My Weird Prompts

Why a Dead Attacker Still Gets Evidence Markers

25 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Why a Dead Attacker Still Gets Evidence Markers

Descripción

When you watch footage of a terrorist attack in Israel, you'll see small yellow numbered placards scattered across the ground — on shell casings, weapons, even the attacker's body. But what are they actually for? And why, when the attacker is dead and the threat is over, is the entire area still treated like a crime scene? This episode unpacks the forensic protocol behind evidence markers: how grid searches prevent investigators from rushing to the most dramatic evidence, why numbers are assigned in order of discovery (not importance), and how a single marker can feed into six simultaneous investigations — from criminal prosecution of accomplices to tracing weapons supply networks. We also look at the Israeli-specific context, where the stakes of counterterrorism forensics mean more markers, longer scene closures, and an unbroken chain of custody that can make or break a prosecution.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de My Weird Prompts!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

200 episodios

episode Inside Iran's Pickaxe Mountain Nuclear Facility artwork

Inside Iran's Pickaxe Mountain Nuclear Facility

Deep inside Iran's Kuh-e-Dasht mountain range lies the Shahid Alimohammadi site — better known to intelligence analysts as Pickaxe Mountain. Unlike the declared enrichment facility at Natanz, this purpose-built breakout facility was designed to be invisible. IAEA inspectors have been denied access, satellite imagery reveals chambers at up to 100 meters deep, and some analysts suspect chambers reaching 200 meters. With over 1,000 IR-6 centrifuges potentially inside, the breakout timeline to weapons-grade uranium has compressed from 12 months under the JCPOA to just 2-3 weeks. This episode examines what we actually know about the most fortified nuclear facility on Earth — and why even the US's best bunker buster might not reach deep enough.

8 de jun de 202629 min
episode How $500M Trades Actually Work (Not Venmo) artwork

How $500M Trades Actually Work (Not Venmo)

When a portfolio manager decides to move $500 million of Apple stock, they don't log into a souped-up banking app. This episode peels back the three layers of institutional trading: the order management systems (OMS/EMS) like Bloomberg AIM and BlackRock's Aladdin, the execution strategies like iceberg orders and VWAP algorithms designed to hide giant trades, and the settlement plumbing — Fedwire, CHIPS, and SWIFT — that actually moves the money. We cover compliance pre-flight checks that block trades before they're seen, dark pools where whales trade without moving markets, and why the 2010 Flash Crash still haunts every algorithm. If you've ever wondered what happens after a fund manager clicks "confirm," this is the episode for you.

8 de jun de 202629 min