Heart Starts Pounding: Horrors, Hauntings, and Mysteries - Vanished in The Wilderness Pt 1: The Professor Disappears
Episode Date: August 24, 2023When Boris Weisfeiler embarked on a solo vacation to Chile, he never returned. What came next was a deeper and darker rabbit hole than anyone could have ever expected Subscribe on Patreon for bonus co...ntent and to become a member of our Rogue Detecting Society. Follow on Tik Tok and Instagram for a daily dose of horror. We have a monthly newsletter now! Be sure to sign up for updates and more. Heart Starts Pounding is written and produced by Kaelyn Moore. Shownotes: www.heartstartspounding.com/episodes/boris1Â
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It's summer, and you're sitting at your kitchen table
planning your next vacation.
You're trying to think through everything.
What time you'll arrive, how you'll get to the hotel.
Even on the most relaxed and chill vacations,
a lot of details need to be meticulously planned out.
But there's so much trip planning
that's outside of your control.
There's so many unknown unknowns.
And when you're far away from home, if you find yourself in the unknown, there's not
always someone around to help.
I've always had a fear of disappearing while on vacation, ever since I was little.
The chances of it happening are low, but I remember being in high school and hearing
stories of Natalie Holloway or Brittany Drexel, girls who were my age when they embarked
on a trip of a lifetime and never made it back.
It seems like you can do everything right.
You can book stays in the safest parts of town, you can study the neighborhoods and the
political climate of the country you're traveling to to stay out of harm's way. You can
be on a class trip with shoparounds like Natalie was, and you can still be in the wrong place at the wrong time.
You still can't account for the unknown unknowns.
Today's episode is exactly that. It's about a seasoned traveler taking a vacation that should have been a relaxing recharge.
But instead, it turned into one of the most shocking, wrong place at the wrong time cases
I've ever heard.
A hiker who stumbled upon and unknown that many of us haven't ever heard of, still to this
day.
Let's dive in.
It's that feeling.
When the energy and the room shifts,
when the air gets sucked out of a moment,
and everything starts to feel wrong,
it's the instinct between fight or flight.
When your brain is trying to make sense of what it's seeing,
it's when your heart starts pounding. Welcome to Heart Starts Pounding, a podcast of horrors, hauntings, and mysteries. I'm your host, Kaelin Moore. This is a community for people who love to follow their dark curiosity wherever it may
lead them.
And we are doing quite the deep dive today.
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There are many parts to today's topic. It's full of twists and turns, cover-ups, declassified documents, and historical context.
I wanted to make sure I got this story right, and it took a lot of research.
So today's story is going to be told in two parts, because I wanted to take the time
and do the research it would take to tell you the full story in depth. So this is part one of the disappearance
of Boris Weissviler.
Christmas Eve 1984. American professor of mathematics, Boris Weissviler
boards a plane from New York to Chile. He was embarking on a 10-day solo
backpacking trip through the Chilean wilderness at the foothills of the Andes mountain range.
Boris was 43 at the time, and according to his sister Olga, the older he got, the more he liked to take vacations by himself,
for going, relaxing beach vacations for more strenuous, solo backpacking trips in foreign countries.
Even though the siblings lived thousands of miles apart, Olga and Boris were incredibly close.
Boris had come to America in 1975, fleeing persecution in Russia.
There, he had been a professor, but was declared anti-Soviet after he refused to condemn one
of his colleagues.
Boris, being a Jewish man, believed that his department had anti-Semitic ideology at
the time, and he chose to relocate to the US.
Olga stayed in Moscow,
but they would chat over the phone about Boris's
various adventures.
He had been all over the world.
He'd seen the Arctic Circle,
Ben-Dissiberia and the Canadian North,
even Uzbekistan a stand right above Afghanistan
He'd horrify her with stories of bears and other dangerous wildlife
But when she asked if that would ever make him stop his travels
He replied that animals weren't the danger
people were
This solo trip to Chile was going to be like the others
were. This solo trip to Chile was going to be like the others. Boris actually thought that the travel to the remote part of Chile he was going to was probably going to be more
strenuous than the actual hike. He needed to first take a short flight from Penn State where he
worked to Pittsburgh, then another flight from Pittsburgh to New York where he would board
a 14-hour flight to Santiago Chile. From there, he'd have to take a bus 400 kilometers to San Fabian
where his trip would start. On him, he had a bright red hiking backpack, full of supplies,
identification, his wallet, as well as his plane ticket to return home on January 14th.
