Who Trolled Amber? - The Gas Man: Episode 5 - Truth serum
Episode Date: June 11, 2024In this episode, Chloe looks into what happened to The Gas Man when he arrived back in Germany as a fugitive – and investigates whether his trade with Iran ever really endedTo find out more about To...rtoise:Download the Tortoise app - for a listening experience curated by our journalistsSubscribe to Tortoise+ on Apple Podcasts for early access and ad-free contentBecome a member and get access to all of Tortoise's premium audio offerings and moreIf you want to get in touch with us directly about a story, or tell us more about the stories you want to hear about contact hello@tortoisemedia.comReporter: Chloe Hadjimatheou Producer: Claudia WilliamsEditor: Jasper CorbettNarrative editor: Gary MarshallAdditional reporting: Marten HahnSound design: Hannah VarrallOriginal theme music: Tom KinsellaOriginal artwork: Jon Hill Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Get ready to sashay into season two of Think Queen.
Your fiercest drag queen is back in the lab, honey, serving up even more STEM realness.
We are kicking things off with an iconic guest, the GOAT of STEM, a legendary astrophysicist,
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So get ready to gag on knowledge and tune in to Think Queen, where the world of STEM
gets a major makeover. Before we start, I just need to tell you that this episode includes an incident of antisemitism.
It also includes a description of torture.
Only an idiot wouldn't know why Iran wanted so many barrels, 55 gallon drums of thiodiglycol.
Special Agent Dennis Bass worked for the Baltimore Customs Office for 25 years.
He put a lot of criminals behind bars during that time, a lot of big-time drug dealers and traffickers.
And I think it's fair to say he doesn't have much time
for people who break the law.
He prided himself on his ability to follow through.
But ultimately, he just wanted the job done.
So he was perfectly happy to help law enforcement officials elsewhere to close a case.
Look what happened with Franz von Anrat.
We were never able to get him here to the US.
Franz von Anrat, the guy who supplied Saddam Hussein
with chemicals used to make mustard
gas. He hid from Dennis Bass in Baghdad for more than a decade. When he returned home
to the Netherlands, the US authorities didn't need to go after him because Dutch prosecutors
charged him with complicity in war crimes. And they were so incensed by what he did, they went above and beyond.
Walacek fled, he went back to Germany, and they didn't do a thing to him.
Nothing.
Dennis Bass is disappointed that the Germans didn't take the same approach towards Peter
Walacek, who'd pleaded guilty
but fled before he could be sentenced.
But the thing is, the two cases aren't exactly equivalent.
Franz Van Anrath's chemicals had helped create mustard gas which was shown to have killed people.
Peter Wallischek's chemicals may well have been used by the Iranians, but there's no
definitive evidence to prove it.
It makes no difference. The crimes that both of them committed as far as we were concerned in
the United States were violations of the export administration regulations, making numerous false
statements on US documents, money laundering. It doesn't have to be that mustard gas was
ever made or used.
What he wants to know is why didn't Germany prosecute Peter Wallischek for customs violations?
On the face of it, there's a simple answer. I've been looking into old news coverage of the
Wallachs check case from the late 80s after he escaped back to Germany.
According to the New York Times a spokesman for the German Embassy said he
couldn't be charged under German law because the transactions had taken place
outside the country. I've been back and forth with legal experts on this point.
It's complicated to dig into after so long, but it looks like it wasn't a crime the Germans
could prosecute even if they'd wanted to.
And there's something else too. That same New York Times article claimed that the case illustrated the weaknesses of German export laws.
It warned about the role other Western companies were playing as facilitators or enablers
in the creation of chemical warfare programs all around the world.
And that rang a bell.
When I worked in export controls, the go-betweens, the people like Peter Walacek, the people that
the Iran's and Iraq's and Libya's, the embargoed countries, that they would find to act as go-betweens
on their behalf and make these illegal exports happen, were German nationals. And, you know,
the reason clearly was because Germany doesn't do anything to their citizens
when they do things like this.
Is it possible that the German government was just turning a blind eye to what was going
on?
And what's that meant for Peter Valaschek's links to Iran since then?
then. I'm Chloe Hajimathau.
From Tortoise, this is The Gas Man. All right, it's recording.
Gavi Mehrone is a lawyer based in Chicago.
He's speaking to us from his large, noisy office, all glass panels and piles of paperwork
with the city traffic blaring outside the window.
