This American Life
This American Life

888: Not Today, Hades!

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Regular people trapped inside Greek myths. Visit thisamericanlife.org/lifepartners to sign up for our premium subscription.Prologue: When a mysterious, ripped-open package arrives on Pablo's doo...

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From WBEZ Chicago, it's this American life, I'm X-rays Condoraja in for Ira G...

Bubba does this feel like it, Icarus story to you, maybe, potentially. What part? Well, Icarus dies, not that part.

This is Pablo Manriquez, and he recently survived his

own personal Greek tragedy. He's a reporter in Washington DC known for years, and this all began when a ripped open package showed up on his front suit. It's late winter 2022, I find the box outside of my apartment. Inside is a canvas, a couple, like four, the four primary colors, a paintbrush, and a pallet.

It would just seem like a sign. Yeah. And that's like, what's the sign? It was just, uh, I thought to myself, somebody painted every painting in the capital and the White House and the Department of Justice, all these agency buildings, they have oil

paintings.

And yeah, in the 15 years of life in Washington, I have never met an oil painter.

Hit this light bulb moment. That could be him. It wasn't the first time he decided to become a new Pablo. When we first met, he was doing PR work, but he decided he wanted to be a reporter, no matter what.

So at 37, he moved into a flat house and began freelancing for small publications. And now he spends his days chasing down politicians in the halls of Congress. He made it happen. So with these art supplies, he began to imagine this other life for himself. He made a Pablo kind of plan.

So I was, if I'd become an oil painter, I would basically be the only oil painter I know.

And in some sense, I have like a monopoly on oil painting in Washington, you know, I mean,

like if you want an oil painting, especially a portrait, you have to come to me.

Well Pablo, Lex and skill and experience, he compensates for. He's seeking opportunism and blinding self confidence. It can rub people the wrong way, but I appreciate the hustle. Pablo, it's so fun to me that you're trying to pick one career in a, I can say it, a dying industry by supplementing your income with another dying industry.

Reporting an artist, it's like the two poor, it's, it didn't make any sense to a lot of people. But it made sense to Pablo, Pablo looked down at the new tools and his hands. And then, tilted his head, skyward, even as Icrusted before him, he saw a way to soar where no mortal had dared to soar. Our show today, myths in real life.

What have a next to Pablo and other daring actions by mortals challenging their small lives?

And a cameo by a real life god, because you know, the gods get mad if you don't include them. And I'm too busy to get smoked, not today, hey, these, stay with us. Hey, it's Ray from Cartock, you tied up all the depth and thoughtful care that goes into NPR shows, wants some good old fashion goofing around and stumbling, they figure out what's going on. Well, I've been taking occasional car questions again. You can hear them by signing up

the NPR Plus, along with lots of other bonus content, just go to plus.npr.org. It's this American life, act one, Icarus. So Pablo Manriquez, in Washington, DC, and received these art supplies, perhaps discarded by an Amazon package thief, or perhaps a gift from the gods. And he figured there's all these big egos and town who would love to be memorialized in oil portraits. Well, I could do that for them,

even though Pablo himself had never painted a portrait in his life, or painted anything for that matter.

I had sort of a clear vision in mind of what I needed to do. I needed to learn how to paint a face. Politicians have them. We can't sell a portrait without one. Pablo finds a YouTube channel, called Paint Coach. It has a 10-minute crash course. He follows along, he starts moving paint around

On the canvas, and he's hooked.

hanging on walls around town. He just needs a first subject to paint. It's got to be someone widely recognizable, someone distinct and iconic. So he picks Mitch McConnell.

He's always had super, super loyal staffers. I mean, I imagine he's, according to his book,

the long game. He's run out all his enemies and installed all of his friends. So I was hoping to find Mitch McConnell fans to buy Mitch McConnell paintings. Another thing I did, I looked up on at C, I looked up on the typical places where you would go to buy an oil painting, and I couldn't find any oil paintings of Mitch McConnell. If I painted five paintings of Mitch

McConnell in a week, I had the only five paintings of Mitch McConnell and existence for sale, right?

After a few tries, he gets one that looks enough like Mitch McConnell. So he posted a few pictures of his progress in someone notices. The next day. I was walking through the Senate and one of his aids kind of came out of the woodwork. He was just like, "Hey man, do's paintings of our boss that you're posting on Instagram are really cool, but could you maybe paint him smiling?" You know, that was just like, boom, hell yeah, I can paint them smiling. I can paint them smiling. Whoa,

all day long. If you ever had a picture in your office of your boss smiling at you, if you have, you might be living in a country where the name leader is preceded by great, or supreme. I'd like to take this moment to say, I am grateful to work here at this American life where the company reimburses half the cost of the smiling portrait of Ira that we are

forced to hang in our offices. Pablo delivers his first smiling senator to Mitch McConnell's staffer,

and then he gets a request for another. And another, he's 18 Mitch McConnell's deep before

he stops to catch his breath. With those Mitch McConnell's, in your opinion, were they good?

