From NYC Prosecutor to Global Crime Fighter: Artie McConnell on Law, Order & Dangerous Places cover art

From NYC Prosecutor to Global Crime Fighter: Artie McConnell on Law, Order & Dangerous Places

From NYC Prosecutor to Global Crime Fighter: Artie McConnell on Law, Order & Dangerous Places

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In this episode of The World’s Most Dangerous Places, host Robert Young Pelton sits down with Artie McConnell — a man who’s lived on both sides of danger. After a decade as a Manhattan prosecutor, McConnell moved into global investigations, chasing terrorists, traffickers, and cybercriminals across borders. His story reveals why law and order still matter — and what happens when nations forget that.

Pelton, who’s spent years among rebels, mercenaries, and killers, turns to McConnell for insight into why the rule of law remains essential.

From the Boroughs to the Battlefields

McConnell admits he went to college mainly to play soccer, but passions for geopolitics and constitutional law changed his path. Fascinated by Russia and Afghanistan, he traveled through Central Asia as it unraveled, learning lessons no classroom could teach. Back home, he joined Manhattan’s DA’s office under Robert Morgenthau, working homicide calls and ensuring every case held up in court as New York’s underworld evolved.

The Globalization of Crime

His cases soon expanded from local murders to conspiracies linking the Italian mob, Russian syndicates, Chinese triads, and street gangs. Organized crime, he says, learned to think globally first. Later, at the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Brooklyn, he tackled terrorism, espionage, and money laundering, showing how the U.S. dollar gives prosecutors reach worldwide. When a French company paid ISIS through New York banks, McConnell’s team helped prosecute Lafarge — resulting in a billion-dollar penalty.

The Quiet Side of National Security

Unlike Hollywood thrillers, real counterterrorism is about prevention. “You don’t know what you’ve stopped,” McConnell says. He recalls a radicalized woman bound for ISIS who already had agents’ license plate numbers. His work shows that diplomacy and trust often achieve more than threats.

Faith in the System

Despite growing cynicism, McConnell stays optimistic. “The justice system is designed to self-correct,” he tells Pelton. Solving the 20-year-old murder of Jam Master Jay reaffirmed that faith: “To hug his family and know we got justice — that’s what makes it worth it.”

The Takeaway

From New York’s boroughs to global warzones, McConnell’s journey proves that justice and order aren’t abstractions

Robert Young Pelton is a Canadian-American author, journalist, filmmaker, and adventurer known for his conflict reporting and for venturing alone into some of the world's most dangerous and remote areas to chronicle history-shaping events. His work often involves interviewing military and political figures in war zones and spending time embedded with various groups, including the Taliban, Northern Alliance, CIA operatives, al Qaeda, and Blackwater .

He has been present at numerous conflicts, from Ukraine to the the Battle of Grozny and from Qali Jangi in Afghanistan to the rebel siege of Monrovia in Liberia.

Pelton is the author of several books, most notably the New York Times bestselling guide, "The World's Most Dangerous Places," which provides information for navigating high-risk zones. He has also written "Come Back Alive," a survival guide, and his autobiography, "The Adventurist: My Life in Dangerous Places". His work includes feature stories for National Geographic, Men’s Journal, Foreign Policy and Vice. He has worked as a contributing editor for National Geographic Adventure and has worked for major media networks like Discovery Channel, National Geographic Channel, CBS's 60 Minutes, ABC Investigative Division, and CNN.

Pelton is also the founder of DPx Gear, a company that designs rugged survival tools and knives based on his field experiences.

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