Stuff You Should Know - Who are the Zizians?
Episode Date: June 19, 2025The story of the Zizians is an unusual one. Are they a cult? Or are they simply a group who wants a better world? And why have six deaths in three states been linked to them?See omnystudio.com/listene...r for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an iHeart Podcast.
Have you ever thought about going voiceover? I'm Hope Woodard, a comedian, creator,
and seeker of male validation. I'm also the girl behind voiceover, the movement that exploded
in 2024. You might hear that term and think it's about celibacy, but to me, voiceover is about understanding
yourself outside of sex and relationships. It's flexible, it's customizable, and it's a personal
process. Singleness is not a waiting room. You are actually at the party right now.
Let me hear it. Listen to voiceover on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
A lot of times, big economic forces show up in our lives in small ways.
Four days a week, I would buy two cups of banana pudding, but the price has gone up.
So now I only buy one.
Small but important ways.
From tech billionaires to the bond market to, yeah, banana pudding.
If it's happening in business business our new podcast is on it
I'm max Chaston and I'm Stacey Vanik Smith
So listen to everybody's business on the iHeartRadio app Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts
Welcome to stuff you should know a production of iHeartRadio
of iHeartRadio. MUSIC
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too and this is
Stuff You Should Know. This is I guess a timely topical true crime edition, the three T's.
COA Alert.
Yeah.
I feel I should sound the clacks on on this one.
Yeah, we're issuing a COA on this one, a pretty robust one, because A, this is something
we don't do a lot, which is tackle true crime in almost real time as far as the fact that
none of this has settled.
The alleged crimes, we're probably going to say alleged a lot because there's not even
been court dates a lot of times for some of these cases.
We're talking about potentially six murders in three states by a group that may or may
not have done it, that may or may not be a cult.
So just a big COA there.
This is one of the true crimes where neither one, neither one of us are gonna be like,
well, here's my theory on this, because just who knows?
This has got to play out first.
And the other big COA is a lot of sort of a disproportionate amount of members of the
Zizians who we're gonna be talking about are members of the trans community.
And it's just one of the sort of facts of the case.
It's obviously no suggestion or judgment on our part of the trans community and it's just one of the sort of facts of the case. There's obviously no suggestion or judgment on our part of the trans community,
but it seems to be a big sort of part of this group of people who got together.
So just kind of keep all that in mind as we lay all this out there.
Right.
Nice work, Chuck.
Thank you for that.
Yeah.
So like you said, we're talking about the Zizzians.
How'd you hear about this?
This is your pick.
You know what?
I have no idea.
I even went to look to see if somebody has suggested it and no one had.
I think I might have just seen a news story and been like, wait a minute, this is something
that hasn't been a 10 part Netflix series yet.
So it must be super, super current, which it is.
My theory is that the great Gezoo said, do one on the zizzians, dumb dumb.
Yeah.
And you were like, I should do it on the zizzians.
Yeah.
Thanks for bringing a joke into this thing.
So, uh, the zizzians are called such because they center around Ziz, um, a
trans woman who is often portrayed as the leader of this cult.
Uh, and I mean, you can make a pretty fair case that at the very least she's who is often portrayed as the leader of this cult.
And I mean, you can make a pretty fair case
that at the very least,
she's the leader or the most influential member
because the whole thing's named after her.
Although we should say that this group of people
do not call themselves the Zizians.
That was a name that was given to them
by somebody who's critical of them
and an anonymous person who's critical of them.
But Ziz herself, we know was born in 1991
in Fairbanks, Alaska, and like the other people
that she attracts into her orbit, she was brilliant.
I mean, very precocious as far as like
working on computers goes, as far as mathematics goes.
I think by the time she was at the University of Fairbanks
in Alaska, she had internships at both Oracle,
the cloud computing company, and NASA.
So I mean, like, she had a pretty great resume,
I guess, is what you'd say if you're on LinkedIn.
Yeah, for sure.
And like you said, this is going to be sort of a common thing
with everyone who got together with Ziz and the others.
So in college, Ziz started learning about what's called the rationalist movement or the rationalist community, which were also very science-minded people. They kind of gathered around Silicon Valley.
And one of the big things with rationalism is, and a lot of this stuff makes sense, like a lot of the stuff that they're laying down, like, hey, let's use logical tools to just
always question ourselves, let's not get set in our way of thinking about anything, let's
always revise what we're thinking about everything.
And one of the key people here, one of the names that you'll hear early and then later
on is a guy named Eliezer Udkowski who is an AI researcher
who is kind of doing something different than what a lot of AI researchers are doing in
that he has devoted much of his career to basically saying, hey, warning, this could
really go wrong and I'm going to do everything I can to make sure it goes down in the right
way.
Yeah, he dedicated himself to solving the AI alignment problem, which is how do you create
an artificial intelligence whose motivations
are totally aligned with humans
and we don't accidentally wipe ourselves out
with the AI we create.
Yeah.
And like you said, it kind of flies in the face
of especially what's going on these days,
which is like, hurry up and build an AI
or else China's gonna do it first and we're gonna lose out
and there's so much money to be made off of AI.
And Eliezer Yudkowsky is a very, very interesting dude.