I can't take of a single Mitch McConnell I ever did. That was good. But they were good enough. He sold the first small one for $25. The next one for $50. Eventually, he settled on $500 for $24 by 36 inch paintings. Pablo is becoming a prolific painter. He paints Nancy Pelosi, Ilhan Omar, other politicians. He takes a commission for a lobbyist's dog. Just by his own force of personality, he's making it happen. At the state of the union, Pablo set up an easel

in statutory hall. That's overlooking where all the members of Congress and the Supreme Court justice is passed through. And Pablo, in his white painter's coat, with headphones on, he captured the scene on canvas live. This is something that is a side project of yours.

See span interviewed and messy painted. And then late last year, in December, he got a phone call

from a friend's number. Someone who used to be a policy advisor in the executive branch. I picked up and I was just like, "Hey, man, what do you need? I'm kind of busy. I hear on the other end of the line." Hey, Pablo, you're a great artist. This is Joe Biden. I'm like, "Blo [bleep]," they add, like, very funny, right? He's like, "No, no, I'm serious. Hey, Jill, put on FaceTime." And Boo, Boo, Boo, Boo, like the FaceTime noise plays and I'm looking at

Dr. Jill Biden. And my, "Oh, my God, I'm so sorry, man. I'm so sorry for cursing. I did not mean to say BS in front of you." Yeah, this is real. And she had the fallback over to Joe Biden. And he was just like, "You're a really good artist. This is a really great portrait of Jill and me." If you've been wondering what Joe Biden's been uptoets since leaving office, well,

mystery solved. He knew the photo that it came from. It was from the 1970s when they first

met. So it was an oil painting of them when they were young. And I was on FaceTime with the president. There were probably 25 reporters in the press gallery, filing their stories. And pretty soon, they were all gathered around me and we were all talking to Joe Biden, you know, like the Washington Post, the AP, like the Bloomberg, Huff Post, we're all talking in Fox News. Daily call, I were all looking into the camera and talking to Joe Biden. And he's to tell

everybody how bomb I painting. I was like, "That was awesome. That was awesome." This is the part of the story when Icarus with wings cobbled together with wax and feathers experiences the miracle of flight. Hey, I can see my minute to our from here. When for many mortals, this level of success is thrilling and enough, but not for Pablo.

Pablo has a bigger goal.

approved by a committee and hung by an entity known as the architect of the capital. The only people allowed to drive a nail in the wall. Pablo wants to be immortalized in these

halls of power. I have no legacy. I mean, I'll well know one might remember any story I write,

ever, right? The painting will be there for centuries, centuries if it's on the wall. Maybe you've been wondering this whole time, what are these paintings look like? So to be totally honest, Pablo's improved a lot. But he's doing work that looks like it's made by a talented art student.

Maybe a folk artist. The colors are pleasing. You can always tell who it is he's painting.

But it's not, you know, John Trumbull's painting of the founder signing the Declaration of Independence or any of the other museum grade paintings hanging in the capital of Rotunda. Of course, that does not stop Pablo. And a couple months ago, you saw a way to make his dream happen. In February, the house voted to rename the press gallery after Frederick Douglass, who, among many other things, was also the first black

reporter to cover the capital. There's going to be a little renaming ceremony and press conference. Well, it just so happened that Pablo had made a portrait of Frederick Douglass. It had been leaning

against the wall in the press gallery last two years. So Pablo quickly hatched a plan.

He's going to grab his painting. Snick is painting into the room where the ceremony is going to take place and slip it onto a table where everyone can see it. I sculpted out the room. I was like, oh, there are artifacts about Frederick Douglass here. Like, there was his ledger of sales and stuff like that under glass. I was like, I'm going to go grab my painting and put it on the table. And I did, it's like a pop art portrait of Frederick Douglass with a yellow background like

the distinct yellow background. It's a pretty big canvas, nearly life-sized. And it sticks out, compared to say, the items on loan from the library of Congress. But nobody says anything. Then the VIPs come in. There's the speaker of the house, Mike Johnson, represented Byron Donalds, the bill sponsor. And there's even a living descendant of Frederick Douglass. Traditionally, at a press conference like this, the press are there to cover the event.

Not insert themselves into it. But Pablo is Pablo. And when Mike Johnson came in, I showed it to him. I showed his Byron Donalds. He's like, oh, yeah, there. And that's when Frederick Douglass's grand son was like, that's great. That's great. Probably not grandson. And then he'll keep walking. So I was like, okay, so Frederick Douglass's grand son is cool with this Byron Donalds' school. This speaker Johnson is cool with this.

He gets a selfie with the lawmakers and his painting. Everybody loves the painting. So let's get it hung on the wall officially. To do that, Pablo just needs the permission of something called the standing committee of correspondence. These are a group of Pablo's own peers. Other working journalists. So he writes them a letter, donating his painting to the committee and asking that they hang it in the newly named Frederick Douglass Press Gallery.

