Authors: Brian Freemantle
âNot as people I hung out with. Nineteen sixty-nine is a long time ago. We certainly weren't friends.'
âYou left â retired from â Metro DC prematurely, didn't you, Mr Johnson?' asked Benton.
âAgain, what's the relevance of that question?' said Clarkson.
âEstablishing the reliability and credibility of witnesses in a forthcoming criminal prosecution,' said Benton. âOur prosecutors don't like courtroom challenges that could have been anticipated â¦' He nodded towards the recording apparatus. âNow there it is, unequivocally on tape.'
âAre you impugning my client's integrity?'
âAbsolutely not!' insisted Dingley, enunciating each syllable to enforce the denial. âAt the moment â as we probably haven't sufficiently made clear or established â we look to Mr Johnson as an essential witness.'
âTo what?' Clarkson continued to challenge. âMy client was briefly present at an arrest, an arrest now the subject of a quite separate civil case in no way involving or concerning the FBI. How can that brief involvement make him an essential, material witness?'
âAt this stage of our enquiries, Mr Johnson is one of the
only
witnesses to anything!' said Benton. âWe're anxious we don't leave unasked any question that might give us an opening.'
âI am glad, after all, that this interview is being recorded,' said Clarkson.
âSo are we,' said Benton, immediately. âThat's why we asked for it to be done.' He switched quickly to Johnson. âYou did leave Metro DC police department prematurely, didn't you, Mr Johnson?'
âI'd reached my first available retirement opportunity. I chose to take it.'
âWhy was that?' asked Benton, mildly.
âA position came up at Dubette, in their security division.'
âAs head of their security division?'
Johnson's wariness was back. âYes.'
âThat was quite a jump, going straight in as head of a unit,' commented Dingley.
âI had the qualifications and experience. I was headhunted, if you like.' He smiled at his own pun.
âAs I'm sure you most certainly liked,' Dingley smiled back. âHow'd that happen, Mr Johnson? How did Dubette come to think of you â find you â out of every likely candidate â out of Metro DC, where there were so many officers that you didn't even get to remember Peter Bellamy and Helen Montgomery, who were your contemporaries?'
Johnson's smile remained. âTheir previous security chief, Joe Blanchard. He'd earlier worked for Metro DC police. Put me forward with a personal recommendation.'
âIt's not what you know, it's who you know,' Benton said. âIsn't that what they always say?'
âThat's what they always say,' agreed Johnson.
âSo you left Metro DC in, what was it, November 1996?'
âSomething like that,' said Johnson.
â
Exactly
like that, November ten, 1996,' said Dingley. âWe got it from Metro DC records. Not a good time around then for Metro DC police. Lot of internal enquiries. Lot of people leaving the force. You remember that, Mr Johnson?'
âThis has got to stop!' protested Clarkson.
âSir!' came back Dingley. âThis is a murder and potential terrorism investigation. Two Metro DC officers arrested a man in questionable circumstances â¦' He raised his hand, against the lawyer's further interruption. âAll right! That's being challenged elsewhere, in a court with which we have no involvement or jurisdiction. But we do have a very real interest in their reliability as witnesses in our ongoing investigation. We'd hoped your client could simply give us a steer on that reliability.'
âMy client has already told you he did not know Officers Bellamy or Montgomery well enough to be able to attest to that,' persisted Clarkson.
âIndeed he has,' said Benton. âBut the question wasn't about the two officers, was it? It was about an unfortunate, embarrassing time within Metro DC police department.'
âAn embarrassing time in which my client was in no way involved,' said Clarkson. âAnd which has no relevance whatsoever to the investigation in which you're currently engaged.'
âThat wasn't the question, or the inference, either,' persisted Dingley. âI asked if Mr Johnson remembered it.'
âOf course I remember it,' said Johnson. âThe enquiries were internal but they were widely covered in the press.'
âEvidence-tampering ⦠bribery ⦠stuff like that,' recalled Benton. âWhich brings us up to date with our current investigation. There's indications here of tampering with or planting forensic evidence. You think Officers Bellamy and Montgomery would be capable of doing anything like that, Mr Johnson?'
âHow many more times do I have to tell you that I don't know them well enough?' protested the security chief. âHow can I judge what they're capable of?'
âWhat about that day?' persisted Benton. âYou're a professional. You were with them, saw how they operated. They look to you to be good, honest cops?'
âAs far as I was aware â what I saw â they behaved perfectly properly and professionally,' said Johnson.
âThis is getting ridiculous!' re-entered the lawyer.
For the first time, the agents ignored the interruption. Focusing solely upon Johnson, Dingley said: âYou â and the security officers you control â carry weapons, don't you? Smith and Wesson thirty-eights? Police Specials?'
âFor which we are licensed,' said Johnson.
âWe know. We've already checked,' assured Dingley. âAnything else? Mace? Pepper spray? Batons?'
âMy staff and I protect a pharmaceutical research facility, a very obvious target in the drug culture in which we live,' said Johnson.
âSo, what else is it you carry?' persisted Dingley.
âThe night staff â sometimes the day staff, too â carry Mace. And batons.'
âEver had to use it? Or discharge your weapon?' asked Dingley.
âNo,' said Johnson.
âLet's hope you never do,' said Benton.
âThere's an inconsistency we'd like you to help us with,' said Dingley, in a sudden change of direction. âOur recollection â and Dave and I have checked our notes on this â was that you told us you didn't know what car Richard Parnell drove. Or what its registration was. Is that right, Mr Johnson? Is it right you didn't know the make of the car or its registration number, until Richard Parnell took you to it on the morning of his arrest?'
