Something Was Wrong - S13 E7: [Ruksana] Radicalized
Episode Date: June 23, 2022*Content Warning: Today’s episode discusses cyber stalking, gang stalking, cyber terrorism, and emotional abuse. If you or someone you love is being abused, please call The National Do...mestic Violence Hotline at 1.800.799.SAFE (7233) Text "START" to 88788 or Chat Live at https://www.thehotline.org provides essential tools and support to help survivors of domestic violence so they can live their lives free of abuse, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year. The Hotline can expect highly-trained, expert advocates to offer free, confidential, and compassionate support, crisis intervention information, education, and referral services in over 200 languages.For more free and confidential support resources, please visit: somethingwaswrong.com/resources SWW’s theme music – “U think U” by Glad Rags, from their album Wonder Under.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, prime members, you can listen to something was wrong early and add free on Amazon music.
Download the app today.
I'm Candace DeLong and on my new podcast, Killer Psychy Daily, I share a quick 10 minute
rundown every weekday on the motivations and behaviors of the cold-butter killers you
read about in the news.
Listen to the Amazon Music Exclusive Podcast Killer Psychy Daily in the Amazon Music exclusive podcast killer psyche daily in the Amazon
music app. Download the app today. Something was wrong is intended for mature audiences.
Episodes discuss topics that can be upsetting, such as emotional, physical, and sexual
violence, suicide, and murder. If you're in need of support, please visit somethingwaswrong.com
slash resources for a list of nonprofit organizations
that can help.
I'm not a therapist or a doctor.
Most names have been changed for anonymity purposes.
Opinions expressed by guests on the show are their own and do not necessarily represent
my views.
Resources and source material are linked in the episode notes.
Thank you so much for listening. Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, Hi, my name is Roxana and my American friends call me Roxana.
I was going to graduate school on the East Coast and graduate school ended.
I was active in my addiction with alcoholism, but I totally hit bottom.
At that period in my life, my family was in the Midwest.
I come from a Muslim family, so there was nobody who drank or did drugs, and so I really
had to deal with this on my own.
I had a boyfriend I was living with at the time, and it was like a super toxic relationship
that got even more toxic when I tried to get sober. So I had to move out. I was in this city by myself trying to get sober, just at a graduate school.
I was a highly functioning addict slash alcoholic so I wasn't really able to communicate what was
really happening or what was going on. I'm in this city, I'm trying to get sober, I'm going to meetings, I'm trying to
reestablish my whole life and learn how to live, and I'm out of a relationship.
During this period of time, I learned that I had CPTSD, perhaps from the abusive
relationship I was in, or perhaps from a childhood that had
some trauma in it. Nobody could ever really give me specifics, but I guess I
demonstrated symptoms of that at that time and it was really hard because I was
also getting sober, so it was confusing to know like how much of that was
alcoholism, just like unmanageability, and how much of that was trauma
that I was having to work through.
I'm trying to establish my life,
I'm trying to get therapy, I'm trying to
relearn how to be in the world.
My parents came out and visited,
and they decided to actually buy a place out there
rather than me renting as an investment property.
And then I could just stay there.
I was living by myself. I would say a couple years go by. I'm trying to work in the field that I
went to graduate school for. And I'm really trying to create like a community for myself. And I'm trying
to work through all this trauma. And that was really hard for me to grasp,
because, I mean, honestly, it was a lot easier for me
to say like I was an alcoholic,
than I suffered from PTSD.
I don't know why, but that was just a lot harder
for my mind to grasp.
Life is going on, things are going well.
I'm getting a few freelance gigs here and there,
and I ended up getting a few freelance gigs here and there.
And I ended up getting a text message from a girl named Katie,
who said that her dad and my mom worked together in Florida a long time ago.
And that's how she got my info that she was wanting to go to graduate school
where I went and she wanted to know she could fly out, have a cup of coffee, ask me about my experience.
And I was like, yeah, sure, that's fine.
We ended up talking and oddly, she was in AA as well.
So we started having these spiritual conversations.
She was newly sober and I guess I automatically felt like, you know, a kinship with her.
