Before a single frame of Checkmate was storyboarded, its future leading man was living the plot in real time. A criminal case and a civil federal lawsuit now pending in Los Angeles (Case No. 2:24-cv-09601) confirms that the upcoming thriller is rooted in events so extreme they read like a rejected Jason Bourne draft. Four household names sit on the villain’s target list—Steven Spielberg, Margot Robbie, Todd Philips, and Enzo Zelocchi — and every sordid detail is preserved in the official documents of the investigation and their exhibits.
The Trojan Horse Called A-Medicare
Rewind to 2018. Enzo Zelocchi was quietly assembling A-Medicare, a blockchain-powered, single-payer-style health platform meant to slash waste and speed reimbursements. To polish the project’s crypto white paper, he hired a coder who introduced himself as a “visionary technologist”: Troy Woody Jr. What Zelocchi got instead was a spy in a hoodie.
According to the exhibits, Troy Woody Jr. (currently detained in the Philippines for murder) already a member of the hacktivist crew UGNAZI and an ISIS sympathizer—leveraged his badge-level server access to map out Zelocchi’s digital assets holding. He then fed that information to fellow UGNAZI hacker Mir Islam (currently also detained in the Philippines for murder with Woody); both men relayed updates to ringleader Adam Iza (a/k/a Ahmed Faiq – ISIS terrorist sympathizer from Iraq, who has since entered a guilty plea in the criminal case in California) via contraband phones and laptops smuggled into Metro Manila District Jail.
Building a Rogue Task Force
Iza’s inner circle ballooned to include girlfriend Iris Au (guilty plea), shady private detective Kenneth Childs of Paramount Investigative Services who was used by Adam Iza to spy on victims prior the criminal attacks plus assisting the operations, and a cadre of compromised Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department personnel, including:
- Eric Chase Saavedra (detective, guilty plea)
- Richard Dudgeon (former deputy)
- Dean Bryan Rawlings (current deputy – suspended)
- Christopher Quintero (deputy – suspended) and his brother Michael Quintero
Using StingRay cell-site simulators, tower-dump requests, DMV database look-ups, and judge-manipulated warrants, the deputies turned Hollywood’s elite into lab rats. StingRays mirrored phones; tower dumps sketched movement; falsified affidavits tricked the bench. Spielberg in Pacific Palisades, Robbie on a backlot, Philips in post-production, Zelocchi on set—every ping lit up on Iza’s dashboard.
When Keyboards Gave Way to Guns
Surveillance led to action. In 2021, there was a failed armed kidnapping/robbery at an Arco station. March 30, 2022, a pre-dawn armed home invasion at Zelocchi’s residence. Where Zelocchi open fire against Adam Iza and his criminal associates, the conspirators pivoted to character assassination:
- Summer 2022 Disney – Instagram hack—David Do, Zelocchi’s hired freelancer, falsely blamed.
- TMZ editors paid by Adam Iza bribed for smear copycat pieces against Zelocchi.
- Wikipedia moderators paid off by Iza to wipe Zelocchi’s bio.
- Three defamatory YouTube videos made by a goofy Las Vegas content creator hired by Adam Iza to continue the criminal extortion is now named as a defendant.
- 2024 IMDb infiltration— Troy Woody jr. while incarcerated used falsified credentials to became an IMDB editor and to delete film credits and plant sabotage into Zelocchi’s profile.
The Legal Squeeze
Still empty-handed, the syndicate dressed extortion in litigation: two ethically bankrupt attorneys filed three meritless suits, hoping discovery would expose wallet keys or force a quiet settlement. All three landed in the shredder, but they bought Iza’s crew time to keep the pressure on.
Counterattack: Zelocchi’s Gambit
Instead of paying, Zelocchi went on offense. His own filing—under RICO (18 U.S.C. § 1962), the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (18 U.S.C. § 1030), and California Penal Code § 502, plus defamation and related torts—hit the docket like a flash-bang. He handed investigators chat logs, GPS strings, and threat recordings; international agencies cross-matched them with telecom traces. Saavedra flipped, Woody’s prison hardware was seized, and Iza’s plea deal cracked the ring.
Why It Matters
Checkmate is still in early development, but the real-world stakes have already shaken courtrooms on two continents. By refusing to fold—despite blackmail, gun barrels, and a global smear engine—Enzo Zelocchi did more than salvage his reputation. He exposed a hole in law-enforcement oversight, shielded fellow artists, and turned a script into a cautionary tale for anyone who thinks surveillance abuse belongs only in fiction.
When the film finally premieres, audiences will see choreographed suspense. What they won’t see are the handwritten prison notes, the corrupted warrant logs, or the defiant producer who turned his life into evidence. That part played out in real time, and the final scene is still being written in the halls of justice.