A couple weeks later, the standing committee of correspondence meet.

The first new business on the agenda that day is to take a vote regarding artwork.

And they voted no. They said no. I was like, oh, I still know exactly why. Did you ask any of them?

No. Pablo was not discouraged by this decision. Of course he wasn't. He was like, well, if they don't like this Frederick Douglass, I'm going to make them a much bigger Frederick Douglass. And if they don't like that, I'll paint a smaller one. And I'll keep painting and donating Frederick Douglass' until the damn breaks and they all go up. I thought that sounded like a lot of work. At least more than asking them why they said no. So I reached out and got a hold of the meeting minutes.

The problem was not about the size or the quality or anything like that. The problem was that Pablo had crossed a line. The thing that they voted on wasn't at all about your painting, but a broad rule that would apply to all future situations. What was the rule? You don't get a painting? No, it's not. Don't bring a painting. It was that no credentialed reporter will be able to make artwork

that hangs on the walls of the capital. Is this the first time you're hearing that?

Yeah. That's written down. Yeah, it was a four-to-one vote. How does that make you feel?

Kind of sad.

precedent it would set. What conflicts of interest hanging his painting could cause. And Pablo hadn't gotten permission from the event organizers to put his painting into their event. [Music] Icarus, son of Dettelis, soaring over the aisle was enthralled by his own new ability. He couldn't help wanting to go higher. Pablo, son of Luis, didn't want to only stay in the back of

the press conference with the other scribes. Couldn't this event to honor Frederick Douglass, also honor Pablo, too? Maybe if he'd asked permission, gone through channels. This all might have worked out differently. I floated that idea by Pablo.

Was there another way to do it? Yeah. But I still think this was the best way. Even when you're

thinking about it now, reflecting on it. Yeah, because the humility could not possibly created that scenario to begin with, at every point along the way it was driven by you go.

A lot of it was you go. Maybe like 91, 92 percent. I definitely wake up every morning

excited to be Pablo Americas. Ego, to what makes you pick up a box of stolen art supplies and think, without any experience, I will be a transformational force in the U.S. capital. But it's also Ego that propels you to the front of a press conference with your painting under your arm and sense you crashing better. The Potomac is lousy with wax and feathers. A couple hours after we talk, Pablo sends me a note. He's back in the capital. He says for the first time

he feels small in this place that once made him feel big. The next day he sends me another note. He sounds like himself again. He figured it out. He's launching his campaign to run for standing committee. But luckily, I'm not eligible to run for a standing committee for at least another year if not two. So I decided that while I can't be on the ballot until probably 2028, I am going to start campaigning on Monday. So I

registered the domain daily press gallery.com and I started writing an agenda. Part of my agenda is of course, to repeal the prohibition that they put on journalist art in the capital.

I never hear about Icarus the next day. Did you know he just made some small adjustments to his

wings and headed right back for the sun? If you want to see Pablo's paintings,

we'll follow his campaign for standing committee. He's at Pablo.manrygez, an Instagram. That brings us to act to Cerberus. You know how in Greek mythology there's Hades where everyone goes when they die. You got to cross the river sticks to get there and then there's this gate with this three-headed dog Cerberus. He's guarding the entrance and he's supposed to make sure only actually dead people enter. This story is about a real person in America who stood at

those very gates, which is not the easiest job it turns out. At least not right now. Now do you Raymond talk to him about it? When Jeremiah Scofield started working at the Social Security Administration, the SSA. The first thing his boss said to him was, if you're looking up your exes records, your own records are looking up someone famous, don't. We will know. Then they made him read Title V of the US Code Section 552A, the Privacy Act, the actual legal

text of it. That's how much they wanted to drive the point home. The Social Security Administration

is the caretaker of these truly massive databases of personal information. They use it to send Social Security checks, disability payments, and in order to do that accurately, given how there's

over 300 million of us, they keep master files. Jeremiah says they have all sorts of information

From all sorts of moments in your life, where you were born, your Social Secu...

your mom's made a name, your citizenship status, all of its stored in giant files.

Your master earnings files will show every job that you ever worked at, and it would show

how much money you made at all of those different jobs. And then you have the disability control file, which actually gets into disability-related information. That's for people who collect disability. Things like what your disability, there's like listings of codes for if you have like a cancer, or if you have some other type of ailment, and so it would have all of that

information. Okay, and that's very sensitive information. Social Security, we've always treated

those records as though there are things that they cannot be led out to anybody. Like they contain people's whole lives, basically. That's right. At very sensitive moments in their lives. The point of the many rules governing these lists and files is not just privacy, though. It's about making sure all this information is used only for its intended purpose.

By the book. And Jeremiah, from what I can tell, is a by the book kind of guy.