And later on in the conversation, she able to come out but we still kept
on talking and there was a lot of back and forth i didn't really think much of it i saw myself
more like her mentor or something that's how she referred to me i remember asking my mom if she
knew somebody if she had worked with somebody in florida and my mom was like i don't know what you're
talking about i didn't think anything of it.
In our conversations, she told me that her grandmother was a psychic who lived in China. She was a shaman. And it was because of her grandmother having a dream of some sort that she ended up reaching
out to me. I guess her grandmother told her to reach out to me that I could help guide her in her career.
And I was like, whoa, that's cool.
I would love to meet this woman.
So she's like, sure, yeah.
We ended up emailing and her name was Jill,
who lived in China and understood shamanism.
I reached out to her and she was very sweet,
grandmother-like figure.
And it turned out she was sober as well, NAA.
So we had a lot to talk about because she had a lot of time sober and a lot of wisdom
to share.
We talked a lot about spirituality, herbalism, career, this, dreams, whatever, la la la.
And then she would start to have premonitions about me.
She would say stuff.
Like I shouldn't go outside today.
I should say in my apartment something bad would happen.
If I did, she didn't know it could be a car accident,
it could be this, it could be that,
but I was like, all right, I would listen to her.
During this time, my life became very fragmented.
My work life, I was a professional,
had work relationships. And then in my AA life,
that was like where I was of service,
I was new in my sobriety,
I really didn't know how to have real intimate relationships.
And so much of my energy was focused on therapy
and trying to go through my trauma.
A lot of my energy was spent trying to rebuild my life.
Being single again, I talked to many people in program.
I had many spiritual conversations with people in program.
So Jill and Katie were like one of many people
that I spoke to.
They weren't on my radar.
I felt like I had a support network.
Can you give the time frame if you're comfortable
sharing around what year?
2009, 10.
And did you communicate with Jill and Katie on the phone?
I'll email.
All email.
There were times like we tried to call,
but it never worked out.
My schedule was busy.
Their schedule was busy.
That was not a red flag or anything,
especially within the AA community.
So I'm going on with my life.
I'm working on my PTSD treatment.
My work life is getting a little bit bigger
and I felt like my life was getting a bit smaller.
I talked it up for it to being so deep in my therapy
and not really having the energy. I talked it up for it to being so deep in my therapy and not really having
the energy I would reach out to people and they wouldn't get back to me. I was so deep into AA
and everything. I kind of made it like, oh, it just must be me being selfish or me having
unrealistic expectations on people and what type of value am I bringing to them. I was really trying to pursue my career too.
I just thought that's what life became like when you became sober.
That it was just a lot harder to have relationships with people
without drugs and alcohol.
I have a conversation with Jill and she talks to me about
this Chinese shaman basically noted as like a gong she.
It's almost like a shapeshifter or a time walker.
She said that there was one in my vicinity that wanted to communicate with me,
that wanted to help me.
So I did some research and then she basically was directing me via email.
She's like, yeah, yeah, there's an area next to you, a shop walk in there.
I'm like, okay, so I walk in there. I sit down.
And then she says, the guy across from me is the gung-she.
And I'm like, no. She's like, yeah, and it dissolves via email.
And it turns out to be the guy who helped me and my dad buy our house.
He worked at the bank. This guy was from the Midwest. He had a super conservative family background.
He was raised Mormon. And I remember having that conversation with him at the bank because I was raised Muslim.
He had left his Mormon background and I had left my Muslim background, but there were a lot of similarities and so we really connected.
It turned out oddly, his wife was this white woman who was raised in this Indian religious community, 3HL. I ended up meeting her and him at the bank.
He stood out in my mind because there were so many strange coincidences
whose my family was also from India.
But she was like more Indian than me though.
She ate Indian food, she spoke the language, all this sort of stuff.
So anyways, that's how I became friends with them
and they just seemed like really cool people, really sweet. So he's there and Jill, through email,
confirms that it's him. I'm like, no way, that can't be possible. Jill was like, he doesn't
know. Gong-she's are not aware of their own spiritual capacity. If you talk to him, he
won't know anything that you're talking about. So just be friends with him but don't tell him anything because
that'll freak him out. I was like, okay. So we ended up talking and it's totally
neutral, totally cool. He became like a friend in the neighborhood. I'd see him
around, at places. I started seeing more of him in my life.
