Neighbors both involved and uninvolved with the charges at hand allege David Reinnike has demonstrated violence, vandalism, and bizarre behaviors. No record of these allegations exists in police files. David Reinnike has no prior arrests.
George Reinnike admitted that David has committed two acts of vandalism, but stated these incidents have not recurred. He denies the other incidents. The neighbors making the allegations were re-questioned as to when these incidents allegedly occurred, and admitted the incidents were not recent.
Though Mrs. Winnant's allegation that David Reinnike threatened to kill her dog is credible, no witnesses or evidence exists that David Reinnike did in fact kill the dog. It is clear that much hostility exists between several neighbors and the Reinnikes. This hostility is apparent in their statements.
It is my opinion that prosecution of David Reinnike in this matter would be unsuccessful. It is further my opinion that David Reinnike would benefit from appropriate counseling. George Reinnike stated he would submit David for such counseling.
My recommendation is that the charges against David Reinnike not be forwarded for prosecution.
(signed)
Gil Ferrier, Detective
#1212
9/14/68
JD/SDCSD
When I finished, I copied Ferrier's name and badge number, and the names and numbers of the two arresting officers. I didn't expect the A.O.s to remember, but it was clear that Ferrier was thorough and concerned, and might have stayed involved in David's case. Thirty-five years was a long time ago, but he might even know what happened to the Reinnikes after they left Temecula.
The image of the dead collie was hard to erase, and left me feeling unnerved. The incident with the dog happened almost a year before the Reinnikes disappeared, and the file contained no record that the police had rolled out again, but I believed the neighbors. David Reinnike had been a seriously troubled child, and troubles like that didn't vanish with leaving a house. Maybe George had gotten David into counseling, and David had straightened out, but I doubted that, too.
I went back to the phone, and got Starkey's voice mail again.
"Hey, I just read this stuff. I'm on my way to see Diaz, but I want to talk to you about it. I'll call you later."
I headed for Central Station.
38
Twenty minutes later I left my car in the same parking lot I had used before, checked in at the front desk, and waited another ten minutes before Diaz came down. I started to outline Golden's operation as we rode up in the elevator, but Diaz cut me off.
"Let's see if the picture helps us before we get into all that."
The squad room was busy. Almost every desk was occupied with detectives working their phones. Pardy was the only detective in the room who didn't look busy. He was slouched at his desk on the far wall, staring at nothing with his arms crossed. The dark blue murder book was open on his desk, but he didn't seem to be looking at it. Diaz called out to him, and waved toward her desk.
"Hey, Sherlock. Come see."
Pardy considered her for a long time before he got up. He was probably getting tired of her put-downs. He closed the murder book, checked his pager, then made his way over. He pulled up a chair as far from us as he could get.
I said, "You making any progress?"
"I'm working a few leads. You know."
"Got any ideas?"
"I'm not looking for ideas."
Diaz said, "Okay, Cole, let's see it. What do you have here?"
While the computer booted up, I gave them the page with Edelle Reinnike's and Marjorie Lawrence's names and numbers. I gave them the copies of the newspaper articles and told them what I had learned. Diaz glanced at each item, then passed them to Pardy. Pardy looked up when I told them about David Reinnike.
"I guess that leaves you out, Cole. Unless you were separated at birth."
Diaz flushed like she was pissed off.
"The one doesn't have anything to do with the other. How about you run the name and see if we get a hit?"
"I'm just saying. Why would Reinnike think Cole was his son if he already had a son? It doesn't make sense."
"Why would he tattoo crosses all over himself and pay hookers to pray? We'll find out when we find some people who really knew the guy."
I found the photo file, and opened the picture. Reinnike and Dana filled the little screen, standing beside Reinnike's brown Accord. The license plate was a blurry rectangle in the lower right corner of the screen. Pardy stood closer.
"She has the boyfriend, Thomas Monte."
"That's right."
Pardy looked disappointed.
"Not bad, but not great. It's blurry."
Diaz said, "SID might be able to pull it out. We could snatch the registration with just a couple of digits."
Pardy went back to his chair.
"I'm not getting my hopes up. That backlog is a bitch. If we have to wait months to get a gun checked, how long will it be before they get around to this?"
I interrupted them.
"I can help you with that, too."
Pardy said, "What, you have your own private Walk-in Wednesday?"
So much crime was committed in Los Angeles that the LAPD lab was backlogged for months. Priorities were given to hot cases and cases going to trial, but the backlog was still so great that LAPD set up an experimental program called Walk-in Wednesday. Every Wednesday, detectives could hand-carry evidence to the lab on a first-come first-served basis to cut through the red tape. But there were still so many cases that the waiting rooms were crowded with loitering detectives.
I said, "Something like that. I have a friend at SID who owes me a favor."
"The little creep who worked with the key card?"
"Yeah, Pardy, him."
The little creep. Chen would love it.
I explained how Thomas came to take the picture, and that a couple of hundred pictures just like it were in the computer. Diaz and Pardy listened as I went through the terms of the deal, then Diaz arched her eyebrows at Pardy.
