that the method would make it look like natural causes, no further action would have been taken. But Markov had told the doctors treating him
Starting point is 00:05:02 that he believed himself to have been poisoned, and so his death becomes a murder inquiry. That is post-mortem, the London Metropolitan Police discovered just how sophisticated his assassination had been. A forensic scientist removes a tissue sample from Markov's leg and sends it to the chemical weapons laboratory in Porton Down. There, they find a tiny pellet in the sample, less than two millimeters in diameter, with two holes drilled into it. Further examination cannot detect any trace of poison inside the cavities, Through process of elimination, they determine that it once contained the deadly poison, Risen. This, combined with Markov's testimony, enables them to build a picture of events.
Starting point is 00:05:52 Astonishingly, they believed that an assassin fired the Risen pellet into Markov's leg, using a weapon disguised as an umbrella. The news hits the headlines, and the assassination captures the world's imagination, barking endless speculation about who was responsible. And yet, to this day, the case remains open. So who ordered Markov's assassination? Who invented such a sophisticated weapon? And who pulled the trigger?
Starting point is 00:06:25 The answer to the first question lies in Georgie Markov's past and his rapid turnaround in fortunes. Georgi Markov is born in Bulgaria in 1929. and becomes one of the country's success stories. Educated as a chemical engineer, he pursues his passion for writing in his spare time. His work strikes accord with the people of Bulgaria and propels him to fame as one of the country's leading novelists and playwrights.
Starting point is 00:06:56 With fame comes patronage. Markov is indicted into the inner circle of Bulgaria's president, Tador Jivkov himself. The pair are known to have dinner together and go on hikes through the Bulgarian countryside. But there is a ruthless streak in Markov's patron, and evidence of it can still be seen today in the capital, Sophia, the building that once housed the headquarters of Bulgaria's Committee for State Security, known as KDS.
Starting point is 00:07:29 Bulgarian journalist Alexenia Dimitrova has agreed to show us around today. Okay, this building is now National Archive, but it used to be until 1972 the headquarters of the Bulgarian State Security. And come, I will show you something very interesting. Here in the basement, there were sales of the Bulgarian State Security. We enter into a clean marble-walled lobby, but Alexenia takes us through a door and down a staircase into the bowels of the building itself.
Starting point is 00:08:04 Guy Walters. These are, you know, from the outside, just normal office blocks. They're just in that sort of structural, you know, sort of brutalist architecture we associate with that period. Yeah, they look pretty grim, but, you know, they look like any office from that period. They have desks, they have telephones. They may have had a, you know, a picture of a leader somewhere in the office. But it's when you go into the basements that things look very, very, very different indeed. The gleaming walls of the atrium give way to dank, dark corridors with a grim past.
Starting point is 00:08:36 Alexenia takes us into a small room off the corridor. The walls are covered in grime and the lighting is dim. Alexenia. They kept prisoners here and they tortured them and they beat them severely to extract some evidence from them. We asked historian Richard Felix about the interrogation methods the KDS employed. In that basement, obviously a chair would be sat there, you'd be interrogated, probably beaten, but also still preserved. There are two boxes, electrical boxes from the 60s,
Starting point is 00:09:13 that are not connected in any way now, but were originally connected to a metal bed. People would be strapped to the bed. All manner of electrocution to various parts of the body would be carried out. No one was ever brought in through the front door. They were always brought downstairs and brought in the back. This was a dirty war. Cruel, slow death awaited those who were taken here.
Starting point is 00:09:43 And Guy Walters believes that the building is evidence of how torture and death were routine under President Jivkov's regime. These are office blocks designed to terrorize. The methods they use are a classic example of the bureaucratization of murder. It's kind of an everyday experience. for the Secret Service, going to the office, and for the people in the basement, it is something truly terrifying. This was life under President Shivkov. He therefore seems strange company for a creative writer,
Starting point is 00:10:20 like Georgie Markov. But perhaps predictably, Markov has little choice. Literature, much as the KDS, is a tool of Zhivkov's regime. And the reason for this lies in Bulgaria's past. In the late 19th century, Bulgaria was liberated from Ottoman rule, and in the turbulent years that followed, literature became a means by which Bulgaria forged its own national identity. And in the 1960s, Zhivkov began to use literature to help prop up his own regime. Writers like Markov are coerced into using their talents to bolster their president's credibility.
