Who Trolled Amber? - The Gas Man: Episode 6 - Devil's breath

Episode Date: June 13, 2024

In the final episode of the series, is the 40-year game of cat-and-mouse nearly over?To find out more about Tortoise:Download the Tortoise app - for a listening experience curated by our journalistsSu...bscribe 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 production: Imy HarperSound design: Hannah VarrallOriginal theme music: Tom KinsellaOriginal artwork: Jon Hill Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 TORTURE Tortoise There's something I didn't tell you about Peter Wallisjek. It's not sacrificed and not ordained. Back when we first went to meet him in Siegburg and he came out of his house to greet us. I'm only doing for you. Oh, I see. OK.
Starting point is 00:00:39 So it's kind of a fancy dress. I must. He was wearing bright orange monk's robes over the top of his tracksuit. He said he'd put them on especially for us. Up the stairs, in his office, the room was hazy, covered in a stifling cloud of incense. And he had a YouTube video set up, playing from his computer. This is a singing Buddhist man. Mm-hmm, chanting. What?
Starting point is 00:01:17 Chanting. Eventually, Claudia, who's producing this series, had to ask him to turn it off so we could hear each other. And actually, that's where my interview with Peter Walaszczyk started, with his conversion to a new religion. Maybe we can start. When did your interest in Buddhism begin? This was one year, one and a half year ago because my wife kicked me out 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 book. He tells me he's been accepted as a trainee monk.
Starting point is 00:02:11 That means normally he wears white robes, not the orange fancy dress shop ones he's wearing now. He talks me through the little Buddha statues that clutter his desk. This is the most important. This is a green Buddha. This is in the temple where the king is. I can't help but notice there are other religious symbols in the room too. Can I ask you, I see above your desk you have many Orthodox icons. This is a very famous one. He's pointing to a gilded image of a very stern looking Jesus. He's looking always angry to me when I'm looking to... Buddhist. No, he's looking angry when I'm looking to porno. He leans into the mic to tell me that Jesus is angry with him, not because he's
Starting point is 00:03:20 a Buddhist, but because he's been watching porn. When I probe a bit about how his newfound faith fits in with the rest of his life, his lucrative chemical sales to Iran and his trade with other sanctioned countries, it doesn't go down well. What past? What have I passed? I'm Buddhist now. I'm not interested in the past. I can't help wondering how much he's told the monks. And what about when you go to the Buddhist temple with your ordination? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:00 Do they ask you to talk at all about your past and things that you've done in the past and whether you feel okay? Yes, this is a sign that you have not an idea from Buddhism because in Buddhism there is no past. It's a repeated refrain throughout the interview that whatever he might have been involved in before, it doesn't matter now, because his past doesn't exist. It's quite the pivot, and a convenient one at that. So I have to admit that at first, when he tells me he's going to be travelling to Thailand in a few days to study as a monk, I miss the real significance of what he's saying. I dismiss it as a distraction.
Starting point is 00:04:52 It's only when I'm back in London that I remember something he said. It still opened the warrant. Really? Yes. I searched... In America, it's one criminal till death criminal. And Claudia and I finally connect the dots. The last time he was arrested for travel was more than 10 years ago, but he was arrested. He'd been arrested twice.
Starting point is 00:05:21 What's different about this trip to Thailand is that Thailand has an extradition treaty. That means if the US asked them to, the authorities in Bangkok could put him on a plane to face justice back in America. When we realise the stakes, we try and work out what flight Peter Wallischek's on. That's one from Frankfurt. That left a couple of hours ago from Germany. And is currently on flight. Is currently, let's see where it is. It's currently right over Iran. Is it? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:57 That's a bit of irony in that one. And figure out what might happen to him when he lands. We have no way of knowing whether the Thai authorities will bother with an old man. I wonder how we can find out if he's picked up. I start to wonder, in turning to a religion he believes absolves him entirely of his past, could he actually be inadvertently walking himself
Starting point is 00:06:24 right back into custody? I'm Chloe Hajimathain. From Tortoise, this is The Gas Man. Episode 6. Devil's Breath Wow so this is the temple. It's gorgeous. It's very ornate with kind of gilded gold and red ceiling. Lots of flourishes. When I set out trying to understand Peter Falaszczuk's story I knew it might take me around the world but I did not expect to end up in a Thai Buddhist temple in the leafy London suburb of Wimbledon. So there's a load of monks down there in the garden wearing orange
Starting point is 00:07:26 robes. Oh it looks like they're preparing lunch for the order or something. They're wiping down tables. I'm here because maybe Peter Valaschek's right. Maybe I just don't know enough about Buddhism to understand his new approach to life. Can he really expect to live out the rest of his days in Thailand without ever having to engage with his past? Or is the gas man just playing another one of his games? Oh, that's him, the guy there in the orange robe. Hello, are you Dr Lau?