"You'd have to turn it over to Southwest Bunco, but it would still look good. I think we should go for it."
"Do whatever you want."
Diaz stared at him, and was clearly annoyed.
"Listen, Pardy, don't drop the ball here. This could turn into a major investigation with the Feds. You should get a piece of that. You should develop the case to see what you have before you hand it off. That way, you get more of the credit."
Pardy had resumed his slouch, and stared at her with sleepy eyes.
"I'm busy. You develop it if you want."
Diaz looked as if she was going to say something more, but turned back to the laptop and angled the screen for a closer look.
"Okay, fuck it. We get this cleaned up, it might be good for a registration. I want to get this over there right away."
"Are you good with the pass for Thomas and Dana?"
"We're good, but not if they had anything to do with the murder. Everything about this killing stinks like sex to me. If it turns out they had something to do with the murder, all bets are off."
Pardy said, "It wasn't about sex."
He was slouched back in the chair with his arms crossed and his legs out, looking like he was about to fall asleep. Diaz's mouth tightened with irritation.
"Okay, genius, what do you think it was?"
"A straight-up murder."
Diaz swiveled to face him, and Pardy went on.
"I haven't been sitting on my ass, Diaz. A witness ID'd Reinnike at Union Station about an hour before he was killed. Described the tats on his hands, and picked his face from a six-pack."
"What witness?"
"Homeless dude I know from Metro. Reinnike was hanging around, he said. My guy hit him up for a handout, and Reinnike came across. I'm thinking if Reinnike was at Union Station, he was meeting someone."
Maybe Pardy looked sleepy because he had been working the case all night.
Diaz said, "Then what
? Someone picked him up, and they drove to an alley in the middle of nowhere? Why the alley? Why that alley?"
Pardy stared at her, and seemed absolutely confident in his answer.
"Because it was in the middle of nowhere. Because whoever brought him there intended to kill him. They might have even murdered him somewhere else, and the alley is just a body dump. We didn't find a shell casing. We didn't find the cell phone Cole said he had. A lot of things are missing."
Diaz frowned, but I was liking how Pardy was putting it together.
She said, "Beckett found no evidence the body was moved."
"If he wasn't moved far and he was moved right away, there wouldn't necessarily be anything to find."
I said, "How about the car? Did your guy see the car?"
"No, but it had to be nearby or someone gave Reinnike a ride. That alley is a long walk from the station. I walked it myself. Reinnike couldn't have made the walk in an hour."
Diaz studied Pardy as if she had never seen him before. A deep smile slowly split her face, but Pardy didn't smile back. Diaz fingered the little heart necklace.
"Well, now, that is outstanding police work, Detective. That is truly excellent work."
Pardy nodded, and Diaz went on.
"Have your wit bring you around to his friends. Talk to them, too."
"Already in the works."
Diaz smiled at him a little bit longer, but Pardy didn't return her smile.
"Okay, Cole, you're going to talk to your boy, Chen?"
"I'll bring it over now."
Pardy roused himself from the chair and picked up Stephen's computer.
"I'll bring it. I want to meet your pal, Chen. Maybe I can get my own private Walk-in Wednesday."
Diaz said, "Give Cole an evidence receipt."
"Sure. I can do that."
Pardy filled out a receipt for the computer, signed it, and then they told me to leave.
39
Frederick
Frederick did not open Payne's gas station that morning.
He had spent most of the night sick to his stomach with the growing certainty that he would not be able to escape.
The army of forces aligned against him was enormous, and might be anyone—Cole, a policeman, the priest, any random motorist who pulled to the pumps; everyone who crossed his path might be a tentacle employed by the beast that was trying to find him. Frederick imagined a dozen scenarios, all of them ending with his own terrible death, until finally he locked his trailer, brought the shotgun out to his truck, and drove back to Los Angeles to see if the police were still guarding Cole's house.
40
John Chen was out of the office that morning working a homicide near Chavez Ravine. I left word on his voice mail explaining about Golden's computer, and asked him to call. After I left word for Chen, I called Starkey.
"Detectives. This is Starkey."
"It's me."
"Oh. Hey."
She sounded uncomfortable. I was uncomfortable, too.
"I feel bad about last night. I didn't mean it to play that way."
"What are you talking about? I didn't think twice."
"I could've played it better, is all. I should've asked you to stay. Lucy was all for it."
"Cole, please, you're making too much out of this. You had to adjust your plans. I'm cool with that."
"Okay. Listen, I want to talk to you about David Reinnike. Can you meet me at Musso's? We could have a late breakfast."
"Look, Cole, what is this, a mercy meal? You don't have to feed me today to make up for last night. It's not like I don't have a life."
"I'm not trying to make it up. I still need a way to find Reinnike, and I want your opinion."
She hesitated.
"C'mon, Starkey. Please."
"Begging is good, Cole. Begging, I like. I'll meet you in twenty minutes."
She hung up before I could say something smart.