There's one database with arguably more power than the others in the name to match. It's called the death master file. It's a master list of all the dead. Well, all the deaths recorded since the dawn of Social Security. It has millions and millions of names. People get added to it when they die. Their name and their date of death. If you get accidentally added to it when you are not dead, it can mess up your Social Security payments, sure,

but also your bank accounts, all kinds of things. So Jeremiah and everyone treated this one with

extreme care. And one day, Jeremiah says he was summoned to a meeting. And the first thing he sees

when he enters a meeting room, handwriting and all these whiteboards are the names of all these databases, including the death master file. The whole meeting was kind of strange actually. Jeremiah was a boss at this point he had been there 25 years. His first proper adult job. So he'd been to a lot of meetings, but none like this. It was not put on the official calendar, and the whole thing was very secretive. It was in a half-use office building. There was a guard in

the hallway almost like a bouncer. And in the room, three people with non-government laptops. This was February of last year, and these guys, they worked for Doge. So-called Department of Government deficiency, headed by Elon Musk. In the meeting, Jeremiah makes some proposals. Some ways Social Security can be more efficient. Better I team to update these lists quicker. But he's almost instantly interrupted by one of the Doge guys. Until New Grasius,

eventually capitalists, now team Elon. And within two minutes, Mr. Grasius had shut down the conversation and said, "We're here to talk about Social Security fraud." And we're looking for a big win. And I said, "Well, a big win." I mean, I have millions of dollars in potential savings by doing these new IT systems. And he said, "He was only willing to go to the president

with a big win of, you know, he said, "50 billion dollars savings." What did you say?

I, well, what I said was that I don't think you're going to find $50 billion in fraud.

Around this time, Elon Musk announced on X that they might have found some fraud. The fraud was related to the deathmaster file. Musk was pointing to a problem with it. Namely, that there were people who were clearly dead who were not in it. People who seemed to be a 150-year-old according to other social security databases. He posted, quote, "Maybe Twilight is real and there are a lot of vampires collecting social security." He even brought it up in the

Oval Office with President Trump before the camera is. "No, do you know anyone I had is 150, I don't, okay? They should be on the Guinness Book of World Records. They're missing out." Dear Maya saw all this. So, in layman's terms, I was pissed off that our leaders in the country were saying this. And, you know, it was infuriating. Dear Maya was pissed off because in layman's terms (bleep) complicated. It's true that there were some people who appeared to be 150,

not marked as dead, but the social security administration knew that already. And they knew why. Sometimes the death of a person born in 1875 or whatever, didn't get reported to the SSA. And without an official death date, that person didn't go on the deathmaster file. Regardless, there was a whole system in place to make sure social security payments

Did not go out to these people because when someone is over 100, the social s...

actually contacts them to make sure they're still alive. And so we have different groupings of

technicians within the agency that literally make phone calls to these folks. And in some cases,

go to people's houses just to make sure, "Hey, Jeremiah's over 100 years old. Let's make sure that he's still living and that he's receiving the benefits that he needs to." He says some of these 100 plus year olds are happy to have a visitor. Others are like, "Go away, of course, I'm alive." And if there's any fraud, anyone taking in a paycheck for a dead relative, the SSA would catch it. Plus, the SSA had already tried to clean up the deathmaster

file, specifically chasing down death dates for these 150 plus year olds. But it took a lot of

time and resources. And it didn't save the government any money because it's not like the SSA

had been sending checks to these dead people. So, the opposite of efficiency. But don't still press down. They want to Jeremiah's team to mark these a pair of 150 year olds's dead and mark them now. Just populate the sensitive list with random death dates, which was totally unheard of.

And it made Jeremiah a little nervous. It seemed like a bad president. Because remember,

if you make a mistake in the deathmaster file, say mark someone dead who isn't, it's not just their social security that gets shut off. Anything tied to their social security number is now bricked. The person finds out often in pretty dramatic fashion that they've been killed off by accident. Like, they go to the grocery store, they try to pay with their credit card and it doesn't work.

Then they try to pay with another credit card, same thing. So, they go home and call the bank, and they're like, "What's going on?" And they would have been directed to go to social security to fix the problem. Would they, could they have access to their money and their bank accounts or no? The bank accounts would have been frozen. Oh my god. So, it's not even that you can't use credit cards. They can't take money that they

have in the bank out of the bank at all. That's right. Everything just stops because everybody thinks that the person is deceased. It's a mess. And now, here was Dodge, insisting Jeremiah's team marked these 150 plus year olds's dead. Jeremiah was like, "Okay, I know we don't have physical proof, but if the date of birth is right, logic says these people are for sure dead." So, it didn't seem

that risky. They did them methodically, carefully, to avoid making mistakes. But ultimately,

they put in fake death dates for all those people. Jeremiah didn't like it, but he did it anyway. This fixation with the death master file. Little did Jeremiah know it was just beginning. A few weeks after the 150 year olds, Jeremiah says his higher-ups contacted him with a request. From DHS, the Department of Homeland Security. And this request was unlike anything Jeremiah had seen in his more than 20 years of the agency. I got a request from the Deputy Commissioner

for Operations, my boss, and said we have a listing of six, a little over 6,000 people.