He's a self-taught AI researcher, incredibly brilliant.
And just by happenstance, I got an email yesterday
from somebody at a publishing house
that mentioned that he has a new book
coming out in September
With Nate source one of his collaborators
It's called if anyone builds it everyone dies and it's about AI
And from what I understand he's title he's thrown in the towel. He's basically said it's it's too late
we are not going to be able to create a friendly AI because not enough people are working on it.
And it's about to happen any day now where super intelligent AI is going to come out.
And so we have to figure out how to let humanity die off in the most dignified manner is how I saw it described.
Right.
Which doesn't have a whole lot to do with the Zizians, but that just
sets up kind of who this guy is.
In 2009, he founded a blog called Less Wrong,
as in let's do less wrong.
And I mean, I assume that's what it means.
It means, so it's about overcoming your biases.
Like you wanna be less wrong kind of,
it's all about thinking clearly
and not letting your biases guide your thinking, I think.
Yeah, so they started gathering as, I guess, a de facto sort of community of rationalists.
A lot of this, again, is taking place in and around Silicon Valley and Northern California.
And he founded a couple of Berkeley, California-based organizations that will come into play,
the Machine Intelligence Research Institute,
or MIRI, and again that's about you know minimizing the risks of AI, and then the
Center for Applied Rationality, or CFAR, and again same deal, clear unbiased
thinking is what they're after, never getting too set in your ways and always
trying to revise how you think about things.
Right, they're also very closely tied with effective altruism,
which is essentially using rational thinking
to donate your money to the greatest good.
We did an episode on that, if I'm not mistaken.
We did, my friend.
All of this attracted Ziz to move from Alaska
down to the Bay Area in San Francisco.
And she got involved with CFAR, got involved with Miri,
and dedicated herself also to trying to figure out
this AI alignment problem too.
The thing about this rationalist community
is they are as open as you can be.
You can be a Nazi and show up and be like,
I'm a Nazi and here's what I think about everything.
And they will engage you in debate
because that's just what they do.
They like know thought processes off the table.
And that attracted a lot of interesting people
who were, the average normie would probably not necessarily
feel comfortable sitting in a room with,
just because, you know, of awkwardness, but also because they probably wouldn't have much to converse about, because the people we're talking about in this rationalist community are so brilliant,
that they probably would not be able to relate to the average person and vice versa.
Yeah, or at the very least on some of the radical fringes of whatever movement that they're in.
Or at the very least, on some of the radical fringes of whatever movement that they're in.
Ziz is one of those people and started writing on the less wrong side in her own blog and
writing about, again, stuff that's on the more radical end of the spectrum, like, hey,
we got a sort of 12 monkeys kind of stuff.
Like, hey, we got to do whatever it takes.
Some people might think something we're doing is evil,
but if it's in the service of what we think has a good end,
then that's what we should do.
Sometimes she calls herself a Sith,
as in, you know, Star Wars.
And apparently the name Ziz comes from a speculative fiction
story called Worm that a lot of rationalists love
in which Ziz in the story is a villainous
entity that if they are listened to for too long, you will go crazy.
And so Ziz is all of a sudden hanging around the Bay Area, going to these rationalist hangouts
and meetings, wearing black robes and sort of dressed like a Sith.
So all this is what, around 2016, 17,
that this is all starting, that Ziz is showing up.
And again, like I said, this community is very open.
So even though Ziz would show up wearing black robes,
declaring herself a Sith Lord
and that that's her religion as Sith.
But despite that community being open,
she still stood out, not necessarily
because she wore black robes and called herself the Sith,
but more because she was more intensely devoted
and dedicated than even the average rationalist, right?
So she did stand out some.
One of the other things that she was radically dedicated to
was veganism and animal rights.
And this would actually end up separating her
from the rationalist community eventually.
And that you can kind of make a case, it seems like, is the initial schism that caused this wedge that led to all the events that would follow.
Yeah, like basically, hey, you're trying to protect human life.
Like, what about the animals?
Like, every sentient animal is a person.
And these are the Ziz's words.
And so we gotta kick up the intensity
on the animal front as well.
The problem with all of this is that this was around San Francisco
and Silicon Valley where it's really, really expensive to live.
And if you're someone like Ziz, you're not going out
and getting some big tech job where
you're making tons of money to afford that condo downtown.
So you got to live somewhere.
And this is when Ziz meets up with somebody named Gwen Danielson.
Had a lot in common.
Another rationalist, another trans woman, another person who is very much into animal
rights.
And Gwen happened to live on a sailboat in Berkeley Marina and said, hey, who is very much into animal rights, and Gwen happened to live on
a sailboat in Berkeley Marina and said, hey, this is much cheaper rent here.
Why don't you just come and live on this boat with me?
I'm also into math.
I'm also into science.
And I'm also have some pretty radical ideas about stuff.
Yeah.
And so the point of this was, if you, and this is Ziz's belief, if you could free yourself
from things like paying rent,
especially the high rent of San Francisco,
and keep your costs down to as minimal as possible,
you could devote that much more time
to figuring out the AI alignment problem,
figuring out how to push CIFAR and MIRI
into protecting animal rights too.
