(bongo music)
- [Narrator] This is a story about
a puzzle called Kryptos
and one woman who's spent
almost two decades trying
to solve it.
(upbeat music)
(comical music)
In the heart of the CIA
headquarters lies a mystery.
OK, probably more than one mystery,
but, this one is weird because
it's meant to be solved.
It's a sculpture containing
an encoded message
that's a challenge to the CIA employees;
but, for 30 years, no one has been able
to figure out what it says.
If anyone's got a shot, it's Elonka Dunin.
I mean, just listen to her.
- When my friends and family ask me
what I want for Christmas,
I tell them to get several puzzles,
mix all the pieces together
and then, just give me a bag of pieces.
I enjoy seeing order come out of chaos.
- [Narrator] When Elonka's
not solving jigsaw puzzles,
she's cracking codes and she's good at it.
The Da Vinci Code's author even named
a character after her, Nola Kaye.
I mean, it's an anagram,
but, you know, that's the kind
of thing puzzle people do.
One day, Elonka ran into a
code that finally stumped her.
- I first heard about Kryptos,
I think, in late 2000.
It is about 12 feet tall and 20 feet long.
It has thousands of
characters carved into it.
Kryptos has four codes in it.
Three of the four have been solved.
The fourth has not been
solved and it is considered
to be one of the most famous
unsolved codes of the world.
Here we are going on 30 years,
and it still hasn't been cracked.
Elonka and cryptanalysts around the world
have tried every technique in the book,
polyalphabetic
substitution, transposition,
Playfair, binary, Morse,
but, the fourth code
only 97 characters long,
it doesn't give an inch.
It just sits there, right
in front of us, unsolved.
- So, it raises a question of why.
Why is it that this artist, Jim Sanborn,
who had never created a code
before in his entire life,
how could he have designed something
that has stumped the
entire code breaking world?
(gentle music)
- [Narrator] Welcome to
the island of Jim Sanborn.
He is the artist who made Kryptos,
and he's the only person on
Earth who knows the solution.
- The code itself is in a safe deposit box
that's pretty much where it stays.
In the late 1980s the CIA was required
that they have a sculpture.
I was ultimately selected to do the work
on the exterior of the building.
So, I chose to do a
piece using encoded text.
Through this copper screen,
I cut with jigsaws, by hand,
almost 2,000 letters
and people have been contacting
me continuously, daily,
for 30 years about it.
(car tires on gravel)
- [Elonka] We have sushi, we
have drinks, we have chips.
- [Jim] There is actually a Kryptos group,
that meets every year or so,
to do everything humanly possible
to get me to give them a clue to Kryptos.
- [Elonka] Our Kryptos
community is made up
of people all around the world.
We have thousands of people
that are interested in Kryptos
and either cracking it or
helping to see it cracked.
Some of them are
professional code breakers,
some of them are students,
often someone will just
come in and toss out an idea
and then, there will
be some brainstorming.
The topography has changed.
Has anything changed in terms
of the solutions of Kryptos
because of the changes?
- That's a, it's a trap
question.
- Good (laugh).
- [Elonka] Often it's just a case
of everyone just wants to listen
to every single thing that
Jim might say about Kryptos
because there's that hope
that he will drop that clue,
that little hint that will help.
- So, if one invested a lot of time
in the environment around Kryptos
that would be kind of silly.
I still have to be very vigilant
and extremely poker faced
when everybody wants
to know what it says,
but, I've gotten after 30 years,
fairly good at making it
so that I don't flinch
or offer them a tell.
And so far, so good.
(comical music)
- [Narrator] It's been
30 years since Kryptos
was unveiled at the CIA
and still people are working
to crack that forth code,
every single day.
- I think every artwork
strives to hold your attention
for as long as possible,
but, if it's an artwork
that contains something
that keeps your attention
for even 10 minutes,
much less 30 years,
I get a great sense of
satisfaction from that.
It's become part of a
many, many people's lives,
and I think that's the
most important part.
- [Elonka] People have asked me if I want
to be the one that solves Kryptos,
and it doesn't have to be me.
I want to see it solved,
and if I can help by sharing
as much information as I know,
that's as good to me as having
actually cracked the code.
(gentle music)
If I had to place a bet, Kryptos,
yes, Kryptos will be solved.
I couldn't tell you when,
but, it's a real code; it's
a real cipher; it's solvable.
(dramatic music)
(soft music beat)
