INVESTIGATINGMilitaryTwo former US special operations soldiers confessed to participating in a private-sector assassination-for-hire operation. They face court proceedings. Military-trained killers running a private murder business.
“Two former US special operations soldiers confessed to participating in a private-sector assassination-for-hire operation. They face court proceedings. Military-trained killers running a private murder business.”
Two former US special operations veterans admitted to participating in a private assassination program. Not a rogue operation. Not a moment of desperation. A business. Military-trained killers offering their skills on the private market for money.
Both veterans admitted their roles in court proceedings. They detailed how their military training — paid for by American taxpayers — was repurposed for private hits. The skills designed to protect the country were sold to the highest bidder.
A for-profit assassination operation requires infrastructure: clients, communication channels, payment systems, and operational planning. This wasn't two guys going rogue. It was an organized enterprise that leveraged military expertise for commercial killing.
How many similar operations exist? If two veterans were running a private assassination business, the question isn't whether they're unique — it's whether they're the ones who got caught. The skills that special operations create don't disappear at discharge.
The existence of a for-profit assassination service implies the existence of clients willing to pay for assassinations. Who hired them? How many operations were completed before they were caught? The confessions opened a door. What's behind it may be worse than what we know.
No one's said anything yet. Be the first to drop your take.