Like just thinking and learning to think better.
That was kind of the point. And so I
think Ziz initially moved into the sailboat with Gwen Danielson, found that they were not quite
exactly compatible roommate-wise, but still friends. And so Ziz bought her own sailboat
and docked it at the same marina in Berkeley. And they became what was called the rationalist fleet.
Berkeley and they became what was called the Rationalist Fleet.
This, they invited more and more people to come join them at the marina and they actually went so far as to buy an old tugboat that by this time
was in its seventies or eighties, maybe not like, not a good age for a tugboat.
And they actually bought it from Alaskan, tugged it down or sailed
it down all the way to San Francisco.
Yeah, the name of this boat was Caleb.
So now it's in Half Moon Bay, south of San Francisco.
And Caleb was a problem though.
Cable, like you said, was an old boat, an old World War II era tugboat.
So it wasn't like, you know, even like a mid 70s houseboat would have been a better option probably.
This thing, they couldn't, they had a hard time anchoring it.
It was too expensive to maintain.
It would drift out of control and hit other boats.
So it was not everything they thought it was going to be.
So just sort of park that for now.
I'm going to say that a lot because we're going to be parking a lot of things as this jumps around. At this point, we have to introduce some new characters to the scene.
Again, had a lot in common with Ziz and Gwen in that they were very smart, very much into math and science.
Some were trans and some were non-binary.
And the first player here is someone named Emma Baranian, a programmer,
worked at Google but left
Google because they thought the company was corrupt.
Yes, and we should say these people fell into Ziz's orbit because Ziz was a prolific
blogger and blogged in a way that like a lot of the language and thoughts and
ideas were impenetrable to all but a certain group of
people and these were the people that she ended up attracting through her blog. There's a really
great Guardian article about all of this written by Oliver Conroy and Conroy says that there was a
glossary that somebody gave him that one of the one of Zig's blog followers created of Zig's words and that when he printed it out, it was 48 pages long.
So like she had a certain thing going on that attracted a certain kind of person.
And these were the people who were falling into their into her orbit at this time.
And we should also say all of these people were in their early to mid 20s.
I think Ziz was the oldest maybe at the time at 26.
So they were all disaffected, brilliant,
often trans, vegan, 20-somethings
who were living very close to homelessness
in San Francisco in the late 2000 teams.
Yeah, so the second person was Alex Leatham,
occasionally known as Somni, a mathematician in this case.
Went to UCLA, studied at UC Berkeley as well.
Then we have Michelle Zoshko, a biometrics researcher,
another smarty pants.
And then someone named Alice Munday,
who was Zoshko's girlfriend and a
bit of a mentor apparently according to Ziz, to Ziz. And they started sort of just
getting together talking about their ideas. They came up with a name for one of their
theories or sort of their overarching theory called vegan anarcho-transhumanism. And
Gwen Danielson
developed this idea that the hemispheres of the brain were basically separate and
they could operate independently from one another you can be different genders
at the same time you can be good and evil or good or evil at the same time and
they started these experiments called unit unit hemispheric sleep where they
were saying you can be asleep and awake
at the same time.
One can be asleep and then one can be active and awake.
And we say this because there are people that have accused Ziz and others in the group of
basically keeping you sleep deprived through these experiments, potentially leading to
a couple of suicides that we'll talk about.
And again, I have no judgment on whether or not they are a cult or not at this point,
but if you're making a case for cult, sleep deprivation is a very big hallmark of something
that oftentimes happens.
Yeah, that's like chapter two in the cult leader's playbook.
Yeah.
We should say also that unihemispheric sleep theoretically is possible.
Humans don't do it, but dolphins do, whales do, migratory birds do.
So it's not like it just doesn't exist.
It's humans trying to figure out how to do it themselves
so they could think longer,
more hours in a day essentially.
Yeah, so this group is getting a little more upset
and aggressive toward the official
rationalist movement and community.
They think again that
Miri and Seafar, you're not doing enough for the animals. You need to expand your, I guess,
viewpoint on sentient beings and what that means. And you're also biased against trans
people.
Yeah. And there was another thing too that Ziz got really upset about. She came to believe that Miri paid off a blackmailer.
Another way to put it is that somebody accused people at Miri of sexual assault
or statutory rape, I think it was, and that they paid the person to go away.
Some people would call it a settlement.
To Ziz, it was a blackmail, paying off a blackmailer, and that you just did not do
that, that that violated some of the basic tenets of the rationalist community and the way
of solving problems that they use. So that, with the ethical veganism combined,
really separated her from this rationalist community. And with this
growing group around her, they decided that they were going to show up, go to the CFAR seminar conference
that was being held in 2019.
And they were gonna present their problems
and their issues in a very rational way,
just like CFAR would want them to.
And the people who organized CFAR were like,
you guys are way too aggressive for our tastes.
You can't come to this CFAR retreat. And one of them said, you've got way too aggressive for our tastes. You can't come to this Seafarer retreat.
And one of them said, you've got a Nazi in there.
So four of them, Ziz, Gwen Danielson, Emma, Baranian,
and it gets a little confusing with all the names.
