cover of episode Ukraine: Under the Counter

Ukraine: Under the Counter

Publish Date: 2023/1/20
logo of podcast Radiolab

Radiolab

Chapters

Shownotes Transcript

WNYC Studios is supported by Zuckerman Spader. Through nearly five decades of taking on high-stakes legal matters, Zuckerman Spader is recognized nationally as a premier litigation and investigations firm. Their lawyers routinely represent individuals, organizations, and law firms in business disputes, government, and internal investigations and at trial. When the lawyer you choose matters most. Online at Zuckerman.com.

Radio Lab is supported by Progressive Insurance. Whether you love true crime or comedy, celebrity interviews or news, you call the shots on what's in your podcast queue. And guess what? Now you can call the shots on your auto insurance too with the Name Your Price tool from Progressive. It works just the way it sounds. You tell Progressive how much you want to pay for car insurance and they'll show you coverage options that fit your budget.

Get your quote today at Progressive.com to join the over 28 million drivers who trust Progressive. Progressive Casualty Insurance Company and Affiliates. Price and coverage match limited by state law.

Hey, just a heads up, this episode deals with some sensitive issues like sexual violence and war. If that's not something you're ready for right now, or you're listening with some younger listeners, you might decide to skip this one. Wait, you're listening? Okay. All right. Okay. All right. You're listening to Radiolab. Radiolab. From... WNYC. See? Yep. See?

This is Radiolab. I'm Molly Webster, sitting in for Lulu and Latif. Today, we have something super special for you. It's a collaboration with our friends at the NPR show Rough Translation. And we're going to be talking about

When we heard about the story, we were like, we have to be a part of this. And so I joined up with Gregory Warner, the host of Rough Translation, to report and edit and argue and travel so that we could do the story together and then share it with all of you. Ready? Ready. So here we go. Hey, you're listening to Rough Translate.

Wow, man. This is Rough Translation. I'm Gregory Warner and that voice is... Molly. Molly Webster. Molly Webster of Radiolab is here with me in the studio because we have been working on this collaboration. It's been months in the making that kind of sits at the intersection of both our shows. Yeah. But I won't say anything more about that. We'll find out why.

Just a heads up, this episode does deal with some sensitive issues, including sexual violence and war. And it comes to us from a colleague that both of us have worked with. A colleague who was telling us a number of stories about Ukraine, and one of them just leapt out to us. It starts with this woman, Evgenia. She's Ukrainian, and she moved back to Ukraine two days after the full-scale invasion.

So late February. She moved to Ukraine. Yeah. And within days of being on the ground in Ukraine, she had set up an NGO. And the NGO was all about getting supplies to Ukrainians during the war. A lot of times it had to do with medical supplies. And so she would use Facebook. Here's the list of meds or generators or whatever. And people were like, yeah, let's help. And she'd throw out these requests. And she would just see, like, donations would come rolling in.

And it was amazing to her. And then one day... I made a post. We're looking for money to buy body bags.

We just understood that it's not enough body bags in Ukraine. For Ukrainian soldiers. For anyone. Every human being has to be passed in a normal way. But this post... It's like two or three, two and a half likes. It actually only gets like five likes and two sad tear emojis. And not enough donations. It's like people didn't donate...

Just because they didn't want to be associated with body bags? Yeah, it's like you can't donate a body bag or even think about a body bag donation without thinking, oh God, we're out of body bags? Like, you know, if someone's asking for 200 body bags, that's 200 dead. But somebody needs to do this, you know, that's life.

This is Rough Translation. Some kinds of donations are not made for Facebook. They have to be done in the shadows or in secret. We were not aiming to achieve something that was illegal. Today, a story about one such donation to Ukraine of a life-saving drug in a legal gray zone that everyone involved with has been worried about talking about until now. This is actually kind of crazy what we did there. I was very proud and in love that...

that clouded my judgment. - 'Cause you understand what you're doing, but you're ready for the punishment. - To protect people's identities, we're not using last names or sometimes any names at all. This story is a two-parter. We're dropping episode two next week. In this first part, a covert operation and a chain of strangers where everyone would have to decide how far they could go and who of them to trust. - At this point, I'm convinced we're getting screwed over.

But what if the weakest link is you? Our story today comes from Katz Laszlo. She is a European reporter. She is, in fact, the colleague that first told me about the story of Evgenia and the body bags. And today she's going to start in Germany with a couple and a question. Yeah. Here's Katz. Where does this story start for you? Well, really, with the beginning of the Russian invasion in Ukraine.