You need to come up with a strategy on how we're going to kill off these 6,000 folks. The

listing we had received from DHS. Kill off. Yeah, she DHS had sent us a list, and the expectation was that we added date of death for these individuals. To add these 6,000 or so names to the death master file. It was strange because normally, death are reported by funeral homes or family members or some state authority. And also, there was no indication from DHS that these people were dead. They just said, "Add these people to this list." So Jeremiah and his colleagues were trying to

figure out what's going on, and why these 6,000 in particular? Like, "Go is there a pattern here?" Like, is it all like, is it all people from one area of the country? Is it like there was no nothing like that that you were able to see? I did not see it, but there were conversations that happened, and the conversations that happened around the agency indicated that it was mostly Hispanic last names. DHS also sent a memo from then secretary of Homeland Security Christy Noam about, quote, "suspected

terrorists," who she said had social security numbers and access to our financial system. She asked the SSA to stop it in a way that was, quote, "consistent with law." Jeremiah was pretty sure none of this request to mark 6,000 people as dead was lawful. No proof of death for one thing. So he says he goes and asks someone at the Social Security Office of General Counsel. The lawyers who tell him, "Yes,

It is illegal.

dead that's not dead. That's against the law. So Jeremiah and his team refused, but then,

within a couple of days, they start getting some strange reports from the field offices.

Workers calling in saying, "What's going on?" People are showing up here saying we marked them as dead. They're definitely not dead. I'm like, did somebody process these 6,000 deaths? And we started to ask around the agency at headquarters and we found out that there was staff in the office of chief information officer that had posted the dates of death. He knew the chief information officer staff did it because that was the only office that could process these deaths the way

they were processed all at once. Jeremiah says all 6,000 some people had remarked as having died on a single day, March 8, 2025. He couldn't believe they had done this. I mean, by the agency choosing to do this, we just took a list without any documentation and we posted these 6,000 deaths. That could have happened to anybody. And within 48 hours, that anybody would have had their lives halted until they could fix it. And it's possible they could fix it in a few days or there's

been cases where we've seen where it takes months or even a year to fix all of the little things that get screwed up because you got your name on the death master file. The process of getting

resurrected, that's what they call it when you're accidentally killed in the death master file and

need to be brought back to life. It's not simple. You have to go into your social security office in person and prove your alive. And sometimes it takes multiple visits, as you keep encountering new corners of your life for someone's detusion or other is still convinced your dead. Jeremiah doesn't tell the field offices that the 6,000 or so were secretly killed by the chief information officer's office or the DH has requested it. He's like, "Let's not dwell on the

mess. Let's just fix it." And let's fix it the way we normally would. As any other mistake in the death master file, which meant it was up to each one of these 6,000 or so people to come into their local field office and prove their alive. We saw 30 resurrections happen pretty quickly and then that number

quickly grew within a few weeks to 300 reservations. So that's what was happening on the ground.

Meanwhile, from above, we were getting pressure to say, "We told you to kill off the 6,000. We want the 6,000 to remain dead." DH has was telling that they wanted the 6,000 to remain dead. That's right, and it was coming down from pretty high up leadership. When these 6,000 fake deaths happened, the Washington Post found out and published a big story. So did the New York Times. So as the news breaks, Jeremiah is also dealing with the chaotic

media fallout of this. And then something bigger happens. And this part of the story has not been out there before. Jeremiah is the first person to talk about it. So then fast forward a few weeks, and a new request comes in to kill off a new grouping of people. The new request from DH

has for 2.7 million names. DH has once the SSA to kill off 2.7 million people,

like an entire city. Mark them all as dead in the death master file. Again, like last time, no signer pretends that they're for real dead. DH has told Jeremiah's team that these 2.7 million are here illegally. And also, these folks were violent criminals and suspected terrorists. They told that there were 2.7 million violent criminals in terrorists. That's a lot of violent criminals and suspected terrorists. It is. We were pretty suspect about this 2.7 million

list. And so when it came in, we also thought it was a pretty big number. And we wondered whether or not the list was accurate. Last time this happened, when Jeremiah said, "Wait a minute, these people are alive. That didn't stop the SSA from marking them as dead." So this time,

he tried something different. He decides to fact check the claims DH has made about the 2.7 million.

