To Die For - 5) Pandora's Box
Episode Date: March 26, 2024"When I entered the house, two people immediately jumped on me. One kicked me in the stomach and I collapsed. Another one jumped on me put his hand on my mouth, silencing me. Another woman came and in...jected me and then I lost consciousness."  Show Credits: Produced by Tenderfoot TV in association with iHeart Podcasts Host/Writer: Neil Strauss Guest: Aliia Roza Executive Producers: Neil Strauss, Donald Albright and Payne Lindsey Lead Producer and Editor: Tristen Bankston Additional Editing: Miles Clark and Christian Brown Supervising Producer: Tracy Kaplan Consultants: Nooshin Valizadeh, Chelsey Goodan and Jaime Albright Cover Art Design: Byron McCoy Original Music: Makeup and Vanity Set, with additional music by Ben Fleisch Mixed and Mastered: Dayton Cole Theme song: Killer Shangri-lah by Pshycotic Beats featuring Pati Amor Special thanks to: Oren Rosenbaum and the team at UTA, Beck Media and Marketing, Oren Segal, Rebecca Jensen, Rose Baruc, The Nord Group, Meredith Stedman, and Alex Vespestad   For free, confidential, 24/7 support for survivors of sexual assault, as well as information and resources, visit rainn.org, or call 1-800-656-4673. For more podcasts like To Die For, search Tenderfoot TV on your favorite podcast app, or visit us at tenderfoot.tv.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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To have a murder as gruesome as Jade Beasley's doesn't happen very often down here.
In Marion, Illinois, an 11-year-old girl brutally stabbed to death.
Her father's longtime live-in girlfriend maintaining innocence, but charged with her murder.
I am confident that Julie Beckley is guilty.
They've never found a weapon.
Never made sense.
Still doesn't make sense.
She found out she was pregnant in jail.
The person who did it is still out there.
Listen to Murder on Songbird Road on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
He was a Boy Scout leader, a husband, a father.
But he was leading a double life.
He was a monster, hiding in plain sight. Journey inside the mind of one of history's
most notorious killers, BTK, through the voices of the people who know him best. Listen to Monster
BTK on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. All eight episodes of To Die For
are available now to binge absolutely free.
But for ad-free listening and exclusive bonuses,
subscribe to Tenderfoot Plus at tenderfootplus.com
or on Apple Podcasts.
Warning.
The following episode contains explicit language
and sexual themes.
Listener discretion is advised.
About four years ago, I received an unexpected offer to interview the president of Belarus,
Alexander Lukashenko.
He wanted to create, quote, mutually beneficial ties with the
U.S. And someone evidently thought that one way to do that was for me to profile Lukashenko for
Rolling Stone magazine. Belarus, caught between Russia and the European Union, has been ruled for
decades by autocratic President Alexander Lukashenko. He declared victory in August elections the US said were fraudulent.
Huge protests followed,
and he moved swiftly to crush them.
They reached out to me,
and I told them that if my editors approved the story,
I'd be honest in the interview
and wouldn't be throwing him softball questions.
And they seemed open to that.
He and Russian President Vladimir Putin
are two peas in a pod when it comes to shutting down dissent.
So Putin swiftly helped his skiing partner with $1.5 billion.
Months of systematic repression and torture followed, documented by human rights groups.
Then came the emails.
Asking me what kind of women I liked.
Asking me to send photos of my type of women.
Offering to arrange dates for me when I'm in Belarus.
Perhaps they can even throw a party for me, stocked with beautiful women.
I will be set in Belarus for the trip and possibly my life, they said.
As a journalist, I knew what accepting favors,
whether cash or sex or anything from a subject, can mean.
The end of your career.
And that was my first possible experience with what the Russians call Kompromat.
Kompromat comes from the Russian for compromising material.
It means that the Russian secret state have managed to film
somebody having sex with somebody they shouldn't be having sex with. Politicians, diplomats, spies,
whoever. A former British spy called Christopher Steele reported that the Russian secret state
had filmed Donald Trump in a hotel room in Moscow.
Trump has denied it ever happened.
But if it did happen, then that was a classic case of compromise. I'm really sorry.
I had to do it.
Gotta go on my own.
You didn't get stuck behind.
I was holding my gun.
I got you.
I tell you now.
I had to kill you? Was it so much fun? Episode 5, Chapter 11, Seduce and Destroy. I wanted to let you know I was transcribing the interview with the sex spy.
And I actually have firsthand knowledge of this because in my past life,
I worked on these black programs in aerospace.
Each program had its own security officer.
Shockingly, at least to me, the voice you're hearing is that of my audio transcriber.
For 10 years, she's listened to my interviews
and written down the secrets of the famous and powerful,
from Tom Cruise to Elon Musk.
And this is the first time she's called like this.
After listening to my first recordings with Aaliyah Rosa,
she wants to let me know
that she has actually had her own experiences
with compromise and sexpionage. We would actually have meetings where the upper management would inform us about
it. And the men who were usually the target had to sign paperwork indicating, yes, they had been
informed about these women, especially from Russia. I had no idea that prior to this, she'd
worked at a company that contracted with the military,
and that spies like Aaliyah are evidently a well-known threat in the industry.
Wow. It was like part of standard operating procedure.
Absolutely. Every program I worked, we talked about it.
I just remember them warning mostly men about women who might approach them when they're traveling on work or traveling out of town.
And what were the telltale signs of these people?
Oh, if the woman was extremely attractive, you know, definitely if she was really out of your league type of a woman.
And if she came on sexually, you know, too aggressive sexually, or wanted to be alone with you,
or wanted to get into your hotel room with you for whatever reason,
and to watch you drink, they could drug you, that kind of thing.
In fact, the government was so worried about compromise
that anyone with a secret sex life was considered a security risk.
There were people who openly keyed on their wives that everybody knew, and they lost their clearances.
I asked my transcriber for her thoughts on Aaliyah's story
since she's listened to the recordings so closely.
I think it sounds accurate
because it was exactly what we were being warned about.
She's incredibly attractive.
She's charming. She's smart.
She's manipulative. She's loyal to her country. It all sounds like it worked.
I call Aliyah after speaking with my transcriber, and Aliyah has just returned from a session
with a new therapist.
How was your therapy session um honestly not really good
i mean i don't know it's like really difficult to go through that again it's like it's so
so many feelings you know so many sensations which are just like disgust me so much
i i feel really guilty guilty in what way i can very deep like in many like i feel like i have
done so much bad you know things in my life like really bad things like i've done so many
things which i never wanted to do the therapist therapist, she said that I had to survive,
that's why I did it. But it doesn't matter to me, you know, it's just like I feel really guilty.
I ask her more about it. Aliyah says she was at a friend's birthday and was given a small dose of
mushrooms, something she doesn't ordinarily do.
This triggered memories that she keeps compartmentalized in her mind.
She calls that compartment Pandora's box.
I felt like I saw so many ghosts of those people who were killed or I did unintentionally
or they were affected by my life or something.
I saw them and it was so scary.
I felt like I saw even their faces.
You know, it's not really pleasant, you know, view.
And it's kind of like maybe I'm going crazy.
I don't know.
We talk about PTSD and therapy
and decide to take a little time off
so that Aaliyah can recover from her experience.
She feels that unburdening herself of her secrets
will give them less power over her.
In the meantime, I tell her about the conversation with my transcriber.
So my transcriber called, she...
And we discuss how large this program must have been,
and how many women must have faced similar traumatic experiences.
You know, Neil, I feel very, very, very big sorrow and very big sadness
when I think about these women.
I remember my classmates.
They all came so young and fresh and beautiful. And then just in a few months,
instead of happy face, instead of smile, I saw sorrow and helpless and nothing else.
I wonder how many women have done this throughout the history, and how many women are doing this right now in the whole world, even in the United States.
So while Aliyah takes some time off, I decide to take some time to find answers to her questions about the program.
Since speaking to my transcriber, I've been wondering similar things.
Are there other countries also using sex as a weapon of war?
And just how big are these operations?
To have a murder as gruesome as Jade Beasley's
doesn't happen very often down here.
In Marion, Illinois, an 11-year-old girl brutally stabbed to death.
Her father's longtime live-in girlfriend maintaining innocence, but charged with her murder.
I am confident that Julie Bethely is guilty.
This case, the more I learned about it, the more I'm scratching my head.
Something's not right.
I'm Lauren Bright Pacheco.
Murder on Songbird Road dives into the conviction of a mother of four
who remains behind bars and the investigation that put her there.
I have not seen this level of corruption anywhere.
It's sickening.
If you stab somebody that many times, you have blood splatter.
Where's the change of clothes?
She found out she was pregnant in jail.
She wasn't treated like she was an innocent human being at all.
Which is just horrific.
Nobody has gotten justice yet.
And that's what I wish people would understand.
Listen to Murder on Songbird Road on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
He was a Boy Scout leader, a church deacon, a husband, a father.
He went to a local church. He was going to the grocery store with us.
He was the guy next door.
But he was leading a double life.
He was certainly a peeping Tom, looking through the windows,
looking at people, fantasizing about what he could do.
He then began entering the houses.
He could get into their home, take something, and get out and not be caught.
He felt very powerful.
He was a monster, hiding in plain sight.
Someone killed four members of a family.
It just didn't happen here.
Journey inside the mind of one of history's most notorious killers,
BTK, through the voices of the people who know him best.
Listen to Monster BTK on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
I spend the next couple of weeks doing research and interviewing agents and journalists from around the world. And what I find shocks me. First of all, it's not just Russia that does this.
It's China. Chinese intelligence operation on U.S. soil targeting American politicians with a female operative who had ties to a Democratic congressman
and intimate relationships with at least two Midwestern mayors.
North Korea.
According to Jiang, North Korea's honey trap plan, established by former leader Kim Jong-il,
was to set up foreign dignitaries with female spies posing as translators or aides.
Pakistan.
They befriended on emails and WhatsApp group, etc.
And they get entrapped, and then they emotionally get entrapped.
Even America, the United Kingdom, and so many others throughout history.
The women met the soldiers in a pub in Lisbon, a pub frequented by off-duty soldiers from a nearby army base.
And it was here that this carefully planned operation began.
In fact, even ancient military writings advise weaponizing this weakness in human nature.
If we go back sort of two and a half thousand years,
one of the ancient military writers said that you should train a martial art warrior to
identify and exploit four human weaknesses.
They were fear, lust, anger, and greed.
And certainly these are all used in sexpionage.
This is David Lewis, a psychologist and author of the book Sexpionage, the Exploitation of
Sex by the Soviet Union.
I called Dr. Lewis to find out the kind of impact
that this type of spycraft has had on political history
and why it works so well.
It's always struck me as a psychologist, very strange,
that you have people who are immensely powerful,
usually highly educated, very wealthy,
and yet they throw it all away for the sake of a one-night stand.
Yet it happens over and over again.
And if you think that most people would be smarter, think again.
Here's just one chilling example of a target who's literally in hiding from the government,
throwing all caution to the wind for an attractive woman.
Mordecai Venunu was working as a technician at an Israeli nuclear facility
when he began to have moral misgivings.
He gathered evidence, left the country,
and told journalists for the first time
about the extent of Israel's nuclear weapons program.
And then, as he was working with the Times of London
on leaking the story, he met someone special.
Here he is describing it in his own words,
speaking to an interviewer from 60 Minutes Australia.
I bought a cigarette and I saw an American woman standing there,
buying us a cigarette.
I look at her, she look at me.
You'll notice in this next part,
some similarities with Aaliyah's training,
which is that the agent never approaches the target.
She gets the target to approach her.
You took the initiative to, forgive the colloquialism,
to pick up this lady.
Yes.
You did it.
If she had tried to pick me up, then I suspected her.
But if I took the initiative, I mean I'm not suspecting her.
She was dragging you into her trap?
No, I was already in her trap.
After a few dates, she convinced Venunu
to join her for a weekend in Rome.
Despite being a whistleblower who was wanted for treason
by the Israeli government, Venunu suspected nothing
and flew to Rome with her.
In the car from the airport, she kissed him passionately
all the way to the house
where they'd be staying,
evidently to keep him from thinking with his brain.
When I entered the house,
the door opened and immediately jump on me two people
and one kick me in the stomach and I collapse.
Another one jump on me,
put his hand on my mouth, silencing me.
Another woman come and injected me, and then I lost my conscience.
Venunu spent the next 18 years in an Israeli prison, 11 of those years in solitary confinement.
And this is just one of many historically significant examples. From the Moon Sisters, two Confederate seduction spies who at one point were engaged to 38 Union soldiers between them,
to Ramon Mercator, an agent of Stalin who honey-trapped his way into Leon Trotsky's study
where he executed the famous Russian revolutionary with an ice pick.
Posing as a Trotskyist, Ramon Mercader seduced Trotsky's secretary.
Soon he was a frequent visitor to Trotsky's villa
and a familiar face to his security guards.
I don't think people really understand
the extent to which sexual aversion
has helped shape Western society.
This is historian David Lewis again.
I have a specific question that I'm hoping he can answer.
How did sexpionage go from a dirty trick
that governments use in a moment of desperation,
like in the cases we just heard,
to what Aaliyah and my transcriber have been describing to me?
A factory-like training camp
that a country uses to churn out sex spies.
We can trace the start of what we might call industrial sexual perversion
back to a woman called Catherine Zabich.
She was actually known as Kitty Smith.
She started life...
Kitty Smith began running Berlin's most in-demand brothel.
Then World War II began.
When she saw war was going to be declared
after Hitler had come to power in 1933,
she tried to flee to England.
She was arrested at the border and she was offered a choice.
She could either come back and run her brothels for the government as spy centres
or she could go to a concentration camp.
So she decided to set up the brothels for them.
Salon Kitty, a notorious house of forbidden pleasures
in Berlin under the Nazis.
This was organised by a guy called Walton Schillenberg,
who was head of SS counter-espionage.
Now, this was the first time the girls used were highly trained.
They had to be aged between 20 and 30. They had to be single.
They had to be National Socialists, Nazis in other words. When they joined, they were
inducted into the SS. They took an oath of allegiance to Hitler. They attended classes
on hairdressing and social etiquette, but also on unarmed combat, marksmanship, foreign
languages, uniform identification. So they were very professional spies.
This was really the start of the industrialization of sexual perversion.
And it was certainly a model followed by the KGB after the war when they took control.
Now were the KGB the first ones to then take women and some who'd never even had a sexual experience before
and then train them from there versus using sex workers. I don't know of any other intelligence
agency which had done that to that extent. On the outskirts of Moscow stands the giant
training academy of the KGB. Here the uncles, as they're called in the espionage business,
are instructed in how to persuade women to offer sex to foreigners in return for information.
These days, the organization is called the FSB.
But while the name may have changed, sexual entrapment using young women is still a priority.
Young women, much like Aaliyah and her classmates.
And they had trainers in there, kind of taught them the ropes and showed them how to behave,
and really deprived them of their inhibitions, so they were prepared to go with any man, however disagreeable they found him, or however old he was, or indeed however young he was,
in order to extract information from him.
And they were taught how to behave naturally,
although the situation they were in was, of course, anything but natural.
To have a murderer as gruesome as Jade Beasley
doesn't happen very often down here.
In Marion, Illinois, an 11-year-old girl brutally stabbed to death.
Her father's longtime live-in girlfriend maintaining innocence,
but charged with her murder.
I am confident that Julie Beth Lee is guilty.
This case, the more I learned about it,
the more I'm scratching my head.
Something's not right.
I'm Lauren Bright Pacheco.
Murder on Songbird Road
dives into the conviction of a mother of four
who remains behind bars
and the investigation that put her there.
I have not seen this level of corruption anywhere.
It's sickening.
A few steps, not many times, you have blood splatter.
Where's the change of clothes?
She found out she was pregnant in jail.
She wasn't treated like she was an innocent human being at all.
Which is just horrific.
Nobody has gotten justice yet.
And that's what I wish people would understand.
Listen to Murder on Songbird Road on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
He was a Boy Scout leader, a church deacon, a husband, a father.
He went to a local church. He was going to the grocery store with us. He was the guy next door.
But he was leading a double life. He was certainly a peeping Tom, looking through the
windows, looking at people, fantasizing about what he could do. He then began entering the houses.
He could get into their home, take something, and get out and not be caught. He felt very powerful.
He was a monster, hiding in plain sight. Someone killed four members of a family.
It just didn't happen here.
Journey inside the mind of one of history's most notorious killers,
BTK, through the voices of the people who know him best.
Listen to Monster BTK on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Chapter 12. Tools of the Trade.
As our time off draws to a close
and Leah feels ready to continue her story,
I find myself deep down the rabbit hole
of Russian espionage.
I even managed to find FBI agents and contractors
who worked to bring down the Russian illegals program.
Eleven spies who are working in the U.S.
using seduction and other techniques
to infiltrate different groups.
You did some work with,
I think you were saying with like agents that were still working here? Turn off the recorder.
Most of the people I reach aren't willing to talk about it on the record,
not just in America, but even more so in Russia, where my sources fear reprisals from Putin.
Here's a former Russian intelligence officer
who was trained at the same academy that Aliyah went to,
speaking through a translator.
You ever heard of a program like that?
No.
With this question, I will not be able to reply,
to respond to this question due to, let's say, professional secret.
Many of these sources were willing to speak to me off the record, and a few you'll hear
from shortly were surprisingly willing to talk openly.
And here's what I learned.
There are four levels of sexual espionage that are important to know, because they'll
help explain the next parts of Aliyah's story,
and because they're still going on today.
Level one is the most mild,
but it's also the most common.
It is everywhere,
and unknowingly, you may have come across it in your own life.
It's called nabloudinia, or surveillance.
In American intelligence terms,
we call these people eyes and ears.
You know, one of their biggest exports of Russia is beautiful women.
And they send out an enormous amount of girls into the world.
This is Ina De Silva, one of the first Russian model agents in New York City during the 1990s. All these girls were sent out into the world,
and they were told,
try to meet important men,
try to attach yourself to important men.
And they would send back information to handlers that, you know, this moment I'm dating so-and-so,
I've met so-and-so.
And the handlers would decide if anybody was important enough
to really put an effort into by maybe recording them,
or, you know, they would receive further instructions.
She mentions a well-known Russian model who did this type of work
along with her boyfriend, who was also her KGB handler.
If you're really going to do modeling, you do not go Moscow to Washington.
They lived in Washington for a year, attending daily cocktail parties at embassies, consulates and stuff like that.
It's like a typical thing.
It's pretty unbelievable.
I mean, Germany right now
is like a rat's nest with all of this.
German intelligence agency has warned
against the risk of an aggressive
Russian espionage operation.
This comes as West ramps up
its support for Ukraine.
They've all been told
to penetrate and influence anybody
who has decision-making powers in Germany, you know,
regarding meaning military.
So, I mean, the war in Ukraine is also being fought
by all these girls that are all over important cities.
You know, there's this Russian doll, a doll within a doll within a doll,
called a matryoshka.
Well, a lot of these girls, that's really what it's like.
Unless, like, any, you know, national security agencies,
any of these countries gets lucky.
I think it's very difficult to keep track of these women.
Level two is provocatia in Russian, or provocation.
And someone who has eyes and ears, if they land the right target,
can be moved by their handler into this more prestigious position of influence.
One example of this type of agent is Maria Butina,
who is living in, yes, Washington, D.C.,
and convicted in 2018 of acting as an unregistered foreign agent of Russia.
She definitely was going into these conservative circles, right,
among mostly the Republican Party, the NRA, these types of places,
where there is a machismo.
And she came in looking sexy, toting a gun, and she used that to...
This is Alex Finley, a former CIA officer who was stationed in Europe and the author
of the Victor Caro trilogy of novels about the CIA.
The whole point as an intelligence officer is you have to assess your target.
What is it that's going to motivate them?
Or what are their vulnerabilities?
She knew and understood if I go in in short shorts and carrying my gun,
that's going to get me closer to them.
Now, separately, she did have relationships with a few different
political functionaries, right, within the Republican Party.
She goes on to mention a prominent figure that Maria Butina had a relationship with,
one who ended up pushing many conspiracy theories that may have been planted in his mind by this agent.
Because the goal of these agents is not just to spy, but to seduce powerful, vulnerable people
and influence their thoughts and behavior to help destabilize a country.