And Alex Lethem, they went anyway.
And they had their Guy Fawkes masks on,
and they had their black hooded robes on.
They blocked the exits with their vehicles and they were like, here, you're going to listen to
us. Here's our flyers. Here's our problems and our issues. And the staff didn't know what was
going on. They called in a report of a possible active shooter and the cops came. They did not
have arms on them or anything like that, but they were arrested on charges of false imprisonment and child endangerment because there were kids there. It was a campground where they
met north of San Francisco. And the defendants, we should point out, the four of them did
end up filing a suit against the police alleging mistreatment.
Yeah. So the rationalist community is like, that's it. Not only can you not come to CFIRE
retreats, you can't even hang out on the less wrong blog.
You can't come to our cocktail meetups that we have,
which are a lot of fun, so you're probably gonna be upset.
They've just got booted out.
So now this wedge was a gulf.
It was a break in communication between the group
that would come to be known as Sisyans
and the rationalist community.
And with that, that group became more and more isolated,
and their ideas got a little weirder and a little more far out
and a little more aggressive because they were all similar people
who were feeding off one another in this isolated situation.
There weren't people on the outside coming and be like,
whoa, whoa, whoa, let's rethink what you're saying.
It was like, yeah, that's a really good idea.
And it just kept going from there.
All right, I think that's a good,
you can kind of park all that stuff for now
because this story kind of jumps around the country a bit.
And when we come back, we're gonna pick up with part two,
a little north of San Francisco in Vallejo, California.
["The Voice of the World"]
Have you ever thought about going voiceover?
I'm Hope Woodard, a comedian,
creator, and seeker of male validation.
To most people, I'm the girl behind voiceover,
the movement that exploded in 2024.
Voiceover is about understanding
yourself outside of sex and relationships.
It's more than personal,
it's political, it's societal. And at times, it's
far from what I originally intended it to be. These days, I'm interested in expanding
what it means to be voiceover, to make it customizable for anyone who feels the need
to explore their relationship to relationships. I'm talking to a lot of people who will help
us think about how we love each other.
It's a very, very normal experience to have times where a relationship is prioritizing
other parts of that relationship that are being naked together.
How we love our family.
I've spent a lifetime trying to get my mother to love me, but the price is too high.
And how we love ourselves.
Singleness is not a waiting room.
You are actually at the party right now. Let me hear it. Listen to VoiceOver on the iHeart
radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
A lot of times the big economic forces we hear about on the news show up in our lives in small ways.
Three or four days a week,
I would buy two cups of banana pudding,
but the price has gone up, so now I only buy one.
The demand curve in action,
and that's just one of the things we'll be covering
on everybody's business from Bloomberg Business Week.
I'm Max Chafkin.
And I'm Stacey Vanek-Smith.
Every Friday, we will be diving
into the biggest stories
in business, taking a look at what's going on,
why it matters, and how it shows up in our everyday lives.
With guests like Businessweek editor Brad Stone,
Sports Reporter Randall Williams,
and consumer spending expert Amanda Mull,
we'll take you inside the boardrooms, the backrooms,
even the signal chats that make our economy tick.
Hey, I wanna learn about VeChain.
I want to buy some blockchain or whatever it is that they're doing.
So listen to everybody's business on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, and I'm the host of the On Purpose podcast.
Today I'm thrilled to welcome back to On Purpose, Cynthia Erivo.
They grab me, Emmy, and Tony award- winning actor and singer you know from the color purple, Harriet and Wicked.
Oscar nominated, incredible actor, singer, author, and producer.
Cynthia Erivo.
What's the difference between achieving and overachieving?
You've done something really amazing, but how can I be more than amazing?
How can I push more? How can I do more?
You always felt like you didn't fit in.
I had to come to terms with the fact that I don't think I'm ever going to fit in.
And why would I want to?
We don't want to let people down.
We want people to be happy.
We don't want to break someone's heart.
But the reality is, that is how the way things go.
I feel like a villain for doing it, for hurting someone.
And this may be a hard thing to say,
but sometimes hurting someone
actually aids the growth of another person.
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts. So Chuck, one of the outcomes of being like pushed out of the rationalist community, somebody
launched a website called zizzians.info.
It's still around today.
And they basically chronicled all the things that they accused the Zizians of being a cult, or that backs up their accusation of the Zizians being a cult.
And two of the things are something you referenced earlier, there were two suicides by people who were said to have gone through this unihemispheric sleep, I guess, boot camp. And it resulted in their suicides, allegedly.
So the Zizzians just have a really bad name at this point.
The Marina thing is not working out.
The rationalist fleet is kind of sinking, as it were.
And they just happened to meet somebody at the Marina
named Curtis Lind, who is a 70-something guy
who loved people, loved artists, and had a bunch of land down in Vallejo and said,
hey, I want artists to come live down there.
You guys seem kind of artsy and odd.
Why don't you come live there for really cheap rent?
And the Zizians were like, heck yeah.
All right.
So Curtis Lind offers them the chance to go live.
They paid rent, but I don't imagine it was very much.
In this, we're going to be introducing some more players at this point.