Musso & Frank Grill on Hollywood Boulevard was a five-minute walk from the Hollywood station. It's been in the same location since 1938, hunkered down behind glass-paned doors that have kept the restaurant safe since Hollywood's early beginnings when movie stars and studio heads filled the back tables. They've served pretty much the same menu since 1938, too. When other restaurants in L.A. went light with nouvelle cuisine, Musso's piled on butter and salt. Hollywood declined in the sixties when street people, prostitutes, and crime sprouted on the boulevard. The city decayed into a crime-ridden slum, but Musso's survived all that, and flourished. Maybe because of its history, or maybe because of the tough old men who served as the waiters and simply refused to let such a good thing die. It was and always has been one of my favorite restaurants. I liked it that they refused to change. The world caught up to them again. It was a good place to eat.
I parked in the back lot and made my way inside. Diners lined the counter, and most of the red-leather booths were already filled with the typical Musso cross-section of businessmen, studio flacks, musicians, and bookies. Starkey was already seated in a narrow booth in the center aisle, set up with water and a couple of menus. I put Reinnike's file and the news clips between us as I took the bench across from her.
"Hey. Thanks for meeting me."
Starkey looked uncharacteristically pleased with herself.
"Don't try to feel me up or anything, Cole. I don't put out on the first date."
Starkey's comment left me feeling awkward, especially when three women in the next booth glanced over.
"Look, I'm sorry if we had a misunderstanding. I didn't mean for last night to be a date date. It was just dinner."
"I was teasing you, Cole. You're so fricking easy to tease."
Starkey popped two antacid tablets when the waiter took our orders. I went with a Denver omelet; Starkey ordered a tongue sandwich. When the waiter left, Starkey glanced at the reports and articles.
"I don't know what I can tell you about this."
"If Chen can't pull the registration, I'm out of ways to find George. Finding David might be as good as finding George."
I tapped David Reinnike's file.
"Did you read it or just pass it along?"
"I read it. That kid had problems."
"Yeah, he did, but there was only this one arrest in his record. The newspapers said the neighbors called the police three or four times on this kid."
Starkey shrugged.
"It's newspapers, Cole. Newspapers get everything wrong. But even if it's true, the police roll out, somebody agrees to pay for somebody else's broken window, everyone calms down, and that's the end of it. The cops could have rolled out a dozen times—two dozen—and we wouldn't know."
"I'm not looking at it that way, Starkey. I'm coming at it from the other direction. The detective who covered this case, Ferrier, recommended counseling. I'm thinking the counseling helped— that's how this kid was able to stay out of trouble. Can I find out who the counselor was?"
"Not from the police records. What's here is here."
"Would Ferrier know?"
Starkey glanced at the three women, then shook her head.
"Ferrier retired in eighty-two and died in eighty-nine. I checked. I figured you might want to talk to him."
I didn't know what else to say. I drank some water, then looked at the three women, too. George Reinnike wasn't in the database, only this single file existed about David, and there didn't seem any way to go forward with it.
Starkey fingered the pages one by one.
She said, "Let me tell you something I learned on the Bomb Squad—you have a bomb, that bomb is going to explode."
"What does that mean?"
"Just because this kid wasn't arrested again doesn't mean he was a model citizen. This boy was acting out violence and aggression over a significant period of time. I see kids like this all the time. Let me tell you, man, their arrests are just the tip of the iceberg—they get popped for one thing, there could be thirty or forty other incidents they get away with."
"You don't think someone can change? You must see kids change all the time."
"Yeah, I see change. I just don't expect it."
She suddenly pushed the pages aside, and seemed embarrassed.
"Cole, look, I don't know why anyone does anything. I chased bomb cranks four years after I left the squad. These freaks were the sickest, most mentally fucked-up degenerates you can imagine. You know the difference between them and everyone else? Real people get the urge to do something weird, they don't do it. Assholes get the urge, they just do it."
"No impulse control."
"This kid had no impulse control. I see kids with no impulse control every day. That's why they have to deal with me; they get in trouble. But this isn't just some unhappy kid acting out a bad home life—"
She fingered through the report and articles, looking for examples.
"Assaulting this kid with a bat, pissing in this woman's yard— this is showing a lack of impulse control. But here where he throws the hammer at this car—she says he stood there laughing?—and here where he's in the middle of the street talking to himself? This is getting into psychosis."
Starkey glanced up, and her eyes were serious.
"I've been thinking about this, Cole. Here you have a kid with this history, and he and his father up and disappear, leaving behind all this money? All right, no evidence was found linking their disappearance to a crime, but the Sheriffs were investigating check fraud and forgery—they thought the Reinnikes were victims. They weren't investigating a kid who would spear a collie with a garden stake. I'm thinking you should check out the unsolved violent crimes in their area just before they left."
I nodded. It was a slow nod, but Starkey made sense. I could see it happening that way; George was protective of David, and defensive about him. He had gone to bat for David again and again, but had also made excuses for his son's behavior that bordered on denial. George might well have left to protect his son. He might have abandoned the money and never looked back.