He could pack light, though it was winter in the states, it was a warm and pleasant summer in the
southern hemisphere, so hardly a jacket would be needed. He arrived on Christmas Day 1985.
The plan was to spend a few days in San Fabian
and then trek into the Chilean wilderness.
When he was there, he wouldn't have any way
to contact anyone.
So he called the sister Olga
before he would no longer have any way to communicate.
And he told her that he would talk to her
when he was back in San Fabian.
And then he trekked into the forest.
Fast forward two weeks.
January 12, 1985.
The day that Boris is supposed to return to the town of San Fabian.
It would be the first day since he stepped into the wilderness that he would have
any way to contact the outside world. And Olga sat by the phone, eagerly awaiting his
call. But that day, Boris doesn't call. Olga gives it some time. Plain delays, weather,
missed connections, it was the 80s and she didn't really have any
other option to get in touch with them and see what the delay was.
So she figures he'll just call when he can.
Hours pass and he still hadn't called her.
Boris had a flight scheduled to New York to arrive home on the 14th, so she decided to wait for him
to get back to the States before freaking out, even though she was already getting nervous.
January 14th comes, and there's still no word from Boris.
This was not like her brother, so Olga calls the police once she realizes that he most
likely did not make it back to the states.
Their response was that he probably chose to extend his stay in Chile and that it was nothing to worry about.
Why would he come back to freezing Pennsylvania so fast when he could soak up the sun a little longer?
But Boris had a firm date that he needed to be back home by.
Classes were supposed to start back up at Penn State on January 19th. But when that day comes,
with still no word from Boris, the university starts getting nervous as well. Both Olga and the
university get in touch with the US State Department to notify them that Boris
definitely did not make it home from Chile. Now it's in the hands of the government to figure out
exactly what's going on. There's not really much that Olga can do now. She keeps calling Boris's home phone, but each time no one picks up. And now she's
thinking that no one wants to help her. The police still think he's just extended his
stay, but what she's unaware of is that thousands of miles away. Deep in the wilderness of Chile, there's already an investigation happening into Boris's disappearance.
That's right. By the time the State Department calls to report Boris missing,
someone had already tipped off Chilean authorities to a foreigner's arrival in the area Boris was last seen, and local police are searching for the
professor.
It turns out that on January 3rd, Boris was crossing the Nubley River when he ran into
two local shepherds in the area.
They were kind to Boris.
They offered him food and a place to stay for the night.
Though, it's hard to imagine how much they really spoke because Boris didn't speak a word
of Spanish.
The next day, Boris was on his way again.
But as he was leaving the area he met the two shepherds in, he runs into another man.
Luis Lopez, who is the brother of one of the shepherds.
Luis and Boris don't speak, but they see each other, and this sighting is important
because now, Luis is the last person to see Boris alive.
Luis got a weird feeling about seeing Boris in the wilderness. And he ended up calling local police, the Kata Beneros, to report his sighting.
See, this was a time of political turmoil in the country of Chile.
And this fact becomes really important in our story.
In 1984, Chile was under control of a dictator, Augusto Pinochet, whose
rule was defined by crimes against humanity, torturing and killing political prisoners,
and fiercely oppressing the citizens of Chile. But by the time Boris entered the country,
Chileans had over 10 years of Pinochet's reign of terror.
It was a chaotic time, politically, but that didn't stop Boris from visiting.
He told a friend he felt the current political climate made the trip more exciting.
Plus, he was going to be in the wilderness, hundreds of miles away from any real threat. But when Louis saw Boris,
he saw a man, not from Chile, with military style olive pants wandering in the forest.
And he was worried. Boris' outfit resembled an army uniform more than it resembled hiking clothes.
outfit, resembled an army uniform, more than it resembled hiking clothes. Was he part of an invasion? Was he a political prisoner illegally re-entering the country?
Luis was worried that a political extremist was crossing back into Chile from Argentina.
So he rang the local police to tell them about a strange foreigner in military garb wandering
around the woods, like he had been instructed to do under Pinochet's regime.
Officers came to the area to search for Boris, but they were unable to find him.
They were able, however, to find boot tracks that they believed belonged to him, leading
to the bank of the Los
Sosses River where it crossed with the Nubley River, and then disappearing.
None of this was being relayed to Boris's sister Olga, who was still in her
apartment in Russia, panicked. She had no idea that Boris had met people in the
mountains, or that the US government was aware of the
shepherds that spoke with him.
It wasn't until months later that she learned anything about her brother's disappearance
at all.