One of the members of the group that had joined up at this time, her name was Suri Dow, and
she was fresh out of high school and a leftist blogger.
Just sort of put a pin in this.
At one point in a Discord chat, she said that she had had very dramatic fantasies about
becoming a knife murderer.
And there's up to 20 people at this time on Curtis Lynn's property.
The neighbors get a little freaked out.
They're like, hey, they're walking around naked sometimes.
They're wearing gas masks. Lynn eventually was like, you guys aren're walking around naked sometimes, they're wearing gas masks.
Lind eventually was like, you guys aren't even paying rent anymore.
And they said, yeah, well, there's a COVID eviction moratorium, so what are you going
to do about it?
So everything just starts going really pear-shaped, as you say, in like 2022.
Yeah, also, Chuck, I saw that they would carry katanas around like samurai swords.
So imagine seeing your neighbor walking around naked,
wearing a gas mask and carrying a samurai sword.
And there's 20 of them.
It would be hard, especially in the context of California,
to not be like, I think they might be a cult.
Good point.
So in 2022, like you said,
things just really start to take a terrible shape.
In August, Ziz's sister and Emma Boranian
went to the police and
said, our friend Ziz fell over while boating. So Ziz died during a boating
accident. The Coast Guard launched a huge search and I guess after 18 hours they
said there's no way that she could have survived and she was, although they
didn't have the body, they still declared her legally dead. And her sister was given a death certificate.
And around the same time, Gwen Danielson, who was one of the OG members of this whole
group, she died by suicide too.
So this group is just rocked by these two deaths in 2022.
That's right.
So while this is happening,
it's kind of at the same time, this COVID eviction moratorium runs out.
So Curtis Lind is like, all right, now I can actually, um,
get these people off my property finally, probably like this November.
Two days before he was able to do that and sort of drop the news that they were
out of there. Suri Dow called, uh, called him in and said, hey, there's a water leak on my property here or in my
trailer.
You got to come and check this out.
Curtis Lynn says, I went to address the issue with the water and I was assaulted.
They hit me over the head.
They stabbed me with knives.
They stabbed me with a katana, the samurai sword.
He ended up losing an eye.
He was stabbed through the chest.
Apparently, he alleges that Alex Lethem
was the one who stabbed him through the chest.
And so he shot Lethem and Emma Baranian and killed her dead.
If you ask the Zizians that were there,
they said, no, that's not what happened.
He'd been harassing us and he just opened fire on us one day.
So the authorities tended to agree or believe Curtis Lind,
uh, and in fact, Lethem and Dow were arrested, charged with attempted murder,
and then also charged with, um, the death of Emma Baranian,
because apparently in California law, if you do something that causes the death of somebody else,
even incidentally, um, you are responsible, or you can be held responsible for that death. And the
thinking was that Curtis Lynn had to kill Emma Baranian because of the
actions of Dow and Lethem, right? Right. So now Suri Dow and Alex Lethem are in
jail in California. That's where they are. So just park that like you said.
That's right. So police took another member of the group at the time. She gave her name
as Julia Dawson. They said, come down to the station with us. We got to question you. At
the station, she seemed like she was having a medical emergency. So they're like, well,
we got to get her to the hospital. Stat took her to the hospital and she disappeared from the hospital.
Detectives started investigating what happened there and they said,
Oh, you know who that was?
That was Ziz.
Ziz is not dead at all.
And they also determined, guess who else was there?
Gwen Danielson.
She's actually alive as well.
Yeah.
So if you've heard our faking your death episode,
this is a, it's a big deal to fake your death,
especially successfully.
So the Zizians never thought they were dead,
or if they did, it was for a very short time,
it was to protect themselves from the authorities.
One of the other things that was really an unsettling find
after Curtis Lind was attacked,
they found a vat of lye that suggested that they intended to kill him
and that they were going to dissolve his body in it.
So, um, it's starting to become clear, like these people are no joke, but at
the time, this was like a, an isolated incident.
It wasn't related to anything else.
The, the authorities did not know that this
was a group known as the Zizians or anything like that. There were pieces that were starting
to lay out on the table, but no one had put them together yet.
Yeah, exactly. All right, so now you can park all of that because we're going to move once
again across the country. This time, Pennsylvania is going to come into the picture. In 2021, so this is, you know,
a little bit before these events, Michelle Zoschko that we mentioned and Alice Monday,
who were girlfriends with each other, they moved from California to Vermont, to northern Vermont,
pretty rural area. And they were joined by getting Daniel Blank, another like-minded person. He went
to UC Berkeley, bioengineering and electrical engineering co-degree and then worked at startups and he was also a vegan and
started to sort of get a little more radical about it. He got distance from his
parents, started judging them for eating meat and he hooks up with Monday and
Zosko in Vermont. Yeah and and so by this time, I think,
I don't know if you said it or not, I think you did.
Ziz had credited Alice Monday as being like her mentor.
She modeled herself largely after Alice Monday too.
Like she was apparently really assertive
with her beliefs and ideas,
and Ziz became more and more like that
after meeting Alice Monday.
By this time though, she considered Alice Monday an enemy,
what she called a vampire.
And I guess Zazhko was by association, guilty by association.
And from what I can tell, Alice Monday became her enemy because she and maybe Zazhko
were warning people away from Ziz, saying like,
you need to steer clear of this person.
So Ziz considered them enemies, and she contacted Zazka and said,
hey, if you want to earn my trust back, you need to murder Alice.
And if you don't, I'm going to come to Vermont and murder you.
And this was the kind of a precarious situation as far as Zazko was concerned,
Michelle Zazko was concerned, because, and this really I think kind of gets a lot across,
she was like, I really had to kind of decide, you know, did I want to murder Alice to make Ziz happy,
or should I kill Ziz? This is the position that Ziz was putting people in by this time, allegedly.
Yeah.
Should we just have Jerry drop in the word allegedly, like just every 40 seconds?
Allegedly.
Beijing, Mr. Herman.
I know I promised Pennsylvania,
and we've been in Vermont for a second here,
but here's where Pennsylvania comes into play.
On December 31st, last day of the year,
according to many, in 2022,
this is about a month and a half after Curtis Lind was stabbed and after that all occurred in Viejo.
So, Michelle Zasko's parents, Richard and Rita, were murdered in Pennsylvania.
They have ringed camera footage from a neighbor that shows two people arriving in the house a little before midnight.
And on the camera footage, you can hear what sounds like mom,
and then a few seconds later, oh my god, oh god, god.
And the parents of Michelle Zajko were found shot in the head,
kind of execution style, in their bedroom.
Yeah.
So the Pennsylvania State Troopers
went to go visit Michelle Zajko in Vermont.
And she's like, I haven't been to Pennsylvania
in almost 20 years, or more than 20 years., I haven't been to Pennsylvania in almost 20 years or more than 20 years and I haven't talked to my
parents in a year.
So it's not me.
I don't know who killed them.
And in fact, she showed up to a graveside service a couple of weeks later.
And I believe was the sole beneficiary maybe of her parents' estate.
While she was there for the service, she was accompanied by Daniel Blank.
And I guess they had drawn some attention at the hotel
because they were both wearing black,
and one of them was said to have been carrying a gun
around the hotel grounds.
So the hotel called the police,
and the police started surveilling them.
And after a very short time,
they went into Michelle Zajko's hotel room and searched it.
And I think they searched her car, found something like $40,000 in cash,
and they were like, we're just gonna take you down to jail.
So all this stuff is kind of mounting.
We still think you might have killed your parents.
We're gonna take you in for questioning.
And she said something to the hotel person that was there,
said, can you contact Daniel Blank?
He's in another room here and tell him what's going on.
And the police were like, I think we'd like to talk to him too.
Wayne got a warrant and then they went to Daniel Blank's room shortly after that.
That's right. They detained him.
They did not, were not able to keep them for very long.
They were released pretty quickly.
But we should mention too, in addition to that 40 grand in cash, they also found several
prepaid cell phones, which is a bit of a potential red flag as well in Michelle Zasko's car.
And while they were arresting Blank, there was someone else in the room.
They were lying on the floor.
They wouldn't move.
They wouldn't speak.
And that was, drum roll, Ziz.
So Ziz is getting around at this point. Police arrested
Ziz on obstruction of justice, disorderly conduct, I guess, just for not complying,
I guess, and getting off the floor and stuff like that. It was a misdemeanor charge, but
they did hold her in jail for five months instead of, or I guess in lieu of a $500,000
bail, which Ziz could not afford obviously.
And the judge said, all right, we're gonna release you.
You got to promise to pay 10 grand if you miss court.
She did return to court for that August hearing
in a wheelchair pushed by her mom.
But when the trial date came up of December of 2023,
she did not show up.
So I think that's probably a great place
for our second break because the
story is really heating up now.
Sure is.
Have you ever thought about going voiceover? I'm Hope Woodard, a comedian, creator, and seeker of male validation.
To most people, I'm the girl behind voiceover, the movement that exploded in 2024.
Voiceover is about understanding yourself outside of sex and relationships.
It's more than personal. It's political, it's societal,
and at times, it's far from what I originally intended it to be.
These days, I'm interested in expanding what it means to be voiceover,
to make it customizable for anyone who feels the need
to explore their relationship to relationships.
I'm talking to a lot of people who will help us
think about how we love each other.
It's a very, very normal experience
to have times where a relationship is prioritizing
other parts of that relationship
that are being naked together.
How we love our family.
I've spent a lifetime trying to get my mother to love me,
but the price is too high.
And how we love ourselves.
Singleness is not a waiting room.
You are actually at the party right now.
Let me hear it.
Listen to VoiceOver on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
A lot of times the big economic forces
we hear about on the news
show up in our lives
in small ways.
Three or four days a week, I would buy two cups of banana pudding, but the price has
gone up.
So now I only buy one.
The demand curve in action.
And that's just one of the things we'll be covering on everybody's business from Bloomberg
Business Week.
I'm Max Chafkin.
And I'm Stacey Vanek-Smith.
Every Friday, we will be diving into the biggest stories
in business, taking a look at what's going on,
why it matters, and how it shows up in our everyday lives.
With guests like Business Week editor Brad Stone,
sports reporter Randall Williams,
and consumer spending expert Amanda Mull
will take you inside the boardrooms, the backrooms,
even the signal chats that make our economy tick.
Hey, I want to learn about VeChain. I want to buy some blockchain or whatever it is that they're doing.
So listen to everybody's business on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I came out because I literally had a contract ripped up in front of me.
On a recent episode of Good Game with Sarah Spain, I spotlighted an inspiring out athlete,
pro golfer Mel Reed.
I think everyone's story is different.
I've been very lucky that I've got a very supportive family
who literally don't care.
It's a part of me.
I'm certainly not ashamed of it.
And I think that there should be more representation in.
To hear this and more on identity, inclusivity,
and the power of being seen, listen to Good Game with Sarah Spain, an iHeart women's sports production in partnership with Deep Blue Sports and Entertainment on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Brought to you by Novartis, founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports Network. [♪ Music playing.
[♪ Music playing.
All right. So now we're going to find ourselves partially in North Carolina,
and back in Vallejo, and also back in Vermont,
and we're going to introduce
what I guess three more people Olivia Bachholt, Maximilian Snyder and Milo Youngbloot. Yeah, so Ophelia Bachholt was German by birth and she was described as naive altruistic and
trusting by friends. She fell into Ziz's orbit, I think, by starting out reading her blog.
She was trans, she was a math genius, and she was really, really interested in effective altruism.
I think she made a couple hundred grand a year as a
quant trader in New York and donated all but 10% of it to effective altruism causes.
So she was very dedicated to this,
but something about Ziz's philosophy grabbed her
and she ended up leaving New York one day,
cutting off all contact with everyone else
in her former life and moving to North Carolina
and essentially starting a new life in this orbit of Ziz.
Yeah, so Maximilian Snyder was a data scientist,
another super, super smart person.
And Milo Youngbloot went to an elite private school
in Seattle with Maximilian Snyder,
and they got together later on after that.
And in May of 2024, Youngbloot's parents said,
they're missing.
I don't know where they went.
They and Snyder applied for a marriage license
together in November of 2024, which is November 5th specifically, which is Guy
Fox night. And apparently they all got attracted to the Zizians just through online. They never
met Ziz, they never met Gwen Danielson, they never met any of the other rationalist fleet
Zizians at all in person? Yes. That seems to be contested from what I can tell, Chuck, that there's, it's possible
that there's evidence that they did meet them, but I don't know who said what or why, but
that's a contested issue. So in January of 2025, Jungblut, Bachholt, they're in Vermont. They're a short distance away from Michelle Zajko's house.
So shortly after the move where everybody was in Chapel Hill,
Jungblut and Bachholt traveled to Vermont, and they checked into a hotel
that was not too far from Michelle Zajko's house.
And I thought initially that they were there to kill Michelle Zajko,
but I found that they had made contact with her enough that the police think that she bought them some guns
or gave them some guns that she bought.
I'm not exactly sure what they were doing in Vermont,
but they were eventually they fell under the radar of the Border Patrol who pulled them over near the Canadian border.
And when that happened, they were pulled over at the very least, Young Blute allegedly got
out and just opened fire on the Border Patrol agents.
Yeah, the Border Patrol said that Bachold attempted to draw a gun.
They fired back.
It's basically a firefight at this point.
And Bachold and a Border Patrol agent named David Malland were both killed.
Young Blute was injured, arrested, obviously, on assault charges.
Police found hollow-point ammunition in their car, found those burner phones wrapped in
foil. They found full-face
respirator mask, they found a night vision monocular.
So it's sort of the mayhem starter kit in the car.
Sure sounds like it, for sure.
So yeah, again, I'm not sure what they were doing in traveling from North Carolina to
Vermont.
But this was a big deal, and they killed a Border Patrol agent, especially when a pair of trans
people dressed in all black just opened fire on a Border Patrol agent and made national news.
And this is when people started to connect the dots. Not only did you have the attack of Curtis
Lind, a couple years later, as everybody's starting to go to trial, Suri Dow and Alex Lethem are
moving toward trial.
Curtis Lind is a star witness, I guess allegedly to shut him up.
Maximillian Schneider shows up in Vallejo and murdered Curtis Lind before he could testify.
Yeah.
And this was just three days before this shootout in Vermont.
So it's all really coming to a head very quickly and almost real time to where we are today.
So on February 16th of this year, three people dressed in all black driving a couple of white
box trucks all of a sudden were in Maryland.
They went to Maryland to a property owner and said, hey, can we camp out here for a
month?
He did not take kindly to that, so he called the cops.
And it turns out that was Daniel Blank, Ziz, and Michelle Zajko.
And they arrested them initially on trespassing charges,
but they found a bunch of guns in the trucks and said,
oh, wait, these are the three people that, like you said,
they started really connecting the dots at this point in February.
Yeah, and I couldn't find out what Michelle Zasko or Daniel Blanker wanted for, but Ziz was wanted for jumping bail for that court case in Pennsylvania.
Well, they're arrested for trespassing.