I just thought of it as like a coincidence, you know. His name was Lee.
When you saw Lee at this coffee shop, was he surprised to see you?
Yeah, he was surprised to see me. I sat down. He was working on something
as a computer. We had this really friendly conversation. How's your family?
Because he had met my dad because we had done all the loan stuff together.
It felt very like cordial.
It was comforting because we were both from small.
Like I grew up in a very Christian town in the Midwest.
So it was just friendliness that was comfortable to me that I didn't experience
for many years living in this city I was in.
And this was three years later
from when you originally met him at the bank?
Yeah, yeah, I would say like three years later.
Was that around the same time period
that you also were introduced to Katie and Jill?
I believe so, like maybe a couple months around there.
We didn't work at the bank anymore.
Now he did something else.
He was with his wife, He was actually expecting a child now
A lot of the conversations that we had when I would run into him randomly at the coffee shop or wherever
Was a lot about him being nervous about the baby. What was his personality like?
Shy and then warms up a little goofy as we talked more and more. I began to realize he had very very conservative views
very conservative views, very conservative, political
views, and sometimes we'd almost get in debates, because some of the things that he would say were
quite racist. He would talk to me and be like, I don't think you understand, there's a whole
group of people in this country who don't like people like you who've moved here and taken all our resources
and like, what?
And he was like, yeah, there's a lot of people who believe this racist white, supremacist
argument.
It's not like I ever was around people like that.
It was kind of like my first time up close and personal meeting someone who even said
these things out loud, you know.
I had to look back at that time.
I was so deep into my spiritual program in AA and shame.
Even if I had a negative thought about him,
I judge myself for being judgmental.
I really tried to have an open mind and compassion
and his experience,
because I guess his wife was really mistreated and abused
sexually and physically by these Indian people whom her family was an a commune with.
So he had ideas about like how bad Indian people are in the culture.
He would speak and I would have compassion for them. There
should have been like red flags, but it was more like we would have these
little conversations. He was like a American pride type of person. So he I feel
like he was trying to like educate me. And the big reason why I put up with so
much of it was because he was supposedly like a Chinese shaman. So I would have
these conversations with Jill via email about how horrible he was and the things
that he said. She would rational like, they're like, no, he's just not conscious.
That's who he is in this dimension, but in the other dimension. And it was just
so weird. The only reason why I'm really believing her is because she knows weird
shit about me. Like, she knew that my brother was sick.
He's been sick for many years and she knew that.
And she let me believe that there was this medicine in Mexico that it's not available
pharmaceutical, but that I should start looking into it.
It was giving me hope in these weird ways.
There were many reasons why I was engaging with her.
She was just nurturing grandmother figure now
that existed for me over email.
She told me, a gong she, it's like a Chinese shaman,
and they're able to walk between worlds
and they can be shape shifters,
and they had the capacity to heal.
So that was something else that she said to me
that Lee could help me.
He doesn't know that, but he has that capacity
because in a past life, he was a gong she.
As I began to know, Lee better,
turns out his family went very deep into Freemasonry.
There were a lot of men in his family
that were in that community.
So we had these conversations about politics, Freemasonry, Islam, Christianity, Mormonism.
And for me, it was very interesting to talk to someone who had completely different views and I didn't think anything of it. I grew very curious, I wanted to learn about
like Freemasonry and about these things
because they also have spiritual principles and stuff like that too.
What is free masons?
What I understand it was a brotherhood and they worked on character development.
It was based on a lot of Egyptian science and interestingly enough I saw a lot of similarities
in free masonry as an AA. In terms of its a spiritual program, you have a mentor.
It's about being of service to people
and helping the community.
A lot of similar things that I learned in AA.
That's kind of how we connected.
I did meet some of his friends that were in it.
And definitely there was these power dynamics.
There was something interesting,
but I couldn't necessarily put my finger on it.
It seems like Freemasonry is this global organization, and you can do with it what you want.
If you want it for networking, if you want it for character building, and getting close
to the highest version of yourself.
While this is happening, my life is getting a little bit smaller.
Weird things are happening. A really big red flag event was
I had sponsors in AA and they started getting strange emails from me.
Email saying that I had relapsed and that I was unable to sponsor them anymore. Weird shit.
And I ended up talking to my sponsors. I saw her at a meeting and she was freaked out. She showed me the email that had been sent to her.
I hadn't written that.
A lot of weird things started happening in that way.
People started acting strangely towards me.
Weird things were happening with my social media accounts.
And at this time I'm doing a lot of research about PTSD.
It's not.
And I begin to become scared.
And I think that I have dissociative identity disorder.
I'm reading all this stuff about it, and I'm like,
oh my god, do I have another personality
that's sending these emails?
The first ones went to my sponsors,
would be like, I relapsed, and I can't sponsor you anymore.
Then other emails were like, I would have an
appointment with somebody. A work-related thing, right? An appointment. And they
would have received an email with me canceling it. So I'd show up, nobody would
be there. During this period of time, this would happen. And I just figured, oh, well,
people must be busy
or whatever.
Some of the emails that bounced back,
those were the ones that really led me in the direction
of thinking I had personality disorder
or some sort of associative thing
because nobody could have written those things.
Nobody knew those things.
And for those that don't know,
dissociative identity disorder was previously
called multiple personality disorder.
It's usually a reaction to trauma that people have
as a way to avoid bad memories
and that can look like multiple personalities, essentially.
That's my not a doctor understanding of disorder.
Yeah, I was experiencing dissociative symptoms
like losing track of time, but that was the only
way I could justify the emails that bounced back, the few that came, and then different
times I'd have conversations with people, I would go to meetings and people would be distant
with me.
I didn't understand what was happening, weird stuff with people I worked with, misunderstandings. It felt like when I was using and operating from a blackout, like when you come the next
day and then people are talking about things that happen that you don't remember and you're
like, oh shit, I was blacked up, but I'm not drinking so I didn't understand what was
happening.
It was very scary because I didn't know if I had like a memory
neurological issue. I'm living in the city by myself trying to make a career. My
brother is sick so it's not like I could really talk to my parents about this
because they're dealing with that. I'm still talking to Jill, not talking to Katie
so much anymore, but Jill is sort of operating as like my personal psychic.
Now she tells me that me and Lee are supposed to be in a romantic relationship. It's destined
all this sort of stuff. And I'm like, he's married. That's not possible. I'm not attracted to him.
So then turns out him and his wife have an open relationship.
And I have no idea how it ended up happening,
but we ended up having an intimate relationship with each other.
Probably like the combination of me being so isolated.
I didn't feel bad about it because I thought they have an open relationship.
It's not a big deal.
I didn't feel like I was hurting her in any way. She was pregnant and busy with whatever she was doing. I met her a couple
times. She seemed super cool with me. Like, it wasn't odd. I think I went through with it because I
thought it would help me spiritually or it would help me get closer to finding a cure for my brother.
I don't even know. Like, it was just so messed up. Now that I look back at it, my cousin
reaches out to me and she's like,
are you an Amsterdam?
I'm like, what do you mean?
She's like, your Facebook says that you're an Amsterdam.
And I'm like, what?
I go on Facebook and says I'm an Amsterdam.
And on top of that, it's like all these like
things in Arabic and like allegiances
to the Muslim brotherhood and all this
shit. I wasn't really going on internet or Facebook or anything like that
because I was so deep in my outpatient therapy that I really didn't have the
wherewithal to manage any sort of social media accounts. So this was a shock to
me, a real shock like oh my god. It's all an Arabic, I didn't know what to do.
And I told my therapist about it, he was like, whoever's doing this, they know where you are and what
you're doing at your time's days. Basically, this person was watching me.
If you're into true crime, the Generation Y podcast is essential listening. We started this podcast over 10 years ago to dissect some of the craziest and most notable
murders, crimes, and conspiracy theories together, and we'd love for you to join us.
Generation Y is one of the longest running true True Crime podcasts out there, and we are
still at it, unraveling a new case every week.
