Drug cartels have quietly infiltrated rural America. Trafficked host Mariana van Zeller walks us through the underworld hiding beneath our very feet.
What We Discuss with Mariana van Zeller:
- Mexican drug cartels are deliberately setting up operations in small-town America — not big cities — because rural areas have minimal law enforcement, making it easier to hide distribution networks where a single sheriff can’t compete with heavily armed cartel operatives.
- Mariana van Zeller builds trust with dangerous sources — from cartel lieutenants to assassins — by ditching prepared question lists, sharing personal photos, and offering cigarettes, treating interviews as human conversations rather than interrogations to unlock genuine, unguarded responses.
- Commercial airlines like Delta are among the biggest drug transportation networks in the US, with cartel distributors exploiting everyday travel infrastructure rather than the covert smuggling operations most people imagine — meaning the drug trade hides in plain sight.
- The opioid-to-fentanyl-to-tranq-dope pipeline is a public health crisis, not a moral failing — most users started with a legitimate injury and a prescription, and the street drug xylazine now causes wounds resembling leprosy while hospitals stigmatize users instead of treating them.
- Mariana’s approach to journalism offers a powerful reminder that curiosity and empathy — not judgment — are what unlock the deepest understanding of people and problems, a mindset anyone can practice to have more meaningful conversations and see the world with clearer eyes.
- And much more…
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Journalist Mariana van Zeller, host of The Hidden Third podcast and NatGeo’s Trafficked series, has spent years embedding with the people most of us only read about in headlines — cartel operatives, assassins, human traffickers, counterfeiters — and she joins us to unpack what she’s learned from the front lines. Mariana walks us through the jaw-dropping logistics of how cartels set up shop in rural America, why she had to travel to Sinaloa just to get permission to film a stash house in another state, and how she builds trust with sources who could end the conversation (and worse) at any moment. She takes us inside the harrowing reality of the tranq dope crisis ravaging American streets, the devastating human trafficking pipeline running from Vietnam into China, and her team’s white-knuckle evacuation from Niger after being trapped by a military coup. But what makes Mariana’s perspective so compelling isn’t just the access — it’s her insistence that curiosity and empathy, not judgment, are what reveal the full human story behind the world’s most dangerous markets. Whether you’re fascinated by investigative journalism, want to understand how global crime actually works, or just need a reminder of how much your ZIP code shaped your life, this one will stay with you. Listen, learn, and enjoy!
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Resources from This Episode:
- The Hidden Third Podcast with Mariana van Zeller | YouTube
- Trafficked with Mariana van Zeller | Prime Video
- Trafficked: Underworlds with Mariana van Zeller | Prime Video
- Mariana van Zeller | LinkedIn
- In Small-Town USA, Business as Usual for Mexican Cartels | CNN
- Sinaloa Cartel | Wikipedia
- This Fixer Helps Journalists Meet with Mexican Cartel Leaders | Rolling Stone
- Muck Media Launches ‘El Fixer’ Film Project, About Fixers Who Escort Foreign Journos Into “Darkest Corners” of Mexico’s Drug Trade | Deadline
- The High-Risk, Low-Return Life of a Fixer in Latin America | International Documentary Association
- El Fixer by Miguel Ángel Vega | Amazon
- Fentanyl Flow in the United States | DEA Intelligence Report
- How Fentanyl Producers in Mexico Are Adapting to a Challenging Market | InSight Crime
- Ovidio Guzmán, Son of El Chapo, Arrested in Mexico (the Culiacanazo) | ABC News
- Niger’s Military Rulers Ask for Help from Russia’s Wagner Mercenary Group | NBC News
- Niger Cozies Up to Russia and Walks Away from the West | Jamestown Foundation
- What Has Changed in Niger Two Years After the Coup? | DW
- Xylazine (Tranq): What You Need to Know about the New Street Drug Taking Over Philly | Substance Use Philly
- US-Mexico Relations and the Fight against Fentanyl Trafficking | Brookings Institution
- China’s Bride Trafficking Problem | Human Rights Watch
- Trafficking of Vietnamese Women and Girls for Marriage in China | Global Health Research and Policy
- Silo (TV Series) | Prime Video
- Otto Warmbier | Wikipedia
- Going to North Korea: Part One | Stereo Sunday | The Jordan Harbinger Show
- Going to North Korea: Part Two | Stereo Sunday | The Jordan Harbinger Show
- A Secret Look at a Mexican Cartel’s Low-Tech, Multimillion-Dollar Fentanyl Operation | PBS NewsHour
- DEA Reports Widespread Threat of Fentanyl Mixed with Xylazine | DEA
- John Nores | Reclaiming America’s Wildlands from the Drug Cartels | The Jordan Harbinger Show
- Winston Sterzel | Don’t Lose Your Bacon in a Pig-Butchering Scam | The Jordan Harbinger Show
- Amanda Catarzi | Overcoming Cult Life and Sex Trafficking | The Jordan Harbinger Show
- Javier Leiva | Modern Romance Scam Tactics and Ways to Fight Back | The Jordan Harbinger Show
1302: Mariana van Zeller | The Drug Cartels Running Small-Town America
This transcript is yet untouched by human hands. Please proceed with caution as we sort through what the robots have given us. We appreciate your patience!
Jordan Harbinger: [00:00:00] Welcome to the show. I'm Jordan Harbinger. On The Jordan Harbinger Show, we decode the stories, secrets, and skills of the world's most fascinating people and turn their wisdom into practical advice that you can use to impact your own life and those around you. Our mission is to help you become a better informed, more critical thinker through long form conversations with a variety of amazing folks, from spies to CEOs, athletes, authors, thinkers, performers, even the occasional war correspondent, neuroscientist, or investigative journalist.
If you're new to the show or you want to tell your friends about the show, and I love it when you do that, I suggest our episode starter packs. These are collections of our favorite episodes on topics like persuasion and negotiation, psychology, geopolitics, disinformation, China, North Korea, crime, and cults and more.
That'll help new listeners get a taste of everything we do here on the show. Just visit Jordan harbinger.com/start or search for us in your Spotify app to get started. Today on the show, cartels in small town America, gangland executions in places with one stoplight and a Dairy Queen. Today's guest is one of those people [00:01:00] whose job makes some of us envious, and the rest of us grateful for our little cubicles.
My friend Mariana van Zeller is a journalist and the host of Trafficked on National Geographic, a show where she just casually hangs out with cartel members, human traffickers, armed robbers, people who would absolutely murder most of us within five minutes. She's been embedded, if you can call it that, with drug cartels in Mexico.
Followed human trafficking routes from Vietnam into China, investigated rehab scams that literally kidnap Native Americans and locked them up in houses and filmed armed heist crews in South Africa who blow up cars like it's Fast and Furious, but without the CGI. Oh. And that's just season five of the show.
Somehow through all of that, she's still empathetic, curious, shockingly calm, even when the people she's interviewing are wearing skull masks, carrying automatic rifles, or just casually describing crimes that make your skin crawl. We're going to explore why cartels are operating in small town America, why commercial airlines are actually some of the biggest drug traffickers.
How journalists stay alive in places where they routinely get murdered, and why some of the [00:02:00] most disturbing crimes happening right now aren't happening in dark alleys. They're happening in strip malls and rehab centers. Also, she hosts The Hidden Third podcast, which you should absolutely be listening to if, if you like this show, but wish it involved even more international crime and moral ambiguity.
This episode gets dark, it gets uncomfortable, and it's one of the most fascinating conversations I've had in a long time. I really like
Mariana van Zeller: Mariana, and I know you will as well. Here we go with Mariana van Zeller.
Jordan Harbinger: One thing I found crazy was that the cartels are operating in small town America. Because I don't know, when you think drugs, you think New York, L.A., San Francisco, Chicago, and yeah, there's small hilly towns, but you don't think drug cartel.
You think like, oh, there's a rotten doctor and somebody's trucking the pills over there. You don't think cartels operating in small town America, that's extra scary.
Mariana van Zeller: Absolutely. I've been covering the cartel for many years now and I sort of wanted to do a story about cartel presence in the US and once we started researching it, I realized that actually the story should be about all the things [00:03:00] that we don't know about cocktail presence in the us, including the fact that they're in small town America.
So one of our first shoots for that. Episode was in Georgia, and I don't know if you saw the episode.
Jordan Harbinger: I did. I watched all of season five.
Mariana van Zeller: You did? Oh, thank you.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah.
Mariana van Zeller: And yeah, it was in Georgia and we started with a murder investigation of this woman who was tortured and they cut off her fingers and then eventually killed her.
And she was killed by the cartel and it was in the middle of nowhere in Georgia. And then we followed the investigation and yeah, realized that they're everywhere. And particularly like to operate in small town America.
Jordan Harbinger: Because law enforcement has one sheriff for the whole county. And what's he going to do?
Mariana van Zeller: Yes, exactly. Less law enforcement, easier to hide the drugs and have their distribution networks.
Jordan Harbinger: I suppose that's true, right? Because if you're doing a drug buy at a farmhouse, even if the sheriff is right there at the house. Alright, you guys put your hands in the air while I wait three hours for the FBI to show up.
Mariana van Zeller: Right. And they're all armed with AK 40 sevens and AR fifteens. Yeah. [00:04:00] Yeah, exactly.
Jordan Harbinger: And they've got their helicopter on standby. And yours is in Washington, DC If they understand why you're calling, who gave you authority? No, no, no. I followed the cartel here. Okay. I suggest you leave.
Mariana van Zeller: Yep. You know, so interesting about that story is that in order to get access to the cartel in the US we actually had to go down to Mexico.
Gain permission and have them say yes. And so we spent quite some time in Sinaloa and met a lieutenant and all these other people involved. And eventually it was another member of the cartel that had given us access to an operation in Washington State. And there was some sort of arrests and that fell through.
And so then it moved to the lieutenant. Basically, when you go down to Mexico, you have to meet several people, particularly if you're trying to get access something in the United States and hoping that something will happen. So we met all these people and there was all these possible options, but then nothing worked out.
And then the last one we met was this lieutenant you could see in the episode. He's like all jittery and it was like one of the craziest scenes meeting him, but we had like [00:05:00] 15 minutes with him and then the Marines were coming and they all got nervous and wanted to leave. But the last minute asked him, can we get access to your operation in the United States?
Because a lot of these groups have people that work for them in the us obviously the US is the end goals where they were sending their drugs. And so eventually he said, okay, we've got you. And it was all set up and we were supposed to meet them in Minnesota. And so we traveled to Minnesota. We're like, we're not a huge team, but we are six people and you've got lots of gear and, and I'm shooting 10 episodes every year.
We get there and then we waited and waited and waited for days. I'm like, I never showed up. And then finally we get a call and he's like, actually, that was a decoy and we are in another state that you're not allowed to disclose, but come and meet us here. So then we had to do like a company move to this next place and just hope that they'd be there.
Jordan Harbinger: You think they were watching you in that place the whole time to see if you were meeting with the cops like they didn't show up.
Mariana van Zeller: Sometimes happens when we film Encino loa, that happens all the time where they tell us one place and then they don't show up, or we know that they have eyes on the [00:06:00] ground checking us out immediately.
Sometimes it's not so much about us journalists is because they don't know what, even if they trust us, they don't know if we're being followed. Particularly me and the kind of work that I,
Jordan Harbinger: yeah, if the FBI's following you, you're just leading them to all sorts of criminals. All or Interpol or something.
It's What does she do? She meets with all the people we can't find and they readily meet up with her for some reason, and then film.
Mariana van Zeller: What I usually say is that it's not as if law enforcement doesn't know where these people are. It's not as if the whole of Mexican authorities don't know where the SLO cartel is.
It's more that it's law enforcement. They have to catch them in the act. There has to be evidence, there has to be a case built and not so much in the case of slo, but here in the United States at least, I don't think it's in their interest to follow me. But I do get often asked by law enforcement agencies in the US to go and speak at conferences about what I've learned.
That's interesting.
Jordan Harbinger: That's gotta be an interesting balance because it would be cool to do that. But on the other hand, when you want to film season six, they're like, so you went and spoke with the FBI four times last year. Why are we trusting you with our lieutenant in a secret stash house full of drugs?
Mariana van Zeller: [00:07:00] One of the things I tell always is that we're very, very careful with protecting our sources. So we even bring masks with us. We
Jordan Harbinger: Okay. I wondered about the masks, because you're going in and you're filming these guys packing, I don't know, pink cocaine or something like that. And they're wearing like a skull mask.