We have in-house our own research facility made up of ex-intelligence officers, analysts, from MI5,
from the United States Intel, from Israeli intelligence.
Over the last quarter of a century, his firm has won cases against banks, oil
companies and state sponsors of terrorism and they've collected more
than one and a half billion dollars in compensation for their clients.
Gavi Maron's latest case just concluded in a civil court in Iraq where he's been
representing some of the victims of the 1988 Halabja chemical attack.
But the reason I'm interested in all this is because it's not the regime of Saddam Hussein who's in the dock.
The defendants in Gavi Marone's case include West German companies,
and it's a case that's helped me understand the country that Peter Valaschek escaped to in 1988.
Gavi Marone and his team allege that Iraqi officials hired German companies in the 80s
to build chemical weapons factories under the guise of creating pesticide plants.
And one of their top guys in intelligence, he went to Germany and he contracted with, it became three West German companies
to build the entire chemical weapons plants.
Prusak was the key link and Prusak today, it changed its name.
They today are called TUI and they're the largest tourism organization in Europe.
Tuohy and they're the largest tourism organisation in Europe.
Are you saying that Tuohy, the travel company, knowingly built a chemical factory in Iraq for Saddam to manufacture chemical weapons?
Much more than that, I'm saying. Tuohy was the chief co-conspirator with the Saddam regime to
clandestinely build it.
chief co-conspirator with the Saddam regime to clandestinely build it.
Yep, that Tuohy. Before it changed its name, Tuohy was a big player in mining and chemicals.
I'd heard a little bit about this case before speaking to Gavi Mehrone, but still, it seems incredible that a company I associate with sunshine and family holidays could be implicated in something so dark.
Tuohy sent us a statement denying the allegations made in the lawsuit. The
company claims a group of employees was responsible for these clandestine deals
with Iraq without the main company's knowledge and that they were
subsequently let go. Previous attempts to prosecute the company have been
unsuccessful and a verdict in Gavi Mehrone's case is expected later this
summer. But it's not just him who's making these types of claims
about West German companies.
In 2012, Claudia Rott, a German politician
who was then co-chair of the Green Party
and is now Minister of Culture, publicly
apologized for what she described
as German participation in the Kurdish genocide.
And here's where I'm really going with all this.
Lots of companies around the world sold all sorts of weapons, technologies and chemicals to Saddam Hussein in the 80s.
Yes, in Germany, but also in the Netherlands, France and even here in Britain. In fact, a British company built a factory in Iraq
which was used by Saddam Hussein to manufacture chemical weapons.
Years later, that same factory was cited as a reason for Britain to go to war against Iraq.
The thing is, Gavi Mehrone's lawsuit argues that West German companies were selling far more than anyone else,
and that without their help, it's likely Saddam Hussein would never have had the capability to carry out atrocities like the one in Halabja.
This was the context in which Peter Wallischek was developing his own international business interests.
When Peter Wallischek escaped from the US in the late 80s it was big news.
And then I was on the first page of famous...
Washington Post, New York Times.
New York Times. First pitch. I was there.
Understanding the Germany he escaped to has helped me make more sense of things.
Why his arrest by Dennis Bass would have been unlikely to leave a dent on his entrepreneurial spirit.
Why would it? Other than a bit of media attention, there didn't seem to
be any real consequences for anyone engaged in this type of business. But what about Peter
Valaschek now in 2024? Well, the only real difference seems to be that his client list
has expanded. We have two companies making export of medicine,
then with countries what the Americans say,
they are the bad countries,
North Korea, China, Iran.
Sitting in his dusty office in Siegburg, Germany, surrounded by busts of dead Soviet heroes,
he reels off the list of sanctioned countries he's been trading with, as if he's trying
to impress me.
He has a few companies registered under his name, and he tells me they mostly trade pharmaceuticals,
chemicals and equipment. Maybe it's the language barrier,
but I find it really hard to pin him down on the details. It's unclear what his involvement
is now that he's in his early 80s. Sometimes he tells me his wife's taken over everything,
other times that he still goes on business trips. But he's happy to show off the fact that he's travelled extensively
to these countries since the 1980s, at the invitation of the governments themselves no less.
And North Korea, how was that?
This is also invited from government. I had a car with a car and driver and we were going to the border to South Korea. It was very interesting.