This is Vicky. I made quite a deliberate decision to tell you slowly. And this is her boyfriend Ari. Because I knew that your family was there. They live in Germany, but Vicky actually has roots all across the former Soviet Union and she's still got family in Ukraine. Of course, then you think...

If some things would have shifted in my biography, it would be me or my mother there. This is the biggest humanitarian crisis in Europe in 80 years. There were young people all over Europe calling their grandparents, asking, what do we do? And the only way...

managed to handle it was to get active. Vicky walks down the street and there's this closed nightclub, which has become this place where people are just like scrambling to organize donations that are flooding in. And then I started sorting through boxes in the donation center. I ended up in the medication corner and most people who were sorting through it had no idea what these medications actually are. Vicky's actually a doctor, so she knows what everything is. I

I like to make things more organized. She is someone who makes Excel spreadsheets that are beautiful. And after me sorting through boxes for eight hours or something, somebody said, ah, we are actually...

We heard that you're a doctor and tomorrow we are going with a big convoy of cars to the Polish-Ukrainian border. We're going to go. We don't know what's going to happen. And then, oh, it would be good to have a doctor on board. But if not, we'll figure it out. So she calls a bunch of friends who actually work for international aid organizations. And she asks, should I go? They said no, but we really strongly advise against this and everything.

and you're just messing up with the official structures, private people are blocking the roads, and this just creates more chaos. Hundreds of thousands of people are pouring over the Ukrainian border, which is only a nine-hour drive away, and Vicky really wants to help. I decided the next morning under the shower, okay,

Screw it, I'm going to go. But she feels totally unprepared. I had a bit of a stomach ache when we drove there, thinking, God, like, I'm now driving there, thinking I can do something here. And we are going to be traffic for the big guys now coming in. She's picturing the Polish-Ukrainian border. And what she's imagining is, like, food distribution tents, major NGO flags. Like, I don't know, UNICEF or UNHCR or...

Just one of the big organizations or NGOs, and they were not there. When she finally gets to the border, Vicky sees... There's no one. I spent a fair amount of hours at one border crossing into the night to really see some grandmother or mother, like, stirring a pot and packaging it into, like, warm soups, warm this. Like, these Polish women were standing there the whole night. And this was, like, all this warmth that the people fleeing received. ♪

All of these people, refugees, who are just outside, it's below freezing and they're either stuck waiting for transport deeper into Europe or for family that's still on the other side and they can't see them and they don't know where they are. And there's nobody official saying, you know, you made it, this is your next step. This was around like eight or nine days after the war. So, I mean, you could say this is understandable,

All the organizations are doing assessments. We are assessing, assessing. This is what you would hear. But it also made me really angry because, you know, I mean, this is a no brainer to know that if it gets to minus 10 degrees at night at the border, that you need something to keep the people warm. And I think this was really one of the moments where I thought like,

We're not traffic here. Private people are not traffic. They're the solution at the moment. And so Vicky decides to step in, but all the way in. She kind of blows off her job. She throws herself completely into volunteering. After five or six weeks, she's completely wiped out. I was in bed with high fever, really shivers. She gets COVID. And I was lying in bed sort of scrolling through, I think, 20 Telegram, WhatsApp, Signal messages.

Facebook groups of volunteers. And this is also where all requests were sort of flying around. And then I read they're urgently looking for abortion pills for women who were raped by Russian soldiers. This was a week after all the news broke about Butcha. These requests are coming.

The week that all of those really grim photos from Bucha came out of dead bodies being left in the middle of roads, stories of Russian soldiers using sexual violence as a weapon. Just in that week, at least 25 people came forward and shared firsthand how they'd been raped while trapped in basements in Bucha.

Rape as a weapon has been confirmed in every occupied territory since. And Bucher's liberation, it was the first time that people outside of these occupied territories really found out. I mean, this was shock really for everyone, right? Like reading the news, like we had like faces to that. We were...

in contact with Ukrainian women. These very proud and strong women are kind of like with their children, carrying them with like one little bag. And so just to imagine that this is something that they are not granted the access to,

the pills in a situation like that, like these women that I had faces to, I don't know. If she hadn't been at the border, she would have read this news and thought, big organizations. They will take care of these women. Why should it be me? But from the experiences that we've had before, that...