They can't look at all 2.7 million people, privacy concerns, and also the number is so large. But they do get permission to look at a random sample from the list. 25 people. They check what they can. And so we went through to check. One are they dead. Two are they here legally or not

Legally.

all 25 from the sample were alive. And what's more? When we went through the 25 records, we found

23 of them were records where people were either US citizens or lawful permanent resident or were here legally. And then there were two that more investigation needed to occur because it appeared as though that their alien status had expired. So alive and also most of them clearly in the

country legally. Here's what else he remembers from the sample. But I do remember that it did span a

pretty big age community. So it was children all the way up to people in their 70s. There's a couple cases that I remember that we just thought were super curious. You know, there were some teenagers on the list. And we're like, okay, so teenagers are suspected terrorists and violent criminals. I mean, I guess that could happen. But the likelihood of it happening didn't make sense. Then there was another person on the list that was a person that had been in the United States for over

50 years and was receiving widow benefits. And we're like, okay, so this person's a violent criminal and a suspected terrorist. So Jeremiah is like, one, I can't mark people who are alive as dead. Two, they told us these were all people without status. And that seems to not be true. And three,

the data I did see from the list makes me excited that they're even criminals.

Too many red flags in a row. He decides to sound the alarm. I went to my boss and my boss at the time was now Stephen Evangelista. He had taken over after my other boss left the agency. And I said, we need to have a meeting with DHS. And we need to talk through a couple of things because we think their list is inaccurate. And that's that's probably a light way of saying that. So he calls this meeting. They get DHS on a video call. And on the call, Jeremiah says they

present their findings that the people on the list are alive and seem to be here legally. DHS is like, okay, we'll get you a new list. But Jeremiah has another question. Logistically, he asks, if there are mistakes on this or any other list you give us, how would a person on the list by mistake fix it? In John Coval, a doge guy at DHS says, they would go in person to a SSA office, same as any other mistake. Oh, but when they get there,

just flag them over for ICE. Jeremiah says he looked at his co-worker and they were visibly really uncomfortable. ICE is not a place where immigrants who have a mistake on any kind of government papers go to get them straightened out. It's where they go get deported. Jeremiah looks at his boss, Stephen Evangelista. To Jeremiah, DHS's intention is now crystal clear. And so we were like, okay, thank you for the information. We wrapped up the call.

Then we're still in the room. And I look across the table. I remember sitting across the table

from Stephen and I said, the reason that they're doing this with this 2.7 million is because

they're trying to deport all of these people. It's plain and obvious. And Stephen said, you don't know that. You can't be sure of it. That's too much conjecture. You don't know this definitively. And I'm like, come on. We know this. This is why this is happening. He's like, you just don't know it. I'm like, so we got into a little back and forth in reference to that. And he's like, okay, how about I just call John and I'll ask him. John Coval, the doge guy

working with DHS. I'm like, okay, he's like, I'm going to call John. You guys be quiet. So you guys were me and his technical assistant. And I'll just have a quick conversation with John and

reference to this 2.7 million and why. So he pulls out a cell phone and he calls John. He puts

John on speaker phone. And he says, John, can you tell me why we're going through all this effort with these 2.7 million people? And John said matter of fact terms back. He's like, oh, there's two outcomes that we're hoping for here. One will make the people's lives so miserable with the, you know, their lives will just be sort of, you know, hard to go through because we'll turn off their credit. We'll turn off their credit card and turn off their bank. They'll just

want to self-deport or two. They'll go into a social security office and we'll have ice pick them up there or we'll go, you'll refer them over to us and I still pick them up either at USCIS or at ICE,

Wherever you just, you determine that they should go.

when he said that, I was, I was shocked that he said it so matter of factly. I was,

I was pretty shocked that that happened. It's one thing to think you know and be like 98% sure,

but you don't really know something. It's different when you know it 100% and you just heard it from, you know, chief official over at DHS who also happens to be a doge associate. And he made it very plainly clear that this is what he was trying to do and what the outcomes they were seeking. Stephen was like, thank you for the information. Quickly got off the call. My office, I had to go through a different door than Stephen did out the conference room. He quickly got up. We didn't talk

about it. We didn't have an after the meeting conversation about it. That was also a little bit shocking because I'm sure my face said I told you so in unacquivocable terms, but I was, you know,

you know, and so he got up. He went to his office. I got up, went to mine, and we never talked

about it again. Jeremiah quit the SSA a few months later. And now he's filing a whistleblower complaint. The 2.7 million person list was a crisis ofverted. The SSA didn't add those names to

the death master file. As far as Jeremiah can tell, they're still alive. But of course, they always

were. The government is filled with things like the death master file built for one purpose. But if you're a certain disposition, usable for something else, a list of the dead, a public service to track who is alive and who is dead, or a tool to kill off anyone you don't like. It's not legal. It flies in the face of rules and laws that have governed the list for decades. It violates the whole

name of the list. But that doesn't mean, you can't do it anyway.

Nadia Raymond is a producer on our show. By the way, we did reach out to all the people and agencies Jeremiah names in this story. Only the Department of Homeland Security got back to us.