Not many people get to see that. Is that unusual? I know, I know. But we have given them
medicine and such things. Tehran? Did you go to Tehran? I go there as a friend, one week, two weeks. I have there many friends, they
were all from the heart, like Hamas or so. Like Hamas? Yeah. We're speaking just weeks
after the Hamas terror attack on Israel that happened in October 2023.
For decades, Iran has been one of the strongest supporters of Hamas.
I said it was right what they were doing. I don't like Jewish.
Why not?
not? Because they are Jewish, they make the whole world, the whole centuries, only trouble.
It's really shocking to hear this kind of brazen anti-Semitism, but actually this is pretty typical of my conversations with Peter Walaszczuk. He uses racist and sexist
language and I try not to react because I suspect it's deliberate and intended to
shock and also, maybe, an attempt by him to deflect and avoid answering the real question.
I realise that, even after all this time, I still don't really understand him. I can't
get a grip on what's real and what's a performance.
What I really want to know is why he's chosen to trade specifically with countries that
have a reputation for being so repressive. Iran, Russia and North Korea all considered
to be state sponsors of terrorism and all
of them sanctioned.
Peter Valaschek tells me that even these countries need painkillers. Only I'm not exactly convinced
that's all he's been selling them.
If I want to get anywhere, I'm going to have to find someone who can tell me more about what Peter Wallischek's really been up to since the late 80s and whether he's still
breaking the law to export illicit goods to rogue states.
He was interesting and he was very busy, just try to get contacts and to earn money. Aha, so he was focused on business?
Yes.
This is Karl. He was one of Peter Wallischek's business associates in the late 90s and early
2000s. He's agreed to speak to me on the condition that he remains anonymous. Karl,
as we're calling him, was involved in selling pharmaceuticals and medical equipment
with Peter Wallischek for a couple of decades.
It was in the 1990s.
We're chatting over the phone. He's at home in Germany with his daughter there in the
background to help if he gets stuck with his English.
We had a company dealing with chemicals for schools and universities for research,
trading with relief organizations like the Red Cross or CARE,
and we packed things for deliveries to countries like Bosnia, Herzegovina, Africa and so on.
Oh wow, so he was sending aid, you were helping him send aid to war zones.
Not only a war but also natural catastrophes and things like that.
I have to admit, this takes me totally by surprise.
It seems there was good money to be made from disaster relief at the time.
But still, it doesn't fit with the image I have in my mind of Peter Wallischek. So
I asked Karl about the Peter Wallischek he knew, what he was like as a business partner
and a person.
He was a fan of Stalin, you know, the former Russian leader.
Yes. You see that he has been a communist,
that's a capitalist communist.
So it's very difficult to understand
what's going on in his mind.
It's good to know that I'm not the only one who
finds Peter Wallischek difficult to read.
And it looks like any animosity he might have had for America before his arrest
I hate the US. A good American is a dead American.
becomes all-encompassing afterwards, driving him closer to the countries he still does
business with. Countries he gleefully calls the axis of evil.
He bought no cars that were produced in the US and things like that. It didn't like that
at all. So that was the reason I think he made them business with countries like North Korea, Iran, Cuba, which were also against the United States.
It's helpful to hear this. I realised that until Karl confirmed who Peter Walaszczuk was doing business with,
I was slightly suspicious he was making it all up about North Korea and Cuba,
though I was less skeptical about his old friends.
Do you know what business he was doing with Iran?
In the time we worked together, I saw several of its shipments.
This has been only laboratory equipment and medical devices.
So it was equipment, not drugs or chemicals? Yes also chemicals but not
something like the thing in the 80s with the TOD glycol. Of course also with medical equipment,
lab equipment and chemicals you have always a problem with dual use products.
Dual use is anything that can be used for both civilian and military purposes.
Karl says he never saw Peter Wallischeck selling anything illegal,
but he does remember times when he ran foul of German customs over dual
use exports in the 90s and early 2000s. He doesn't think any of it was deliberate and
he tells me these types of mistakes are pretty easy to make. To me, it doesn't sound like
Peter Walaszczuk learnt much from his time in prison in Baltimore.
But of course, officials from the customs and things, they had a look on him, what he's doing.
They checked everything very close.
I have no way of knowing Peter Wallischek's intentions.
