B U L L EVA R D
How toâŚ
NEGOTIATE WITH A NARCO
what the options are. For some of these assassins, their government is the cartel. Is it right just because a government says it right? If you put the boot on the other foot, whatâs right and wrong? It is very difficult to have any empathy with someone whoâs personally shot 257 people in the head, but thatâs what it is.â
Adventurer Aldo Kane has faced deadly volcanoes, deserts and oceans, but perhaps his most treacherous encounter was with the mind of a criminal
Read the signs
âUnless youâve been trained, you subconsciously give away what youâre thinking, whether you want to or not. Talk to someone for five minutes and youâll probably be able to work out when theyâre lying, when theyâre recalling information, and whether theyâre creative or methodical. But hitmen are difficult to read because, by the very nature of what they do, theyâre cheating you.â
Be ready for anything
Explorer and former Royal Marine Aldo Kane provides support to film and TV crews in extreme environments
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Don't be too enamoured
âWhen I was in the Royal Marines, I was taught how to read people, how to gauge reactions, how to respond to violence or step down, and the basics have served me well. But building rapport with a professional hitman is difficult â a sicarioâs job is to get close enough to put two rounds in your head. That type of person is very sneaky, manipulative and untrustworthy.â
Leave your opinions at the door
âYouâre there as an observer, so you canât be judgmental. Itâs easy for us to sit in comfort and safety in our ivory towers, but then you go there and see
Turn othersâ vanity to your advantage
âEgos are usually fuelled by people bowing down: if you donât give them that quarter in the first place, they usually donât step up to that role. Itâs a different situation here, because theyâve got weapons, but itâs their egos that help us gain access to film them. What people do if they feel valued is amazing. So we got the interview, and Popeye is now world-famous for being Pablo Escobarâs right-hand man. Itâs a strange, strange world.â
THE RED BULLETIN
MATT RAY
A
s a security specialist for TV travel shows, Kane is responsible for the safety of the crew â but not all dangers are clear cut. When working on The Real Narcos, a Channel 4 documentary about the drug cartels of Peru and Colombia, Kane had to risk-assess the people theyâd be interviewing â hitmen, known as sicario, who had to agree to tell their stories on camera for no fee. âSo Iâm sat in a cafĂŠ with Jhon Jairo VelĂĄsquez VĂĄsquez, aka Popeye, Pablo Escobarâs number-one general,â recalls Kane, âasking him to pass the salt, and chatting about his wife and, occasionally, about the people he disembowelled.â
GEORG ISMAR/AGE FOTOSTOCK, ALDO KANE
In 1992, Popeye was sentenced to 30 years in prison. He was freed after serving 22, but rearrested this May
âAs soon as you add drugs to the equation, instincts go out of the window, because people act erratically: self-conscious, weird, paranoid. Then bring in money and the fear of death and you can end up in a very horrible situation very quickly if something goes wrong. You can do as much as possible to mitigate the risk, but itâs right on the edge of whatâs acceptable. Iâd rather be inside an erupting volcano.â