The race is on

The doorbell rang at Judge Moseley’s house, “a rumpled figure opened the door, what’s the emergency this time?” he asked snappily. The young assistant prosecutor said to the Judge, “we have a suspected felon fleeing to Costa Rica. He will be in Mexico to change flights in 2 and a half hours and that may be our last chance to grab him.” The judge looked at the affidavit, looked at the warrant, and signed it. “Good luck, young lady.”

The phone rang at the home of the Alabama Attorney General. “Buddy, this is Sid, how are you doing.” “Its midnight, how do you think I’m doin’?, the AG snapped. “I’m sorry, but we’ve got a fleeing accused felon who is about to land in Mexico City, I’ve emailed a copy of the arrest warrant to you, I need to you to get someone to nab this guy at the Mexico City Airport, or we’ll probably never catch him.”

Jack, Jr. exited the plane into the International terminal at Mexico City airport, the good news was he didn’t have to pass through Mexican customs where his passport might be flagged. He tried to think where he could sit and wait for his plane. He found a small cantina that was darkly lit. “Una cerveza, por favor”, he told the waitress. Shortly a beer appeared in front of him. “Uno Dollare”, the waitress said. He gave her a dollar bill and a dollar tip. “Gracias”, she said smiling. He sat quietly in the darkened cantina and began to feel more comfortable with his plan.

The phone rang at the home of the Assistant Attorney General International Division, “we have an arrest request for Mexico arising out of Alabama for attempted murder. Its urgent”. “Go ahead and send out the wire to the Mexican State Police with all information about the suspect”.

An email came onto the screen at the Mexican State Police headquarters which named Jack Jenkins, Jr. who was transferring to a Costa Rican flight to San Jose’ at Mexico City.

On the lam

Later that evening a man waited at Atlanta’s Hartsfield Airport awaiting his flight to Costa Rica. He had purchased a nice condo there many years ago as an investment, now it was his sanctuary. His flight carried him to Mexico City with a transfer to a flight to San Jose’. When he arrived at the airport after checking his luggage and putting the luggage through security, he immediately headed to go through customs. Sooner or later they’d figure him out and customs was the last check point that he thought that he’d have to worry about. He showed his passport to the customs agent and offered to open his carry on luggage and the agent scanned his passport, the waived him through.

Detective Black knocked on the door of the modest home in the suburbs of Montgomery. No one answered. When he got back to his car, he emailed a note to dispatch. “Be on the look out for Jack Jenkins, Jr. who is driving a new car likely with dealer tags, if you find him detain him for questioning. He is a person of interest in an attempted murder.” At that moment his cell phone rang and it was Jack, Sr. Jack had called his store manager to find out which car Junior was driving and what tags were on it. They had agreed to meet and the dealership and then reviewed the check out slips and found that Junior was driving a Blue Tango Sedan, the most popular color of the most popular model the manufacturer made. He also noticed that it was the lone dealer car without GPS and without an activated security system. He also checked the log to see which cell phone number Junior had. They tried calling the cell phone but it was not turned on. Senior had a hunch that Junior was on the run. He called Detective Black. “He driving a 2010 Tango Sedan, four door, color blue. License plate dXXX-1234. His cellphone is turned off. My gut says he’s running. He owns a place in Costa Rica that he’s visited for years. My guess, is that’s where he’s headed.”

Detective Black immediately got everyone in his office to start calling airlines, he needed to find out whether Jack, Jr. was booked on any international flights. He called INS and asked if Jack Jenkins, Jr. had been through customs in the last 24 hours. They checked their computers and confirmed that he had passed through customs at Atlanta Airport about an hour earlier. He’s fleeing. He contacted Atlanta Airport and asked them if there were any flights to Costa Rica leaving tonight. There were none, but there was one flight to Mexico City that had not left on Yuca Airlines. He called Yuca Airlines and asked if they had a Jack Jenkins or Jack Jenkins, Jr. booked on the flight tonight out of Atlanta. “Why, yes, but its already left the gate”, the lady replied, “and it will be landing in Mexico City in three hours”. Detective Black called the State’s Attorney. “We need an arrest warrant for Jack Jenkins, Jr., the charge attempted murder and vandalism. And then you need the Attorney General to call the Attorney General of the United States to get a fugitive notification to the Mexican authorities all within three hours.” “Wow, that’s a tall order, you’ve got your affidavit and the warrant prepared”, the prosecutor asked. “Yeah, and I’m emailing them to you now”, Black replied. “Good, I’ll go see Judge Moseley, he stays up late and doesn’t seem to get too upset when we ring his doorbell.”