So she knew who to target,
and she knew how to find the people
that were going to have the sympathies that she needed
to help push more and more ideas.
So you see, it's not always just a,
I'm going to have sex with you, you give me secrets.
It can become a bit more complicated.
I ask Alex what she thinks of the statements from Ina De Silva, the model agent,
about the large number of low-level Russian agents still operating in the U.S.
And she confirms this terrifying assessment.
We went through this sort of kicking diplomats and everything out over the past few years, right?
But those are just the people who are declared.
So you have to assume that there's still networks of illegals,
you know, sort of these sleeper cells who live and work among us like normal Americans,
but in fact, they're Russian agents and then their assets.
I'm sure you have a huge network of them still in the United States
doing both collection and also influence operations.
So what happens when these Russian agents get expelled and go home?
The answer?
They return as military heroes.
Or more accurately, the modern equivalent of that, celebrities.
Butina is on Russian state TV.
Chapman became a playboy model, you know,
so they get rewarded, these women.
The other spy Ina Da Silva is referring to is Anna Chapman,
who was arrested and deported as part of the illegals program.
But it gets even darker.
Level three is Kompromat.
This is journalist Mark Hollingsworth,
the author of Agents of Influence,
How the KGB Subverted Western Democracies.
The term Kompromat is a Russian term
which means compromising information.
And what the KGB and now the FSB, the Russian
Intelligence Service, specialize in Compromat in terms of finding compromising information about
Western politicians, diplomats, spies, officials. Many believe that Putin, who was formerly director
of the FSB, rose to power through Compromat.
Putin is in the intimidation business.
When Vladimir Putin met Angela Merkel, he knew her weakness.
The German chancellor was afraid of dogs, so Putin whistled in a black Labrador just to intimidate him. What's interesting about Putin is that there's a strong case to be made that he
only became president of Russia in 2000 because of a honey trapping compromise operation. What
happened was that in 1999, there was a corruption investigation into President Yeltsin's office.
Young women were hired to sleep with him.
So rather than defend themselves in this corruption investigation,
the Yeltsin government decided to set up a honey trap
for the prosecutor leading the investigation instead.
And then the FSB leaked the videos to Russian TV stations. And the significance of this is that the FSB
intelligence officer who was actually seen delivering the incriminating videos to Russian
TV companies and holding press conferences about it was Putin. And so basically the consequence
of this honey trapping operation was that it helped Putin become the next president of Russia after Yeltsin.
Yeltsin appointed Putin his successor. By 2000, Yeltsin had resigned and Putin was president.
The extremes that the Russian government has gone to get compromise even go so far as drugging foreign officials and staging sexual scenes of them
while they're incapacitated.
They'll do anything.
There were no limits.
And they would get you drunk
or they would poison you
or they would hire women or men.
Of course, this type of compromise
doesn't always work if a target is single
or doesn't have sexual secrets or shame.
But compromise can get much more sophisticated than this.
Listen carefully to author David Lewis's explanation of this honey trap
and notice how the target is slowly manipulated
deeper and deeper into a web he can't get out of.
An American businessman visiting Moscow on a business trip
would be hooked up with an attractive woman who he thought he'd just met by chance.
She would be very charming.
They would go back to his hotel or her hotel or else they would be walking back to the hotel when she would start to kiss him.
She would then rip her clothes and scream rape whereupon burly police officers would come and arrest him.
That was one of the ploys they used.
And he would then be offered freedom in return for some very minor secrets,
which he knew perfectly well were completely unimportant.
But they were secret documents.
But of course, that was kind of the bait.
He would then be filmed handing over
the documents, and they would then blackmail him, not on the sex charge, but because he had
committed an act of espionage, which was much more serious. Not only is this incredibly harmful
to these men, it's harmful to people who have experienced sexual assault and are not believed.
Lastly, level four is the love trap, or as the FSB calls it, quote, establishing an operative relationship. The most effective, complex, and destructive of these tactics. It's based on a
psychological understanding that not everyone responds to blackmail.
But human beings will do just about anything for love.
And there are men and women around the world in long-term relationships, even marriages,
to these types of spies.
One example of how this worked is the story of Gabrielle Klein.
She was a translator at the U.S. Embassy in East Germany when one day she met a man on
the riverbank and began dating him.
She also began giving him hundreds of secret documents
for what he claimed was a world peace project.
It wasn't until he was arrested seven years into the relationship
that she learned he'd been a male sex spy,
known as a Raven or Romeo, the whole time.
Here's journalist Mark Hollingsworth.
It was a very organized, strategic operation.
It was quite sad because certainly at the end of the Cold War,
these East German spies would break off the relationships
and the women were devastated
because they thought it was a serious relationship.
And then they would get into trouble
because they'd leaked secret documents.
There's one last spy story I studied
that shows just how powerful a love trap can be.
It was called the Espionage Case of the Century.
It also became known as the Sex for Secrets Marine Spy Scandal of 1987.
It involved a Marine guard at the American Embassy in Moscow,
Clayton Lone Tree, who traded secrets for love... Sergeant Clayton Lone Tree was a Marine stationed as a guard at the U.S. embassy in Moscow, Clayton Lone Tree, who traded secrets for love...
Sergeant Clayton Lone Tree was a Marine
stationed as a guard at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow,
where he began dating a Russian embassy employee
who was, of course, a swallow.
He fell in love and was soon giving her plans to U.S. embassies
as well as the names and identities
of U.S. agents in the Soviet Union.
He was eventually caught and arrested,
becoming the first Marine convicted of spying against the Soviet Union. He was eventually caught and arrested, becoming the first Marine convicted of spying
against the United States.
After serving some seven years in prison
and finding out about the extent of his betrayal,
here's what he told an interviewer
when asked about his affair with the Russian spy.
What we had back then was genuine.
I respect her. I respect her.
I forgive her.
And this is the danger of playing with the fourth and darkest level of sex espionage.
Because love is a lot more powerful, persuasive, and longer-lasting than sex.
You'll notice that one thing is missing from all this research into the methods and consequences of sexpionage.
The perspective of the agents themselves, the swallows and ravens.
That's because there wasn't a single seducer spy I could find prior to this podcast
who had ever publicly gone on the record and revealed the inner workings of this training and these missions.
We only know the stories of their victims.
But let's not forget, before we continue with Aaliyah's story,
that the agents themselves, possibly without a single exception,
are victims as well.
Here's David Lewis again, with a case of the Soviet spy Gudrun Heidel,
who broke the cardinal rule of the love trap.
She developed genuine feelings for her target.
She was under orders to seduce an American officer who had access to native secrets.
Then she made a mistake,
the worst mistake a swallower could ever make.
She actually fell in love with her target.
She wouldn't put pressure on him
because she feared it might end the relationship.
And her bosses
suspected she's changed sides so they had her terminated with extreme prejudice.
If your body is disposable to the state, so too is your life if you decide you want your
body back. This, in the end, is what I learned from my research. No person wins when sex and love
are used as weapons of war. Everyone loses. And this is exactly what Aaliyah Rosa discovered
when she made the same critical mistake and fell in love with one of her targets.
The consequences for her would be even worse than death. So when the criminals find out that I was a mole,
they put the bag into my hat.
They drove me to the forest.
They beat me up.
They did terrible things.
But that moment when I was ready to be dead,
he called them and he gave the order to bring me back to him.
This would come much later in Aliyah's career, after being pulled deeper and deeper into a world from which there were few escapes besides death.
Whether at the hands of your enemy, your own government, or yourself.
Leah returns in episode six, available now on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
For full credits, check out our show notes.
To have a murder as gruesome as Jade Beasley's doesn't happen very often down here.
In Marion, Illinois, an 11-year-old girl
brutally stabbed to death.
Her father's longtime live-in girlfriend
maintaining innocence, but charged with her murder.
I am confident that Julie Begley is guilty.
They've never found a weapon.
Never made sense.
Still doesn't make sense.
She found out she was pregnant in jail.
The person who did it is still out there.
Listen to Murder on Songbird Road on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
He was a Boy Scout leader, a husband, a father, but he was leading a double life.
He was a monster, hiding in plain sight.
Journey inside the mind of one of history's most notorious killers, BTK, through the voices
of the people who know him best. Listen to Monster BTK
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.