And I'm like, are these guys picking this out? I was like, no, the crew must pick these out because they're not like, yeah, hold on. We gotta go to Walmart, Mariana, and get some masks and we want cool ones. And they didn't have any in the local targets. You gotta bring 'em. However, there was one guy who was like a cook in the United States and he had a ski mask on that said, yes, daddy.
And I'm like, who bought that?
Mariana van Zeller: What was this one?
Jordan Harbinger: It was the one about the Tran Dope.
Mariana van Zeller: The Tran Dope.
Jordan Harbinger: And there's a guy with a ski mask that says, yes, daddy embroidered on the front.
Mariana van Zeller: Okay. So
that was his,
Jordan Harbinger: that had to,
Mariana van Zeller: that was his mask. So a lot of the times we do bring disguises, but a lot of the time, because there are situations in which they say, yes, they agree to be filmed, and then we get there and they don't have disguises and then they decide not to do it.
So we started bringing our own [00:08:00] stuff. We even bring long sleeve t-shirts, disguise tattoos and glasses and gloves and all of it. But a lot of times people are prepared and so they know there's a film crew coming and they come up with these amazing, some of the best masks we've had have been people who have picked their own.
We had one guy, season one where we filmed an episode on scams in Jamaica. It was my favorite episode still. I think it was the second episode we filmed for traffic. And we get there and we are interviewing all these incredibly super colorful Jamaicans are amazing.
Jordan Harbinger: This the one where you were under the bridge and he is like, I was thinking about stealing your camera, your
Mariana van Zeller: shit.
Yeah. Victor, his name
Jordan Harbinger: Victor. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I remember that.
Mariana van Zeller: He was thinking I was stealing your shit, but he'd realized I was nice. You're good people, Maria, so I'm not going to steal your, your shit. So instead I'm going to tell you about how the game works, which is scams. But one of the guys that we interviewed, this scammer was a guy, he showed up with a Trump mask because he wanted to talk about capitalism and how it's all about everybody stealing anyway, so I might as well.
Jordan Harbinger: Sensitive topic now. Yeah. Do you think Nat Geo would be like, we don't want a president mask.
Mariana van Zeller: Oh, well they earned it. We filmed in 2019. Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: Oh yeah.
Mariana van Zeller: [00:09:00] It was his first term.
Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: Interesting. Yeah. I would be like, Ugh. Why do you have to pick that one? I don't want to deal with this from the CEO.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, true. But we didn't get in trouble for it, so we, we reaired it.
Jordan Harbinger: How many cartels are there? Do we know?
Mariana van Zeller: Uh, I think it's estimated, it's around 200 cartels right now, operating in Mexico.
These are just Mexican cartels. That's way more
Jordan Harbinger: than I thought because I, I would've said like five, I don't
Mariana van Zeller: know. No five big ones. You know, the big ones. CJ and G and Sinaloa and Halco, I mean, Halco, CJ G, but there's like a lot more smaller groups. We did a story once, many years ago for an NGO, not for traffic, but before about Los Teros, which was a group in Guerrero State that was in charge of the production of, uh, heroin at the time there.
And Los Teros are, they love their tequila.
Jordan Harbinger: There's one, they're Los Viagras, you know those guys, and they're called Viagras because their hair sticks straight up with this Gelt. And I'm thinking like. You guys, the branding is so bizarre. It's
Mariana van Zeller: so not just of their own organizations. 'cause in [00:10:00] many cases they are organizations, but also of the drugs themselves.
They realize they started shipping fentanyl to the United States several years ago, and we did a story about fentanyl when it was just starting. So nobody in the US still knew what Fentanyl was. But because I had done a story on Oxycontin. And then heroin. The progression from Oxycontin into heroin. All my sources on the ground started telling me, Hey, there's this new drug hitting the streets called Fentanyl.
It's a pharmaceutical drug, but they're starting to exploit the pharmaceutical drug itself to get them high instead of in a medical treatment centers. And the cartel suddenly has its hands on this. So we went down to Mexico and interviewed a guy from the SLO cartel. He had a kilo, a brick of heroin, and it was mixed with fentanyl.
It was when it was still all heroin mixed with just a little bit of fentanyl, and then it reversed. But he was telling us, Hey, this just recently happened where we, the SLO cartel, decided we were going to get on in on this business. And they had hired. A Colombian chemist to come there and they'd paid him, I think 40 or $50,000 for the Colombian chemist to teach 'em how to make [00:11:00] fentanyl.
And it was the biggest bet, and that's why the SLO cartel grew so much. They were the first in the, on the Fentanyl game, and initially they were just shipping white powder to the US hidden in packages and whatnot. But then they realized, wait, dealers and distributors in the US realize there's a way that we can make ours different from the other.
So they started mixing it with pink, coloring dye or blue and, and put it, pressing it into pills with the M 30 to make it look real like it's a pharmaceutical, and they're very smart. That's the thing about these groups, as they're all very entrepreneurial.
Jordan Harbinger: By the way, that journalist helping you is brave.
Mariana van Zeller: Miguel Vega.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah,
Mariana van Zeller: he's one of my very good friends.
Jordan Harbinger: First of all, he seems really cool. He's got like a suave factor and he's like, chill. And he is like, yeah, they would kill us if they found this. And I'm like, you're not nervous about that. So he is very good for tv, but also. He's really brave. 'cause my friend wrote a book about narco journalists and there's a couple listeners of the show that are anonymous narco journalists where they post things under a fake name because they will get killed doing this in Mexico.
Yeah,
Mariana van Zeller: that's right.
Jordan Harbinger: So it's very interesting 'cause I was like, Hey, who's this person [00:12:00] who's on my Instagram? And I was like, what do you do? And she's like, well I cover cartels but I can't use my name or face or anything because they murder people like that all the time. And this guy's now I'm just going to show up on Nat Geo, show my face and everything.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, he's incredible. One of his best friends was killed by the cartel actually. Encina Loa. So this is a guy Miguel, my friend Miguel. He's from Sinaloa. He started as a print reporter. His story is freaking fascinating. He wrote a book called A Fixer, and we optioned the book. My company, uh, as soon as he started writing the book, I was like, I'm optioning your book.
'cause his story is phenomenal. But essentially he became kind of a journalist because he wanted to be a filmmaker, like a Hollywood filmmaker. And he was working on his film and suddenly he lost all his funding. So it had been shot, but he wasn't able to pay for the editor to get it together. And he needed to figure out how to finish this.
So he had worked as a journalist before and went back to the newspaper, which is one of the biggest newspapers in Tina Loa, and was there when suddenly an American crew calls and says they're [00:13:00] coming to do a story about the increase in violence in Mexico. This was several years ago. And he is like, how much do you guys pay?
Whoa, I want to be that. And pretended like he had connections to the cartel and was going to give it to them access, but had zero connections to cartel and then starts building connections. His sister-in-law did the hair for one of the cartel bosses wives, and an old high school friend was now involved in one of the distributions, all this stuff.
And he started trying to figure out, and he became the number one person To this day, any international news organization or American that wants to go to the United to Mexico and do a story about the cartel, they will go through Miguel and he has the access and the knowhow.
Jordan Harbinger: A lot of your interviews are done.
There's armed guards around you. Well, you, you always do a great job of showing, there's always a guy in the corner doing this.
Mariana van Zeller: Doc Hammer team is really good at showing the danger.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Like there's some guy who's like, this is amazing. And he is like filming like this. 'cause he doesn't want to be like, Hey man, can you turn to the side when you show your automatic weapon?
That is, that's right. Fully loaded. And I wonder how do you stay focused when there's guys who are itchy [00:14:00] and possibly on drugs and waiting for the Marines to start shooting through the windows And you're thinking like, okay, focus on the guy in front of me because I have 10 minutes or zero minutes. I don't even know.
Mariana van Zeller: I think we're all afraid of different things. That is not a situation that makes me nervous or afraid.
Jordan Harbinger: You're afraid to run out of time?
Mariana van Zeller: Uh, yeah. I'm afraid of not getting that
Jordan Harbinger: interview,
Mariana van Zeller: for example.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, that's, that's what I would be thinking
Mariana van Zeller: of. I'm afraid of big predators like sharks and tigers and shit like that.
Jordan Harbinger: You dove with the shark in
Mariana van Zeller: the I know, and I was scared
Jordan Harbinger: shitless. Oh, okay. Because I thought, oh, she's such a calm diver. I would never do that.
Mariana van Zeller: Gimme a hundred guys with masks and AK 40 sevens and I will take them all, but one, one shark in the ocean and I'm dead.
Jordan Harbinger: Was it you who touched it or was that like No, I touched it.
Yeah. I wouldn't a, yeah, forget it. I'm not doing that.
Mariana van Zeller: I was super nervous, but then once you're in the water, it's actually less nerve-wracking. So I'm usually very focused on the interview. I have this whole thing where a lot of times I bring cigarette. We always have cigarettes in the production because a lot of times you have to have meetings before the cameras are even turned on and you have to get that person comfortable.
And a lot of times they don't want to be on camera. Right. So having cigarettes for me, offering people cigarettes or beer [00:15:00] or. Very Portuguese, but it's a way that we're connecting, right? I'm not above you, I'm not different from you. I show them photos of my son and my family on my phone. I ask them about their families and it's a way that we're immediately connecting.
And I do that even if they say yes, then we sit across from each other. And even before we turn on the cameras, I'm asking questions that I know are just like, what's your favorite food? Things that we all share in common. And that's my way of humanizing them and of them to understand that I'm there as a human being and then I never have a list of questions in front of me.
So that is number one. And I've worked with directors who like write all these questions that they want me to hit. And I hate that because once I read that list of questions, it makes me think that I have to memorize them and then I'm distracted during the interview. 'cause I'm thinking, okay, I have to go back to the question that is on the list.
And I don't want to break eyesight with them because I want them to feel. That this is not work for me. That this is actual human curiosity.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, curiosity. Yeah. I could do that for [00:16:00] 15 minutes, maybe even half an hour. I don't think I could do it for two hours. Like I have a list of things here that otherwise I would forget to cover.
Yeah.
Mariana van Zeller: Sometimes I have some things that I want to hit, but I never look down on questions or rarely. Rarely.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. It's interesting. These guys will even meet you in the first place. Why do you think they do that? They're not getting paid. It increases their risk. This guy's like, oh, the Marines know you're here, so they know we're here.
It's like. He could die giving you 15 minutes of masked information that does him no good.
Mariana van Zeller: So three main reasons. Number one is ego. People want to boast about what they do. I'll never forget interviewing this guy. He's the best money counterfeiter in the world. He's a guy in Peru and he makes these a hundred dollars bills and $50 bills that look exactly like the real thing.
He like is called the finisher. So he adds the crunch to the bill, the makes it look used, and the smell and the touch. It's exactly as if it's a real bill, but it's not. And this guy was a driver during the day and at night. This is what he does and his family doesn't [00:17:00] even know he does it and he's the best of the best.
Jordan Harbinger: Why be a driver during the day when you're printing a hundred dollars bills?
Mariana van Zeller: A lot of times it's to actually launder the money. Yeah. And so that his family thinks that he has a real job.
Jordan Harbinger: I see. If your family doesn't know,
Mariana van Zeller: so I don't think he works like eight hours as a driver. He works for a few hours.
He tells the family that he's a driver. He actually has some stories of driving 'cause he is doing it during the day and he can launder the money and it's not going to be a big question mark, where is he getting all this money from? But the money that he was making counterfeiting, it wasn't for him.
Actually, he was selling that because if you get caught. None of us wants to end up in prison. So what he would do is that he's making the fake money and he would sell them a fake money to the boss that would then distribute it around the world. Anyway, when I started interviewing him, his lies lit up.
He's so excited. He goes, oh my God, somebody actually wants to know about this thing that I'm amazing at. I'm like the Christiana hallo of fake bills and nobody's ever wanted to know. And behind a man, a
Jordan Harbinger: Department of Treasury would love to talk to him as well. Exactly, yeah,
Mariana van Zeller: I know. Should have introduced them.
So I think it's ego and wanting to boast about it in terms of the [00:18:00] cartel, a lot of times it's boasting, um, wanting to talk about it. Then it's impunity in places like Sinaloa where people just don't really see a downside, there's so much corruption. They're, even if the police knows where I am, there's no chance that I'll get Probably
Jordan Harbinger: could
Mariana van Zeller: have done it, it without
Jordan Harbinger: masks and
Mariana van Zeller: it would've been.
Exactly. And a lot, sometimes we actually have to convince people to do it with masks 'cause they don't want to wear sunglasses or they just want to wear this mask or just mouth, cover the mouth and we're insist on This is silly because if you get in trouble. Then we'll get in trouble too, and our whole team gets in trouble, including people like Miguel Vega who lives in Mexico.