In March, three months after Boris disappeared, she gets her hands on a private investigators
report. The Sociedad de Matikas in Chile hired a private investigator, Oscar DurĂ¡n,
to look into the disappearance of the American professor.
The Sociedad was looking out for a fellow mathematics professor,
and they felt that nothing was being done to find Boris.
Reading this report is when Olga learns a few shocking things.
First, on January 22nd, the US was made aware that the Katabaneros in Chile found something by where where Boris was camping. A bright red backpack after the break.
So, Olga learns that Boris' backpack was maybe found in this report. The US was told
that the backpack was found in the bank of the river and that it was soaking wet.
The pack was found in the bank of the river and that it was soaking wet. They suggested this was probably because Boris had drowned.
This doesn't sit right with Olga.
Boris drowning?
He had been on much more truturous trips.
Plus the rivers in the area he was hiking were slow and shallow.
It would be difficult to drown just from crossing.
You'd have to fall and hit your head on something in order to drown.
And that just didn't sound like Boris?
The report mentioned how the Vice-Consul of the US Embassy, Edward Arrazabalaga,
had traveled down to Chile to get a better sense of what's going on.
And he makes a few startling discoveries. First, there's some controversy over whether or not
Boris' backpack was dry or wet when it was picked up. It sounds like a small detail, but it's the difference between it being plausible
that he drowned or not.
If the backpack was washed onto the bank from the river,
that looks much more like a drowning
than if it was just found sitting on dry land.
Second, not all of Boris' belongings were still in the backpack.
His passport, camera, cash, and plane ticket home were missing. Inside the backpack,
there was still his credit card and Pennsylvania ID. The report said that Chilean police
strongly suggest that this was a drowning.
They claimed the river was deceptively strong, and Boris was trying to cross at a junction
where it would have been easy for him to be swept away.
But that doesn't explain the important items that were missing from his backpack.
In February of 1985, the US gets a call.
Someone needs to go down to Chile, it's urgent.
There's an update in the case.
Chilean police believe they have Boris' body.
On February 11th, around 9am, the body of a middle-aged man was found about 70 kilometers
downriver from where Boris' backpack was found.
Edward asked for the fingerprints to be taken from the body to help identify Boris, but
he was informed that they couldn't do that.
The skin on the fingers just where the prints would be had peeled off.
He's told that that's to be expected when finding a body in water, especially since
it was the summer and decomposition would happen so quickly. But even considering that,
when Edward sees the corpse, he doesn't think it looks like someone who drowned over a month ago.
Decomposition had sunk in, but even still, this person did not look like Boris.
Within a few hours, another man comes into the morgue and identifies the body as his brother,
a Chilean man who had drowned only five days prior.
According to the report, police had already searched the rivers for Boris and had found nothing.
So if he drowned and this was not him, they had no idea where he could be.
Nothing about this report sits right with Olga.
Those specific items missing from his backpack
are setting off alarm bells.
If this was adrowning as it were being heavily suggested,
it wouldn't make sense that only a few items
were missing from his bag.
And what about where the bag was found?
The Chilean police now claimed it was
fished out of the river by a fisherman, but the vice-console of the U.S. Embassy was
told it was found on dry land. The report doesn't sit well with the university that hired
the PI either. They seem to think that the PI just spoke to local police and wrote down
what they said in the report. There wasn't a lot of actual investigation that was done.
And as if this isn't enough, there's one sentence At the bottom of the last page, almost written like a throwaway line.
The report reads, quote,
The possibility that Dr. Weisfeiler entered the Dignidad colony can be discarded since it
is more than 100 kilometers from the place where he was last seen.
This line seems random to Olga.
What is the Dignidad Colony?
And what did it have to do with her brother's disappearance?
Why was it even important enough to mention that he wasn't anywhere near this place?
At the time, there was not much information available about the Dignidad colony, which
was known in Chile as the Colonia Dignidad.
So Olga was most likely confused when seeing those words.
But there were rumors of a shadowy organization operating in the wilderness near the Andes mountains.
And in the 80s, if you were to look into the
Colonia Dignidad, you may find the words cult and Nazi come up. But concrete information
would have been hard to find. For whatever reason, the private investigator thought it was important to mention that
this mysterious group had nothing to do with Boris' disappearance.
So, that was all the information that Olga was given in the report.
Boris had drowned under suspicious circumstances, but there wasn't any more to it.
The report had mentioned that it would be too much money to research the areas they had
already searched for Boris in, so there wouldn't be any more dives in the river or helicopter
searches.
