The Apollo Bulletin Board Service, commonly known as Apollo BBS, operated as one of the world's largest online distributors of sadomasochistic child pornography during the mid-1990s. Based in the Dutch seaside resort town of Zandvoort, the Apollo BBS distributed child pornography globally through dial-up connections and early internet protocols. The system employed encryption and access controls to limit entry to verified members, creating a platform for the distribution of illegal materials to paying customers around the world.[^1] ### Discovery by Marcel Vervloesem The Apollo Network came to light in June 1998 when [[Marcel Vervloesem]], a private investigator working with the NGO Morkhoven Workgroup, was investigating the disappearance of [[Manuel Schadwald]]. During his investigation, Vervloesem came across [[Gerrit-Jan Ulrich]], a 49-year-old German computer technician who owned a computer store called Cube Hardware. Ulrich invited Vervloesem to his apartment, where he revealed himself as the administrator of the Apollo Bulletin Board Service and handed Vervloesem a collection of encoded disks containing thousands of images and videos of violent child abuse.[^2] Ulrich's apartment contained multiple running computers connected to five phone lines, with digital storage disks and networking equipment throughout. He claimed to have heart disease and not long to live. A few days after this meeting, Ulrich fled the Netherlands and called Vervloesem from Italy, stating he was frightened and revealing a cache of digital disks hidden beneath a floorboard containing information on his network of associates. On June 20, 1998, Ulrich's body was discovered in an Italian forest; he had been shot multiple times, and [[Robbie Van Der Plancken]] was arrested as a suspect in his murder.[^2] ### Network Operations and Scope The Apollo BBS operation was sophisticated in both technical and organizational terms. As a bulletin board service operating in the mid-1990s, it used dial-up connections and early internet protocols to distribute child pornography to paying customers around the world. The system employed encryption and access controls to limit entry to verified members. The commercial nature of the operation suggested a well-organized business structure with customer management, payment processing, and content distribution systems.[^1] When Dutch police searched Ulrich's apartment after his death, they discovered it contained tens of thousands of images and videos showing extremely violent sexual abuse of children, including infants. A child psychiatrist who inspected the materials stated: "I've never seen anything like this. The pictures show very disgusting things, sexual abuse, violence, and the tying up of young children. There were children aged four to five, children aged eight to nine, and I saw one child about 18 months." Some films were described as "almost killing," as "very special, very aggressive, very hard, mechanically brutal."[^3] ### International Distribution Network The Apollo BBS was a distribution hub for materials produced by trafficking networks across Europe. The disks found beneath Ulrich's floorboard contained information on a network of suppliers involved in producing and selling these films and images. Two of those identified by Dutch authorities were [[Warwick Spinks]] and [[Lothar Glandorf]], both major figures in European child trafficking. [[Warwick Spinks]]' name was also found in an address book belonging to [[Robbie Van Der Plancken]], who was closely associated with Ulrich.[^4] The list of 300 names discovered during the investigation was described by media reports as "an international Who's Who of suspected paedophiles." This list included individuals from multiple countries and various professional backgrounds.[^4] ### Connections to Other Trafficking Networks The Apollo Network served as a crucial intersection point for multiple trafficking operations. It was connected to the [[Warwick Spinks]] network in Amsterdam, the [[Lothar Glandorf]] operation in Rotterdam, and the broader European child trafficking infrastructure.[^4] The connections extended to the Marc Dutroux case in Belgium. [[Gina Pardaens-Bernaer]] told friends and colleagues about a snuff film found on the disks that showed a girl being murdered by an associate of the child trafficking network exposed during the Dutroux investigation. She identified one of the perpetrators as an acquaintance of [[Michel Nihoul]], a key figure in the Dutroux case.[^5] ### The Apollo Disks and Their Contents The "Apollo Disks" that Ulrich handed to Vervloesem contained encoded materials that, when decrypted, revealed thousands of images and videos of child abuse. These disks represented only a portion of the total materials distributed through the Apollo BBS. The materials ranged from standard child pornography to extremely violent content involving torture and murder.[^2] Vervloesem, distrusting Dutch authorities, passed the disks to a colleague in the Morkhoven Workgroup, [[Gina Pardaens-Bernaer]], who made copies before providing them to police. On November 15, 1998, a few months after taking possession of the Apollo Disks, her body was found inside the wreckage of her car, which had crashed into the concrete pillar of a bridge at full speed. Two days before her death, she had sent copies of the disks to the International Committee for the Dignity of the Child in Geneva with a letter stating her life had been threatened.[^5] ### Law Enforcement Investigation The investigation into the Apollo Network was hampered by multiple factors, including the death of key witnesses and the international nature of the operation. Dutch police conducted a thorough search of Ulrich's apartment after his death, discovering the full scope of his operation. However, the investigation was complicated by the fact that the primary suspect was dead, many of the materials were encrypted, and the network extended across multiple countries with different legal systems and law enforcement priorities.[^3] [[Gina Pardaens-Bernaer]]'s death in particular raised serious questions about whether she had been murdered to prevent her from revealing information about the Apollo Network and its connections to powerful individuals. The timing of her death, coming shortly after she had received death threats and sent copies of the disks to international organizations, suggested foul play rather than accident.[^5] ### Footnotes [^1]: 'No kind of Hero', Tim Hulse, The Independent, September 13 1998; Dutch police investigation reports on Apollo BBS, 1998 [^2]: 'Paedophile network trafficks young boys across Europe', Nick Davies, Previously unpublished, October 1 1998; Dutch police surveillance reports, 1998 [^3]: Child psychiatrist's statement to Dutch police, 1998; 'No kind of Hero', Tim Hulse, The Independent, September 13 1998 [^4]: 'Fugitive Briton linked to Dutch child porn hits at witch-hunt from Prague refuge', The Guardian, July 31 1998; Dutch police investigation files, 1998 [^5]: 'Zaak-Morkhoven: ontdekster komt om in ongeval'('Morkhoven case: discoverer dies in accident'), De Morgen, 17 november 1998; 'Parket onderzoekt doodsbedreigingen Gina Pardaens'('Public prosecutor's office investigates death threats Gina Pardaens'), De Morgen, 11 december 1998