Actually, that wasn't the case in a lot of places, that governments and organizations are taking care. So even though I was telling myself, I think I need to pull myself a little bit out of things, this was sort of the one where I was like, OK, what can we do about this? The idea even that someone from one country can get an abortion to someone in another country or...

all came about because of the creation of something called the abortion pill or abortion pills, which are really two types of medication, mifepristone and misoprostol, called MIFI and MISO. Taken together at any point in the first trimester of pregnancy, they can induce an abortion. The trick with them is that they are very, very controlled. They're one of the most controlled medicines that we have, especially moving country to country or crossing borders.

And so the notion on a practical level, on a legal level of donating abortion pills, it's a pretty complicated one. I knew that through some context of my partner's family, there was a woman rights activist. So I thought, maybe this is somebody we could ask. I immediately called her, this friend of the family, asked if she knew some people. Is there a way? How do people usually do this?

So she then gave us the number of suppliers she had worked with. So we reached out to him.

Yes, hello. Can you hear me? This supplier, we are not using his name because he is talking about stuff that he could be arrested for. Are you comfortable with us calling you supplier? Yeah, why not? Even his mom doesn't quite know what he does. For her, you know, I'm a missionary in Africa. The supplier is based in an African country. He is of European descent and he has made a name for himself as being one of the main abortion pill suppliers to Europe. And he's a supplier of the vaccine.

and honestly throughout the world. I had some passion for all these women who die unnecessary from abortion. So what we try to do is to reduce unsafe abortions. He just said, I have somebody in Prague for

for 500 kits, one euro per kit. Which is very cheap. And a kit in this case is five pills. It's one Mifit and four Miso. So the plan is they're going to pick up these 500 kits, drive them through the Czech Republic, into Slovakia and across the Ukrainian border. The first plan was really straightforward and really not complicated. But then there was a little bit of a turn. The supplier calls them back. Like very quickly afterwards. Two hours or something.

Instead he had a different proposal. Instead of this deal, why don't I donate to you guys a lot more? Instead of like 500 kids. 10,000 kids. 10,000.

This is a big chance we have getting women access to these life-saving medicines. I mean of course it's women being raped in need of that medication but in the time of a war breaking out in your country I can imagine myself and other women that are maybe just pregnant from even just their partner deciding that this is not a good moment to bring a child into this world.

The supplier tells them he's got an idea for how this can work, but they have to act quickly. Because he happens to be putting together this huge medical donation for Ukraine with lots of different stuff, painkillers and antibiotics, COVID medication, all kinds of pills, actually. And he doesn't actually have time himself to get all of this stuff to Ukraine. But if Vicky Inari can meet him at the airport and organize the transport over the border, then he can add abortion pills.

Pretty much for free. We were so in this like, okay, let's get it done. But he says, here's the thing. The airport that the supplier is going to fly into, it happens to be an airport in Poland. And in Poland, it's illegal to give anyone an abortion pill. At the moment, there's a serious court case going on. This abortion activist, she gave one set of pills to someone.

And she's potentially going to go to jail for three years. I mean, the court case hasn't finished. But that woman never even took the pills. And that's one set of pills. I just think it's crazy to even think about trying to bring the pills through Poland, which has some of the strictest abortion laws in that region. I mean, like every year, thousands of women are fleeing Poland.

to other countries to try and get an abortion, and then here they want to bring all these pills in. But then I guess I think, okay, wait, they're just bringing them through Poland. They're not stopping in Poland. So, like, that I guess they could probably do? Well, the problem is they can't prove that they're not going to hand them out in Poland, right? Like, if you just get intercepted by customs or police...

You can't very convincingly say, oh, no, no, no, we're just driving on. Yeah, that... So then how would you actually ship it through Poland? The supplier says, all you need is this form. The T1 form. A form and someone official who can help with logistics. He seemed really confident in, this is super easy, I've done this before, I will bring it, you pick it up. The only thing that he did say, which made me a bit worried, he said, well...

Well, maybe not just anybody at the airport. Get somebody who can talk smart with the customs. Yeah, yeah, somebody who can talk a little bit smart and smooth with the customs people. So we thought, but why is that actually needed? When Rough Translation returns, the doctor becomes a smuggler. Or she tries to.

