The chronological order of my stories is as follows:
Todd & Melina series, Interludes 1-5, Sperm Wars series, Russian Roulette series, Case of the Murdered Lovers series, Case of the Murdered Chessplayer series, The Swap series, Interludes 6-10, Case of the Black Widow series, Teresa's Christmas Story.
The Case of the Black Badge, Ch. 1-3
Feedback and
constructive
criticism is very much appreciated, and I encourage feedback for ideas.
This story contains graphic scenes, extreme language, and actions that might be extremely offensive to some people. These scenes, words and actions are used only for the literary purposes of this story. The author does not condone murder, racial or racist language, violence, rape or violence against women, and any depictions of any of these in this story should not be construed as acceptance of the above.
Part 17 - At The Federal Level
Cindy and I had been watching Muscone and Sandra Speer interrogate the suspects. When we arrived in the City, Lindy Linares had escorted us to the anteroom of the FBI's interrogation room, where Jack Muscone was just beginning to work on Sergeant Brody.
When the lawyer had objected to the FBI's jurisdiction of the case, I heard Jack say as I listened in, "Here's the deal: the man Carroll who was found dead in your County was reported missing in Arizona. That means crossing State lines, it means Federal jurisdiction. Your Town & County Police shared with the FBI information from your patrol car's GPS that you'd visited that meat plant the night before the bodies were found-"
"Purely coincidental and circumstantial, Agent Muscone." said the lawyer. "Do you really think this is going to hold up in a hearing, much less a trial?"
"In addition," Muscone continued, unfazed, "Black Badges were found on your clothing at the time of your arrests; matching a Black Badge once found on the other man found dead on Carroll. Circumstantial? Maybe, but there are just too many coincidences. Juries aren't stupid, Sergeant Brody." Muscone noticed, as I did, that Brody's face was showing turmoil.
"Brody," said Muscone, "I would
suggest
you cut a deal and talk."
"Agent Muscone, this is harassment." the lawyer said. "My client has invoked, and this continued inquisition is a violation of his rights."
"Brody, it's not your legal beagle's call, it's yours." Muscone said. "Think hard about this; you know what's waiting for you on the outside if and when you're bailed out of our custody."
"Look..." said Brody, "can I get... I want immunity."
"I can't authorize that, but I'll get the U.S. Attorney in here right now to talk to you about that." Muscone said, rising from his chair.
"Say nothing more, Sergeant Brody!" the lawyer practically screamed. "Agent Muscone, I want to speak to my client, alone. Now!"
"Okay." Muscone said, "but Brody, once I walk out of this room, you have no prayer of a deal." Muscone turned to the door.
"Wait!" said Brody. The lawyer tried to hush him up, but Brody turned on the lawyer and shouted "Shut the fuck up!"
"Well, I can hardly continue to represent you if you don't do what I say." said the lawyer, his words sounding much more like a threat than any attempt to help his client. "You need my representation to have any chance against these Government agents."
"Then you don't represent me anymore. Go." said Brody. When the lawyer didn't move, Brody said, "You heard me, get out!"
"Do you realize what you're saying here?" the lawyer said, his voice menacing. "Do you
fully
understand what you are doing, Mr. Brody?"
"Get. Out. Go talk to Gunn." Brody said. The lawyer finally got out, a viciously angry look on his face. Muscone called for the U.S. Attorney, and soon a youngish, handsome black man entered the room. However, the negotiations soon broke down: Brody wanted immunity in exchange for full disclosure, the U.S. Attorney and Muscone said Brody was looking at a plea deal at best if he cooperated. Even with that, the U.S. Attorney said, they had to have something first from Brody, but he said he had to have immunity and wouldn't say anything without it...
--
"We can hold them for 72 hours before we have to arraign them." Jack Muscone said as he entered the anteroom of the interrogation room at the Federal Building in the City. It was 1:30am, the early morning of March 3d. "Our judge might be more amenable to no bail, but it's iffy; he just might turn around and defer to your local court's jurisdiction."
I'd just watched the black U.S. Attorney enter Gunn's interrogation room, where Brody's wily attorney had gone after Brody kicked him out, and then watched Gunn say "I'm not talking to this nigger." and literally turn his back to the U.S. Attorney and FBI Agent. The U.S. Attorney simply said "No deal for him at any time." and walked out.