Starting point is 00:08:06 Yes I am, yes. Hi, I'm Chloe from Tortoise. Okay, Chloe, nice to meet you. Really good to meet you. So I've come to speak with the Abbot in charge here. He's a slender man with a shaved head and glasses and his orange robe is the real deal. Okay, please come inside. And there's someone else that Dr Lau's invited to join us. His orange robe is the real deal. And there's someone else that Dr Lau's invited to join us.
Starting point is 00:08:33 Robert Banjavashiro, that's his name. But you called him Venerable Bob. Yeah, well we're all venerable one way or another. Like Peter Valaszczuk, Venerable Bob is also in his 80s and came to Buddhism later in life. I learned today at 68 to 72. He's unusual it seems. Dr Lau tells me they don't often admit older people as trainee monks. So how old were you when you were older? 13. 13? You were a child.
Starting point is 00:09:02 I became a monk at 8 or 20 after seven years training as a Buddhist novice. That's normal. That's normal for our tradition. That's very long. Yes. You have to become a genuine practice. You have to be real. You have to be really want to be, not just photo opportunity. I tell them about Peter Walaszczak, his arrest, his current life in Germany
Starting point is 00:09:30 and his future trip to Thailand. I can't tell them much about the monastery he's planning to visit. He told us he was planning on staying there for a few months, maybe even longer, and that he's been in touch with the head monk for a while. I'd love to know how he's presented himself and what he's told them about how he's made his money. But there are thousands of temples in Thailand that accept foreigners,
Starting point is 00:09:56 so I can only share what Peter Valaschek's told me. I think it's fair to say Dr Lao and Venerable Bob are a little surprised and a bit suspicious that he's even been taken on as a trainee. 80 year olds are not normally accepted for many reasons. One of them will be this person is going to be ill, it's going to be a drain on our resources continuously. Is he doing this on purpose? Is this a cheap, you know, whatever? Looking for the place for someone to look after you because you are not well. So they
Starting point is 00:10:32 have to check everything if you're capable to become a monk. It takes years of dedication, they tell me. Thousands of hours spent in silent meditation and adherence to hundreds of rules including canons or precepts for how to live. It's not just a couple of hours doing a GCSE or three hours doing an A level, it's rather more difficult than that. In the morning you take five precepts yeah in the five precepts. These precepts include refraining from using harsh or harmful speech, from harming any living being, and from drink or drugs.
Starting point is 00:11:11 It's something I talked about with Peter Wallischek back when I was in Germany, although his take seemed a little different. Because Abbot, this is the first man in the monastery, said two things you should not do. Drinking alcohol, then I was discussing with him because he's one or two beer. No problem. Okay. You're also supposed to remain celibate. Again, that didn't seem too high on his priority list. In fact, he told me he'd offered to take the Abba at his monastery via agrapils.
Starting point is 00:11:56 He said, what is a blue tablet? I said, yeah, helping you a little bit. And he said, oh, you must must when you come, you must bring me one or two packages. I said, you're an abbot, you should not do it. No, I'm not for me. It's only for my monks. I said, okay. It does sound like Peter Wallischeck has managed to find himself a pretty relaxed abbot. Dr Lau and Venerable Bob say, this is the type of thing you see sometimes.
Starting point is 00:12:29 People who go to a monastery in Thailand do their precepts in the morning and party at night. Yeah, after finish the five-day service in the evening, they go for the party. This is life wherever you go. People are like that. Like a leave service. It's not real. That's right for sure. That's what they say, you do anyway, the ego isn't it? At first I have to say I thought Peter Walaszczuk's conversion
Starting point is 00:12:57 might be a sign of a guilty conscience. But when I pushed him on whether he had any regrets, But when I pushed him on whether he had any regrets, he told me again and again that his conscience was totally clear. My soul is white, he said. Do you worry about it? No. No. What have I done? What have I done?
Starting point is 00:13:24 Met things. Everybody has things in their life they regret or? I didn't kill my wife. Therefore I have not done any bad things. It's not a very high bar he set himself. In any case, he seems to think his conversion to Buddhism absolves him of any past transgressions. And someone who's 81 telling you what he's told you, obviously really either understands it so thoroughly that he can manipulate it, or he's jumped to a conclusion. And obviously he's determinedly interpreted meaningfulness and the moment, living in the
Starting point is 00:14:08 moment in a way which is perverse, totally perverse. If he's got this far he can't be a fool. If he's evaded the authorities he can't be a fool. And then I'm going to be a monk and the world doesn't... The world has no past. Yeah, right, okay. The question is whether he'll manage to keep evading the authorities when he lands in Thailand. For what it's worth, I don't think Peter Wallischek's a full, quite the opposite. I think he's a smooth operator, someone who's managed to wriggle out from the grasp of law enforcement in several different countries, and so far come out pretty much unscathed. And maybe you're thinking, what's the big
Starting point is 00:14:58 deal? He's just one man, and this was decades ago. Does it really matter if he never takes responsibility for what he did, or pays for his crimes? And to that, my answer is, yes, I think it really does. Because if people like Peter Valaschek aren't held to account, if someone can get rich selling lethal chemicals without any idea or control over how they'll be used, then what's to stop others? Have you ever had any threats to you? Several times, several times, several times. You know, none of us feel a safe, comfortable life here in Europe. Kambiz Rafouri is in exile from Iran. Back home, he was studying to be a veterinarian
Starting point is 00:15:58 and then a pharmacist. But as a student, he was caught protesting and was forced to leave the country. These days, he's a journalist living in Finland. Iran makes journalists out of its citizens. Makes journalists out of veterinarians. As a pharmacist and a journalist, Kambez Ghaffouri is in a unique position when it comes to reporting on chemical weapons. And bizarrely, his incomplete studies as a vet have also come in useful for one story in particular. We came to know that a department of Imam Hussain University bought a medicine called medetomidine. It's a sedative, you know. In veterinary medicine we use it as a pre-anesthesia agent.
Starting point is 00:16:53 For like cats and dogs? Yeah, yeah, yeah. And bigger animals. No big deal. Only the university didn't offer any kind of veterinary or medical course. And it's run by the Iranian state. Kam Bisgarfouri says he watched the anaesthetic, also known by the brand name Domitor, travel from Finland to China before it ended up in Iran, that way avoiding EU sanctions. So a middle person, a Chinese person, both domitors and then sold it to Iranians. You know they want to be hidden. But Iranian regime, they know very well how to transfer millions. They have a network of companies under several names.
Starting point is 00:17:50 That's what's going on. It's the same strategy Peter Walaszczyk used in the 80s when he pretended his chemicals were heading to non-sanctioned countries before sending them on to Iran. Last year, academic papers from that university in Tehran that Kambiz Ghaffuri was monitoring were leaked online by hackers. The papers outlined how this anaesthetic, domator, could be used to subdue large numbers of people.
Starting point is 00:18:24 These kinds of weapons are often referred to as incapacitants, because rather than kill their targets, they're meant to put them to sleep. It doesn't sound so bad, right? Except those leaked papers refer to the only time we know of when incapacitants have been weaponized. That was more than 20 years ago when terrorists in Moscow took almost a thousand people hostage in a theatre. Russian special forces filled the
Starting point is 00:18:56 auditorium with this kind of sleep gas to disarm the attackers, but more than a hundred and thirty hostages also died in the process. They just never woke up. So this stuff can be deadly. I would say that the norm against using chemical weapons is right now under stress. We've seen the Syrian government, we've seen Russia using chemical weapons. And our concern about this is now also extended to the Iranians, not in terms of their actual use at this time, but in terms of their chemical weapons program. Nicole Champagne is the US ambassador to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, the OPCW.
Starting point is 00:19:46 It's a global body, a kind of United Nations through which most of the world's countries have joined forces to try to end the development and use of chemical weapons. It was after Iran joined the OPCW in the late 90s that the regime admitted for the first time that it did have a chemical weapons program. But it said the program stopped when the war with Iraq ended in the late 80s. Except Iran maintains a chemical weapons program that includes the pursuit of certain pharmaceutical based agents as part of a broader category of incapacitating agents for offensive purposes. It's a particularly big deal for Iran to be accused of still actively making these kinds
Starting point is 00:20:35 of weapons because as the number one victim of chemical attacks in the world, it's been one of the loudest voices calling for their abolition. The active participation of the Islamic Republic of Iran formulating the convention was rooted in a very bitter experience in our recent history as main victim of chemical weapons. They're still trying to pretend as if that is not happening. So they actually don't want to be seen as being in violation of the Chemical Weapons Convention. I asked an Iran specialist how likely he thought it was that the regime would actually use
Starting point is 00:21:15 these kinds of weapons. Only if they feel cornered, he told me. Given the heightened tensions in the Middle East, I think now might be a good time to start paying more attention to Iran's chemical programme. So if the United States mission to the OPCW believes they have evidence of Iran's new chemical weapons programme, what are they doing about it? Well, not much. The OPCW isn't a police force. States have the right to call for a challenge inspection of another member state. But in the organisation's 27-year history, no one's ever invoked this. Even if it were to happen, the challenged state
Starting point is 00:22:05 would have lots of notice before any inspection was carried out. Plenty of time to wipe the surfaces clean. We tried contacting the Iranian mission to the OPCW and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Tehran, but neither of them responded. The Iranian regime maintains that it has a clear position against weapons of mass destruction, including chemical weapons. And of course there are sanctions in place to try to prevent Iran from acquiring harmful
Starting point is 00:22:38 substances. There are also middlemen willing to bypass them. Companies and individuals who may be sympathetic to the Iranian cause or else just happy to do business and cash the check, no questions asked. Individuals like that are extremely dangerous, are extremely dangerous. It is the transfer of precursors, the transfer of chemical agents, chemical warfare agents themselves, that put us all in danger. So when there are individuals that seek to circumvent the laws of various countries in
Starting point is 00:23:15 order to get those types of agents into the hands of countries that have chemical weapons programs, they're placing many, many people at risk. So it is a very dangerous activity. Yesterday I had a doctor calling me back and he said, the X-ray shows something of you long again. It's always my lung that shows something. Peter Walaszczak on his way to Thailand may seem keen to shed his past but that's not an option for Farah Shafi, the Kurdish-Iranian woman I've been speaking to.
Starting point is 00:24:03 Her history is written into her body. Nearly 40 years after she was poisoned by mustard gas, it's now killing her. Since yesterday, I am a little bit scared about that too, to see what was that black spot that they found in my left lung, they said. In the Interpol wanted notice for Peter Valischek, they call mustard gas the devil's breath, one of the most terrible weapons ever devised. When I asked him about his role as a middleman, sending chemicals to Iran that could be used to make mustard gas. He's tried to justify it by saying he was selling to the underdogs,
Starting point is 00:24:48 that he saw the damage that was being done by Iraq to people like Farah Shafi, and that he'd do it again if it helped Iran fight back. When I tell her that, she's horrified. So basically he gave Iran the same power to do the same dirty thing that Saddam did. Cleaning dirt with dirt. I do not want anyone else, even my enemies, to be exposed to what I have been. even my enemies to be exposed to what I have been. And for the German guy to go and give the same to the other country, they really think that it would be only against Saddam
Starting point is 00:25:34 and no innocent people would be caught between that. No kids, no women. Who would guarantee that to them? I don't want even the armies to be exposed to that. It should not be used, period. I asked her what she'd say to Peter Valaszczek and any other middlemen involved in sales like this if she had the chance. I mean are you kidding me? That's what I want to tell them. Look what you've done to me. Look what you have done to my son. I hope before you die you would live at least one of the life that I have been for the past 37 years.
Starting point is 00:26:26 One year. Wendy's Small Frosty is the ultimate summer refreshment. And not because it's cool and creamy and made with fresh Canadian dairy. It's also refreshingly cheap. Just 99 cents until July 14th. It's a treat for you and your wallet. Hi, I'm Paul Caruana Galizia, an investigative reporter at Tortoise. I wanted to let you know about a four-part series I've been working on over the past
Starting point is 00:27:04 several months. It is about allegations around the author Neil Gaiman, one of the world's most successful authors. Now two women, a former nanny and a fan, allege he sexually assaulted and abused them while they were in consensual relationships with him. He strenuously denies all the allegations. relationships with him. He strenuously denies all the allegations. The series raises questions about whether Neil Gaiman had reasonable belief in consent for sex with these women, given his celebrity and their vulnerability and age.