WNYC Studios is supported by Zuckerman Spader. Through nearly five decades of taking on high-stakes legal matters, Zuckerman Spader is recognized nationally as a premier litigation and investigations firm. Their lawyers routinely represent individuals, organizations, and law firms in business disputes, government, and internal investigations and at trial. When the lawyer you choose matters most. Online at Zuckerman.com.

Radiolab is supported by BetterHelp. We all like to try to set our non-negotiables, whether it's hitting the laundromat every Wednesday or hitting the gym X times a week. These goals can start to slip when schedules get packed and the mind gets cloudy with stress. But when you're starting to feel overwhelmed, a non-negotiable like therapy is more important than ever. Therapy can help you keep your cup full by giving you the tools you need to get back into balance.

If you're thinking of starting therapy, give BetterHelp a try. It's entirely online, designed to be convenient, flexible, and suited to your schedule. Just fill out a brief questionnaire about all your quirks to get matched with a licensed therapist and switch therapists anytime for no additional charge. Never skip therapy day with BetterHelp. Visit betterhelp.com slash Radiolab today to get 10% off your first month. That's betterhelp, H-E-L-P dot com slash Radiolab.

WNYC Studios is supported by Rocket Money. Did you know nearly 75% of people have subscriptions they've forgotten about? Rocket Money is a personal finance app that finds and cancels your unwanted subscriptions, monitors your spending, and helps lower your bills so that you can grow your savings. Rocket Money will even try to negotiate your bills for you by up to 20%. All you have to do is submit a picture of your bill, and Rocket Money takes care of the rest.

Rocket Money has over 5 million users and has saved a total of $500 million in cancelled subscriptions, saving members up to $740 a year when using all of the app's features. Stop wasting money on things you don't use. Cancel your unwanted subscriptions by going to rocketmoney.com slash WNYC. That's rocketmoney.com slash WNYC.

I'm Maria Konnikova. And I'm Nate Silver. And our new podcast, Risky Business, is a show about making better decisions. We're both journalists whom we light as poker players, and that's the lens we're going to use to approach this entire show. We're going to be discussing everything from high-stakes poker to personal questions. Like whether I should call a plumber or fix my shower myself. And of course, we'll be talking about the election, too. Listen to Risky Business wherever you get your podcasts.

This is Radiolab. We're back with our friends at Rough Translation. I'm Gregory Borner. I'm Molly Webster. We're here with reporter Katz Laszlo. And when we last left the story, Vicky and Ari have agreed to the supplier's offer. They're going to meet him in an airport in Poland and pick up thousands of abortion pills and transport them to Ukraine. And part of the rush is that they're racing against two different clocks.

One of those clocks is biological, which is that in Ukraine, you only have nine weeks to take this medication. But the way the weeks are counted is not from when you get pregnant, but from the date of your last period. So imagine you get pregnant at the beginning of the war. By the time Ari and Vicky are trying to get these pills to you, you're technically like eight or eight and a half weeks along, and you really only have like three days left.

to get this medicine to get a medical abortion. And the other clock that the couple is racing against is the supplier's plane. He's already booked his flight. The first time we got in touch with him was a Thursday and his plane was landing on a Monday. They realized they need all kinds of things that they don't have, like a truck that can be officially sealed by border guards, a registered Polish logistics company that can attest for the shipment. We were trying to explain that...

His plan is not going to work, but he was just in the madness of packing and repacking. Meanwhile, the supplier keeps calling them back. Every time we spoke to him, which was really every few hours, he would be talking about a larger quantity. Hand luggage can...

Not only 10,000 medical abortions, but 15,000 medical abortions. And on top of that, 15,000 emergency contraceptives, morning-after pills. And on these video calls with the supplier, it's when the couple realize something new about the supplier's method to get these pills into Poland.

He's like taking them out of the boxes and he's putting them in other containers. He's putting them in these like big tubs of sport nutrition protein powder. And then there's also like pills in little sandwich bags.

What is he packaging there? How much is it? The numbers kept changing. The names, the packaging. Vicky's organization brain is going crazy. The Miso 200 into white boxes and the Mifit 100 and it was just... He speaks really fast and really confusing and you couldn't really follow him anymore. And was this the first moment where you were actually conscious of bending rules? Like this was not going to be legitimate, actually. Yeah.

Yes, that was the first time. They could all go to jail. Like, you can't just walk around with thousands of unlabeled pills. Especially if you're a doctor. Vicky could lose her medical license. Of course, there was a part that thought...