Jordan Harbinger: Why would you get in trouble for interviewing them?
Mariana van Zeller: Because if they found out because of a story that we did, they're going to say that maybe we ratted them out or we gave information. I see what
Jordan Harbinger: you mean. You're not getting in legal trouble for it. You're getting
Mariana van Zeller: in trouble with a cartel, which is much worse.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, way worse.
Mariana van Zeller: And so we're very careful with protecting identities. And then let me just tell you the third reason why I think people talk to us, and it's this very human characteristic. We all share of wanting to be understood, right? We all want others to understand why we make [00:19:00] mistakes, why we do it, why we are who we are.
And that's the opportunity I give everyone. I tell everyone I approach. Look, I'm not here to judge you. I'm here because I really want to understand why you do what you do. I think that's ultimately much more interesting And that doesn't mean condoning what they do.
Jordan Harbinger: Of course, the only time I've seen you almost maybe show that you were judging someone is that pastor who hated gay people in Kenya.
Oh my. He was such a piece of shit, this guy.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. And I it's not my first time interviewing him. Yeah, it's interviewed him before. Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: You were like right on the edge of, I could tell you wanted to just bite his face off 'cause he's a terrible person.
Mariana van Zeller: We actually got into Buch fight. You saw a little bit of it, it got worse.
Um, he's sitting down in front of me telling me how the L-G-B-T-Q community there, everyone is disgusting and they're eating the poo poo. This is what he says gay people do, is they eat the poo poo.
Jordan Harbinger: I, I saw that and I was like, this man is mentally ill and an aggressive piece of crap. And he does it all under the guise of, I'm not religious, but like it's really gross and simplistic.
He's increasing the harm for these kids who are getting shot or beat up [00:20:00] because they're gay in Africa. It's infuriating. It's not an issue that personally affects me. But you can't help but be like, why are you making things worse for people that already have it hard? Why are you doing that?
Mariana van Zeller: And I think actually it personally affects us all right?
'cause it's, right now it's that group, but it could one, be one day be, you know, Portuguese people or podcasters of course, or yeah. And part of that story was actually to show how it's a lot of the legislation being passed here that it is influencing what's happening in Africa. So actually impacts all of us.
But yeah, that was a really hard time. It also interviewed an assassin here. We did a, an episode on assassins in la. Most of the episode was filmed in South Africa, which has the highest number of assassinations in one of some of the highest numbers in the world. But we started that episode interviewing an assassin in la and that was a really interesting one because
Jordan Harbinger: that's not season five.
Mariana van Zeller: That was season four.
Jordan Harbinger: Okay. I gotta re-watch that.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, that was an interesting one.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Oof. Did you lose your cool during that one? Is that why you bring it up?
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, because the whole point of the show is also to humanize people behind the mask and try to understand why they do what they do. And in that case, as soon as we [00:21:00] arrived, we met him downtown at night.
I connected with him through another contact that I have here in the us, a guy that I really like that has given me access to a lot of underworlds in the us. And so as we're driving to meet the assassin, my contact tells me, Hey, by the way. You have to be careful with this guy. 'cause I think he might be bipolar 'cause he will be happy.
One moment and then really angry the next, I was like, dude, where are you taking me to? Right? Anyway, we, we get out of the car. This guy is jittery already and he is like, okay, so what's up? What do you guys want to ask? And I was like, okay. Hi, my name is Mariana. Here's the crew. I'm introducing everyone. He's like, just heads up, he takes out his gun from his belt and he is like, do you see this here?
If the police shows up and says, this is a setup, you're all dead. And so the whole interview, I'm thinking, fuck, if by chance the police shows up, not because I'm here, but if a police car drives by, he's going to think it's because of us. So I'm trying to make it quick, right? So I'm asking questions, okay, are you really an assassin?
What? What do you mean, how much do you get paid? And all that stuff. And then I wanted to ask, my last question was about trying to humanize him. [00:22:00] So he says he kills men, not women or children. And I asked him, do you have children? And what I was trying to get at is that if he was killed, his children would suffer.
So even if you're just killing men, suffering is all around you. And as soon as I asked that he was, he went, jumped to very angry. And he was like, what the fuck are you asking me? Emotional question. I, I'm not going to get emotional here. What are you trying to do? I'm not good with this shit. And he wanted to the interview.
So that was,
that dude is damaged.
He is. This man was a hard interview.
Jordan Harbinger: Yes.
Mariana van Zeller: Yikes.
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Mariana van Zeller: Now back to Mariana van Zeller.
Jordan Harbinger: Are you ever worried about the safety of your crew? Yeah, because it's, I would imagine even though I am [00:25:00] married and have kids, I would probably be thinking if we die here. I'm going to feel really bad in the afterlife that I got her. Him and him all killed, and they're all younger than me and they had their whole lives ahead of them.
It's my fault we're here. Getting buried in the desert.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. It's the biggest thing on my mind. Constantly and all our safety, I mean, we go through enormous length to make sure that we're minimizing the risk. We have hostile environment training, we consult security companies. We don't travel with security the majority of time because it's just, I'm trying to get people to trust me, and if I show up with security, it means that I don't trust them.
They trust me. Right. Even no matter how much planning you put in place, it's like Mike Tyson says, plans are great until you get punched in the face. There's always stuff that's going to go wrong. And so we had that situation in Niger where I got stuck in a coup that was also season four, and we made that part of the story because we were there to do a story about illegal gold mining.
And then there was a military coup. We got stuck and there was an incoming war. We were in one of the most dangerous places [00:26:00] on earth with terrorist groups all around us. And the whole time I'm thinking, I'm here, I'm stuck with six other guys. It was all men. But they're, they all have families. All their wives and moms we're calling my production company 'cause I'm also the executive producer and owner of the company and asking what was happening and how can we get them back to safety.
So it was the worst time of my life. I, I wasn't able to sleep. It was just nerve wracking.
Jordan Harbinger: How long were you stuck there?
Mariana van Zeller: 10 days. 10. 10 worst days of my life.
Jordan Harbinger: That is a long time to be stuck in a military coup. When you expected to be home a week or two, whatever prior to that, or we're going to be in and out in 48 hours.
Mariana van Zeller: That's the only reason that allowed us to go. 'cause it is one of the most dangerous places on earth. You've got Boko Haram and Isis and Al-Qaeda all operating there. You've got kidnapping squads, and as a American showing up with no security is not a good idea. So we'd been giving the military, the local military, or the government gave us military escort that would follow us wherever we went.
So we went out into the mines. [00:27:00] We drove for eight hours and slept out in the desert, in the open desert so that we could film inside the mines and interview the miners that are illegally mining for gold. That is actually funding part of the terrorist groups. So when we came back from sleeping overnight in the desert, we came back to this town called Agave.
And when we arrived, we found out that there had been a coup, and immediately they removed the military security from us. So we were left with no protection in a rundown hotel with again, no protection around us and no way out. So the borders were closed, the airspace was closed, and suddenly they started evacuating people from all over the world, but from the Capitol.
And we were a three day drive to the Capitol and we couldn't even go 'cause it's too dangerous. So we were literally trapped in one of the most dangerous corners of the world, and it was scariest. Shit.
Jordan Harbinger: That is awful. That's not fun. No, you're not stuck at a Four Seasons in the Capitol with a military surrounding it and like, oh, we'll get out of here soon.
It's like. No, we're at a Motel [00:28:00] six equivalent.
Mariana van Zeller: There's actually a building that was a rundown sort of house type thing that was built by Mo Mark, a dfi, and he'd visited in the eighties and they'd left that building there and turned it into basically a rundown hotel. Uh, there was like one drop of water was the shower, and yeah, it was very hot.
And we ate couscous morning, night, and day.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Oh gosh. I'm not sure what's worse, the couscous or the threat of being kidnapped by isis.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. But I have to say, beautiful part of the world. Literally so beautiful. The desert and the, the landscape. So beautiful and incredible. People that were essential to figuring out how to get us out of there.
Safe place. Yeah. How did you get out there? Was incredible.
Jordan Harbinger: How did that happen?
Mariana van Zeller: So we had a couple of ticking time clocks. One was the incoming war. So other countries in Africa, the African group of nations that I cannot remember the name right now, but they were threatening to invade Niger and depose the military leaders.
And then the Wagner Group and Russia were saying that if they did that, they would come in and defend the military cool leaders. And so it was kind of like a [00:29:00] proxy war happening in front of our eyes. And so that was one of the ticking time bombs happening. And the other one was, I had promised my son, it had been his birthday while I was there and he finished his camp.
It's a performing arts camp. And every year my husband and I have a tradition where we go and pick him up. We see his, the play that he puts up. And it's a very important day for all of us. And I spent so much of my time on the road that I live with the Gelt of spending so much time away from him. So this is a day that no matter what happens, we go and see his performance.
It's an important day for him and for us. It's my favorite day of the year, quite frankly. I love it. And that was happening, so we were going to go to Niger. Be there for four days, get out and come back to LA and then fly to New York and do the performing arts camp. Then we get stuck. And so I'm seeing the days go by and realizing shit, I'm not going to be able to make it.
And I'm the worst mother in the world. Plus I have this incredible team around me whose families are suffering right now. And we
Jordan Harbinger: might all die.
Mariana van Zeller: We might all be kidnapped and die. So all of that was going through my head. And one of the first [00:30:00] days of the coup, I went to the airport 'cause I wanted to see if there was any planes flying in or out, even though I knew the airspace was closed.
And I met this amazing guy. He was a manager of the airport, his name was Katter. And I asked Katter. I'm asking, are there planes going in? Do you think there's anything coming out? He's nothing. Nothing. Not until we get the permission from the government. It can't take months until the airspace opens. You guys are going to be stuck here for a long time, and I'm on the verge of tears at this moment and I ask him, do you have kids by chance?
And he picks up his phone and shows me photos of his kids. He's like, yeah, and I showed him a photo of my son on the phone. I was like, I told him it's his birthday next week. It was too complicated to explain like, it's his birthday and I need to be there for his birthday and it's next Friday and this was like Saturday or Sunday and it's next Friday.
And so please katter, if you find out if there's any planes coming in or out, please let us know because I need to get my team out of here and I need to get to my son's birthday. Anyway, unlikely that anything will happen and we start contacting. We have an evacuation company that we work with. We pay a lot of money to get us out in situations like this.[00:31:00]
We filmed us calling the evacuation company and they are completely useless. There's a moment where they say, we have no, and I'm asking, do you have a plan? We don't have plan. It's ridiculous. We should watch this episode. It's insane.
Jordan Harbinger: Why do I pay you $10,000 a month for this insurance? Oh, have you looked at our death and dismemberment policy?
It's
Mariana van Zeller: crazy. So they failed us. So then it was a team in LA led by executive producers on traffic, but also my husband, who's also an executive. I was wonder about,
yeah,
who's in la? And they're like, we are going to have to figure this out 'cause nobody's helping us. So they start to contacting different evacuation companies and different groups out there that could possibly do this.
And they found a group, amazing people who had two pilots who were crazy enough to fly with a private jet in the middle of the night and they told us they're going to land. They're going to be there for 20 minutes. You've got 20 minutes again on the plane. The plane is coming from UBI and it's, it was a G five plane.
If people don't know, it's like the most luxurious of private jets and
Jordan Harbinger: DJ TTO uses it to get to exactly European
Mariana van Zeller: gigs. Dude, it was insane. It was the [00:32:00] biggest whiplash of my life. So basically. After a week of eating couscous and no AC and drip of water. And so this is happening. So we're following the plane as it's coming from Ibiza and the plane's coming here, 20 minutes on the ground and then it's going to Dubai and it's going to drop us off in Dubai.
And in Dubai. We're going to get our commercial planes to go back home and it's a long story, but it's worth it, I promise.
Jordan Harbinger: No, it's so far so good. I'm just imagining the pilot going, let me see the runway. And they're like, it's that soccer field down there.
Mariana van Zeller: It wasn't a big runway. And they were very brave 'cause it was an active sort of military.
Potentially at war country. We still have printed out. My partner in traffic, Jeff Plunkett gave me a map when I came back. He printed out the map of what the plane radar thing map looked like at the time. And you can see it's this, you couldn't fly through Niger Niger's, pretty big country in the middle of Africa.
And it's a red box and then there's one plane crossing and it's our plane that's coming. And basically they figured out, so they coming. We're seeing it coming from Ibiza. We are as nervous as you can imagine, as [00:33:00] we can be. We arrive in, at the airport, it was like 5:00 AM the sun was just starting to come up and we are met by a group of military.