Yeah, but I don't know what they were wanted for already is what I'm saying. So that was February. As of May, late May, last month, a couple
weeks ago, a couple days ago even you could say, Ziz, Michelle Zajko, and Daniel Blank
are all in jail in Maryland for trespassing. Lethem, Dow, and Snyder are all in jail in
California for the attack on Curtis Lynn and then the murder of Curtis Lynn.
And then Young Blute is in Vermont
for allegedly trying to draw a gun
on the border patrol agents during a firefight
where a border patrol agent was killed.
So the Zizians are still like around essentially.
They still will say like, we're not even called Zizians, but now there's more and more journalists who are starting to dig into
it and putting together deeper and deeper profiles of this group and what
was going on. But like you said, this is real time, man. This is, there's no
resolution to this. This is, this is where it stops because this is as far as
it's gotten so far.
Yeah, they're still writing.
Apparently, Daniel Schneider in jail
is writing stuff to the rationalist group saying,
hey, like, you still need to focus on animal rights.
And Michelle Zajko is writing.
She wrote an open letter to the world that's in quotes,
dated March 9th of this year,
and where she was like, hey, I didn't kill my parents.
Ziz hasn't done anything wrong.
A lot of these people, like, I don't even know
those other people.
I'm not with Maximilian Schneider.
Like, I've never met these people.
They're not, Zizians aren't a group like Josh said.
Well, she didn't say like Josh said.
That'd be kind of fun, though.
But they're not even associated with us as a group
that we don't refer to ourselves as Zizians.
Right.
So Alice Monday and Gwen Danielson
are thought to be alive still.
Alice Monday I saw is thought to be in hiding
that she's very scared of Ziz and the Zizians,
especially now.
And then there's other people,
there's people in the rationalist community
who were willing to speak to journalists about this,
but not like anonymously because they're scared of the Zizians too.
So it's still a thing, even though Ziz is in jail.
And it's just a question of where it goes from here.
But just to kind of wrap everything up, we'll go back to Half Moon Bay, where the Caleb was docked in the Berkeley Marina and
Since the zisians abandoned it it has sunk in the marina half sunk and is a
Nuisance to have that you have to get around now poor Caleb. Yeah, Caleb's like what did I ever do? Yeah
I just wanted to help people. I'm a born tugboat. I know
If you want to know more about this stuff, go look it up. There's a lot of stuff to read.
And just keep an eye on the news.
We definitely will be too.
And since I said that, I think it's time for listener mail, Chuck.
This is from James.
Hey guys.
I'm fascinated that terms we take for granted
often come from slurs meant to suppress and in some cases similar slurs. I love
knowing that pagan came from a word that as Chuck puts it means bumpkin. It was
meant to belittle and diminish and now it covers a huge chunk of the faith pie.
I was reminded of the word jaywalking. I feel like we've talked about this in
something. Maybe. The origins of jaywalking? Maybe feel like we've talked about this in something. Maybe. The origins of jaywalking, maybe?
Maybe.
As cars became a thing and started driving
with some velocity in the places where people
were used to walking, big car had to make sure
they weren't the bad guy.
They had to rewrite convention and get people,
pedestrians specifically, off the road.
So what did they do?
Slurs, obviously.
If I remember correctly, jay, like Paganas, meant an uneducated country folk,
too stupid not to walk in the road like a dingus.
This word must have worked because now it is a legal term to describe the act of crossing a street at a non-crosswalk.
Big car won. Constantine won. Thanks for the potting, guys, and for filling my brain with stuff. That is James.
Thanks a lot, James. That's a good one.
brain with stuff that is James. Thanks a lot James, that's a good one.
And I think you jogged my memory to an episode
about like how cars became the dominant mode
of transportation in the US.
Sounds like that might've been the one.
I think that was a good one, that was a sleeper episode.
Agreed.
If you wanna be like James and send us an interesting email
that we may or may not read down in the air,
but we'd still like to receive anyway, you can send it off to stuffpodcasts at iHeartRadio.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeart Radio. For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit
the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Have you ever thought about going voiceover? I'm Hope Woodard, a comedian, creator,
and seeker of male validation.
I'm also the girl behind voiceover,
the movement that exploded in 2024.
You might hear that term and think it's about celibacy,
but to me, voiceover is about understanding yourself
outside of sex and relationships.
It's flexible, it's customizable,
and it's a personal process.
Singleness is not a waiting room.
You are actually at the party right now.
Let me hear it.
Yes.
Listen to voiceover on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or
wherever you get your podcasts.
A lot of times big economic forces show up in our lives in small ways. Four days a week,
I would buy two cups of banana pudding, but the price has gone up. So now I only buy one.
Small but important ways from tech billionaires to the bond market to,
yeah, banana pudding.
If it's happening in business, our new podcast is on it.
I'm Max Chaston.
And I'm Stacey Vanek-Smith.
So listen to everybody's business on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, and I'm the host
of the On Purpose podcast.
Today, I'm thrilled to welcome back to On Purpose,
Cynthia Erivo.
A Grammy, Emmy, and Tony award winning actor and singer
you know from the color purple,
Harriet and Wicked, Cynthia Erivo.
And this may be a hard thing to say,
but sometimes hurting someone actually aids
the growth of another person.
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
This is an iHeart Podcast.