They gave us a statement saying, quote, "The government is finally doing what it should of all

along, sharing information across the federal government to solve problems." Two congressional offices are currently looking into the allegations Jeremiah made in his whistleblower claim. Coming up, one man will suffer through many ordeal to have a private encounter with the God living here on Earth, specifically in Barcelona. That's in a minute from Chicago Public Radio when our program continues. It's this American life. I'm X-rays come to Roger. Today's show,

not today, Hades are last act, act three, Zeus. He has taken many forms here on Earth. For the last 20 years, millions have been worshipping a man they say performs miracles. They call him many names, magician, Messiah, the chosen one. And he looks in some ways kind of anonymous, like nobody special. He's short, five, seven. He's soft-spoken, shy even. The legends about this man are many. But very few of his devotees have ever actually met him, let alone talked with them.

Writer, Danielle Alarcon is one of them. One of the very few mere mortals to have met Leonardo Messi, arguably the greatest soccer player of all time. Danielle talked about it on the podcast he hosts with his longtime friend who's also a writer, John Green. Danielle adapted it for our show. So, John, yeah, once upon a time there were many, many magazines that were publishing United States and around the world, as you know, I've written for many of them. And magazines for

our younger listeners are like very thin little books. It's like Instagram, but text-based and printed. Yes, and there was a specific niche among these that were called glossies. And glossies were kind of the high-end fashion magazines and the glossies got their name from the glossie paper that they were printed on. So Vanity Fair GQ goes with the glossies. And they were kind of lucrative. Yeah,

They paid great, they played so much money.

until one of these editors who worked on one of these magazines called me up and asked me if I was interested in writing a profile of Leonardo Messi. And of course, I was interested, huge soccer fan,

blah, blah, blah. The problem is that I was about to be married and the reporting trip would be

then the week after my wedding. So terrible timing. I was told I would get to spend three days with the world's greatest player. I get to see a training session. I get to go to a game. I'd have full access. And I spoke with Carolina and she said, "You gotta go. You gotta do this." And we would

do the honeymoon later. And yeah, and I think, you know, you know this, but I think it's worth

repeating just what a genius, you know, Messi is spoken of in the same breath as Pelé as Marlona. And I felt like there are people who watch the inlnessy play game and they're like, man, he's good. And there are people like me who understand it or feel like we understand it on a completely

different level. And I thought that there would be a way that I could express to him that my understanding

of what he was accomplishing on the pitch was not like, "Ooh, goal." You know, it was a much more sophisticated understanding. And I was like, "Yeah, no doubt. Me and Leo were going to be friends." That's totally realistic. I was imagining us like, you know, hanging out at his house, like playing Xbox or, you know, FIFA or something and then like going to eat some like Argentine barbecue, somewhere, the grill, and Barcelona somewhere, and then, you know, riding and his car. And then at the

end of the night, he'd be like, you know what, man, you're so cool. Cancel your flight back. Like,

we're hanging out. Yeah. Normal stuff. So this is what I was imagining. Right. And yeah. So basically, 36 hours after my wedding, I'm on a plane to Barcelona. I ride the New York. So I flew from terms to go to New York. I check my email. And that's when I've got the first blow, which was that I would no longer have three days with Leo and El Messi. I would have a single day. Now, I still thought a single day is good, you know? I was like a day. That's still pretty good. I check my email again

when I got to Barcelona. And now it was no longer a day. It was an hour. Okay. So at this point, just to be clear, I had given up my honeymoon to spend an hour with soccer player. Yeah. It was just

beginning to dawn on me that this was the wrong way to start my marriage. Right. So here's what

happened. I got to Barcelona. You know, I had planned four days in town. Now I've got two extra days to report. So I'm just going to report this out of this story, which is what I do. So I talked to everybody. I found the guy who took Messi's first photo ID. Back when Messi was a teenager with like long hair. And he needed his ID card to enter the ground to the stadium. I found the owners of the Argentine restaurant in the suburb where Messi had his has his gigantic home. And I got to sit in the

booth where Messi sometimes goes to eat. So anyway, I finally do have my day where I get to I'm going to go meet Leone and Messi. And I get, I didn't told to get to the Ciudad de Portiva around 10 a.m. And of course, I did punctually there. And I get there. And I'm like, hey, so, you know, I'm a journalist for this fancy glossy magazine. This was all been scheduled. Publicists, editors have been negotiating my rival. Can I walk around? No, no. Well, you can't. I'm like,

okay. And they take me to this kind of press room. And they tell me Messi will be there in a few minutes. It's super hot. This is like September. I was not given so much to the glass of water and I waited and I waited and I waited. And then someone came in and told me that I'd be meeting Messi

actually not then, but like before after me in training. And I was like, okay, so can I watch the training?