Starting point is 00:11:04 Markov, however, is not willing to completely abandon his morals, and through thinly disguised language, he remains critical of the system under which he works. For a time this was tolerated, but it's a dangerous game to play because Shivkov answers to a higher power. Boris Volodarsky was once an officer in Russian military intelligence, and he tells us of the closeness between Bulgaria and his former homeland. Bulgarians used to be like brothers and there were talks about making Bulgaria 16th Soviet Republic.
Starting point is 00:11:44 So they were always treated like the closest alleys and everything. Due to the ties between the Soviet Union and its very much junior partner, Zhivkov's policies mirror those of his overlords. And events in the Soviet Union are about to alter the fate of writers like George. writers like Georgie Markov. In October, Leonard Brezhnev comes to power in the Soviet Union. The years of comparative openness under Khrushchev are at an end. Brezhnev adopts a far more conservative line than his predecessor, and his reactionary politics
Starting point is 00:12:24 soon trickled down to Bulgaria. Markov continues to write. Each work is ever more accomplished than the last, but the political obstacle grow. One by one, his plays are banned. And with his life's work fading away in front of him, he makes a dramatic decision to leave Bulgaria. But if his writing puts him at odds with the regime, defecting would be far more dangerous, as dissidents are not tolerated by President Jivkov. Guy Walters. We tend to think that all these regimes within the Soviet bloc had absolute control, absolute power.
Starting point is 00:13:03 But of course, the guys running these regimes knew there were an enormous number of dissidents who were managing to escape on a regular basis, who were then promulgating more liberal democratic values in the West, and represented in the eyes of the totalian regimes, a serious threat. Markov flees first to his brother in Italy, and from there he moves to Britain. But not only is he a dissident, he's also a critic, and he will turn his creative flare upon his former patron, we asked Boris Volodarski about Markov's activities in Britain. He immigrated to Britain and he started working for Radio Liberty and other organizations that were using propaganda as a tool against the communist regime of the country. And he was very active. He was
Starting point is 00:13:55 accusing the president of many things. He was saying that he is a low profile party apparatchik, a bureaucrat, not intelligent and things like that, he was accusing him of different things. And Todor Rivkov did like that, naturally. Back in Bulgaria, Zhivkov reads through transcripts of Markov's broadcast as soon as they arrive on his desk from the KDS. In one, Markov calls him, some paltry mediocrity who's proclaimed himself a demigod.
Starting point is 00:14:26 Jivkov concludes that Markov must be silenced once and for all. But how could he accomplish this? KDS, after all, was an internal security service. Surely it could not liquidate Markov in London. It's only recently that this question has begun to be answered. With the collapse of the Soviet Union and the opening of the archives of the USSR's former satellite states, journalist Alexenia Demetrova began to read through the documents of the KDS archive.
Starting point is 00:14:59 And it was there that she made a discovery. A section within the KDS called Service 7, Alexenia. Service 7 was not so big in the beginning. When I established it in 64, I read in the documents that they were only seven people, and I even have the list of the people. But in the late 60s, they become 20, even more, because they need more personal to carry on these tasks. Leafing through the documents,
Starting point is 00:15:28 Alexenia discovered that Service 7's... mission was to eliminate people like Markov, dissidents who'd left Bulgaria for the West, Richard Felix. Their targets were mainly emigres from Bulgaria, people that were dissidents that had left the country. Some of them were genuinely anti-Soviet and communism, and the whole idea was to eliminate them, one hell of a deterrent to stop anyone else from leaving Bulgaria and going to the West. Eliminating dissidents. Eliminating dissidents. on foreign soil at a time when relations between East and West were close to breaking point was a very dangerous task.