We break down infamous cases like the Evil Genius Bank robbery, and lesser known cases like
the case of Kimberly Rico.
Did she actually kill her husband after they took part in a murder mystery game?
We cover every angle, breaking down theories, diving deep into forensic evidence, and interviewing
those close to the case.
And with over 450 episodes, there's a little something for every true crime listener.
Follow the Generation Y Podcasts on Amazon Music, or every Listen to Podcasts,
or you can listen ad-free by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app.
When your cousin saw these extremist posts, did they assume you were packed?
No, nobody even responded to the extremist stuff.
It had been going on for so long.
My cousin, I don't even think she understood any of that shit.
The Arabic, what the Muslim Brotherhood was.
That was my red flag.
But for her, it was like, what are you doing in Amsterdam, girl?
I see what you mean.
Nobody in your life is seeing these posts
about the Muslim Brotherhood and talking to you about that.
Nobody, nobody, nobody.
They just stopped talking to me.
Looking back at it now, I think the terrorism thing
is just so scary. I think people either
they left the site or stopped talking to me. And in my AA community, a lot of people later
told me that they thought I relapsed and lost my shit. Everybody from work, I was making
people money. So nobody said anything. I think people assumed that I had relapsed. Not one person said anything.
My therapist was like, you need to leave the city.
You need to go home to stay with your family for a period of time.
So I went back, say, with my family, turns out I ended up getting pregnant.
This is all happening during this whole period of when I've been told I need to go back home. And then it turns out that I find out I'm pregnant. This is all happening during this whole period of when I've been told I
need to go back home and then it turns out that I find out I'm pregnant. So
everything's just coming to a head. I have no problem getting an abortion because
there was no moral issue about it for me, but for Lee, whoa, huge moral issue. He was
like, I don't believe in abortion. You're so vain. That's why you don't want to
have a baby. Do what are you scared about your body?
You don't even have to take care of the child.
Me and my wife will take care of the child.
You don't have to do anything.
Fliped the freak out.
I was so shocked.
I never thought that that would have been an issue, you know?
Because it was my body.
So I ended up having it and he was so mad.
The level of his anger and rage,
it was just off the charts.
His wife was pregnant.
I mean, he had regretted even telling him.
I ended up going back to my parents' house.
So now it's just time for me to clean up
the whole internet debacle.
I ended up going to the police in this small town in the Midwest.
I explained to them my situation. My mom ended up coming with me.
When I told my parents what happened, they were terrified because they were
Muslim and within the Muslim community, especially in this small town, they have a lot of fear of the people within the Muslim community being radicalized.
I think for them, they saw me as somebody who stopped drinking
and who really changed lifestyle. And they thought, oh my god, she's become radicalized.
I could see the fear that they had, they made it about them too.
They became terrified that their relationships, their business would be affected by my associations.
I had really burnt a lot of bridges and trusts by having been an alcoholic and I had worked
really hard to reestablish that trust.
They had seen the emails and I couldn't necessarily defend
myself because I was scared that maybe I did it,
but it didn't help to have your own parents
be suspicious of you.
It was terrifying to see my brother scared of me.
That was terrifying.
I saw my parents and my brother scared of me. I thought, yeah,
I must have done it. I must have, you know, they couldn't even talk to me whispering around
me, overhearing them have conversations like, do we turn her into the police? I went to
the police almost with this idea of like, I'm turning myself in. And as I started explaining
my case to the detective, he was like, absolutely not. You're not a terrorist.
Totally not.
Your shit got hacked.
Then I'm like, I don't know who could have hacked it.
He was like, come back.
We'll work on this.
But don't leave your house.
My health started to suffer.
I got a adrenal fatigue.
It was nervous breakdown time.
I could actually collapse a little bit. but I couldn't fully because my parents are still
sort of scared of me.
I went to AA in this small ass town.
I couldn't tell anybody what was going on over there.
I went and I worked with this detective.
We sat through all the IP addresses and tried to figure things out.
We went through all the IP addresses and tried to figure things out. We went through all my emails. We found some emails that bounced back that looked like they were
written by me, but it wasn't me. That's when I started to have this detective about my relationship
with Jill and Katie. And he was like, how did you believe this woman was in China and she was a shaman. Like, you're a grown woman.