Starting point is 00:27:34 It's called Master, The Allegations Against Neil Gaiman. To listen, just search for the Slow News cast, wherever you get your podcasts. When Peter Valacek's plane lands in Bangkok, it's the middle of the night here in London. The next morning I scour the papers. I'm not exactly sure what I'm expecting. I suppose I wondered whether his entry into the country would trigger some kind of alarm. It wouldn't be the first time he's travelled abroad and accidentally flagged his fugitive status to the local authorities. Only that day and the next and the one after that there's no news. Not from law enforcement or from Peter Valischek. It feels like the trail's gone cold.
Starting point is 00:28:40 OK, can you hear me now? Yes, I can hear you. When I started working on this story and first called Dennis Bass out of the blue last year, he was really taken aback. It had been years since anyone had asked him about the Valaschek case and he was cautious, suspicious even. It took quite a bit of convincing before he'd agreed to talk to me. The media back in the days when I was in law enforcement, I wasn't real crazy about. But in the case of Peter Wallachek, I think it's good because he would like everyone to forget
Starting point is 00:29:23 that he's a criminal and that he's done these things. And by them being brought out in the media, people being reminded, it's good because it shows people today what kind of person he is and the things that he's done. And I think that's better than nothing, in my opinion. When I tell him about Peter Valischek's whole Buddhist conversion thing, he gives me a typical Bas response. I just think he's a wacko. He's a nutcase and so, you know, he does crazy things.
Starting point is 00:29:58 What I want to know is, what kind of ending would satisfy him now after so many years? What would closure look like for Special Agent Dennis Bass? Closure for me would be what I've wanted since the very beginning for him to serve his time for the crime and crimes that he committed. He's 81, 82 now. Is it really worth arresting and extraditing him? To me, yes. And truthfully, if he was put in jail today and died in jail, that's his fault. He could have served his time 30 years ago and this would have been so far behind him. But he decided otherwise. He decided to escape and not pay the price for the crimes that he committed. Peter Wallisjack has always known he's a wanted man.
Starting point is 00:30:55 Do you think they still want to arrest you now you're a... Yes, yes, I know it. How? How? Because I have a lawyer there and he said if you have a warrant from America, then the warrant is still your debt. But when I spoke to him back in Germany, he seemed pretty convinced that he'd only be arrested if he set foot in America. And he wasn't likely to fall for that one a second time.
Starting point is 00:31:25 I have to be honest and say even up until pretty recently I thought he was being reckless by travelling to a country with an extradition agreement. But in the end it looks like Peter Valaschek was right. Because eventually after countless unanswered calls to his mobile Oh, I was hoping to speak to Mr Peter Wallischek. I'm Chloe from London. I make a last-ditch attempt on a different number. Oh, hello! How are you? I didn't realise you were in Germany. Did you finish in Thailand? Are you going back? He's back home in his stuffy office in Germany. No sign that he had any problems or raised any red flags with the Thai authorities.
Starting point is 00:32:14 I can't even find out from the US authorities whether his case is still open. Dennis Bass insists he's out of the loop. He's busy at the country club these days. I know he still harbours hopes of seeing Peter Wallischek behind bars, but I'm starting to think it's the fantasy of a retired special agent, rather than anything rooted in reality. He had Peter Wallischek in custody three times,
Starting point is 00:32:44 and three times the gas man slipped through his fingers. I think what he's left holding on to is that he made Peter Valaschek's life pretty uncomfortable over the years. He's looked over his shoulder since the day he fled the United States. I think there's nights that it bothered him. he fled the United States. I think there's nights that it bothered him. He was a real high roller, he used to travel all over and suddenly he'd go to places and the police would lock him up in those places. And I hope, you know, someday he pays the price, whether Buddha does it for him or somebody else. I can't shake the feeling that there must be lots of people like Peter Wallace check out there. People who made their money facilitating wars
Starting point is 00:33:38 or helping to arm brutal regimes, whether they know it or not. It could be anyone. The harmless looking old woman sitting next to me on the plane, or the nicely dressed gentleman in the cafe at the table across from me. Even the wise looking Buddhist leading a meditation session.
Starting point is 00:34:00 So many more middlemen and women who are doing similar things today. After all, there are plenty of conflicts that need feeding for them to get rich from. Including Iran's apparently flourishing chemical weapons program. Because in the end, uncomfortable as it might be, Peter Wallachek has got away with it. And the message that sends all those other enablers is, go for it. Do you worry, like you do business with the Iranian government and the Chinese government
Starting point is 00:34:36 and the North Korean government? There have been a lot of reports about human rights abuses. We were coming to the end of the interview and actually about to pack up. But just before we left, I had to push him on it. Forget this fucking human rights. I hate it. I hate this.
Starting point is 00:35:00 There is no human rights. Thousands of years, no human rights. Thousands of years, no human rights. It's not what I expected. I thought he'd argue that he didn't violate anyone's human rights. Not that there weren't any in the first place. Why should I be afraid when I'm sending? They also need something against headache. We are not sending atomic bombs there. What is this? And human rights, when I hear this, this other stupid Western thinking, human rights. But what is it about that that makes you so angry?
Starting point is 00:35:49 It makes me not angry, but the word human rights, for me, it's nothing. Later, over the phone, and actually the last time I speak to Peter Wallischek, he'll adapt one of his favorite phrases and tell me he thinks a good journalist is a dead journalist. But before that, back when I'm sitting in his office in Germany, I just can't help myself. I have to give it one more go before I leave the gas man for good. One final time.
Starting point is 00:36:27 Okay, but what about then? My God, please shut up about this. Forget this fucking story with Iran and Iraq. Are you an agent from US? No, I'm from London, I'm a journalist. Because nobody has asked me in the last 30 years about this. And so, oh, and what is with the Iraqis and what is with the Iranians? Were you on the battle and saw the dead people, then you should not ask such stupid questions.
Starting point is 00:37:09 So, and please. Okay, thank you very much. I should believe my wife that don't even interview. It's a by Chloe Hajimathau and produced by me, Claudia Williams. It's written by both of us. Gary Marshall is the narrative editor and Jasper Corbett is the editor. The sound design is by Hanna Varun, original theme music by Tom Kinsella, with additional production in this episode by Innie Harper. With thanks to Mike Chamberlain, Dan Cazetta, Martin Hahn, Manisha Ganguly, Florian Flader and Matt Russell.
Starting point is 00:38:21 If you enjoyed The Gas Man, our next investigation, Dangerous Memories, is out soon. It's a story about what we risk when we let someone else into our mind and into our memory. To get ad-free and early access to all episodes of Dangerous Memories and the rest of Tortoise's podcasts, subscribe to Tortoise Plus on Apple Podcasts or by becoming a Tortoise member. While you're waiting, you can hear more from Tortoise's award Apple Podcasts or by becoming a Tortoise member. While you're waiting, you can hear more from Tortoise's award-winning newsroom by searching for Tortoise wherever you get your podcasts. Wendy's Small Frosty is the ultimate summer refreshment. And not because it's cool and creamy and made with fresh Canadian dairy.
Starting point is 00:39:13 It's also refreshingly cheap. Just 99 cents until July 14th. It's a treat for you and your wallet. Hi, I'm Paul Caruana Galizia, an investigative reporter at Tortoise. I wanted to let you know about a four-part series I've been working on over the past several months. It is about allegations around the author Neil Gaiman, one of the world's most successful authors.
Starting point is 00:39:38 Now, two women, a former nanny and a fan, Alicci sexually assaulted and abused them while they were in consensual relationships with him. He strenuously denies all the allegations. The series raises questions about whether Neil Gaiman had reasonable belief in consent for sex with these women, given his celebrity and their vulnerability and age. It's called Master, The Allegations Against Neil Gaiman. To listen, just search for the slow newscast wherever you get your podcasts. Hi, I'm Paul Caruana Galizia, an investigative reporter at Tortoise. I wanted to let you know about a four-part series I've been working on over the past several months. It is about allegations around the author Neil Gaiman, one of the world's
Starting point is 00:40:28 most successful authors. Now two women, a former nanny and a fan, alid she sexually assaulted and abused them while they were in consensual relationships with him. He strenuously denies all the allegations. The series raises questions about whether Neil Gaiman had reasonable belief in consent for sex with these women, given his celebrity and their vulnerability and age. It's called Master, The Allegations Against Neil Gaiman. To listen, just search for the Slow News cast wherever you get your podcasts.

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