A revelation

At the appointed hour, the doorbell rang at Jack Jenkins home, “Detective Black?” asked Jack, Sr. “Yes, may I come in”, the detective asked. “Sure, sure” said Jack as he ushered the detective to a stuffed chair and the living room. “Mr. Jenkins, I have reason to believe that your driver did not have an accident and was not driving recklessly, but that someone tampered with the motor mounts on the vehicle”, the detective started. He then pulled out the pictures taken by the technician showing the rust markings on the undercarriage of the car. “Who ever did this, had access to a garage and access to a wench to hold up the engine while they swapped out the motor mounts. This was not vandalism, too much work for that, this was without a doubt attempted murder”. Jack shivered for a second and then said, “This is not the first incident. But I didn’t want to report it at the time because I was in a car in Louisiana”. Jack said cautiously choosing his words. “I’m not interested in whether you were driving without a license, what I am worried about is that someone might be trying to kill you”, the officer said trying to allay Jack’s concerns. “Okay, I was driving my car in Louisiana after a conference. The brakes failed. The mechanic said that someone had punctured the brake line, but did not bleed it or cut it. This meant that the fluid oozed out over time, so it wasn’t immediate. Since I was coming from New Orleans, I just chalked it up to youthful mischief.” Jack answered. The detective nodded. “Who knew that you were in New Orleans driving that car?” the detective prodded. “Only my son, Junior”, Jack said with a melancholy voice.

Meet Detective Black

February 1, 2010

Later that night, Jack, Jr. followed Elmo’s path and saw the motor mounts and bolts laying on the side of the road. He picked them up and put them in a dumpster behind a restaurant a few miles away.

February 6, 2010.

“Where are the motor mounts and the bolts?”, the technician asked the officer. “We picked up everything at the scene”, the officer said. “The motor mounts would have been several miles back, could you go back and look for them?”, the tech replied. “Sure” said the officer. After calling Elmo and retracing the route, he found no motor mounts, no bolts, no nothing. Somebody probably saw them as used parts to sell on ebay, he thought. He called the technician, they’re gone. “Thanks”, the tech replied. He looked at the bottom and it was clear that a rusty motor mount had been installed on the bottom of this car, much older than the rest of the body and it left an impression. “Barry can you come over here for a second, look at this on the bottom of this car, do you see what I see?”, the tech asked. “Yeah rust stains from where the motor mounts were, someone installed bad mounts on this car”, Barry replied. “So, somebody is trying to kill somebody”, the tech answered, “better forward that to the detectives.”

Detective Black was rather boring personality. Not the high energy types that you see on television. He is studious, insightful, instinctive, and experienced. He has been around the block many a time as he nears his retirement. At 55, he’s a bit arthritic, a bit laconic, and a bit overweight, those sausage sandwiches take their toll. He also smokes which makes him a heart attack waiting to happen. But if there is a tough case, he’s the go to guy. The Lieutenant called him into his office, “Maurice, I’ve got a stumper here. Jack Jenkins’ car was tampered with. The motor mounts were replaced on it, they failed and the car crashed while his driver was running an errand. We need to find out whether it was vandalism or whether someone’s trying to kill him”, the Lieutenant said emphatically. “My bet is on murder – find a jealous husband, and you’ve probably figured it out. The guy is a walking cougar magnet.”

Later that day, “Hello, Mr. Jenkins, this is Detective Black, I would like to come and interview you about the accident your driver was in.” “Thanks, I’d come to you, but I’m banned from driving due to a little indiscretion last fall and my driver is in the hospital”, Jack, Sr. responded. “How about 5 p.m. this evening”, the Detective responded not wanting the trail to get any colder. “Fine with me”, Jack said, “and I’ll hold off on the martini until later”.