I remember him saying that and I was like, I don't know.
I couldn't really explain to him the whole spiritual thing
having been an AA and being sober.
Why, I trusted her more.
I couldn't explain that to him.
I remember him shaking his head and he used to call me
city girl.
So he'd be like, all right, city girl, we're gonna get through this.
All right, city girl.
For one time, we were working on the files and we were trying to break it into my
Facebook and it was so hard when you try to write to Facebook and ask them to
shut something down.
It was such a fiasco to have to prove to yourself that you're not that
person or that your account has been hacked. It was really devastating
One time we tried to like
Put passwords into my account and it was very clear that there was somebody on the other side
Trying to change the password before we could change the password
While we were trying to get into the account
There was somebody else in present time on the other side
fucking with us. When I saw that, I started bawling because I had this sense of relief that it wasn't me.
Because all this time I thought it was me. I thought I was a danger to my family. I thought I was
a danger to society. I thought I was just walking, taking time bomb, that had a terrorist agenda or some shit.
And I'm like, it isn't me, it isn't me.
And the detective was like, whatever city girl,
it was never you.
He's like, okay, you need to like go play some basketball,
go have a beer, chill out, come back tomorrow.
He tried to make it funny.
Once I realized that it wasn't me for real, for real,
I got vigilante.
I was researching all this stuff, like,
gang stalking and hacking,
trying to learn as much as I could.
From what I've learned,
gang stalking is when you have an organized group of people
harassing you online.
It's an organized effort.
Wow.
So almost like those like in-sell groups
or the people that are on white supremacist groups.
Totally.
So what was interesting, I remember Lee saying
his family members were mason's and their policemen.
And I remember him saying stuff like,
do you know who I know?
If I wanted to, I could end you right here and nobody would know because I have protection.
That's real power.
Shit like that.
And I'd sit there and be like, this guy is so weird, man.
Like, who says that?
After you have this breakthrough with the detective, did you go home and try to discuss it with
your parents and relay this to them?
I don't think they could discuss it. I think it triggered some real primitive fear.
They took me to the mosque. I had to talk to a shake to see if I had been programmed or see if he could deprogram me.
It was a shit show. I was going along with it all because I was like, oh my god, if there is something in me that's bad, I don't want it there.
I don't want to hurt anyone. They never apologized for that. Once they learned that it wasn't
the case, it was like, all right, let's just go back to life is normal. The relationship has never
been really repaired with my parents. They still don't talk about it. Looking back at it now, my parents,
as Muslims dealt with a lot of bigotry, not in America, but in their perspective countries
that they came from.
So I think this whole incident really unearthed
a level of trauma in hysteria
that was really generational ancestral.
I remember my mom yelling at me,
I was like, how could you do this after everything?
This country is done for you.
I think at this time too, the Muslim ban had happened or it was happening.
I know a lot of shit was happening in Syria, people were scared.
Muslims were very, very scared of terrorist activity within the Muslim community.
My family felt a huge loyalty towards America and was absolutely disgusted
that I could even possibly be in that camp,
or whatever.
My mom and dad will talk, my mom will be like,
remember we took her to the shake and my dad's like,
who, what, when?
It's like they blacked it out.
It was so traumatic.
I started to go back to the detective,
we're working on it.
And then with the weirdest thing that happens,
there's all these IP addresses. One going to Amsterdam, one going to Nigeria. And then what's the weirdest thing that happens? There's all these IP addresses.
One going to Amsterdam, one going to Nigeria, and I guess that's pretty common because they have
some certain emails that are abroad, that are linked with scams and things like that.
It made me see that this person, whoever did this, was very connected. They had many people working
at once targeting me specifically, and it was organized.
There were a lot of government email addresses in there.
At one point, I remember the tattoo looking at it and something shifted in his face.
Something shifted.
He looked at me and he was like, you know what?
I can't help you. He was done.
He wasn't going to help me anymore.
And he was like, listen, if I were you, I would change your name.
I would just start over.
Because if you want wanna really chase this,
it's gonna cost a lot of money.
