"One has to wonder," Boldt agreed.
"Hence Flek's reluctance to cooperate with us," she said. "Protecting a brother, a cousin?" She had felt something odd about his demeanor. Now, maybe she had an explanation for it.
"Worth pursuing," Boldt said.
"That call I just hung up from?" she said. "The number called from the pay phone at Etheredge? It looks like maybe it's a cloned cellular phone. That bill has dozens of calls being disclaimed by the customer."
"A cloned number offers anonymity. It makes sense," Boldt agreed.
"Which means we'd have to catch this guy in the act to connect him to Flek—relative or not. And we'll lose that chance, because he'll be warned off by all this media attention."
"
"You think we made a mistake, Lou? Interrogating him? Tipping our hand? Maybe we'd have been better to sit on him. Intercept the activity."
Boldt believed she was probably right, but also knew there was no looking back during an investigation. He didn't answer directly. Instead he said, "We work this relative of Flek's and we work this cell phone that was called. We work it fast before too much of this makes it onto the evening news. Maybe we get lucky."
"Since when?" Daphne asked.
C H A P T E R
30
Upon returning to his job, LaMoia thought the excessive workload facing him must have been some kind of cruel joke, perhaps cooked up by Boldt to prove how hard things had been for him during LaMoia's absence. There were nine active investigations on LaMoia's desk. He had responded to two of the crime scenes and taken reports from the other seven. At the same time, he was wearing the hats of Burglary detective, Special Assaults detective, and Homicide sergeant. And he'd only been on the job for two days.
When some guy identifying himself as Ragman called from Colorado Corrections and mentioned Boldt by name, LaMoia focused his attention on the message being relayed—the name of a possible accomplice.
He scribbled the name
Ragman said, "Brother Flek owns a pink sheet the length of your arm. A juvie gone bad. His more recent history here puts him in double jeopardy. One more felony conviction and the guy does fifteen without parole."
"Flek," LaMoia repeated, reading from his notes. Having spoken to Boldt earlier, he knew about the failed interrogation out at Etheredge. He had asked a friend at InterCel to identify the cellular phone number called from the prison, and then had spoken with Matthews ten minutes earlier to deliver the bad news: The number had indeed been cloned.
Ragman warned, "His jacket is littered with references to what one officer called 'the volatile nature of his personality.' There's also a reference to a psych evaluation in here, although I don't have my hands on it. Way it looks to me: This is a dog that bites. Little brother is tame by comparison. This one took out two uniforms trying to arrest him back in ninety-three— both hospitalized, one with a broken neck."
"Broken neck?" LaMoia repeated, yanking his feet off his desk and sitting upright in the chair. "You have aliases for this mope?"
"You got a sharp pencil? It's a long list. Better yet, what if I fax you as much of this as I can?"
"Is he on WestCrime?" LaMoia inquired.
"NCD," Ragman said. The National Criminal Database. "You guys lined out with that yet?"
"You bet. We've got access to WestCrime, NCD, and all the federal databases."
"Then you're set on the aliases," Ragman said. "I'll still fax you the liner notes, in case that stuff didn't get posted to the database. The way it shakes out: He's a thief with a fondness for anything electronic, a violent son of a bitch when he wants to be, and I guess that's most of the time. Just so you and your boys know to wear vests."
"Got it," LaMoia said, drawing a thickening ring around the name
He called Boldt, who said, "Can't talk on the cellular. I'll call you back from the airport." The line went dead.
He accessed the NCD database and downloaded both Flek brothers' criminal records. Bryce Abbott Flek operated under six aliases, all ending in "ek," or "eck." LaMoia typed in the various names, all separated by commas. He tried SPD records, King County records and state records. No arrests. He tried the man's Colorado motor vehicle registration—a 1991 blue Dodge van. A subsequent request with the licensing bureau kicked five unpaid in-state parking tickets, all within a three-block area of Ballard. The first of these parking tickets was dated a year earlier, the same month as David Ansel Flek's conviction. The pieces started falling into place. LaMoia grew increasingly excited.