John McAfee dead: Inside the Internet millionaire playboy’s wild world of guns, drugs, and jungle harem of seven women
GUN-TOTING John McAfee was seen posing on a yacht beside his wife, just days before being detained for taking weapons and ammunition into the Dominican Republic in 2019.
Gloucestershire-born McAfee — who was found dead in jail at age 75 — had once planned to enter the 2020 US presidential race and spent his younger years drinking heavily and snorting cocaine daily.
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His death, reportedly by hanging, was announced just hours after Spain’s National Court approved his extradition to the US, where he was wanted on tax-related criminal charges that carried a prison sentence of up to 30 years.
The decision could have been appealed and the final extradition would have needed to be approved by the Spanish Cabinet.
Meanwhile, his that authorities were “determined” he would die in prison just days before his death.
McAfee’s 2019 arrest followed a long line of scandals, including accusations that he was involved in a jungle murder and was the target of several CIA “chases”.
He went on to make $84million (£60million) through his cyber-security software brand — and moved to the jungle with a harem of seven young women — which he said was “less stressful” than being married.
McAfee also bought a luxury yacht, started injecting testosterone in his bum to keep up with his young lovers and eventually married a prostitute — although he refused to use porn sites due to the virus risk.
The tycoon, who was once dubbed the “world’s most wanted man,” claimed he’d been the target of “assassination” attempts in Central America and that the CIA were trying to hunt him down.
He was then on the run from US authorities after refusing to pay millions in tax because he considers it “unconstitutional and illegal”.
In 2019, McAfee claimed he’d escaped to London after Dominican officials released him from jail — but he fled just two days later in search of “complete safety”.
Now, as the 75-year-old tech mogul allegedly took his own life in Barcelona, his lawyer confirmed on Wednesday, we look at his very bizarre life.
Childhood abuse and a party drug habit
McAfee’s fear and paranoia began during his childhood when he claimed he’d often receive beatings from his “abusive and alcoholic” dad.
But when he was 15, his former soldier father shot himself dead, and over the following years, McAfee himself began drinking heavily.
Dropping acid before work
He took on a series of programming jobs instead — but soon developed a love of drugs, particularly LSD. According to , he’d drop acid in the morning before heading off to work.
On one harrowing occasion, McAfee snorted an entire bag of a psychedelic powder called DMT. He was found hiding behind a rubbish bin, convinced he could hear voices.
Over the next few years, his drug habit escalated, and McAfee found himself doing lines of cocaine at work most days.
Unsurprisingly, things eventually came to a head in the early 1980s when his wife left him and he was sacked.
Contemplating taking his own life like his dad, McAfee finally sought the help he needed to get sober and landed a job as a software engineer for defence contractor Lockheed Martin.
While there, he came across the first-known computer virus. He tried to crack it himself — with his success propelling him towards fame and fortune.
Playboy lifestyle funded by $84m (£60m) sale
By 1987, McAfee had established himself as the world’s leading antivirus expert and founded McAfee Associates, with his antivirus product becoming an instant hit. Seven years later, he sold his stake to Intel, netting around $84million (£60million).
With his fortune, McAfee splashed out on properties in Hawaii, Arizona, Colorado and New Mexico, as well as antique cars and a fleet of planes.
In a particularly eccentric move, he also set up a “sex yoga ashram” school.
But after the economic collapse in 2008, bad boy McAfee auctioned off all his belongings, and moved to the Central American jungle where he bought a villa in picturesque Belize.
A harem of seven women and buttocks injections
Desperate to keep old age at bay, the increasingly wacky tycoon would allegedly inject testosterone into his buttocks every other week.
He was also joined in the country by a harem of seven much younger women.
“Some people think it is horrendous that I lived with seven women aged between 18 and 25,” McAfee would later tell The Sun. “People can think what they want. The women all got along.”
He also bizarrely revealed one of his lovers, a teen called Amy, had tried to shoot him.
“She tried to kill me when we first met, although we got over that,” he said.
“They only have sex with me”
Despite his playboy antics, McAfee never went on porn sites in case he got a virus.