They're all there and they don't want us to leave. They start creating problems. They start saying that we don't have the proper documentation. Then back and forth. And Kaar, my friend, the manager of the airport is also there, and suddenly Kaar takes the reins and starts literally yelling at the military, which is very risky for him too.
And trying to convince them that the papers are in order, that we need to leave, and basically doing us an enormous favor and trying to help us. And eventually they decide, okay, everybody can leave. Except for, we had a fixer, the producer, local producer who is actually from Mali, from the neighboring country who is with us and helping us.
And they said, everybody can leave except for the Malian guy. And that's when I called my husband and I said, Hey Darren, I'm so sorry everybody's going, but I'm staying. I'm sending the team with the gear, everything, but I'm staying with this guy and I'm in tears. I'm thinking, I get emotional self talking about this.
But [00:34:00] for me it was the failure of me as a mother to making this decision. And it was really, really hard thinking. Yeah, I'm not going to be there most important day of the year for my son. And again, I'm feeling him. And it was, I'm having all these gigantic Gelt problems, and yet again, Kadra comes and is yelling at him, and then my husband is on the phone with me and says, Hey.
I'm looking at the flight report and I think the pilots are Portuguese. Their names are Portuguese. I was like, what? Okay. So at this point the plane is landing and I'm running as fast as I can. As soon as the plane lands, I run to where the plane landed. One of the pilots is coming out of the plane and I go up to him before the military is able to get close to him.
And I tell him, are you Portuguese? And he says, yes. And I said, oh my God. And I explained everything in Portuguese what was happening. And I said, they're saying that he doesn't have the right paperwork, but if you are okay that I think you can convince them to let us into the plane. 'cause he didn't have the visa for Dubai and that was our next stop.
Jordan Harbinger: A pilot could just bullshit that one. Maybe
Mariana van Zeller: the pilot could say, no, you can't take [00:35:00] anyone on your plane if they don't have the visa to go to the next place. But because he's Portuguese, we spoke our language. I think in many ways that helped. And so anyway, fast forward, he starts talking to the military.
KA is helping. Everybody gets on the plane. I'm the last one. I'm running to the plane. Happiest moment in my life. And I hear somebody call Mariana, Mariana, Mariana. And I look back and it's, and he turns to me and says, happy birthday to your son.
Jordan Harbinger: Oh, that's,
Mariana van Zeller: and that's the moment that everything came out of.
Jordan Harbinger: Oh
Mariana van Zeller: my gosh. I started crying.
Jordan Harbinger: Did you kiss the ground in Dubai when he landed? I would imagine you guys must have
Mariana van Zeller: kissed the ground in the US when I landed
Jordan Harbinger: at I bet
Mariana van Zeller: JFK. Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: I would be like Pilot, tell us the second we are out of missile range from Niger Ground forces. Yeah. Or out of this big red
Mariana van Zeller: box. Oh yeah.
The whole team was crying and the saddest part for us was like, I remember looking out the window and just thinking it was a terrible 10 days for us. This is the future of a country with incredible. Promise and amazing people. Everyone from the gold Miners, the gold traders, to the people working at our [00:36:00] hotel, to Kader, these are all amazing human beings who every chance they had were trying to help us.
And who are people just like you and I, their mothers and fathers, and who now have their future because of politics and leadership?
Jordan Harbinger: It's interesting when that coup happened, a lot of people online were like, good. They're getting rid of the colonial French. Obviously those people don't know anything about these kinds of things.
They just believe whatever the sort of Russian, they're overthrowing. The imperialist Americans look, the military is going to let people live free now. And it's like, that's not how any junta has ever worked in the history of military.
Mariana van Zeller: No. And these countries have enormous promise and potential, but they need investment.
And what we were doing until up until that point was that there was actually a lot of investment. The United States invested, I think over a hundred million dollars in building these. Military bases. They had two military bases. There no longer, uh, was money lost. But the idea behind those military bases was to prevent attacks from terrorist groups that would eventually, possibly what happened in Afghanistan, organize and [00:37:00] attack the United States Security and other countries matters ultimately for security here at home.
And that's what was happening there and is not happening anymore. Unfortunately.
Jordan Harbinger: I was surprised to hear one of your sources said that commercial airlines in the US transport the most drugs, not like truckers or secret network. It's like, no, that lady who has three bags on Delta plus two of 'em are closed and one of 'em is full of methamphetamine
Mariana van Zeller: and Delta wasn't that interesting that he said, this was our interview for Cartel USA.
We interviewed. A guy called El Gringo, who's an American guy, doesn't speak a word of Spanish yet, is one of the biggest distributors for the cartel here in the us. Fascinating guy. And yeah, he says, when I asked him, how do you distribute drugs? And I was thinking he was saying, I've have these like four wheel shrugs.
That that's what I was thinking. He's like, no, Delta Airlines.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, Delta Airlines.
Mariana van Zeller: The Delta Airlines
Jordan Harbinger: got a million miles.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. Strippers. Strippers and Delta Airlines.
Jordan Harbinger: I thought that was interesting. Why? Strippers,
Mariana van Zeller: I think in his women is always better, right? 'cause they're less people, suspect them less. And I think strippers because they're more likely [00:38:00] to do risky behavior.
I'm not sure why.
Jordan Harbinger: Flirt their way out of a situation successfully. I don't know.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. They know how to charm people. I think. Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: Don't open that. It's full of adult toys. I don't know. I'm trying to think of what the advantage is there.
Mariana van Zeller: I think, yeah, I think the way they dress too probably throws people.
Nothing against trippers.
Jordan Harbinger: No. I mean it's, it's a, it's legal way to make money. Except if you're transporting drugs for L gringo. Exactly. Then you're on the line. How long does it take to plan and shoot each episode of the show?
Mariana van Zeller: A long time, months, sometimes even years. Like the NI year episode, we started pitching it on season two, and it took us two and a half, three years to convince Nat Geo that it was safe for us to go to New Year.
Jordan Harbinger: So Nat Geo has to sign off on this. I thought maybe you made it and then you just sold them the episodes or something.
Mariana van Zeller: No, it's very much a partnership where every story, we pitched them stories at the beginning of each season, and then they say yes to some and no to others. The majority of the stories they say yes to, but there are definitely stories that they're not interested in.
And then once we start, before we hit the ground, we have weekly meetings with them and discussing everything. This is, we're [00:39:00] interviewing, this is how the story's going to unfold, or this is what we're hoping to get. And even when we're on the ground, we have to send them reports. And then they see when we get back and we start editing, they see rough cut one, rough cut two, all of the final Cut, fine, cut all of it.
Jordan Harbinger: Were they thrilled about your NI air experience after not wanting to do it for three seasons? And then they're like, good thing we let you do that, and it cost us a hundred grand and rescue fees or whatever.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. My first thought when I realized there had been a coup was, shit, NA Geo's going to be so pissed.
My thought was like, NA Geo, they're going to get there, security people involved, and they're going to want to pull us out of the country immediately. And we haven't even finished our story. And then I realized, oh no. Even if we wanted to get out of the country, we can't.
Jordan Harbinger: No. The net geo security people were like, we gotta get 'em out of there.
Oh, it's impossible. All right, I'm going on vacation then because there's nothing I can do from here.
Mariana van Zeller: Oh, they were lovely. They tried. They, they were also having sleepless nights trying to figure out how to help us.
Jordan Harbinger: This is going to be a bad look if they all get murdered.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. It's not good.
Jordan Harbinger: How do we figure this out?
Which episode made you feel the most unsafe when filming? [00:40:00] Except for, of course, that one New
Mariana van Zeller: year.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. The assassins one in season four. Yeah. That was scary. Some moments, obviously it's, we're not talking about,
Jordan Harbinger: yeah.
Mariana van Zeller: Drugs or scams. It's actual assassins, so there were moments that weren't so comfortable.
I've been in situations with a cartel, several where sort of the Marines are showing up and trying to see who can save themselves, you know, free for all, where everybody just tries to get out of there as fast as they can. And when you are with the cartel, there's always a dilemma. What do I do? Do I pretend I'm with them and just follow them or do.
We try to hide if the Marines show up. It's just always complicated. What do you do? What do you decide?
Jordan Harbinger: Oh my gosh. You need like a white surrender nat geo flag that says like
Mariana van Zeller: yellow in that case, because it's Na
Jordan Harbinger: Geo. Yeah. We're here just interviewing these people.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, we always carry press passes with us and in some situations, like in Niger, we also have press things on the side of the trucks that we travel with, and that's always important too, but that unfortunately matters is less and less in the world we live
Jordan Harbinger: today.
It does, yeah. I [00:41:00] remember back in the day, I used to go out and take photos of things and then it was like, now you need a bulletproof vest with the press Velcro to. Take photos of things and it was like, and you should probably get a helmet and goggles to do this. And then it was like, oh no, the cops are still going to shoot you in the head with a rubber bullet anyway.
'cause they just don't care. And then I was like, all right, maybe I should get a different job.
Mariana van Zeller: Is that how you find
Jordan Harbinger: yourself here? That's right. Exactly. Is there anything you learned while planning these episodes that almost got you into trouble? Thank God we have a satellite tracker. Or thank God you mentioned you have the hostile environment training, but what do you do with that knowledge?
Mariana van Zeller: They teach us what to do if somebody gets shots. How to use a tourniquet.
Jordan Harbinger: First responder.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, first responders, but also then real scenarios. They show us videos of situations where they're shootings, but also if you're being followed, what to do to evade surveillance, telecommunications, how to make sure that you're not being listened.
How to protect your sources. You learn everything. I remember an interesting, funny story about this is for season one, when we first started shooting trafficked, [00:42:00] I'd been reporting on black markets for years at that point. But I had just hired a team of camera folks that hadn't, they in fact had been working with Anthony Bourdain on his show and that that came D Different gig.
Yeah, different game. That came to an end and I reached out and I asked if they wanted to work on my show. I loved Bourdain show and I loved how it looked, and I had spent a lot of time doing these stories, but doing them with like handheld cameras and not the best quality. And with traffic, we wanted to combine Gonzo journalism or boots on the ground journalism with beautiful imagery, nagio style, right?
And so we hired these guys and so it was one of first hostile environment training of this type where we're actually going to hang out with the cartel and the criminal underworld. And I remember the guy that was teaching us at the time, he's a British military, former military dude. Really fun guy. And he turns to us and he says, okay, so now what do we do?
If you get kidnapped ladies, there is a chance you will be raped. Yeah. And so if this and then [00:43:00] explains what to do in those situations, I look at the guys and they're like, oof. Yes. Oh my God, this God this not happening. And then he looks at the guy and says, gentleman, it's not an if you are going to get raped,
so this is what you have to do.
Oh my
Jordan Harbinger: God.
Mariana van Zeller: And I see all of their faces like, what?
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Oh my God, I don't know
Mariana van Zeller: if we should be doing this show. And they were brave and they did it. But we still talk about that. Like
Jordan Harbinger: I was filming old Vietnamese ladies cooking fun the side of a street in a Hanoi last season. What the hell did you get me into?
Mariana van Zeller: That's right. That's right.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Geez. Oh my God.
Mariana van Zeller: But they did it and no one got raped.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. No, it's so far Season five. Yeah. I thought it was interesting to see a loa cartel is murdering the fentanyl cooks now or recently. Can you explain why that is? 'cause I thought you explained well in the show, but I think people are going to be confused.
There's tons of fentanyl here in the United States. It's coming from the cartel, or it was coming from the cartel. Now there's bodies piling up on top of 20,000 Fentanyl pills under an overpass. What's going on?
Mariana van Zeller: So the American authorities started going really heavy on the Chappo family, right? The Chapto, as they called [00:44:00] it, sons of El Chapo, was caught, brought to the United States, and then the slo cartel was run by the Chapitos on one side.
El Mayo, who's the legendary shadow partner of El Chapo, everybody knows El Chapo, but nobody knows El Mayo. But he was the equal partner for the SLO cartel, and in many ways, sort of more crucial to the operations of the cartel. He was the whole corruption that had the liaison, the partnerships with governments and law enforcement around the world in order to be able to move his drugs at the scale that they did.
And once El Chapo was brought to the United States, the government started really going after, particularly the Chapitos, because they were in charge of a lot of the Fentanyl production. And I don't know if you remember, it was a thing called the Kuzo, where the Mexican Marines went and detained apprehended Ovidio Guzman, who was one of the Chapo's son.
Jordan Harbinger: Oh, was this when they surrounded the barracks?
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, exactly.
Jordan Harbinger: Said We're going to kill all your families if you don't let it and go. Yeah.