Starting point is 00:16:11 And the fact that the very existence of Service 7 has only recently come to light is due to the utmost secrecy in which they carried out their operations. Guy Walters. Normally we think of intelligence agencies, you know, bumping off people as simply a sort of fictional thing like the AAO agents in the Ian Fleming novel. who've got a license to kill. But Service 7 actually did have a license to kill from the very top echelons of the Bulgarian government.
Starting point is 00:16:40 And so therefore it had to be kept very, very secret because of course it's probably breaking technically Bulgaria's own laws and of course every law going everywhere else in the world. All its documentation is written in this highly-deniable style. So instead of having, you know, go and kill someone, it was go and carry out what was called a sharp measure, which is this sort of fantastic, sort of dark euphemism for literally ordering someone's death.
Starting point is 00:17:06 In order to discover more about what these so-called sharp measures entailed, we met a woman called Natalia Meneva in a park in Bulgaria's capital, Sofia. Like Markov, Natalia's father, Trachio Belapopsky, fled Bulgaria for the West in the early 1960s, and by 1964, Service 7 were ordered to eliminate him. Natalia. He was originally a student at a military school for translators. There he met my mother. After that, work began at the Ministry of Interior.
Starting point is 00:17:47 He began to engage in intelligence and was sent on a mission to Cambridge. Treycho had been an officer in Bulgaria for the KDS, and Natalia believes his posting to Cambridge, Cambridge led him to see the realities of the regime back home. Maybe he was much more awake and he saw what we saw in 1989. He saw it and understood the difference between West and East, that the East, really, as he says in his letter, is thrown into hell, is doomed. Maybe that's why he decided to flee to England.
Starting point is 00:18:38 But Treycho, perhaps due to his first-hand knowledge of KDS operations, lived in fear. Much later, through other acquaintances, I learned that he was afraid. He was convinced that they wanted him to be killed, even in London. He put bars on his window in his apartment. apartment and claimed to his relatives that they really were trying to kill him. And sure enough, his fears proved to be founded. Natalia tells us that Service 7 sent Trecho's father to England, under the guise of persuading his son to return to Bulgaria.
Starting point is 00:19:21 But they also gave his father a piece of salami to give to his son as a gift. But when they met, Treycho becomes a gift. Tretio becomes suspicious and gives the meat to a dog. His fears were soon confirmed. The dog died in agony. Tretcho had therefore survived, but from then on, he would live in fear of further attempts on his life. Natalia's testimony is compelling because it's evidence that Service 7
Starting point is 00:19:52 did have the capacity to attempt assassinations in the West. And like Georgie Markov, they did use poison in their attempt to kill Trecho. We ask Guy Walters to speculate why poison was their weapon of choice. For two reasons I suggest. The first is simply stealth. It's easier to get something like that through customs than it is a sniper rifle or a handgun or a hand grenade or a bomb.
Starting point is 00:20:17 That's the obvious thing. The other thing is it's all about fear. It is not a humane death. And this is why it's used. It's to instill terror. Terror is something that the Eastern Block is very good at promoting, and what better way to terrorize your enemies than say you're going to die and you're going to die horribly and it's going to take days.
Starting point is 00:20:37 There are, however, clear differences between the two cases. Markov was apparently murdered by a real agent on British soil. The attempt on Trecho's life came from poison, delivered by an innocent relative. The man that killed Markov used a far more sophisticated means of delivery. The famous umbrella modified to fire a poison pellet. Service 7 crudely attempted to trick Trecho into eating poison meat. And due to the requirement that Markov's death appear to be a natural one, he was killed with the far more sophisticated poison, ricin.
Starting point is 00:21:18 And this begs the question, did Service 7 have the means and technical knowledge to carry out Markov's far more elaborate assassination alone? Boris Validarski reveals to us that the Soviet Union's control over Bulgaria went beyond policy. The Secret Services of the Eastern Bloc had a very powerful master. Every secret service of every Soviet satellite country or was a packed country. They were under complete control of the Russian KGB. They had a representative in the appropriate ministry. They had a liaison officer with the secret service.
