Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen

Trunk Music

Titel: Trunk Music Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Michael Connelly
Vom Netzwerk:
continued, “I told Jerry that you’d take the autopsy so he can stay at Archway. Then I want everybody back here at six to talk about what we have.”
    “Okay, when’s the autopsy?”
    “Three-thirty. That going to be a problem?”
    “No. Can I ask you something, why’d you call Major Fraud in instead of OCID?”
    “For obvious reasons. I don’t know what to do about Carbone and OCID. I don’t know whether to bring in Internal Affairs, look the other way or what.”
    “Well, we can’t look the other way. They have something we need. And if you call in IAD, then forget it. That will freeze everything up down there and that will be that.”
    “What do they have that we need?”
    “It stands to reason that if Carbone was pulling a bug out of that office, then-”
    “There’s tapes. Jesus, I forgot about that.”
    They dropped into silence for a few moments. Bosch pulled the chair out across from her desk and finally sat down.
    “Let me take a run at Carbone, see if I can figure out what they were doing and get the tapes,” he said. “We’ve got the leverage.”
    “This may have something to do with the chief and Fitzgerald, you know.”
    “Maybe.”
    She was referring to the intradepartmental skirmish between Deputy Chief Leon Fitzgerald, commander of OCID for more than a decade, and the man who was supposed to be his boss, the chief of police. In the time Fitzgerald had run the OCID, he had taken on an aura akin to J. Edgar Hoover’s at the FBI, a keeper of secrets who would use them to protect his position, his division and his budget. It was believed by many that Fitzgerald had his minions investigate and keep tabs on more honest citizens, cops and elected officials of the city than the mobsters his division was charged with rooting out. And it was no secret within the department that there was an ongoing power struggle between Fitzgerald and the police chief. The chief wanted to rein in OCID and its deputy chief but Fitzgerald didn’t want to be reined in. In fact, he wanted his domain to broaden. He wanted to be police chief. The struggle was largely at a namecalling standstill. The chief could not fire Fitzgerald outright because of civil service protections; and he could not get backing to simply gut and overhaul OCID from the police commission, mayor or city council members because it was believed that Fitzgerald had thick files on all of them, including the chief. These elected and appointed officials did not know what was in those files but they had to assume that the worst things they had ever done were duly recorded. And therefore they would not back the chief’s move against Fitzgerald unless they and the chief were in a guaranteed no-lose position.
    Most of this was department legend or rumor, but Bosch knew even legend and rumor usually have some basis in reality. He was reluctant to step behind this curtain and possibly into this fight, as Billets clearly was, but offered to do so because he saw no alternative. He had to know what OCID had been doing and what it was that Carbone was trying to protect by breaking into the Archway office.
    “Okay,” Billets said after some long thought. “But be careful.”
    “Where’s the video from Archway?”
    She pointed to the safe on the floor behind her desk. It was used to secure evidence.
    “It will be safe,” she said.
    “It better be. It will probably be the only thing that keeps them off me.”
    She nodded. She knew the score.
    The OCID offices were on the third floor of Central Division in downtown. The division was located away from police headquarters at Parker Center because the work of the OCID involved many undercover operations and it would not be wise to have so many undercovers going in and out of a place as public as the so-called Glass House, Parker Center. But it was that separation that helped foster the deepening gulf between Leon Fitzgerald and the police chief.
    On the drive over from Hollywood, Bosch thought about a plan and knew just how he was going to play it by the time he got to the guard shack and flipped his ID to the rookie assigned parking lot duty. He read the name off the tag above the cop’s breast pocket and drove into the lot and over toward the back doors of the station, then put the car in park and got out his phone. He called the OCID’s main number and a secretary answered.
    “Yeah, this is Trindle down on the parking lot,” Bosch said. “Is Carbone there?”
    “Yes, he is. If you hold

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher