Season 1: Hantavirus

Vector

A serial investigative podcast from Armbrust USA about why hantavirus is back.

Start with episode 1
Vector episode 1 cover

Start here

Without a Name

May fourteenth, nineteen ninety three. Gallup, New Mexico. A car pulls off the highway. A nineteen-year-old marathon runner cannot breathe. The doctors work on him for hours, and then they lose him. His name was Merrill Bahe. He was on his way to his fiancée's funeral. She had died of the same thing, three weeks earlier.

Listener offer

30% off Armbrust masks

Newsletter signup is coming soon. Save your launch code now.

VECTOR30

First-time Armbrust customers, one use per account. Code activates 12:01am CT on launch day.

Shop Armbrust USA

Episodes

S1E1

Without a Name

May fourteenth, nineteen ninety three. Gallup, New Mexico. A car pulls off the highway. A nineteen-year-old marathon runner cannot breathe. The doctors work on him for hours, and then they lose him. His name was Merrill Bahe. He was on his way to his fiancée's funeral. She had died of the same thing, three weeks earlier.

S1E2

The Cabin in Mammoth Lakes

Vector reports from Mammoth Lakes, California, where three hantavirus deaths in a four-month span (February, March, and April 2025) have raised questions that the county's thirty-two-year history with the disease has not answered. We trace the cluster through Mono County Public Health statements, walk through the unusual exposure profile (two of three victims had no mice in their homes, but all three had mice in their workplaces), and pull up the 2012 Yosemite Curry Village precedent for what happens when seasonal architecture and deer mouse habitat overlap. We close with the climate question: a deer-mouse population boom in the Sierra echoes the conditions that triggered the original 1993 Four Corners outbreak.

S1E3

The Hackman Coincidence

Vector reports from Santa Fe, where Betsy Arakawa died of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome around February 12, 2025, and her husband Gene Hackman died eight days later of cardiovascular disease, with advanced Alzheimer's as a significant contributory factor. We walk through Arakawa's last days using her computer's search history and email records, the property's post-discovery environmental assessment, the clinical structure of HPS, and the question her death raised: how often does this disease go undiagnosed in the United States.