Starting point is 00:21:58 and they were completely controlling all secret services of all former socialist countries. It's difficult today to comprehend the sheer scale of Russia's KGB. With their 480,000 personnel, the KGB infiltrated every major Western intelligence operation. They placed an agent of influence in almost every major capital city in the world. And they became, quite simply, the world's largest foreign country. largest foreign intelligence service. The KGB also instructed Bulgaria in how to build their own Soviet-style security service, the KDS.
Starting point is 00:22:38 And once it was up and running, Bulgaria's President Shivkov took things further. To ensure that he and his regime had the backing of the Kremlin, he personally assured Moscow that his intelligence service was a mere branch of the KGB. Most of Bulgaria's foreign intelligence operatives were trained at the KGB Academy in Moscow, and the KDS became utterly subservant to their Russian counterpart. But the loyalty that Zhivkov had bought them from Russia not only helped prop up his regime, it also gave it access to the operational and technical expertise of the KGB. More specifically, the products of two laboratories in Moscow.
Starting point is 00:23:24 There were two laboratories. One laboratory was working on poisons, on specific poisons that cannot be traced. And this is a laboratory which was set up by Lenin in 1917. This laboratory is given a very specific task to come up with a poison that when given to Markov would not only kill him, but kill him in such a way that it looked as if he died of natural causes. This would ensure that Markov would not be seen as a martyr by those sympathetic to his cause.
Starting point is 00:23:57 The poison they choose is ricin. Found in castor seeds, it's been calculated that just 10 grams would be enough to kill 30,000 people. And after its use, not only do the symptoms take time to develop, but when they do, they're easily dismissed as natural for those not in the know. With the decision made to use ricin, The job of the second KGB laboratory is to come up with a method of delivering the poison
Starting point is 00:24:28 without arousing suspicion. Another laboratory was working on special guns, that is working on the objects that could be used as a weapon to kill somebody. Any object might do. This weapons laboratory was like Kew Branch and James Bond. The KGB engineers developed weapons disguised in all manner of everyday objects from pens that literally drip poison to knives and even newspapers modified to shoot bullets. For the assassination of Georgie Markov, the laboratory chooses to modify an umbrella.
Starting point is 00:25:05 The KGB convert the tip into a gun that would silently shoot the ricin pellet into its victim. Testimony from a former member of the KGB reveals that the development of the poison and the delivery method took over a year and a half of traumatic trial and error. The ricin and the umbrella are made in two KGB laboratories before being flown to Bulgaria for the KDS to test. A Bulgarian operative fires the first ricin pellet into a horse, which soon dies. The second pellet is tested on a Bulgarian prisoner, but the ricin fails to release and And he survives.
Starting point is 00:25:49 Further experiments back in Moscow then refine the technique. But when the weapon is first used on the streets, the target is not Markov. Ten days before Markov's assassination, Bulgarian defector Vladimir Kostov is ascending an escalator from the Paris Metro at the Arc de Triomphe. He suddenly feels a sharp sting and turns to notice a man with an umbrella running away. He carries on with his day until he starts to become ill. He suffers an agony for 48 hours, but survives. It's determined that the assassination attempt fails
Starting point is 00:26:30 because he was wearing such a heavy sweater that the pellet did not penetrate deep enough into his body to reach his bloodstream. Service 7 will not make the same mistake with Georgie Markov, and a date is set for his death. As a cruel joke, he will be assassinated on President Zhivkov's birthday, September 7, 1978. And they now select the agent to be given the deadly task. The Bulgarians employed one of the agents, which is today said to be Agent Piccadilly, who lived in Denmark.