“I just don’t go there,” he once told the
During his time in Belize, the businessman started up an antibiotics company and began posting on drug-taking message boards about attempts to purify the compounds within bath salts, reports.
His business venture turned to ruin when local cops raided his company lab in search of evidence of drug-making.
They found a cache of weapons and $21,000 (£15,000) in cash, but no illegal drugs.
Claims of a “conspiracy” to kill him
According to McAfee, the raid marked the beginning of a “conspiracy” to destroy him — something he believes was revenge for his refusal to be extorted by the Belizean government.
He even claimed the authorities were trying to kill him. Belize’s Prime Minister Dean Barrow has dismissed McAfee’s allegations, labelling him “extremely paranoid, even bonkers,” reported.
In 2012, McAfee was deemed a “person of interest” by the nation’s police when his neighbour Gregory Faull was discovered shot dead in a pool of blood.
Officers called by McAfee’s home, but there was no sight of him.
The tycoon, who has admitted American Mr Faull “was not my favourite person” but has denied any involvement in his death, would later claim he buried himself in the sand to evade police.
He fled Belize but was arrested in Guatemala in December 2012.
A fake heart attack to give his lawyer more time
He was charged with illegally entering the country, but faked a heart attack “to buy some time” so his lawyer could stop him from being deported back to Belize.
The plan seemingly worked — days later, McAfee was sent to the US.
Shortly after, McAfee met his wife Janice in Miami Beach, Florida, when he hired her as a prostitute with money loaned to him by a friend, and the pair tied the knot in 2013.
But the drama wasn’t over yet.
The same year, McAfee uploaded a parody video, “How to Uninstall McAfee Antivirus,” showing him criticising McAfee software while snorting powder and surrounded by women.
Dark allegations of rape and murder
And three years later, he was at the centre of another scandal when the Showtime documentary, “Gringo: The dangerous life of John McAfee,” was released.
It alleged he drugged and raped a former business partner, and committed murder —accusations McAfee has vehemently denied.
McAfee was then served with a subpoena by the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), reported to be related to his involvement in cryptocurrencies. He told Reuters he did not pay income tax for eight years for ideological reasons and was indicted.
The following year, McAfee and his wife revealed they were living in a Tennessee compound with a 24/7 armed bodyguard, claiming they had been followed for the past four years.
An alleged poisoning
The same year, McAfee claimed he had been targeted in a poisoning “assassination attempt”, posting images on Twitter purportedly showing him on life support in hospital.
“I am more difficult to kill than anyone can possibly imagine,” he wrote.
In 2019, McAfee left his heavily-fortified compound and took off on a yacht to avoid trial, along with Janice, their four large dogs, two security agents and seven staff.
The tycoon — who has previously claimed he’s fathered 47 kids — left the States for the Bahamas, then Cuba, after suspecting US law enforcement were trying to extradite him.
But the businessman was detained in 2019 with Janice and his crew in the Dominican Republic — just days after claiming on Twitter that the CIA had tried to “collect” him.
His Twitter feed was taken over by a friend, who warned “if John misses his next check-in, events will be set into motion”.
Detained for four days by Dominican authorities
McAfee and his crew were detained for four days, before initially being released on July 24, 2019. But the day after, McAfee claimed to have been arrested for the second time in a week.
He shared photos of himself on Twitter, with his arms around his captors — along with the bare-chested image of him in a cell, which Janice deemed her “favourite”.
He claimed he had smuggled a phone into the jail by “sleight of hand” adding: “If my hands were bigger I could have smuggled a Bangkok prostitute in with me.”
A trip to London with ‘guards’
Soon after, McAfee revealed he and Janice had landed in London, with pictures purportedly showing the pair visiting a restaurant and in a hotel room with some “guards”.
“The bad guys never came close,” the tycoon tweeted.
McAfee fled once more, to the secret, fortified facility in Lithuania — after claiming the “long arm of the US” was trying to get him in Britain.
And while it was unclear exactly where this facility was, he claimed: “There is an underground network of corrupt national officials that is used by the CIA for nefarious purposes. I will soon illuminate it.”