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Eunice Hunton Carter, a granddaughter of slaves, went on to become the lawyer who built the case against Charles âLuckyâ Luciano, one the 20th centuryâs most powerful criminal kingpins. It was an assignment fraught with danger, but one Carter performed with tenacity, intelligence and a sense of mission, discovering the Achilles heel of a man whoâd evaded prosecution for years.
She did so in the face of the entrenched racial and gender discrimination of the 1930s, whose impact on the historical record has only started to come clear. Her story was lost and buried for decades, and Carterâwho went on to a successful legal career and advocated for social justiceâis only now receiving her due. -
Gabriella GĂłmez-Mont is neither an urban planner nor an engineer nor a politician. Sheâs an artist. But as creative director of Mexico Cityâs Laboratorio para la Ciudad (Laboratory for the City), she has tackled some of the thorniest problems confronting the modern metropolisâwith astonishing success. She and her team launched one of the biggest open data projects ever seen, drawing numbers from institutions and individuals, building map upon map of their city, to better understand challenges as varied as traffic deaths and social isolation.
Today, cities as far flung as Seoul and Manila seek GĂłmez-Montâs expertise. As host Sarmishta Subramanian puts it: âHer power of one is in a sense the power of millionsâa faith in the talents and wisdom and energy of ordinary citizens, in ordinary neighbourhoods. A belief that change can be made thoughtfully, and for the better.â
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One spring day, Bradley Birkenfeld boarded a flight out of Geneva, beginning a journey that would make him one of the greatest whistleblowers in financial history. The former banker with UBS provided information to U.S. authorities that would shatter Swiss banking secrecy and lead some 14,000 well-heeled Americans to fork over an astounding US$5 billion in unpaid taxes.
Abrasive and unsparing with criticism, Birkenfeld is not everyoneâs model hero. He spent two and a-half years in a U.S. prison for helping a client evade taxes, yet collected a $104-million award for coming forward. Still, the enormity of his defining act is beyond dispute. So is the value of his perspective. Heâs quick, for example, to note that many Canadians who banked with his former employer have never been called to account. âIâm bringing this news,â he says, âbut nobody wants to talk about it.â -
Kathi Lynn Austin has targeted, investigated and helped to bring down some of the worldâs most dangerous arms dealers, exposing transactions that fuelled the Rwandan genocide and shutting down smuggling networks that helped power years of civil war in the Congo. But she is neither a cop nor a CIA agent nor a crusading prosecutor. Sheâs merely an American civilian with a deep sense of moral outrage and a deeper reservoir of courage.
Austin joins us to describe her unlikely career path into investigating the illicit arms trade, some of whose treacherous players she has met face-to-face. In doing so, she has gathered leads and evidence against everyone from a global gun kingpin to a network supplying guns to rhinoceros poachers. Says one colleague: âIâve seen her living out dramatic detective stories, all in the name of peace and social justice and protecting our environment.â -
Itâs been a decade since Sergei Magnitsky was tortured and killed in a Moscow prison. In that time, his name has become synonymous with rule-of-law and international justiceâeven as those principles come under attack around the world. It is memorialized in the laws of six countries allowing for sanctions against human rights offenders.
How did Magnitksy, a mild-mannered tax lawyer, come to symbolize the values of a democratic world in which he didnât live or work?
We explore the tragic but inspiring story of a man who exposed corruption and theft in Vladimir Putinâs Russia; who was urged to flee his homeland, yet stayed to make his case. Magnitsky believed in the possibility of a Russiaâof a worldâwhere justice and truth prevailed. His sacrifice did not go in vain. -
On this 75th anniversary year of D-day, the world marked the invasion that started the liberation of France from Nazi rule. Forgotten in the celebrations was a lynchpin of that operation, a man operating very far from the front.
Juan Pujol Garcia was perhaps the most important spy from WWII. As Agent GARBO, he walked into the innermost circles of the Third Reich, earned the Nazisâ trust, and fed them a pack of lies. His tour de force: persuading the Germans of a fabulously fake Allies battle plan for D-Day that diverted their troops and made the Normandy landings a success. A Spanish chicken farmer turned double agent, he tricked the Nazis, fooled his own wife, and helped the Allies win the war.GUESTS: Jason Webster, author of The Spy with 29 Names; Nigel West, author of Operation Garbo: The Personal Story of the Most Successful Spy of World War II
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History doesnât call them heroesâbut only because not enough people know their stories.
The Power of One is a podcast dedicated to the extraordinary stories of ordinary people whose actions have dramatically changed the world in some way. Subscribe to hear the stories of unlikely heroesâ the fantasist who saved D-Day, the woman who went up against the deadliest arms dealers on Earth, the artist who reclaimed a crime-ridden city for its residents, the worldâs least appreciated financial whistleblower. Their stories are devastating, gob-smacking, terrifying, funny, and inspiring.
Brought to you by the latest season of Tom Clancyâs Jack Ryan, available only on Amazon Prime Video.