Can we not take an official route? Because abortions are not forbidden in Ukraine. But at the same time, like with everything in these first weeks, there was no time to take all these official rules. I've never felt more sure that this is the right thing to do somehow. They're already getting additional requests for abortion pills from Ukraine. We would start getting messages from people saying, hey, we heard you guys are transporting something. Could you get it to us? It was very clear that if we were not going to do this...

then this shipment wouldn't go. If we pull out, then we're basically canceling this for everybody. The things were packed, the flight was booked, and this was our best chance. Okay, so they're going to do this thing. What is actually the plan? Okay, buckle up, because by Sunday night, they have set up a relay race, which is...

The supplier has gotten the pills from India, where they're manufactured. He's taking them from his home base in Africa, which we can't name, up to a Polish airport. At the Polish airport, he will hand the pills to the couple who are on the customs forms as, like, the receivers. They are supposed to spend as little time with the pills as possible. Because...

What's the word that Ari always likes? This plausible deniability? Like you lose that in the moment that you have that in your hand, right? They will then immediately give the pills over to a Polish logistics guy. He will then hand the pills to a driver who is taking the pills along with the entire medical shipment over the border to a hospital in Ukraine. At the hospital in Ukraine, Evgenia, who we met at the top of the show... The body bags woman. The body bags lady...

She will extract the pills and start distributing them to doctors and gynecologists who will then get them to patients. And the thing to remember is in this whole chain of humans, the only person who is being told that these are abortion pills is Evgenia.

We've never met these people before, so we didn't know if we could trust them. So what is everybody else on the chain being told the pills are? The supplier's system to keep these pills safe, mostly from the border guards in Poland, was to relabel them as vitamin C. Vitamin C plus was Mifir, and vitamin C without the plus was Miso. Can you, like...

paint the airport scene, what am I imagining? They walk into the airport, like, where are they waiting? Like, do they need to go up to anyone and say, hi, we're here for a customs shipment and this is our paperwork? Or... They don't really know. Like, they've never done anything like this before and they don't want to mess it up. We didn't know if the situation is going to require that we would have to have some kind of discussion with the customs people. So we thought...

How shall we dress? Like, let's dress as like the most reliable, boring, proper people. I was wearing a beige sweater and underneath a button-up shirt with the collar sticking out of the sweater and wearing my glasses. Right, because nobody's ever broken the law in a beige car. Exactly. It just doesn't happen. So they arrive early.

They're in their boring outfits. They choose a boring bench. There's no better scenarios than just sitting it out now. And so they wait. They scroll through their phones. They glance at the customs door, glance at the police. I'm feeling super calm, but I just have to go to the toilet every 10 minutes.

Like, nothing strange about that. I feel my lungs weirdly, my heart. I felt like my heart beat for like two and a half hours. The logistics guy shows up, and the three of them wait some more. And then suddenly, my phone rang.

And it's our supplier. I landed. I'm here with customs. Can you put your logistics partner on the line? And the logistics partner gets on the phone. He speaks in Polish. Nods. Laughs a little. Says okay. Hangs up. Looks at both of us. And says, it's through. Oh my god. Suddenly the supplier walks through the door. Yeah, I see...

I see a man in a suit. He's like a guy in his 50s. Quite tanned. And he's wearing like a blue stripy shirt. Like somebody who would have this like little like briefcase like with the wheels where he just puts in his important documents for the meeting that he's flying into. But instead of this little slick briefcase...

He's got one of those airport trolleys. Stacked to the top with these bags. Just a huge amount of these like plastic colorful bags that you zip up that are super handy and you grab them in a panic because they're really light and you stuff all your clothes in them. Yeah, really. Yeah. Bizarrely wrapped in plastic. And he's just like slowly pushing it in front of him, trying not to drop it.

These bags are like jam-packed with antibiotics, with COVID medication, with anti-inflammatory medication. And then hidden between all of those pills are the abortion pills. Vicky is thinking, oh my God. Okay, if this now goes in one big package into Ukraine...

Is this really going to work out? We thought, what if something goes wrong? And then these land in some hospital in Lviv and are used maybe falsely. Did something about the site of these pills make you think, oh my God, this plan we have, that's just not going to work? I did imagine some kind of doctor on the other side or a paramedic or somebody opening it.

And nobody knowing, oh, that there's, what are these pills suddenly? These loose pills in bulk in a plastic bag. What happens if by some mistake they wind up sitting in a vitamin C box and then they give them to someone and it's not vitamin C and you really don't want to be taking Mifep or Miso not knowing what it is. And even though she knows she's supposed to just hand the pills over to the next person on the chain, their role is done. We sort of

diverged from our plan. How do you say that? Yeah, true. They decide they're going to go with the logistics guy to his warehouse in Poland and then repack the pills before he gives them to the driver. Let's go through it together to make sure that...

Yeah, that everything's separated properly. Everybody, even the supplier? Yeah, the supplier is the only one who knows all this stuff has been packed, but he's got a connection flight in one and a half hours. So they're just like, okay, we're going to do this as fast as possible. We arrived there and then we thought, okay, let's sort of quietly start doing this. The two of us started doing this on the floor in the warehouse, opening the bag, getting it out. That's when we figured out

The markings he had put on the boxes was done with a whiteboard marker. So all of the markings had disappeared. Every now and then you would see a smudge. You had to really dig deep into, like take out half of the bag until you find the first box or bulk packaging. We were really knee-deep in these pills.

Seeing that, they are now very glad that they decided to take this detour and separate out all the abortion pills. We tried to be very organized. And then as we noticed, there was not that much time left. I remember I was getting really stressed, but two other people who were working at the warehouse start helping too. By the end, there were like six people doing this.

This was, I thought the operation was of the utmost secrecy. And now a lot more people know what's going on. It just, doesn't it make it more risky? Yeah, I think initially they're worried about people knowing. And as they're repackaging the pills, they're worried more about like, are we going to find all of these pills in time to put them in the right place and ship them onto Ukraine?

And it's only when they've fished out all the abortion pills and tossed them into three moving boxes, three cardboard boxes, that they're finally ready to go home. It felt like, OK, our thing is over. We're driving towards home. I mean, a lot of tension fell off. And yeah, it was a really good feeling, even though super exhausted. We were super exhausted. ♪

But a couple of days later... Ari leaves for work and... We got a message. Yevgenia is texting. All of the medication has arrived. And the only thing that isn't there is the abortion pills. While we are speaking to her about how confused she is... We kept calling the logistics guy. Where are the boxes? Are they not there? And he kept insisting... No, no, they arrived, they arrived.

And they're talking to Yevgenia and Yevgenia is like, they did not arrive. So we are getting two conflicting messages about the same shipment from both sides of the border. At this point, I'm convinced we're getting screwed over. And they start to think they've been tricked. What do they imagine? What are they playing out might have happened? That it's somehow the driver cannot be trusted.

And he is against abortion and is going to throw these into the river. Or he could want to sell them on the black market and make a lot of money off of them because they're hard to get. Yeah. It's all strangers. It's all strangers sort of joining forces. You never know if there's some hidden agenda on either of the sides. And they know that if they'd stuck with the supplier's chaotic plan and left the pills hidden among the antibiotics and painkillers...

those pills would still be with the rest of the medical shipment in Ukraine. Like that's when they start feeling really stupid. That they're like, what were we thinking? I'm just feeling so naive and defeated. Yeah, it was not nerves anymore. It was really frustration. The whole plan is just crumbling. And they're like, how are we ever going to tell these people that the shipment that we've been telling them is going to arrive in a few days with this essential abortion pills?

has been lost. How are we going to tell them? And they're thinking, how are we going to tell the supplier who's donated a huge amount of money in terms of these pills that it just didn't work out? And also, why the hell did we take this risk to take all of these pills through Poland? When Rough Translation returns, a chance discovery sends the mission into a whole new direction right after this break.

WNYC Studios is supported by Zuckerman Spader. Through nearly five decades of taking on high-stakes legal matters, Zuckerman Spader is recognized nationally as a premier litigation and investigations firm. Their lawyers routinely represent individuals, organizations, and law firms in business disputes, government, and internal investigations and at trial. When the lawyer you choose matters most. Online at Zuckerman.com. WNYC Studios is supported by Rocket Money.

Did you know nearly 75% of people have subscriptions they've forgotten about? Rocket Money is a personal finance app that finds and cancels your unwanted subscriptions, monitors your spending, and helps lower your bills so that you can grow your savings. Rocket Money will even try to negotiate your bills for you by up to 20%. All you have to do is submit a picture of your bill, and Rocket Money takes care of the rest.

Rocket Money has over 5 million users and has saved a total of $500 million in cancelled subscriptions, saving members up to $740 a year when using all of the app's features. Stop wasting money on things you don't use. Cancel your unwanted subscriptions by going to rocketmoney.com slash WNYC. That's rocketmoney.com slash WNYC.

This is Radiolab. We're back with our story about smuggling abortion pills into Ukraine at the start of the war in collaboration with Rough Translation. Picking up the story a few hours after the pills go missing. We heard from the logistics guy. Then he tells us. We know where they are. They found the pills in the driver's private car while the rest of the shipment is in his truck already in Ukraine.

Honestly, to me, this part is super suspicious, but nobody really had time to investigate why. And it didn't really matter. They are just trying to finish this delivery. And so the second they find the pills, the logistics guy is like, OK, I've got a new driver who has time to drive the pills to the border, but he can't take them into Ukraine. So do you have someone on your end who can pick them up in Poland and get them to Lviv? We weren't really sure who to trust.

In the end, they ask the one contact who knows that these are abortion pills and who's in Ukraine. And the person who has experience distributing medical supplies, Evgenia. The decision was, OK, me and two of my friend's girls were just going by car, traveling to Europe to pick it up. Evgenia calls up her friend Maria. We're going to take a ride to Poland to take a couple of boxes as a volunteer. She said, OK, that's fun.

Side note, before the war, in normal times, Maria was a fashion editor. She says, in this war, you know, you're so stressed all the time. You're trying to eat, you're trying to sleep, you're reading news. So you're looking for something to do so you can be useful. And we take some coffee, we smoke some cigarette, we just talk about whatever.

Then we cross the border. They get to the meeting spot, which is... It's abandoned gas station.

Like in a movie, you know, when you're meeting some gangster or something, it's raining. Like suddenly you're in the middle of nowhere, taking something from a car from strangers, you know. And we didn't open the boxes, just put them in a car. They drive off back to the border. And as they get closer, we grab some food. And I said, OK, maybe we'll check what is in that boxes.

She said, yeah, okay, maybe we'll need to take a look. Wait, you're killing me. Like, do you know it's abortion pills at this point? Or does she not tell you? She told me, but I thought, okay, abortion pills, no problem. And we just opened these boxes and there's black garbage bags. Like...

There is no packs or prescriptions, nothing. They're just black garbage bags in a box. And you open it and it's full of pills. And especially when you know how vitamin C looks like, you know exactly that it's not it. And I said, okay, we're going to be arrested. It looks like a drug specking. I don't want to touch it.

Evgenia at this point is dedicated to helping the war effort and getting medical supplies to Ukrainian people. If she is arrested or in any way compromised because of this delivery, all that's going to stop. It was like I was standing somewhere in other country with my car. I have to bring it and I have to go back home and I can't stay here, but

Somebody needs to do this and how to do this and why it's me. It was feelings like how to just stop it. I'm definitely not against abortion, but it was like why we should bring it in this amount. It's a large amount to Ukraine, into Ukraine to take it. And the reason, the first reason was rape cases.

And here I became a bit sad. I mean, I need to do this. They decide they're just going to keep driving. Night is falling, curfew is approaching, they have to get over the border. That very same evening, back in Germany, Vicky and Ari are also getting ready. We had our six-year anniversary of our relationship. And we don't go to fancy restaurants often, but that was a nice restaurant and it was a very intimate place.

It just has a few tables, so it's not a very loud environment, right? It's not that we can have a conversation about smuggling pills over the Polish-Ukrainian border and not have anybody hear us on the table next door, because there's like four tables and a waiter that appears every 10 minutes. Both our phones are face up on the table. They're just staring at their phones, waiting to hear from Yevgenia. I think the waiter must have thought, like, what a strange couple. Yeah.

This relationship must not be going so well. Meanwhile, near the border, Maria, seeing all these bags of loose pills, turns to Evgenia and asks... Do we have documents for that? So Evgenia calls Ari. Of course, he cannot have a phone call in this restaurant with five tables, so he goes outside. I'm left at the table, super tense, because I don't know what's happening. She wants to know what's up with these documents, where are they from...