I've tried to ask him about these things, but he just dodges the question or tells me I should read the Bible, not the papers.
tells me I should read the Bible, not the papers. And I'm not sure that customs would agree with Karl's take,
that it's not such a big deal to make mistakes
with dual-use exports.
But here's what I think is important about all this.
Karl is saying that Peter Falischek was known to customs.
And a source in the customs office
has confirmed they were keeping an eye on him.
That means no matter what Dennis Bass might think, German law enforcement has been on
to Peter Wallischek. My name is Martin Hahn. I am a German freelance correspondent and reporter and I work mainly
for German public radio. So I've worked on chemical weapons and chemical weapons regulations.
And we met at a chemical weapons convention.
We did. We did meet in The Hague at the German Embassy where you were on a
on a panel where they discussed the chemical weapons and chemical weapons regulations.
Yeah. When we first met Martin Hahn told me to give him a ring if I ever needed any help with
an investigation I was working on. A very risky thing to offer because a few years down the line
and I've roped him into helping
us with the parts of this investigation that require a German speaker. Investigating what
kinds of things Peter Wallischek's been trading and whether the customs officers ever charged
him with anything. And you've been helping us loads.
I've tried.
You've tried. With the limitations that you've put within...
Because it's not that simple in Germany.
The country has these super strict privacy laws that significantly impact the information
authorities will give out about things like investigations or criminal records.
We have two cases in the German history, the Third Reich under Nazi Germany and the Stasi
secret service. So I think these two things basically are the reason that data protection
today is so strong and is seen as a safeguard against these intrusive inshumane surveillance
measures by the state.
It means that Martin Hahn hasn't been able to get any answers about Peter Valaschek's
possible criminal history, whether he was charged in any customs cases, as Karl mentioned.
I also find a news article that suggests he was investigated for fraud and forgery, but
we can't stand that up either.
So wherever I went, really, the answer was, we we don't know and even if we knew we wouldn't
be able to tell you.
The guy Martin Hahn talks to in the customs press office is able to comment more broadly.
He admits they're limited in what they can do.
So they take random samples and check that but there's no guarantee that every single shipment
that is mislabelled will be flagged.
So it feels like there isn't anything substantial that we're going to get from official channels.
But I do remember something that Peter Valaschek mentioned when we were in his strange office in Siegburg. He had all
those rows of bookshelves filled with taxidermy, all the weird dusty stuffed birds, and as
he was telling me about them, I realise now that he actually admitted to pulling a fast
one on German customs.
This is from Iceland. Not allowed to bring it in anymore.
And Kastam, oi.
OK, but when you brought it, it was OK?
They didn't see it. Sometimes Kastam is not looking in the airport,
and sometimes it was looked at.
But it's a long time ago, five years, ten years.
To be fair, it was just a stuffed puffin. It was a long time ago, five years, ten years.
To be fair, it was just a stuffed puffin. I don't have any evidence he tried to sell
anything illegal to any of the rogue states he deals with, until I discover a new case,
this time from 2012, when Peter Valaschek was caught
sending another potentially deadly substance to Iran.
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I heard from the main custom office in Aachen that they were investigating a wholesaler, that they violated the European anti-torture regulation.
Okay, my name is Markus Helwig.
I'm a reporter for the newspaper in Germany called Bild am Sonntag.
It's a weekly newspaper in Germany called Bild am Sonntag. It's a weekly newspaper in Germany.
Marcus Hellwig first came across Peter Wallischek in 2012.
But to understand the events that led him to the gas man,
we have to scroll back about a year and a half before that.
In 2010, Marcus Hellwig was in Tehran
for a pre-arranged interview with a source,
when the door slammed open and a group of Iranian state security officers piled into the room.
They were playing close and they just told me I should stop talking and give away my cell phone and that was like, okay, what will happen next? I don't know.
Being arrested in Iran is no joke. There's no guarantee you'll get access to a lawyer
and certainly no guarantee of a fair trial.
They accused me of being a spy and threatening their security.
And after that, I was a terrorist.
Then it became, the situation became worse.
So they took me in this secret prison and that was a kind of torture prison.
They torture people there.
Iran's use of torture against people in detention has been really well documented by human rights
groups.
I was blindfolded the whole time and there were a lot of, I think, soldiers from the
Iranian Revolutionary Guards. I guess I couldn't see them but I hear them. And then the staff from the prison, they started to work at eight, sometimes nine o'clock.