And then he said that I was the one at fault
because I didn't protect myself.
I'm so sorry.
Were these United States government email addresses
you're saying, or from other countries?
Like Joe at CaliforniaState.gov or something like that?
Yeah, so I don't think it was necessarily them, but it was routed through them.
Okay, so these are professional hackers.
Yes, absolutely 100%. They knew what they were doing.
I obviously pissed somebody off who knew what they were doing.
During this time when you're back at home and you're working through all this, obviously piss somebody off who knew what they were doing.
During this time when you're back at home
and you're working through all this,
are you still in communication with Lee?
No. After he found out that I terminated the pregnancy,
he was like, do not contact me anymore.
I want nothing to do with you.
You're discussing, I was like, oh right, fine.
I have other shit to worry about right now.
My identity got hacked.
He's like, that's so not my problem.
So I did not connect him with that at all.
So I changed my name and I got a work opportunity
back where I lived before and I left.
I really tried to just forget it and start over
with another name.
I was scared it could have been anybody.
It could have been somebody from AA.
It could have been somebody from graduate school.
I didn't think it was Jill or Katie or Lee.
It could have been anybody as far as I knew.
When I was working with the detective, we went through all my emails.
He contacted everybody in my email list.
Went through all my contacts.
He's like, I can do that for you.
Turned out for like three years,
people were getting crazy emails,
me threatening them, me accusing them of things,
weird things in Arabic, and nobody said anything to me.
Nobody said anything, they just left or acted weird. I did notice, I felt like
people were getting hostile and weirder around me. I didn't take it personally. I thought
people were going through stuff, but it goes to show you when it comes to the terrorist
thing. I think it really scared people and that put me in a very isolated environment.
This was after I just got out of a really abusive relationship too.
I was already isolated in that way.
I didn't have anyone around me that was close enough to me to be able to notice these
things.
I was also getting sober too so I didn't know if that was what life was like now. If you don't have drugs and alcohol in your life, I've done my best
to live my life and move on, have a different name. It's taken me a long time to
learn how to connect with people safely again. And then even my A program, I'm
very, very cautious now about who I engage with and who I deal with.
A lot of people have had a lot of theories. The number one theory is what's Lee and Katie and Jill.
But there's other theories. Maybe it was somebody I worked with. Maybe it was my ex that I was in
that abusive relationship with. My dad has his own business. Maybe it was an employee that he fired.
That was also another theory. So there was really no resolution. The detective thought Maybe it was an employee that he fired. That was also another theory. So there
was really no resolution. The detective thought maybe it was Lee's wife, because some of
the emails were from the law school in my neighborhood where she went to school. When
I first got out of it, I came back to the city and I had to like reestablish my life.
I was completely shattered. I
am fearful. Couldn't really trust anyone. Like I couldn't trust my own mind, you
know. I had this memory of what my life was and my dreams were and I just tried
to take the next right action. My faith completely shattered. My faith in God or my higher power.
So that's really hard.
How do you work in AA program without having faith in God?
The betrayal was really hard for me too,
because the fact that for three years,
people were getting inundated by this stuff,
and nobody said anything to me.
I still can't wrap my mind around it.
I really didn't understand racism in this country, honestly.
I'm a minority, but they came from a privileged background, so I had a lot of access to stuff.
Meeting the person like Lee and learning about these little different pockets and American politics
and that people actually really feel that way.
I changed my name and I changed it to an American name mostly because I couldn't
deal. I just needed to start over somehow. And that was really amazing because for the
first time I saw people engage with me in a way that like they didn't have fear in their
eyes. My whole life I didn't know that upon meeting people I always had to justify
having this backstory. Like I'm not scary, I'm just like you act like a clown or
whatever. With an American name, I didn't have to do that anymore, I could just
stand there, I didn't have to like be so pleasing, be so pleasant, I could just
be present with people without having to reassure them of anything.
I was invited places.
It was just a different life.
And that was tricky because I had no idea that so much of my life or personality was probably shaped by other people's fear or resistance towards me.
I guess I just saw how other people saw me, you know.
It was a real wake-up call.
It was the only way that I can describe it.
Whenever I told people this happened, it was just too much for anyone.