And they're like, no, absolutely not. You cannot watch the training. And I'm just like, like, I'm like, what is this? So kind of like, I kind of like impeeking out the window and I see Messi and the other players arrive. They have super fancy cars. And naturally, Messi did not come up to speak to me before training. And a little factotaum will send up to tell me that he would come after training. So at this point, training started like three. I've been there ever since 10. I've resorted to

go into the bathroom and just like, lapping water into my mouth out of the sink because I have not been given anything. It must nothing. You know, I'm like eating like watered up paper towels. Just chewing on paper just to trick myself. Like I'm starving. And then I didn't know what had happened at training that day. I found out later. But I could tell because I am an astute judge of character John, as you know, that something bad had happened at training. I kind of saw the players

trudging off with this look of there, but for the grace of God, go, I, you know, that's kind of like,

You know, they had seen something.

player named Ibrahim Effilai had torn his ACL. And so I had, of course, was not allowed to watch training, so I didn't see any of this, but I could sense something was wrong. And that is one of those things that I think really affects player's moods because they know that all of them are one bad turn, one injury like that away from sitting out for a year, you know, and maybe in like in the

case, we were here and maybe never quite being the same, never quite being the same exactly,

which is precisely what happened to Effilai. Anyway, at this point, it's past six PM. So I've been there for a full working day, nothing to eat, super hot, and I'm not one to be dramatic, John, but I was basically being held prisoner at the Barcelona Training Ground by that point.

That's how it felt. So finally, it's, it's just before 7 PM when the world's greatest player

finally walks in. We sit down at this table, it's this little silver table, there's three chairs, it's me, across from Messy, and his publicist is kind of in the middle. And so it begins, the world's worst interview. He batted me away. Like, I can't remember what I asked him, but you know, he's like, he's like, he'd rather be at the dentist, I mean, and just look at me, and I'm like disheveled and sweaty. My shirt was a normal size at the beginning of the day, but after like,

you know, eight hours of being held hostage at the Barcelona Training Ground in like a hot

September or day, the shirt was just stuck to me. And I asked him my first question, he said this

thing, and I'm going to imitate it, and I'll just find out, and he said, okay, but I'll remember

what I'm talking about is what I'm talking about, which is basically like, dude, I've been asked this

so many times, like you could be like he's rolling his eyes in like, oh god, and he got worse from there. It just got worked, like, I realized something bad has happened to training, I realized that he's not interested in speaking with me. He doesn't know what a GQ is, or what a Vogue is. He doesn't give a *****. He doesn't care. He's just like, this weird guy who's all sweaty is sitting here, you know, he's like, been waiting for me for eight hours, like a freaking stalker,

and now he's asking me dumb questions that I've been asked before, and, you know, so he's just being monosolabic, and at the end of it, it's just like, it's just devastating, you know, he, basically the public is just kind of calls time on it, and it's done. Before he walks out, we take this photograph,

I asked the public, it's okay, we take a photograph, and he said this thing to me, he's like,

of course, I know we all have feelings. We all have feelings. The public is consents my humiliation, which is actually manifesting as physical pain, like at this point, it's just like, like this is the worst reporting experience of my life, possibly one of the most humiliating experiences of my life at all, you know, all the whole of it. So I took my photo, messy walks out, immediately, of course, forgets the entire interaction

that I have never forgotten. Yeah, need to say, I wrote my draft, and then got a very

efficient, carefully worded email from editor saying that the article was not going to be published, and that I could kindly take my kill fee and go away. Brutal. Yeah, I don't know how to ask this delicately, but like even on his best day, Lionel Messi is pretty at arms length when it comes to interviews, and in retrospect, there is something charming about the fact that you thought you were going to get the real Lionel Messi? Yeah, I mean, you know, he batted me aside, like I was, you know,

a third tier defender, and went on with his life. And so here I am thinking, man, we're going to vibe on this because we're both, you know, have this like deep emotional and deep intellectual understanding of the game, and what basically what he was telling me was like, no, you're down here, and I'm up here. [Music]

Danielle and John's show is called The Away End, which is a soccer podcast about the run up to the world cup made by two people who really like books. Manual Jochi produced this version for our show. [Music]

[Music]

Our program was produced today by me and edited by David Gastonbaum. The people who put together

today's show are the abandoned Dana Chivis, Cassie Howley, Adrian Lily, Seth Lind,

Molly Marcello, Katherine Ray Mondo, Stone Nelson, Robin Reed, Ryan Rummery,

Melissa Ship, Christopher Swittala, Nancy Updeck, and Diane Wu. Our managing editor is Sarah

Abdurrahman, and our executive editor is Emmanuel Barry. Special thanks today to Sam McKinnis.

Thanks also to all our this American life partners. When you join, you'll get regular exclusive bonus episodes, listen, add free, most importantly, help us continue making this show,

join at thisamericanlife.org/lifepartners. This American life is delivered to public radio station

by PRX, the public radio exchange. Thanks as always to our boss, I request, you know,

at his own wedding recently, decided it would be funny to start his vows by saying, "It's this American wife." Nobody laughed. It was just, it was just, became the daughter of me that this was the wrong way to start by marriage. I'm Mike Sheskin, the Rajam, I reglass will be back next week, more stories with this American life. [Music]

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