Starting point is 00:27:05 Agent Piccadilly is most likely the codename of Francesco Gelino. An Italian by birth, after his recruitment in Bulgaria, he had been set up in Copenhagen undercover as an antique stealer. It's alleged that it was Geelino who was sent to Britain to eliminate Markov. And so, Agent Piccadilly, with his orders from Bulgaria and Umbrella Gunn and Reison from Russia, is the man who carries out the hit. This is how it happened. Agent Piccadilly makes his way to Waterloo Bridge
Starting point is 00:27:42 and spots Georgie Markov standing at a bus stop a few hundred meters away, exactly as anticipated. He makes his way towards Markov, careful to appear normal and unrushed. Markov is 200 meters away, then 100. Piccadilly gets jostled by morning commuters, then 50. Then 25, he swears he can hear his own heartbeat. Then 10.
Starting point is 00:28:15 Then 5, he tightens his grip on his umbrella. Now is the moment. His target is right in front of him, facing away. With a swift movement, he swings the KGB's umbrella out in front of him. Its pointed tip makes contact with the back of Markov's leg. And then he pulls the trigger. The ricin pellet is fired into Markov's leg. Piccadilly clumsily drops the umbrella.
Starting point is 00:28:44 He quickly grabs it off the pavement and dashes across the road and jumps into a waiting black cab and disappears. Markov suspects nothing at this point, but would later recall Piccadilly dropping the umbrella. Piccadilly's part of the operation has been successful. Now it's time for the ricin to do its work. Markov continues on his way to work, but at the BBC, he notices a red spot on his leg and becomes feverish.
Starting point is 00:29:18 His symptoms worsen at home that evening, and he takes himself to Ballam Hospital. He mentions to the doctors that he believes himself to have been poisoned, but this knowledge won't save him. As the KGB had planned, the ricin confound the British doctors. Four days after the attack on Waterloo Bridge, Markov is dead. The man who most likely pulled the trigger, Francesco Jilino, would be investigated multiple times in the coming years, but with the relevant records missing from the Bulgarian archives, he would never be brought to trial. The case officially remains open. President Todar Zhivkov's
Starting point is 00:30:04 popularity would later decline. and in November 1989, his 35-year rule of Bulgaria came to an end, when he was ousted by his own party. The revolutions in the Eastern Bloc in 1989 and the dissolution of the Soviet Union marked the end of the Cold War, and the opening of previously classified archives is beginning to shed light on the activities of the Eastern Bloc's most secret operatives. But Boris Volodarsky argues that,
Starting point is 00:30:36 While the Cold War is over, that covert spy war hasn't gone away. It's merely evolved. Today, spying is about recruiting people who can influence public opinion to get decisions in favor of what the politicians want them to do, or want the countries to do, the European Union to do, this sort of things. And in our modern globalized world, it is in fact much easier. in the times of the Cold War, it was very difficult to travel abroad. While today, almost anybody can travel abroad,
Starting point is 00:31:13 spying became very easy. Anybody can settle in a country, in this country or in any Western country. There are much more spies working today in the West. It's 10 times more than during the Cold War, the whole Cold War. Today, Georgie Markov is buried in Dorset in Southern England. On his gravestone is the inscription, died in the cause of freedom. And while Service 7 may have been consigned to history,
Starting point is 00:31:42 continued unexplained deaths on the world streets remind us that their so-called sharp measures are still very much in use today. Next time on Forbidden History. I don't think Ludwig was mad. I think that Ludwig was eccentric. After being declared insane and take it into custody, the so-called Mad King of Bavaria,
Starting point is 00:32:11 was found floating in two feet of water. Timing is everything. He was forced to be removed from Neuschenstein. Within 24 hours, he was in the castle of Berg, and he was dead. But was his death the tragic result of suicide, or the murder of a crown monarch? The death of King Ludwig, to my mind, certainly looks like it could have been a murder.
Starting point is 00:32:32 And I find it very strange that we still can't see the bones of King Ludwig. Because I think they'll probably show that Ludwig was shot. In The Madness of King Ludwig II. Probidden History was Like a Shot Entertainment production. Produced by Matt Bone, executive producers Henry Scott, Steve Gillum, and Danny O'Brien. Edit and Sound Design by James McGee and Liam Clayton for Arafon Limited.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.