Mariana van Zeller: So the military detains this dude, the son of El Chapo, and immediately all the different factions of the Sinaloa cartel got together and said, no, [00:45:00] they we're not going to let this happen.
So they brought the whole of the Kuan, which is the capital of Sinaloa, down to its knees, and demanded the release of Ovideo Guzman Andan. They released him. A few years later, they released 'em because they had to, it was so embarrassing for the government, the Mexican government, and it empowered the American government in this pursuit too, because what they're saying, you guys aren't going to be able to bring them to justice.
So we are going to work with you and are, we're going to be much more involved in making sure that we're bringing them to justice and stopping the production of Fentanyl. And so there started to be more and more pressure because now they're dealing with the American government wanting to come there and take them and arrest them.
And so when it started getting heated, they realized, okay, we have to do something about it. 'cause nobody wants to end up in prison. So they asked, let's stop production of fentanyl because that will get the authorities off our backs, the American authorities off our backs. And they did. And they stopped production for a while.
But because if there's not just one or two chemists [00:46:00] is hundreds or thousands of chemists, and they all depend on this. Now for a living, a lot of chemists decided to not abide by the rules, the new rules of the cartel, and they kept making fentanyl. So those were the ones who started being killed. What I heard when we were doing that story, because it made no sense, because I knew that they was still fentanyl coming across.
Was that they already had large deposits. So they were going to move those deposits of fentanyl to the United States and stop the production in the hopes that would prevent the American government from coming after them.
Jordan Harbinger: So like, oh, we're going to stop producing it. Great. What we didn't tell 'em was we have 15 million pills in a warehouse somewhere.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. And we went to one of those labs where it was still being produced, but then we also went to an underground lab with a guy showing us that he was a chemist and he did everything in an underground lab under his house, which was insane.
Jordan Harbinger: That was insane. That was, it was like
Mariana van Zeller: a drainage tunnel. The drainage tunnel, yeah.
That happened to pass under his house. And then he figured that out. He was like, I have the best lab situation in the world. Nobody's ever going to be climbing yet. Concrete bunker. So we went [00:47:00] under, and he wasn't producing fentanyl anymore, 'cause he was visited by two cartel members who basically threatened to kill him if he continued.
Geez, that's crazy to me.
Jordan Harbinger: We'll get back to human trafficking, cartel violence, and why commercial airlines are apparently the world's most efficient drug meals. But first, a quick word from a company whose business model does not involve cutting anyone's leg tendons. We'll be right back.
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Now, back to Mariana van Zeller.
The dope thing is disgusting by the way. So [00:50:00] dope mixed with xylazine, which I think is a veterinary tranquilizer.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, that's right. An animal tranquilizer. Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: So the whole, I mean, forget, just say no to drugs, like that whole campaign. Just show that lady's arm from the harm reduction clinic.
This looked like someone took hamburger meat, shoved it into a bag of human skin, and then soaked it in a sink for three days and then just stabbed like a hundred little holes in it with a needle. It was one of the most disgusting things I've ever seen on tv, and I can I imagine it, it, it must have smelled terrible because it looked like she just had a rotten arm.
It was like zombie.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. So we were there in a small clinic in Kensington, Pennsylvania, which is ground zero for Tran Do Tran Dope. What it does is it's fentanyl mixed with the animal tranquilizer, and what it does is that Fentanyl gives you a really high, but unlike heroin, the high goes away very fast.
So they figured out a new drug that they could mix there, which is a tranquilizer that allows that high to stay high longer, which is ultimately what every user drug user usually is after. And so they started using it and they didn't even know there was tranquilizer in it. They [00:51:00] just realized, oh, this is a good high, let's keep using this, right?
But what they didn't know, most people didn't. It's a new sort of medical phenomenon. Nobody has studied this because it's so new and it's never shown up anywhere. 'cause nobody is willingly using horse tranquilizer on themselves is that it creates these horrible wounds that look like leprosy essentially.
I don't know if you've seen films of like leprosy back in the day when it was still big in India. It looks like that. It's like big open wounds with like puss coming out and it's just one of the most disturbing things I've ever seen. In this case, we were in this clinic run by these sort of volunteers, amazing people who are dressing the wounds and unwrapping, and we were seeing them doing this to dozens of people and asking if we could film.
This woman agreed to be filmed and we see this amazing guy. Who is doing, again, volunteering his time and opening up this wound. He's not no medical training, but he's learned himself how to do it, and he's treating this woman's arm, and the moment he unwraps the gauze, the smell is everything you can imagine.
It's [00:52:00] super powerful, but yet this is a human being who's being treated. The worst thing I could do is start talking about how much this smelled right. And what that taught me, and the guy said so well, as somebody who's been covering the drug epidemic for so long, is that we're approaching it all wrong.
This is a public health crisis that's happening in America. We essentially have thousands of people on the streets of America nowadays hooked on this drug. You might think that they're there because they want, and they're doing the drugs because they want to. Nobody wants to be out there like this.
Nobody willingly do this. It's a public health crisis. It's like leprosy. It's so many other diseases that we've been able to combat and fight against. And here for some reason, because we think that they have a choice, we allow it to happen. And the reason also why they're being treated in this like roadside clinic, instead of going to hospitals, we spoke to a lot of these users and they were all saying, we go to the hospitals, there's so much stereotyping, and they're immediately, they're stigmatized and they're treated as junkies, [00:53:00] not treated as human beings.
And that's what with our episode we try to do is really humanize these people and try to show this other side that they're human beings just like us and need help.
Jordan Harbinger: It's a scary path, right? Because I had a friend who had a back injury, so he got Oxycontin. Then he got hooked on Oxy Oxycontin and then he couldn't get it anymore.
So he started doing heroin. But now you can't get heroin, so you do fentanyl now. You can't get fentanyl. You're Doran dope. So it's like you end up with a guy who's like a construction worker. This guy was an MMA fighter, but he, you know, you get a back injury. And it's like dot, dot, dot. Five years later, they're in an alley covered in open sores, and it's like disgusting.
Mariana van Zeller: Every conversation, every time I bring up the opiate epidemic, somebody has a story like that, and the vast majority of them starts with an injury. I had an ep, I'm not going to name him, but I had an executive producer on television that worked with me for some time. Who had seen my coverage on the opiate epidemic and called me one day and says, Hey, you have no idea what just happened to me.
I went in for like a tooth surgery [00:54:00] and they gave me opiates and I had no idea. Some people have the brain chemistry that makes 'em or hooked. He never had an addictive personality or anything. And he was like, I spent two months doing these opiates. Weaning off those opiates was the hardest thing I've ever done in my entire life.
And he said, I was on the verge of a mental breakdown just talking about how this normal person goes and in two months is super hooked. He doesn't know still how he managed to get off the other way, but for a lot of people they don't. And so that's what I mean when I say it's not a choice. Yeah, it isn't a choice.
Jordan Harbinger: I'm curious, you are clearly careful not to touch any of this stuff. If you go to a drug lab, I dunno, what kind of precautions do you take? 'cause that stuff is in the air and it's on the bag and it's on the table and you put your elbow down and now you've got, I don't know, xylazine on your elbow.
Mariana van Zeller: As long as you don't put it on your mouth or your eyes or you ingest it.
We were in Miami where they had bags and bags of drank dope and they were mixing the fentanyl with the Xylazine. And we used gloves, which is the appropriate thing to do. And they were using gloves too. But when I was in the [00:55:00] lab in Mexico and saw them making fentanyl, this was for season one of Fentanyl.
That was insane. We went in with like hazmat suits and like big masks and respirators, and we look like those movies about epidemics where the scientists walk in there and they can barely move. That's what we looked like when we were filming. So it's me and my team. My guys are holding their cameras through their masks and we can barely move with these gigantic suits.
And these dudes, two dudes from the SLO cartel that made the chemist for SLO cartel making fentanyl, they had gloves and they had one of those just COVID masks.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, it's like a scarf wrapped around his face.
Mariana van Zeller: And I was like, aren't you scared? He was like, no, this is actually great because I know the fentanyl is potent.
I know I've got it. I know I've made it. He's making it. I know I've got the end product when I start feeling. Through my skin because it comes in through the skin. You see the fumes are everywhere. This is why we're using these sort of respirator masks and, but I know I start getting, my heart starts beating really fast and that's when I know I've got the good shit.
These people are [00:56:00] bananas. Wow.
Jordan Harbinger: These guys are crazy. They're insane. One of the saddest episodes I think was the Mong women in Vietnam. Kidnapped essentially, and sold to Chinese men. Tell us how they get snatched and scanned. 'cause it's really extra disturbing. It's not better if their family sells them, don't get me wrong.
But it's really scary to think you're going shopping and your friend's like, Hey, let's go get something to drink. And then your friend sells you to a Chinese guy and you just vanish.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, it's essentially what's happening there. We heard dozens. We talked to dozens of women who told similar stories who were, these are Hmong villages, so it's impoverished communities in the mountains of Northern Vietnam, and not a lot of job opportunities, not a lot of education.
And a lot of times they would meet people that foreigners or Chinese people or more wealthy Vietnamese people that would come through and they'd start charming them. It's a lot what happens here actually with pimps and then say, Hey, do you want to go for dinner with me? And then the next thing they know, they're being handcuffed and blindfolded and taken [00:57:00] across to border to China and sold to men.
And one of the most horrific stories I heard there was this woman, something similar to her happened. She was kidnapped, sold. She found herself living in a small apartment with a Chinese man and his parents all living in the same apartment. And this is happening in China, by the way, because of the one child's policy.
Jordan Harbinger: For people who don't know, there's not enough women to marry in China because they had a one child policy. You wanted a son. If you could only have one, you aborted or got rid of the girls, and now there's one girl for every, I don't know.
Mariana van Zeller: Three men or something, two men or something. It's not as big, but there's a lot of single men.
And in China it's incredibly important, culturally very important to get married. You are seen as a failure if you don't get married and if you don't have children, your parents will be the biggest sort of sadness of their lives. If your kids don't give you grandkids, basically. It's very important culturally in China.
So there's enormous pressure on these men and they can't find Chinese women, so they're going and paying people to go find them wives elsewhere. So this case of this Vietnamese woman shows up, she was young, I'm [00:58:00] not sure if she was a teenager, but she was young and she shows up, but this's a small, tiny apartment.
This guy, they lock her in a room and the parents live there too, but they lock her in the room. The guy comes in just to have sex with her. She eventually gets pregnant, is forced to give birth to this child. They take away the child from her and let her see the child. Once in a while, let the child go into the room to be with her.
She gives birth to a second child and then after they want two kids, give them two kids. And then they say, okay, if you want, you can go back to Vietnam. And she says. Will I be able to see my kids again and says, no, you can either go back to Vietnam and be with your family, or you stay here, live your health, rest of your life, locked in a room, but you'll be able to see your kids.
So she had to make this decision.
Jordan Harbinger: It was terrible.
Mariana van Zeller: It was devastating. You
Jordan Harbinger: forgot that they sterilized her before she left because they didn't want her to start another family for what reason? I don't really understand.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, I didn't even remember that part. There are parts of it that
Jordan Harbinger: I can take that was particularly horrifying.
If they're going to let her go back and see the kids only on FaceTime, what's the difference if she has more kids? They just didn't want her to, I don't [00:59:00] know. It seemed extra evil.
Mariana van Zeller: It's extra evil. When I started talking about her kids. And how often does she get to talk to them? Because it's not just that she is not able to live with the kids or ever see them again.
It's the fact that she has to live with the Gelt of having made that choice. She abandoned her children and that it's her fault.
Jordan Harbinger: The whole thing was so disgusting, and I think, was she the one, she was like 12 when she got taken there by her friend. They blurred together in my mind, but her friend asked her to go hang out or something, and then she woke up in a car and the other one, she said, they brought her to a room.
There was a bunch of Vietnamese people in there. Two of them or three of them tried to run away and they cut their leg tendons so they couldn't run away. This is like a really. Large organized crime operation that's able to smuggle people across the border
Mariana van Zeller: and that nobody's talking about it because it's not in the interest of either China or Vietnam to expose this.
And journalism is very heavily surveilled in those countries. And our whole experience in Vietnam was insane. It was at the moment we landed, we knew we were under [01:00:00] surveillance. We had a government minder that would follow us everywhere. I had to show him my list of questions. So we'd pretend, like wrote fake questions and he'd give me, okay.
And then I'd sit down and start interviewing people. And the first person I interviewed, I started asking them the questions I wanted to ask. And these were people that had gotten in trouble for trafficking. They'd done time in prison and they were out. So I, they'd agreed to talk to us. So we're asking them questions, but then I start asking the questions that I wanted to ask, and immediately we get stopped from the government mind, who by the way, is also traveling with the police officers.