And then you can hear, I heard the people crying and screaming.
Marcus Hellwig was tortured too.
Electric wires were attached to his head and searing bolts shot through his jaw and skull.
It's been years but he still can't bring himself to talk about it.
Instead he describes the tiny space he was kept in.
I was in a very very small cell so it was not possible to just stretch your arms and legs and
the light was on the whole night 24-7 and sometimes they hit me sometimes it
was quite a brutal. After five months the newspaper he works for pays a
$50,000 fine
and the foreign minister of Germany flies to Tehran to bring Marcus Helwig back home.
But the reason I'm telling you this is because a year later, in 2012,
when he's recovered and back working again,
he gets a tip from one of his contacts at the customs office. It's about an illegal
shipment they've managed to stop. And they think Marcus Helwig might be interested because
it was on its way to Iran. You guessed it, Peter Walaszczek. Only this time he's sending
a pharmaceutical, 5,000 ampures of it.
He wanted to export a drug called thiopental.
Sodium thiopental has legitimate uses as a pre-operative anesthetic.
But under EU anti-torture legislation, its exports been restricted for countries that still carry
out the death penalty, including Iran, but also the USA, because it can be used as a
form of lethal injection. It's sometimes called truth serum. That's because it can
be used to break down people's defences and make it more likely that they'll talk.
For Markus Helwig, it's a hell of a realisation
that a German man was involved in the sale of a pharmaceutical
that could be used as a torture aid.
Knowing that they kill their own people,
knowing that they're torturing their own people,
it was shocking.
Activists in Iran suspect these kinds of chemicals may have been used to induce public confessions
from prisoners. So we asked Martin Hahn, the German journalist who's been helping us,
to look into what happened to Peter Walaszczek as a consequence of the truth serum
case.
Customs then confiscated that shipment and destroyed it. I tried to reach out to the
customs agency that was responsible back then and they said the files have been destroyed.
So we can't even find out whether he received a penalty of some kind for his infraction?
All that falls under data privacy laws and data protection. I reached out to the German
federal police, the BKR, and even they said they couldn't help me.
If he was found guilty, it seems the worst he would have got was a fine. Peter Wallacech
admits he tried to send the drugs, but again he says he didn't
know it was illegal. When we spoke, he denied he was prosecuted and dismissed the case as
nothing big.
Once again, nothing seems to touch Peter Wallischek. Still, German customs had done their job.
They discovered illegal goods heading for a sanctioned country
and stopped them.
But here's the thing.
There are also plenty of other goods
that are allowed to go to Iran that won't be stopped by customs
but can be repurposed by the regime.
In 2017, Bosch, the German engineering company, sold Iran
thousands of CCTV cameras. Last year activists inside the country claimed
the cameras were being used to crack down on protesters. Bosch says it wasn't
aware the cameras were being used that way and that it didn't sell them
directly to end customers.
The sales were legal, but the case caused a backlash and they were caused to boycott the company.
Because that's the risk anyone who trades with a country like Iran takes.
You can't control how your products will be used.
And Germany is doing far more of this type of trade
than any other EU member state.
It's Iran's biggest trading partner in the block.
In 2023, trade from Germany to Iran
was worth more than 1.2 billion euros.
That's more than double that of Iran's next biggest EU trade
partner.
Well, I think Germany is the economic powerhouse of the European Union, right?
Why is Germany the economic powerhouse?
Because we are export champions, as they call Germany.
And that also means exporting into Iran.
So Iran is just part of the whole puzzle. It's worth remembering here that Iran has been increasingly belligerent recently,
firing missiles at Israel, supporting attacks on ships crossing the Gulf Straits,
and internally it's killed hundreds of protesters in the past five years and arrested thousands.
To be fair to Germany, trade has significantly fallen in the past
year, in large part because of those increasingly strained political relations.
So you have these really harsh critiques out there.
Activists, journalists and now also politicians in Germany are calling for tougher sanctions
and stricter rules to prevent all dual-use
products from reaching the regime.
We do see parliamentarians speaking out against these practices. They are from the Social
Democrats and the Greens who are in power, but also opposition politicians from the conservative
CDU. They say we must finally restrict these effectively and regulate it at a European level. If they
don't, if they aren't changing it, that's the power of business in Germany for you.