What do I have to do with them? What can I say about them? That paperwork, it doesn't make sense anymore because the abortion pills have now been separated from the rest of the medical shipment. So there's documents, but they no longer actually apply to any of this. We don't have documents that we are official volunteers. We don't have any prescriptions and we have no proof what kind of pills that is. This is serious, guys.

I remember me getting really nervous that maybe something would go wrong. Did you feel responsible for her? Of course, yeah. For the pills and for everything. Everybody involved. At that point, so many people have put some risk. Let's not have something go wrong here.

So Evgenia and Maria are finally at the border. And it's a day when it's going really, really slowly. They're actually stopping every car, searching the cars, taking out the packages. And they finally pull up to the border booth. They're the first car. The border guard comes out of her booth and she says, get out of the car, open up the trunk. And so they open up the trunk of the car.

And there are the three moving boxes. The border guard is like, can you tell me what's up with your taillight?

And we were like, what? And they look and the taillight is broken. It's not working. And the border guard, she's asking all of these questions about the taillight. She said, oh, my God, you were driving like that's for Poland. It's impossible. Who allowed you to do that? Yevgenia and Maria are like, oh, my God. And then the border guard sort of turns back to the boxes, says, what are you carrying?

And we said, Pils, do you have any documents for that? Yes, of course. She understood that, OK, it's medicine. And she just waves them through. And basically that's it. They pile back in the car and then just drive off. So at 7.50 p.m., we got the message back.

Friends, congratulations to all of us. We are in Ukraine now. Wow. We'll be in Lviv at night. Tomorrow we'll start unpacking and I'll call to understand where our vitamin C is and what to do with it. It was really like a firework explosion sort of feeling. I think that was the best feeling I've ever had ever in this relationship. That was incredible. You want to share it with everybody. You kind of felt like jumping up and screaming and like...

Sort of like, oh, I want to scream it at the top of my lungs and tell everybody like, oh, we are getting married or we're having a baby. Oh, we smuggled abortion pills. Now we're going to go dance all night long. The next day, they get another text from Yevgenia. It's a huge, huge, huge help. And we are so grateful for the help. You're really beautiful, but I feel like a criminal. After that, we won't work together anymore. I'm sorry. And that was it.

After this moment, this sort of community of strangers just dissolves with different feelings of shame and success and a lot of questions. Because, like, what happened to these pills? And were they needed? And did pregnant women get them? Did doctors want them?

So we decided to cross the border ourselves and find the Ukrainians, the doctors, the pregnant women who were waiting for these pills. That's coming up on the next episode next week. That's episode two on Rough Translation and on Radiolab. See you there.

This episode was reported by Katz Laszlo and produced by Daniel Gurma and Tessa Paoli, with help from our senior producer Adelina Lansianese. Our editor was Brenna Farrell. Thanks to the many people who listened to this piece and made it so much better. Vojchek Oleksiak, Katie Lee, Maria Khozunova, Valeria Fukina, Sarah Forgi, Noelle King, Robert Krawicz, Sana Krasikov, and our shining friends at Radiolab.

Thanks also to Micah Loewinger and Laura Griffin, and to the many, many experts and sources we interviewed who asked to remain anonymous. The Rough Translation team includes Luis Trejas and Justine Yan. Our intern is Lelena Twarak. Our supervising producer is Liana Simstrom. Irene Noguchi is the executive producer of the Enterprise Storytelling Unit, of which Rough Translation is a part. Peter DeCampo and Katie Dull are our visuals editors, and illustrations came from Oksana Drashkovska.

Thanks to Tony Cavin, John Ellis composed our theme music, original music from Nick M. Nevis, and additional music from Blue Dot Sessions and First Calm Music. Mastering by Gilly Moon, fact-checking by Marissa Robertson-Texter, legal guidance from Micah Ratner and Dentons, and NPR's Senior Vice President for Programming is Anya Grunman. I'm Gregory Warner, back next week with Molly Webster, Radiolab, and more Rough Translation. ♪

By the way, if you haven't had a chance to check out Rough Translation, please, please go listen. It's a great show. They have so many good stories. I did a quick poll of our staff. Our executive editor said we should all go check out one of their most recent episodes called Hotel Corona. It's not about the beer. It's probably about COVID. Go check it out. You can go to NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

Hi, this is Beth from San Francisco. Leadership support for Radiolab science programming is provided by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Science Sandbox, Assignments Foundation Initiative, and the John Templeton Foundation. Foundational support for Radiolab was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Thank you.