We have a government minder and a police officer checking every single interview and listening, and they are with us. And then our van one day disappears for hours, and it's our production van that we rented, but the government minder and the police decide to disappear with our van. So we know that it was either checked and bugged and probably both.
That's when we realized, oh my God, they're not just listening in on our interviews. They're actually listening in on our private conversations in the van. And then there were situations in the hotel where I [01:01:00] truly believe my phone was bugged at the hotel because it was a crazy light situation. And conversations that were having that I knew that there was no other way they would know unless they were listening.
So the whole situation was crazy. And we started going out in the middle of the night when they weren't watching and trying to figure out ways to do this story.
Jordan Harbinger: The, it's a creepy feeling to have the government spying. You know, I went to North Korea and just a tourism ish trip, but I remember going, I went 20 12, 13, 14, and 15.
I think
Mariana van Zeller: you went every single year.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah.
Mariana van Zeller: For three, four years.
Jordan Harbinger: For four years, yeah. And then it became illegal actually after that to go, so I had to sell the tour company.
Mariana van Zeller: Was your tour company you would bring people?
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, I was bringing people. So it was like, we had a partner in Beijing that was a British company running in China that would bring people.
And they're like 20 years behind. So I was like, you need a website? And they're like, yeah, we have this URL slash North Korea dash trips. And I'm like, how about how to go to North korea.com? And they're like, oh, that's a good idea. And then you would have to like email them on a form that was broken half the [01:02:00] time, or call China and leave a message and they would call you back during business hours.
And I was like, how about a chatbot in the corner where people ask questions and then it says, we don't know. We'll email you back, put your email in and then squeeze and newsletters. And they were just like, wow. Yeah. So we were like, wait, we're going to run this and we'll sell you the leads. And so that was the company.
And then I would get all these free trips. So I was like, okay, I'm going to go. And I talk about it on the show and people go, go with. So we would go and then it would fill up another one and another one I just kept going for free. It was fun, but I remember. Being in the hotel and there's like the hotel phone and it was on a desk.
And when you're at a hotel, there's a wire for the lamp and a wire for the phone. This desk had a hundred wires coming out of the back. And I'm thinking one of these is for the phone. One of these is for the lamp, one of the other gazillion wires. And then you'd be talking with a friend in there and the phone light would turn on a little bit.
Yeah. And then turn off when you're done.
Mariana van Zeller: That's right. That's what was happening in my, but I kept thinking like, maybe I'm imagining this because
Jordan Harbinger: that's [01:03:00] what I thought too.
Mariana van Zeller: How technically inept must they be to not figure out how to not make that light go on when they're all
Jordan Harbinger: Well, Soviet era wiretapping technology from this North Korea slash China.
And I remember things like that. And I remember being in the bathroom and people were like, do you think they're filming us? And I was like, don't be ridiculous. And then I remember taking a really long shower and all the steam went on the mirror except for this circle.
Mariana van Zeller: Oh my God.
Jordan Harbinger: And I was like, why would that be there?
And it was like, only if that's a different temperature than the rest of the mirror. And it's let's a circle. That's why would it be right there? And I was like, guys, turn in your shower. Tell 'em if you have a circle. They're like, yeah, we have a circle. And it's not in the exact same spot. So it's not like the mirror was made and there's a glass thing there.
It was like somebody's circle was a little bit over here and another person's circle was a little bit up here. And I was like, there's something behind the mirror.
Mariana van Zeller: Well, have you watched the Apple Show Silo, by the way? Uhuh, if you watch it, that's exactly where they hit. All the cameras is behind the mirror.
Jordan Harbinger: Oh my gosh. So there's a hidden floor in the hotel where you stay and we walked through that floor. This is where Otto Warmbier actually walked through that floor, but [01:04:00] the kid who got arrested and ended up dying there. So we would walk through that floor and they would catch us there. But I remember going and we'd just say, oh, we're looking for the bathroom.
Mariana van Zeller: Why is it a secret?
Jordan Harbinger: It's a secret floor because it's employees only, and they have meeting rooms and there's propaganda posters all over the walls and everything. And he stole one of those posters. That's why he went to jail. But we walked around there and when they would catch us, we would just say, we're looking for the bathroom and pretend to be really drunk or actually be really drunk, as the case was happened to be.
And I remember one time we were walking around and we walked to dead end in the hallway on one of the hallways and there was a pile of cameras on the floor and it was like, why do they have a pile of cameras? Where would those go? They obviously go in
Mariana van Zeller: 100%
Jordan Harbinger: the rooms or in the public area. And it's, I remember looking at the little circle lens in the camera and going.
I wonder how big that is Exactly. And I wanted to go and touch it and be like, okay. And then go back to my shower and be like, okay. But I didn't have a chance to do that, but I was just thinking like they are filming us in the fricking bathroom.
Mariana van Zeller: Oh my God.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah.
Mariana van Zeller: I didn't think about it in the bathroom.
Jordan Harbinger: You question your sanity though, right?
Oh, you're like, [01:05:00] I'm being paranoid. Why would they care? And weird things do happen. Like year one, you go in there, you tell 'em what you do, you run a podcast, and then three years later you have the same guide. And he goes, Jordan, how's your podcast going? And you're like, okay.
Mariana van Zeller: There's no way he remember this.
Jordan Harbinger: You either have the best memory of anybody I've ever met, or there's a file on me that you read before I get here. And you're like, oh, that's the podcast guy, right? Because what the hell? Even though it's North Korea, you've still had 300 people come in per year besides me. So what the heck, Lee? It's unnerving.
Yeah. And you start gaslighting yourself. No, that can't be, can it? No. I'm being paranoid. I'm not that important that he did know that thing. It's just bizarre being watched like that.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, there was a moment where we all decided we were going to get, so we're in the northern Vietnam, and again, we're being followed and everything we're doing, we're thinking, oh my God, this is crazy.
They know everything, all our moves and everything and 'cause they do a lot of tailoring In Vietnam, you can get your suits done for like a hundred bucks. You get the most beautiful custom made suit. So my whole team decide we're all going to get suits made. So we do. And then [01:06:00] that night we kind of like left the hotel without telling our government minder and went to good Vietnamese food.
There we are. And who shows up? But the Taylor and he's sitting at a table right next to us and he's like, this is Dan. That's, yeah. And this is like a big town with lots of restaurants and we're thinking the tailor is also a spy. Tinter Taylor, what's that thing? Tinker
Jordan Harbinger: Taylor? Uh, sail, spy. And then it's like, no, it's just a coincidence.
Is it though, or did the government minder go like, Hey, they think I'm not following them. You have to go follow them and pretend that you're just seeing them there.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, we don't know. I mean, it could be a level of paranoia. It could be actually real.
Jordan Harbinger: Exactly. Like just 'cause you're, what's that phrase?
Just 'cause you're paranoid doesn't mean they aren't out to get you. Yeah. Yeah. This might actually be the case. Yeah. You mentioned in the Vietnam episode that in some of the villages, something like 10% of the people are missing.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. Some of the smaller villages and some of them trafficking organizations that work there believe that a lot of them were in fact kidnapped and taken to China.
Some of them take jobs in big cities and don't come back, but it's still an enormous number. And you [01:07:00] have families all over Vietnam looking for their daughters. Having no idea what happened to them.
Jordan Harbinger: If you take a job, don't you call your parents and say, by the way, I'm alive.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, of course. Yeah,
Jordan Harbinger: yeah.
Maybe they took a job, but then you're not missing. You're just not at home. That's different. They kidnap these people often off the street, and I think you'd mentioned something like the witnesses bystanders don't intervene because there's a ritual.
Mariana van Zeller: So that's what's so unfortunate about all this too, is that in the culture, the way that people get engaged or one of the cultural traditions that they have there is that for a man to ask for a woman's hand to get married, he actually, there's some strange cultural tradition where they go and kidnap them from a public street, take them on the back of their bike or take them to car, wherever, and it's sort of a thing that they do, and then they go and present them to the.
Parents and they get engaged. The problem is that this is also how traffickers are kidnapping women. So they're actually using the cultural tradition as a disguise to [01:08:00] actually kidnap women. And it's very unfortunate that
Jordan Harbinger: I grew up in Detroit and there's a lot of Mung there from after the Vietnam War.
It's like one of our ethnic minorities that no one else has ever heard of, and
Mariana van Zeller: that's why you're so comfortable saying their name back and forth. I was like, no one knows about the Hogan journey
Jordan Harbinger: years. Everyone says Hoon or something. It's wrong. Anyway, so my friend was dating one of these girls and they ended up getting engaged and she's like, so here's the thing.
You have to kidnap me with your friends,
Mariana van Zeller: so you know this too.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. And I remember being like. How are we doing this? And he's like, yeah, I have to plan a kidnapping. I didn't end up being part of it. It would've been awesome, but, 'cause he ended up postponing it and stuff and I moved. But basically he had to stage a kidnapping where it was like a bunch of buddies and him had to go when her and her friends were hanging out unexpectedly.
I mean, it was all planned. And then go and kidnap her and then basically show up with her to the parents and be like, I'm marrying your daughter. And it's pretty cool when it's not actually human trafficking.
Mariana van Zeller: And it was really hard actually. 'cause there's a ton of footage out there on YouTube of real [01:09:00] kidnappings and of these traditions.
So even for us, like our archival producer lost their mind trying to figure out what's real and what's just a marriage proposal. I'm so happy you mentioned that. Even we're reporting, we make, we fact check, but it's good to have this corroborated. This is actually the case and happens even outside of the country.
Jordan Harbinger: It's unusual. And I remember being like, she's messing with you, dude. Don't do that. You're going to get arrested. And it was like, you have to plan it carefully because if your neighbors see you yanking a girl out of the house, they're going to call the police and you're going to get shot or arrested. No, here's the thing, officer, it's a, I love this woman.
It's a ritual We've been dating for a while. Oh yeah. Okay. Tell it to the judge. Sure. Tell it to the judge. I was so frustrated for you during these Vietnam interviews though, Hey, do you know anyone who's human trafficking? And they like, look over to the cop and the government mind and they're like, no, no,
Mariana van Zeller: not me.
Meanwhile, I know that he was a human trafficker,
Jordan Harbinger: bro, you just got out of prison for human trafficking. We all know that You're guilty. You did your time. What's the deal? I don't know. Nothing. Don't worry about it. And it's, oh, for God's sake, why did we show up and do
Mariana van Zeller: this? Yeah. And we had people who agreed to talk [01:10:00] to us.
The police showed up at their house and told them not to talk to us. It was really hard. And it wasn't really until we partnered with that Asian undercover group of journalists. They were amazing. And they were the ones who went into some of these brothels using undercover footage and they were actually able to get all the stuff that we needed.
'cause until that point, we thought we didn't have a story. And then we met them and they started doing this incredible work. So this, at least we have footage of this actually happening. 'cause nobody wanted to talk to us.
Jordan Harbinger: The brothel thing is extra gross. So you think, oh, they're getting married off to guys in China.
All right. They're starting a family. It's definitely not ideal. It's definitely still human trafficking. And then you find out, oh, not all of them get married. Some of them just get locked in a storage unit so that they can get raped over and over.
Mariana van Zeller: The ones that don't get married, you think the worst of the worst is living in the situation that that woman lived right in the house with the family, Chinese family locked in the room and forced to give birth to kids.
But in this case, there's even worse, which are those that don't get married, they're put in brothels because the [01:11:00] traffickers have to figure out how to make money out of this commodity. Where for them with these women are just commodities and yeah, being locked in those rooms. And this undercover journalist, it's this incredible work where he shows up at this brothel and he says he's like this long corridor.
And every single door on both sides are women that are locked and forced to have sex with men, and they're not making any money.
Jordan Harbinger: And they're in the dark.
Mariana van Zeller: In the dark. And so he goes into the, one of the rooms, it's complete darkness in there. Once he gets in, at one point I think he turns on the light and they tell him, no, no, no.
Turn off the light. 'cause he wants to see what's happening. It's the madam that runs the brothel that takes him there. As soon as he gets in, she locks the door from the outside. So then he's in there, he says he saw there was three women and they start whispering to him and saying, okay, what can we do for you?
And he's like, nothing. 'cause he was just filming undercover, nothing. I don't want anything from you. And trying to figure out how you can get out of there. And they start saying, look, if you don't have sex with one of us, you have to pick one. 'cause if you don't have sex with one of us, they're going to beat [01:12:00] us.