It seemed like they would find him if they find him, but there were no more resources
to look.
And so the book was closed on Olga.
Chile officially declared Boris dead in early March, though the only evidence he drowned
was that his backpack was maybe wet.
That's all the information Olga had.
She tried to contact the US Embassy multiple times, but each time the
Soviet Union would question her and give her a warning. She couldn't go to the United States
because her and Boris's mother had a stroke that left her partially paralyzed and unable
to talk, so Olga needed to be there for her. But she wasn't the only one fighting for information on
Boris. In June of 1985, the Penn State Math Department, where Boris had worked, had filed
a freedom of information act request to obtain more information on Boris' disappearance.
And for months, nothing came. But then, 15 months later, there was a reply.
Fall 1986, a one-page document is released to Penn State.
On the top and bottom, in all caps and underline reads, eyes only, marking its classified information status.
No copies, no photos, eyes only.
The document is from the Consul General dated April 10, 1985,
just about a month after Boris was declared dead.
It reads,
New information has recently been received,
which indicated that the boundaries of Colonya Digny-Dod
are more extensive than have been previously thought.
They extend very close to the river Nubley,
if not in fact to the river itself.
Thus, at the time of his disappearance,
Vice-Filer was either on or very near the Colonia property.
I feel that it is vital that this new information
be transmitted to the department immediately
by secure telephone.
So the weird line in the report,
the one about Boris not being on the Colonia Dignidad's
property that Olga thought was strange, was a lie after all.
And beyond that, here the US government was calling it a disappearance.
They said Boris's disappearance, not death.
So they believed he could still be alive.
But despite this massive discovery, it was the only piece of evidence that Olga and Penn
State received that Boris might be alive.
So time marched on.
In 1992, Pennsylvania officially declared Boris dead.
At that point, Olga was living in the United States
after her mother died in 1987.
She was teaching herself English
and looking anywhere she could for information.
But for 15 years after Boris disappeared, there wouldn't be much.
In the late 90s, Pinochet was ousted as the dictator of Chile and was arrested in London
after he fled the country.
While all of this is happening, US President Bill Clinton declassified thousands of documents
related to his dictatorship.
Soon information started flowing from the government into the hands of the people, detailing the
crimes against humanity Chileans faced while under Pinochet's regime.
At this time, Olga was working in living outside of Boston,
Massachusetts, with her daughter Anna.
She had a PhD in microbiology from Russia,
but she had to downplay her credentials
in order to find work in the US.
On a normal afternoon in 2000, a FedEx driver
approached Olga's front door and dropped off a non-descript box.
It's heavy and strange.
Olga hadn't ordered anything she could remember, and the return address isn't anywhere she
recognizes. When Olga opens the box, she sees it's something she could have never imagined.
Inside, there's 250 declassified documents, all of them pertaining to Boris's disappearance,
and all of them from the years 1985 to 2000.
It turns out the United States had declassified thousands of documents about the Colonia Dignidad,
the mysterious organization briefly mentioned Embores' report,
and it's revealed that the rumors about this group were true.
And it's worse than anyone imagined.
The Colonia dignidad was occult started by a pedophile Nazi
named Paul Schaefer.
He had fled arrest in Germany after the Holocaust
and established his religious compound in the foothills of the
Andy's Mountains. Pinochet was made aware of the cult's existence, and instead of shutting it
down, he would send political prisoners to shaffer for the cult to torture and murder. And if that's not wild enough, when the US declassified all of their documents
pertaining to the Kolenia Dignidad, inside their filing cabinet of documents about the
cult, was a massive folder labeled Boris Weisfeiler. And that was what was sent to Olga. She couldn't believe it, so she just stared at the
piles of papers, unsure where to start. The first document she picked up out of the pile was a
translation of an interview that happened years ago. In 1987, two years after Boris' disappearance, an anonymous Chilean army official who went
by Daniel had approached the head of the Chilean Human Rights Committee and the US Embassy.
He told them that he knew the Colonia Dignidad had picked up Boris and was holding him in
the prison camp as late as 1987.
This changed everything for Olga, who was now dedicated to reading through every document
in the box to see what information she could learn about her brothers' whereabouts.
But to really understand what was happening, and why Boris had gotten mixed up in it.
We need to do a deep dive into what exactly the Kulania Dignidad was.
Next week, I'm going to take you through the history of the cult, and what that meant
for Boris and Olga Weisweiler.
This has been Heart Starts Pounding, written and produced by me, Kaelin Moore.
Sound design and mix by Pete Treesound.
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