So I quickly learned I couldn't share this with anyone.
I couldn't share that this had happened.
And it just freaked people out.
There have been times where it just shared what happened.
Years afterwards and people, the response was like,
I'm not equipped to handle this.
The terrorism thing, it freaks people out so bad.
I got to say, having an American name has been great
because I don't feel like I have to educate people
about any sort of community. I don't have to carry the burden and responsibility of educating
other people about things when I'm just trying to like live my life too. The
opportunity came up to talk to you and I saw wow it could help people but I don't
share this with people because it's too extreme and too much. And the assumption
always is like what did you do? You must have done something, you must have
pissed somebody off. I already felt that so I don't need that. My boyfriend, he's
the only person. We were friends for a long time first because I was so scared
to get close to people because I was scared. I mean, we never found who the person actually was.
I was very scared to let anybody in my life
because I didn't want weird stuff
starting happening to other people.
So my boyfriend, after a while, I told him what had happened.
It was like, nah, you're not a terrorist, dude.
He wasn't scared of it.
He's still engaged with me as a person. I think
that was really healing for me. I met him three years after it happened. That was pretty
shattered. Through him, I started to meet people and make friends that were more consistent
in my life. I had to deal with all the grief and process all that. I actually had space in my life to deal with what had happened.
And now it's learning how to accept it and find a place in my life where these things can maybe help other people.
It makes me grateful now more for the things that I have in my life.
But I'm very, very, very cautious about who I led in my life now.
I can't do social media.
I mean, I still have panic attacks when I go on the computer.
Anything technology-based is very loaded and tricky for me.
Nowadays, that's just how you engage in the world.
I'm working through that.
I've had to find other ways to connect with people,
but that digital world, I will not engage with it
in any way that I feel not safe.
Thank you so much for being willing
to share your story.
I am so incredibly sorry.
What do you hope that listeners will walk away with?
I hope that when people have someone in their life and they see that something is off,
like you get like a weird email or you see them and they just seem off.
Instead of assuming the worst to ask if something is going on,
we never know what people are going through.
If I had just one person during the time that could have seen me as somebody
Who wasn't capable of that? It could have changed everything
When the detective called everybody on the list they were all like, oh, yeah, we thought she relapsed
Oh, yeah, we knew something weird was going on. Oh, yeah, that was a weird email
We thought she relapsed. Oh, yeah, we knew something weird was going on. Oh, yeah, that was a weird email
But it was like out of sight out of mind And if just one person would have been like, hey, are you good?
Anything like did you send me this?
Are you a terrorist now like anything? I mean it anything
We like oh you learned Arabic anything
Yeah, and I think that benefit of the doubt is so important, like you said.
I know this person to be a good person.
So perhaps there's more here.
And by just being inquisitive and curious instead of making assumptions,
writing people off, we can actually help people in a deep way.
It could take that one person being like,
hey, are you okay?
They changed their mind's life.
Especially when you know that person too,
not behave that way typically,
or you see that somebody's withdrawing,
or they seem more isolated, they're not reaching out,
they don't seem like they're typical self.
Just sending a text message to someone,
hey, thinking about you. You good? It can make such a difference for people.
Thank you so so much for being willing to share your story and give your energy, especially
given that you had to use technology to do this. And we were having technical issues, of course,
because Mercury is in retrograde and being a total bitch, but I'm so incredibly thankful technology to do this and we were having technical issues of course because
Mercury is in retrograde and being a total bitch but I'm so incredibly thankful
for you doing so. Thank you for giving me the platform to be able to share this.
Thank you so much for listening. Until next time, stay safe friends.
Something was wrong is a broken cycle media production, created and hosted by me, Tiffany
Rees.
If you'd like to support the show further, you can share episodes with your loved ones,
leave a positive review, or follow something was wrong on Instagram.
At something was wrong podcast.
Our theme song was composed by Glad Rags.
Check out their album, Wonder Under.
Thank you so much. Hey, Prime members, you can listen to something was wrong early and add free on Amazon Music.
Download the app today, or you can listen early and add free with Wondery Plus in Apple
podcasts. Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondery.com
slash survey.