So you have to pick one. And it's this moment for him where he's trying to figure out what to do and then he just starts knocking on the door and comes up with an excuse that he doesn't like the darkness or something. I can't remember exactly what was his excuse to get out of there, but he got the footage of that whole situation.
Jordan Harbinger: If you're listening to this thinking, man, I need a shower, a nap, and maybe some therapy. Same Now, how about a discount on that therapy and or a mattress? We'll be right back. This episode is sponsored in part by Fundera, powered by NerdWallet. Running a small business is tough, and when it's time to get a loan, it can feel impossible to find a lender you actually trust.
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If you haven't signed up yet, I invite you to come check it out. It is a great companion to the show. Jordan harbinger.com/news is where you can find it now for the rest of my conversation with Mariana van
JHS Trailer: Zeller.
Jordan Harbinger: You know I'm like in my house watching this in my office. Comfortable. A beverage in my hand and I'm just like, oh my God.
The only real difference is I just happen to not be [01:15:00] born in a village in the mountains of Vietnam. That's like the dice roll.
Mariana van Zeller: The biggest learning that I've had from all these years covering black markets is that I usually use this line that I read once that I love, which is the wheel of history turns.
And where and when you were born determines whether you get crushed or raised by it. And we are the lucky ones. We got the lottery ticket, right? We were born where we were. We got opportunities that we did. We got access to greater education. And so what I wanted traffic to be also is a great conversation starter for all of us.
What are we doing with these opportunities that we are given? 'cause we are not the girl in Vietnam or even some of these traffickers, even some sicarios in Sinaloa, where this is the environment they grew up in. This is all that's offered to them. This is all they know. And I will never forget this interview that I did with a 16, 17-year-old kid in Peru who's carrying cocaine on his back, like kilos and kilos of cocaine, backbreaking work through the mountains of Peru, seeing some of his friends being killed in front of him by rival groups [01:16:00] at this point, has seen dozens of people being killed.
Extreme violence, really difficult work. Really dangerous. And when I asked him, why are you doing this? He says, look, I've always wanted to be a dentist. I've always wanted to go to college. My parents can't afford it. And so this is the only work that I. Will allow me to go to college. And I say, why college?
What do you want to do? He says, I want to be a dentist. And I ask him, why do you want to be a dentist? Because in my little town, all the posters that I see for dentists is posters of people with big smiles. So I want to make people smile. I God, you make
Jordan Harbinger: me cry in my own show. That's so sad.
Mariana van Zeller: I know.
Jordan Harbinger: So instead, he is humping cocaine to the jungle.
Mariana van Zeller: Exactly. Hoping that one day he can become a dentist. So that's what I want the show to be. I want people to see many of these traffickers, again, do we do not condone what they do. It's difficult to even empathize, but the majority of the people that I talk to are people just like you and me that don't have the opportunities or the luck that we have.
Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: You do a good job of not glamorizing it, but humanizing the people involved, but not making excuses for the people who are doing criminal
Mariana van Zeller: activity. And I ask all of [01:17:00] them hard questions. It's my job as a journalist. I'm not there to then have fun with them, even though I'm trying to connect on a human level and treat people with respect and try to find the humanity out of them.
Because by finding the humanity, then you really get the depth of the reporting that you need to understand why things like this happen. But at the same time, I'm also holding them accountable for what they do. So even the cartel, like you are always told, there are questions that you don't ask the cartel.
I will always ask those questions of the cartel.
Jordan Harbinger: What are, what's a question you don't ask? The cartel?
Mariana van Zeller: One of the first ones is what cartel they belong to. They don't like being asked that bosses and structures or names and things like that. I try to always do my job as a journalist, which is to hold people accountable.
Jordan Harbinger: Props, by the way, to whoever does the music on the show. Because whoever they are, they find like the best Vietnamese rap with an electronic music dance beat behind it. And I'm like, whoever picked that is fire like
Mariana van Zeller: this. I think that was actually our director on that episode. Rob Raskin is really good with,
Jordan Harbinger: yeah.
Yeah. I was like, where do you even find something like that? You don't type that into [01:18:00] Spotify and find that as a hit.
Mariana van Zeller: We also have an amazing music supervisor, Dan Wilcox. He's an amazing supervisor. He also finds really good music. Yeah,
Jordan Harbinger: it's pretty cool to have something like that. Someone is just spending hours finding the perfect track or gets really lucky here and there and finds a track.
Or finds a track and goes, one day I'm going to use this. And then when they're looking for music, it's ah, Vietnamese rap from the nineties. I'm doing it.
Mariana van Zeller: I love that you notice it. Thank you.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. It's part of the production thing and it's like if I did a TV show, I would do traffic. It's already taken, but very rarely do I envy someone else's job.
'cause I have a pretty cool one too. I talk to smart people, interesting people all day, but trafficked. I'm like, eh, would I trade? Maybe. I mean it's a little scary getting stuck in Niger after a coup. I do have little kids. My wife would, would not be interested in me trading, but I could probably do a couple seasons of traffic.
Yeah.
Mariana van Zeller: You came to an end. We did five seasons. This was the last season. Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: I did not know that. My final question was what do we expect next season? There goes, okay, screw that.
Mariana van Zeller: See I told you not to have four
Jordan Harbinger: seasons.
Ruined it. Um, yeah, no, now I'm paying the price for that. [01:19:00] What's your favorite part of the job, you think?
Or what was your favorite
part
Mariana van Zeller: of the job? So what comes next? Let me tell you what comes next, because I'm still working in black markets. I have a podcast that I love. Started doing this a few months ago, and I think the way I describe it is in many ways trafficked with sort of the map of these black markets.
And the podcast is a li a little bit like the diary, right? It's where I actually get to sit with people and have intimate conversations on traffic. You'd see like these people have incredible, fascinating stories and yet you'd hear like 2, 3, 4 minutes of their lives. And here we, I have a platform where we can talk and I can understand who they are, why they do what they do.
And these are people with some of the most fascinating lives, right? People that work and have operated somehow in these black markets. So I've got that and I'm working on other shows. It's just the privilege of a lifetime, right? Being able to see things that nobody else sees. And connecting with people, you know, becoming friends with victims of human trafficking.
In Vietnam, or with the kid that's carrying cocaine or Jamaican [01:20:00] scammer, Tweety that I'll never forget. There's all these people, again, not condoning what a lot of them do, but creating connections with them and feeling like the privilege of walking in their shoes for a little bit and understanding their lives is amazing.
It just expands your mind in a way that I think we all should be exposed to.
Jordan Harbinger: I agree.
Mariana van Zeller: We did five amazing seasons. We got nominated for 29 Emmys last year was the most Emmy nominated unscripted show in the history of the Emmys, which is crazy, and we're going to be up for a bunch, hopefully. Oh my God. I'm jinxing it already.
We're applying, we're submitting to the Emmys this year for season five, and I'm going to figure out a way to keep doing what I do elsewhere.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, I was going to say, if you can do it on YouTube or there's so many apps and streaming services now. It's kinda like with podcasting. When I was younger I wanted to be on the radio, and then I got on satellite radio.
And it was like the station manager would go, what if you do this really lame thing that makes your show exactly like everyone else's show? And then we cancel it because it's just like everyone else's show, but not right. And it's no thanks. I'm going to do this podcasting thing. And I remember [01:21:00] everybody was like, what a loser podcasting is for losers.
Now all those radio guys are doing podcasts because it makes more money and you don't have to listen to some knucklehead station manager who doesn't understand what you do.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, that's exactly it. So that's my plan for the future, is that I can figure out how to grow the YouTube channel that I have. I mean, it's a good show and it was very.
Successful. Very popular, right? Yeah. For five seasons. A lot of people love it.
Jordan Harbinger: I remember when I left satellite radio, the station manager goes, oh, you guys are just on fire. It's really something. Anyway, we're not going to continue. And I was like, what did I misunderstand about? This is fire. Like repeat the last rewind.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: That's so Hollywood though, right? You are beloved. Anyway, that was our last season. What are you talking about? How does that follow, by the way, South Africa looks so cool and beautiful, but holy crap. That place is the Wild West armored car bird.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: Is that heist thing?
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. That was a crazy story, right?
The heist.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, the heist crews blowing up armored cars and then they're like, oh, how do we keep these people secure? And it's like helicopter chase and escort [01:22:00] thing. And I'm like, can't you just have more guards? And they're like, oh, that sounds expensive. We're not doing that.
Mariana van Zeller: It's a war game between the security companies and the robbers and the heist gangs and they're all trying to one up each other and they're all one upping each other constantly.
So now you've got like a war on the. Highways of Of South Africa. It's insane. In Johannesburg. Particularly in In Durban. Yeah. It's crazy.
Jordan Harbinger: And this woman's like, oh, our plan since they're shooting these is to make them bombproof
Mariana van Zeller: proof Uhhuh.
Jordan Harbinger: It's like maybe there's another
Mariana van Zeller: solution. So first is like, make them bulletproof, which they did.
And then the heist crews were like, oh yeah, take a look at that. This and big I about
Jordan Harbinger: this rifle that shoots through Bulletproof. Yeah.
Mariana van Zeller: And they started using explosives to open these things up and now we're going to make them bombproof and they're going to come up with something else. It's a cat and mouse game.
Jordan Harbinger: You could not pay me enough to be an armored car driver in South Africa. After seeing that episode,
Mariana van Zeller: the guy who's been shot multiple times who thought he was dead
Jordan Harbinger: was, he had been robbed like 14 times.
Mariana van Zeller: And then he, there's a video, which is insane, where he's. [01:23:00] Looks like an act of war essentially is being shot at from all sides.
He's wounded, he thinks he's about to die. He's like trying to radio to call for help. And then he gets back on a truck a couple months later and is back doing that armored truck driving job.
Jordan Harbinger: That was the guy who's like, oh, he's going to kill me. So he's shot the guy through like a hole in the truck.
Mariana van Zeller: He was able to shoot the guy shooting at him.
Jordan Harbinger: This is like a story from Iraq.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. Or Hollywood. Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. And he's like an old dude who looks like he should be a mall security guard.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. So this is the part that made me feel bad is that this guy, obviously I asked him why is he retiring? Because he can't afford to retire. He's taken bullets for the security company.
Just give this guy his full pay and let him retire.
Jordan Harbinger: Seriously. And I don't know what wages are like in South Africa, but I'm going to go ahead and guess. He's not making no
Mariana van Zeller: nothing. A
Jordan Harbinger: six figure salary.
Mariana van Zeller: No, not at all. These guys are making nothing and they're risking their lives.
Jordan Harbinger: I notice you're emotional at times with interviewees, people who've lost children or simply saying insane things like the pastor we talked about before, like gay people [01:24:00] should be executed and stuff.
How do you decide when to blur the line between like 60 minutes journalist who shows absolutely no emotion and being more human with the person in front of you?
Mariana van Zeller: That line doesn't exist for me because I believe journalism is not just about holding people accountable and it's not about objectivity. I think perhaps one of the most important jobs is connecting people, creating connections between us, the viewers, the listeners, and people on the other side of the world that we think we have nothing in common with.
I think that's one of the most powerful tools in journalism. I also think that in many situations. The work, the job of a journalist is very much like a caretaker. When I'm interviewing the victims and even some of the really sad stories behind some of the traffickers and people involved in these black markets, I am almost their therapist.
These are people who've never shared their stories. There's a very important caretaking part of the journalism profession that people usually don't talk with about that I think is very important, and it's the only way that you can show the complete picture, [01:25:00] and I am also a human being, so if I am going to get emotional, I'm going to show that I'm emotional, and I'm hoping that the viewers and listeners will feel that and will feel what I'm feeling at the time and will care.
Ultimately, it's all about making people care about these issues in the world.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Would you let your son do trafficked on that geo or would you talk him out of it?
Mariana van Zeller: I've never been asked that. I would love for him to be a journalist because I love my job so much, and I think he's 15 years old now. I think that I've led such a fascinating life that I wouldn't want to him not to have it.
I would be worried, but one of the things that my parents taught me, and I think part of the reason why I am the way I am, is that they were never fearful. They were never helicopter parents. They allowed me to explore the world. If I wanted to go up trees, if I wanted to move to Syria, which I did right after Syria.
Yeah, I moved to Syria right after. Columbia University. The war in Iraq had just started. I wanted to be close to the action. I wanted to be reporting from the Middle East. At the time, I didn't know anyone in Syria. I didn't know [01:26:00] Arabic. That was basically next door to a huge war, and my parents never told me, don't go.
They were always supporters and trusted. My common sense sometimes to their detriment, but
Jordan Harbinger: yeah. Wow.