A couple of days later, I'm sitting in the studio with Claudia, who I'm working with
on this series, and we're waiting for an interview to start when it's a whatsapp message from Martin Hahn which I read
aloud. Oh my god I just had a long chat with Peter Valastrek he called me after
I reached out to his wife a few days ago Martin. Hi Martin can you talk? Yes, I can talk.
This is particularly exciting because when I talk to Peter Falischek, I'm always a bit
worried things are being lost in translation.
This is the first time we have someone on our team questioning him in German about his
business empire.
I said, this is such a hard business to do, exporting into heavily sanctioned.
And he said, haha, yeah, customs officer also asked me that.
This is his whole thing. He thinks he's this renegade businessman
doing business with the axis of evil, but he also probably made good money.
Martin Hahn says the conversation was pretty friendly on the face of it, but it had an undertone.
And what I found very striking in my position as a journalist when I talked to him towards the end of our conversation
in the context of him doing business with North Korea, he said,
Do you know why journalists are being executed in North Korea?
I said, no, me, tell me.
And he said well because they're too curious.
There is obviously a way of reading that as a threat into our direction.
Back in 2012, Marcus Helwig, the journalist who was imprisoned in Iran,
was confronted with the same hostile Peter Wallischek when he went to his office to ask him about the truth serum.
And he was immediately very aggressive. So he asked me to leave. So I was leaving his office
and on the street he was insulting me and threatened me and was mocking about the cousins, the general cousins, so they can't do anything
to me and I'm safe here.
I'm safe here. There it is again, that same sense of impunity Peter Valaszczuk had when
he walked into the police station with my friend Mike right at the start
of this story. It's like he's untouchable, like he's somehow protected. And maybe that's
how he feels.
It was shocking for me that there are still a lot of loopholes so that you can do this
kind of business, you know? Peter Wallischek seems to know how to play the system.
If he's been prosecuted by the German authorities,
it hasn't stopped him.
A quarter of a century after he sent those chemicals to Iran
that could be used to make mustard gas,
he's sending banned substances like truth serum.
It's clear those he's selling to
still see him as a middleman, an enabler.
In fact, he's felt comfortable expanding his trade
into other countries with brutal regimes.
For him, it's just a business, you know?
No Gwisyn.
Possibly the only word I know in German, something I had to learn to question Peter Wallischek. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, this to Peter Wallischek, tried to push him on his business deals and his relationships
with sanctioned regimes around the world. He won't be drawn. And then he drops a bombshell,
something he seems to think wipes the slate clean.
And then I said, what shall I do? Yeah, I have some Buddhist monks who are German. Then I said perhaps it's something
for me and then I was reading the books.
Peter Wallischeck is studying to be a Buddhist monk.
Then I was speaking with monks and now it's a question, should I go 800 kilometres from Bangkok down?
And it's not in his native Germany.
I'm going to Thailand and there's no problem.
But actually there really might be a problem Because Thailand does have an extradition
agreement with the US.
Peter Walacek pled guilty to the crime. So he'll be wanted until he's dead. I'd be
happy to dismiss the warrant once he's dead.
That's next time on the Gas Man.
Individuals like that are extremely dangerous. So it might be some kind of nerve agent.
It might be.
Forget these fucking human rights.
I hate it.
There is no human rights. I hate it. There is no human rights.
Thank you for listening to The Gas Man. It's reported by Chloe Hajmothau and
produced by me, Claudia Williams. It's written by both of us.
Garry Marshall is the narrative editor and Jasper Corbett is the editor. The
sound design is by Hannah Varrell.
Original theme music by Tom Kinsella.
With additional reporting by Martin Hahn.
This episode was fact-checked by Jess Swinburne.
With thanks to Kavita Puri, Matt Russell, Katie Gunning and Martin Hahn.
You can listen to more episodes of The Gas Man today by subscribing to Tortoise Plus
or by downloading the Tortoise app.
You can listen to our previous investigations right here on Tortoise Investigates while
you wait for the next episode, and to hear more from our award-winning newsroom search
for Tortoise wherever you get your podcasts. gusts. You're telling me that there was a terrorist attack in 2014 involving the use of chemical weapons but nobody heard about it.
This could not have been an accident.
People were eager to assume that it was some sort of hate attack.
I've gone through all the theories.
I think there's only one that fits.
Yeah, you have to read this story.
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