Mariana van Zeller: But that's the kind of parent I am too, with my son, is I want him to explore the world. I want him to make mistakes. I want him to sometimes feel uncomfortable, get outside his comfort zone. I think that's a very important, and I think there's a instinct, or not an instinct, but usually parents try to protect their kids to their detriment in a way, sometimes too much.
I'm not saying that, yes, my son go out and hang out with drug traffickers, but do something every day that makes you feel a little uncomfortable, because that's the way that you evolve and you become. A better human being.
Jordan Harbinger: I agree with that. It's easy for us to say, and then it's, mom, I'm going to go to Venezuela and I'm going to meet up with these people who are human traffickers that also sell cocaine.
And you're like, I come from zero credibility telling you not to do that because it's too dangerous. So have [01:27:00] fun.
Mariana van Zeller: He's 15 right now, so obviously you wouldn't go now, but later in life, when I went to Syria, I was like 26 or 27 years old. And when I started doing these sort of stories, yeah, I was around that age.
And I think at that point I had a little bit of experience. I was a little bit more mature. I had conversations with my parents about it, and I think that I would prepare him. And tell him everything that I know and hope that he would make good decisions and have the training that he needs to have.
Although I didn't have any training when I went. Yeah,
Jordan Harbinger: it's,
Mariana van Zeller: that's kind of bullshit.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, exactly. But I
Mariana van Zeller: would try to get him
Jordan Harbinger: to hold on. Mommy's coming with you.
Mariana van Zeller: Probably I'd be with like binoculars.
Jordan Harbinger: I won't say anything. I swear I'll just hang out in the van. No, mom. Yeah. Although he, it would be great to have your mom be your ep if your mom is Mariana Van.
Suppose is there any place that's been just impossible to film in so far, but is on the top of your list?
Mariana van Zeller: Oh, North Korea would be one of them. I would love to go North Korea and Iran. Uh, we've had plans to go to Iran. We've been pitching a story on Iran since season one of Trafficked so far. It hasn't worked out for us.
Jordan Harbinger: Now. Might not [01:28:00] be the best time to go to
Mariana van Zeller: Iran. No, might not. Although it possibly would be the best plan to go. This is when we want to be there.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Yeah, that's true. Although getting stuck there now.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah. It's just, it's very dangerous and particularly as a journalist and yeah, there's all reasons not to go.
I was trying to go there with my Portuguese passport, so just fly under the radar,
Jordan Harbinger: right? Yeah, a little bit until they realize, well, because you have to apply for a journalism permit to film, and they're going to at least Google you and then it doesn't matter what color your passport is at that point.
Have you ever had to scrap anything because footage didn't work out or it got lost or your camera got stolen or something?
Mariana van Zeller: Not like that, but we had a story we were going to do once about uranium and nuclear weapons and the trafficking of nuclear weapons and uranium and we were going to Ukraine. This was way before the war.
It was again season, I think it was season. Yeah. It was season one of traffic. So this was 2019. Our producer and director was already on the ground and they called us and was like, do not come. We have to get out of the [01:29:00] country. There's shit happening. And so we never did that story and that's when that, I'm sad because we were really looking forward to doing that story.
Jordan Harbinger: That was before the war. So the shit happening was what? Organized crime or something? Or you can't even say what it was.
Mariana van Zeller: I think it was a mix of paranoia and the government talking to people that they would, we would get in trouble if we did it, and then the people that were going to take us and give us some of this access, deciding they didn't want to do it.
So it was a combination of things.
Jordan Harbinger: So what other shows are you working on or what other documentaries are you working
Mariana van Zeller: on? So I'm working on The Hidden Third, the podcast. You can catch it on YouTube or we'll link to
Jordan Harbinger: it in the show. Pay those bills. Pay those bills.
Mariana van Zeller: I need some of your viewers, Jordan, real listeners.
And then I'm also working on a really fun show. I can't tell a lot about it, but it's a really fun show for Gio. Be scams. I can tell you a little bit about it. It's essentially the idea. It's called Super Scam me, and it's a show I pitched them, which is, I've reported on scams extensively. I've been all around the world talking to scam victims, but I've never felt what it's like to be a scam victim myself.[01:30:00]
So for a limited time period of time, I say yes to every single scam that comes my way. I answer every phone call, I reply to every email. I create this persona that I put out online. I opened myself up to romance dating, romance scams, crypto. All the scams you can think of. It's an experiment.
Jordan Harbinger: So right now you have dudes from Bangladesh messaging you and telling you how beautiful you are or whatever.
Just you should invest in their secret crypto platform that's made them a hundred percent return.
Mariana van Zeller: You have no idea. I am talking to three. Brad Pitts, a couple of Keanu Reeves. I think four George Clooney's. 'cause celebrity scams are huge right now. I have, I'm romantically involved with a couple of men. I have all these amazing scams happening right now.
Jordan Harbinger: It's funny when you are a willing participant in knowing it's a scam.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: So we covered those pig butchering scams and scam centers and things. Also you covered in traffic. And one of the things that I was wondering about is what if I just started talking to these people knowing it was a scam? 'cause before I used to berate them in [01:31:00] Chinese and be like, I'm a Chinese party official.
And they'd be like, oh, I'm sorry, uh uh, we'll take you off of our list. And then when I found out they were being held there captive and they weren't willingly doing it a lot of the time, I started messaging back and being like, Hey, are you okay? And they're like, oh, what do you mean? And I'm like, are you in a Cambodian or Burmese scam center and you can't escape?
And some of them will reply and go, yes. And it's is, is there anything I can do to help you? Thinking they're going to go, yeah, just deposit crypto. And they're like, can you tell someone that I'm here? And I've had people send me like their family's phone number and they're like, I'm deleting this account, but just please tell me you did that.
Mariana van Zeller: Oh my God, that's so sad.
Jordan Harbinger: It was a guy in Dubai told me he reached out to me 'cause I, he heard the podcast or saw the podcast on YouTube that I did covering this. And he said, I'm trapped in Dubai in the UAE. And he drew a map of the scam center and he called me and we recorded the calls and everything and I called a prosecutor in Santa Clara who covers a lot of crypto scams.
Aaron West. Aaron
Mariana van Zeller: West. I love Aaron. We worked with her for this story. Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: So she [01:32:00] said, there's no evidence that this is happening in Dubai. This is a couple years ago. And then about last year, she called me back and she goes, so you are right. There is a huge organized crime connection. There's a Chinese gang working there.
We think that the guy you talked to may be a part of this thing. So he ended up escaping and like deleting all of his media.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, it's interesting. Yeah. We interviewed a lot of victims from these crime compounds who had just been able to flee the scam compounds. And we're in Thailand on our story scam city.
And some of the Indians that had just fled to this com compounds went through Dubai. They applied to it for a job in Dubai. They got to Dubai and they met a woman who lure them for a job in Myanmar, and then they got stuck in these compounds and these kids were beat and tortured with electric shocks.
It was the whole thing.
Jordan Harbinger: That's what this guy told me that. And I thought, oh, is this real? Someone's winding me up. But it all got corroborated. I mean, not his particular stories, but it was all like, yeah, they're getting shocked with batons. And then he sent me the, all of the personnel with all the photos of everybody who worked there kind of giving it to the FBI.
So I have all these guys from Sierra Leone who work for the security. This is the chief [01:33:00] enforcer. This is the guy who beats us. This is the boss. Here's a photo of the boss. Here's his nickname in Chinese. I don't know his real name. And so the FBI was like. Going through all these files and they're like, oh yeah, okay.
Interesting. This totally makes sense.
Mariana van Zeller: Did you meet with the F fbi?
Jordan Harbinger: I, yeah. They came to my house. Wow. My wife was thrilled about that. She's like, what are you doing? And I'm like, oh, they want the information.
Mariana van Zeller: And
Jordan Harbinger: you were actually interested in knowing they were interested.
Mariana van Zeller: So do you think they were investigating this because they, no one has done anything?
Jordan Harbinger: Well, what they were mostly interested in, this same guy said there were scams and they didn't seem to care about that. The, the FBI agent in Tennessee cared about it 'cause it was his beat or whatever. But what really got their attention was this guy on the recorded call had said they meet with Russians all the time and they have an insider at a US bank and they're going to do some kind of thing at the US Bank and steal all the money of the money and the personal data.
And then the FBI came over like that night.
Mariana van Zeller: Oh wow. '
Jordan Harbinger: cause they were like, we want to know if there's going to be a terrorist attack on a bank in the United States. They were really interested in that. So I asked that guy for more information about that, and he told me who the Russians were and [01:34:00] how they changed all of the IP adjust.
He just knew who they were. He didn't have their full names or anything, but there's a company that comes in and installs VPNs so that they can change their IP addresses every week. So he gave off all of the vendor information and they, I think the FBI was like, I'm speculating here. I think they were thinking, if we can find out who that VPN company is, we can monitor that VPN company and find out which bank it is and what they're going to do, which is probably a good way to investigate that.
Mariana van Zeller: I should have talked to you when we, yeah, we filmed two summers ago, but all of this would've been good information for us, even for our story. Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: Next time.
Mariana van Zeller: Yeah, next time.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah.
Mariana van Zeller: I need you as my
Jordan Harbinger: story. That's right. I would happily join the the Van Zel crew. That's true. Thanks for coming in. This has been super fascinating.
Mariana van Zeller: Oh, I've had such a fun time. Thanks for having me, Jordan.
Jordan Harbinger: You're about to hear a preview of The Jordan Harbinger Show with Amanda Catarzi, who
was raised in a cult and later sex and labor trafficked.
JHS Trailer: The women were trained to be insanely submissive, like you could never say no to any man, and then the men were [01:35:00] trained in a very military way.
These people are well armed and well-trained, and it's a whole group that thinks that the world is evil and they need to repopulate the world with their people to bring the kingdom of God. When you turn 13 in that culture, you're an adult. So to be 13 years old, being courted by men twice my age, three times my age to see if I would make a good wife, it was just kind of outrageous.
So I moved to California to go to school and I. Start training MMA, and my trafficker was there. He was actually one of my boxing coaches. Then he's like, you know, I like you. And so now we're dating. So this is my first adult relationship. He's twice my age at this point. And then he would always take me up to his cabin on the mountain, which was really far away from everybody else.
No phone service, isolation. And it was on a Native American reservation. So whatever they wanted to do to me, [01:36:00] they could, oops, you accidentally got gang raped. That was very common of going to go train. And then all of a sudden, now that you've fought 12 rounds, mm-hmm. Now you're going to be raped. A girl ran a red light and T-boned my truck.
So I pull out my phone and I text my trafficker and I say, Hey, I almost just died in a car accident. And he said, is your face fucked up? And I'm like, no. And he said, well, you're still fuckable then. Something isn't right here. This isn't. Who I want to be. This isn't what I want. And it was like I was coming out of water.
I had this moment of clarity and I knew something wasn't right and I knew this wasn't what I wanted. And I knew I needed to act fast in order to get out of that situation. 'cause I knew I'd get sucked back in.
Jordan Harbinger: To hear how she escaped her dire situation, check out episode 631 of The Jordan Harbinger Show.
If this episode stuck with you, good, it [01:37:00] should because behind the cartels, the trafficking, the scams, and the violence are systems that don't look like movie villains. They look like paperwork. They look like airline luggage. They look like fake rehab centers set up in a house that would otherwise be an Airbnb.
They look like government silence and people who learn to look the other way because it's safer than speaking up. Mariana has seen this world up close, armed guard surveillance, intimidation, and moments where everything could have gone sideways, fast, and she still keeps going because if nobody tells these stories.
The silence wins. Check out Mariana's podcast, The Hidden Third, wherever you're listening. Now, of course, all things Mariana van Zeller will be in the show notes on the website, advertisers deals, discount Codes, ways to support this show, all at Jordan harbinger.com/deals. Please consider supporting those who support the show.
Don't forget about Six Minute Networking as well over at sixminutenetworking.com, and I'm Jordan Harbinger on both Twitter and Instagram. You can also connect with me on LinkedIn where the same people are. This show is created in association with PodcastOne. My team is Jen Harbinger, Jase Sanderson, [01:38:00] Robert Fogarty, Tadas Sidlauskas, Ian Baird, and Gabriel Mizrahi.
Remember, we rise by lifting others. The fee for the show is you share it with friends when you find something useful or interesting. In fact, the greatest compliment you can give us is to share the show with those you care about. If you know somebody who's into a little bit of the dark side of stuff, loves the show, traffick is into kind of this true Crimey stuff, definitely share this episode with them.
In the meantime, I hope you apply what you hear on the show so you can live what you learn, and we'll see you next time.
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