The blink was of a country road animal on a dark night, transfixed in the lights of an oncoming vehicle. Johnson said: âI don't remember ⦠what I did or didn't tell you, I mean ⦠don't remember your asking â¦'
âSo, let's ask you again, Mr Johnson,' said Benton. âUntil the day of Richard Parnell's arrest, did you know the make or registration of his vehicle?'
âI told you I don't remember!'
âNo!' refused Dingley. âWhat you didn't remember was what you told us when we first talked. The question now is whether, before Mr Parnell's arrest, you knew his car details.'
âDubette have a research and administration staff at McLean close to two thousand people,' said the man.
âOne thousand, eight hundred and forty-two,' supplied Benton. âOut of that one thousand eight hundred and forty-two, did you know the details of Mr Parnell's car?'
âNo!' blurted Johnson.
âYou absolutely sure about that?' said Benton. âOn the evening Mr Parnell found his car damaged ⦠damaged sufficiently to remove paint later found around â but not adhering
to
â Ms Lang's car, you logged on Dubette's personnel file access system as having examined Mr Parnell's personal records. And in those documents is listed the make and registration of Mr Parnell's car. Do you remember going through Mr Parnell's file?'
The approaching headlights were blindingly in Johnson's eyes. He shook his head, blinked a lot, and looked sideways for help to his lawyer. Clarkson said: âThis interview ceases, now! I need further time ⦠instruction ⦠with my client â¦'
âWe can fully understand that,' accepted Dingley. âAs we made very clear from the outset, by having this interview recorded, we are extending every legally required courtesy to your client, Mr Harry Johnson. Which is why I think this is the moment formally to read him his Miranda rights â¦'
On cue, as Dingley stopped talking, Benton recited Johnson's legal protection against self-incrimination.
Continuing the double act, Dingley picked up the moment his partner finished, speaking more towards the recording apparatus than to the security chief. âI am now showing Mr Johnson and his attorney the search warrant issued earlier today by a judge in private hearing â¦'
âI should have been informed of this before this interview began!' protested Clarkson.
âThat warrant authorizes the FBI to search Mr Johnson's home as well as his office and locker at Dubette Inc. at McLean, North Virginia,' continued Dingley. âIt effectively seals every article in every stated place under court jurisdiction until Bureau searches have been completed.'
The email had been waiting when Parnell arrived that morning, addressed to him, not Lapidus, despite the request for further avian-flu specimens coming from the Greek geneticist. More cultures were being despatched. So were preliminary papers from Shanghai University updating research on a SARS vaccine incorporating DNA from the infecting virus. Part of the paper indicated that the Chinese were also experimenting upon a similar method of immunization against the current lethal bird flu.
âIt's an idea,' suggested Parnell, when Lapidus's team assembled.
âIt goes along with your D, C, B, A approach,' said Sato.
âAnd there's the linking respiratory factor in both conditions,' Beverley pointed out.
âThe gamble comes, as it always does, in finding an acceptably safe level,' said Lapidus. âRemember, we can't try culture growth in eggs.'
âWhat about the mice we already tested?' asked Parnell. âDid we isolate a specific host gene?'
âI tried, obviously,' said Sato, at once. âThe damned strain is so mephitic it's like a pump gun â everything gets shot away.'
âMaybe Ted's just shown us a path,' said Parnell. âWe minimize the strength of the virus, under controlled conditions, to the point of destruction. Every level's logged. Against each level we administer until we lose the pump-gun effect. And then go for tolerance, working through the logged levels. At an acceptable tolerance, we might locate our most likely friendly host. We get the mouse host, we look for a human match.'
âElementary, my dear Watson,' gently mocked Lapidus.
âHow long's a few thousand comparisons going to take?' Parnell mocked back.
Seriously, Lapidus said: âHow many other companies do you think might, as our people have, pick up on Shanghai?'
âI don't even want to make a guess. I know this is a race but I don't want any of us running so fast we trip over ourselves,' cautioned Parnell. âDubette came far too close to that â to doing that â all too recently. We follow this research line, if it turns out to be feasible, like the scientists we are, and always will do as long as I am the director of this unit. And that's scientifically. If someone comes out ahead of us, so be it. They did better than us and they deserved to get there first â¦' Parnell came to a halt, suddenly embarrassed, at the same time as being aware of how often he seemed to need to stop talking, to draw breath. âThat didn't start as the lecture it turned out to be,' he apologized.
âI didn't think it was a lecture,' said Beverley. âI thought it was a professional commitment.'
A three-man forensic unit led the entry into the fetid apartment, on the Anacostia side of Capitol Hill, with the investigators, Johnson and the two lawyers behind. Which was where they remained, virtually unspeaking, as the protectively suited three methodically worked through Johnson's home, room by room. Johnson insisted he had a licence for a second .38 Smith and Wesson discovered in the dishevelled bedroom, and which Benton bagged, but remained silent at the gradual accumulation of name-stamped Dubette property, which ranged from pens and notepaper to crockery, linen and towels. A switchblade, one half of the handle broken, was found in a kitchen drawer, among an assortment of tools. Benton put that into an evidence envelope, too. In the living room there were several photographs of Johnson in Metro DC police uniform, none of them featuring either Peter Bellamy or Helen Montgomery. There was also a scrapbook of newspaper cuttings of reported cases in which Johnson had featured. There were also six newspaper stories of the 1996 corruption investigation into the Metro DC force. After a momentary hesitation, Johnson felt beneath an adjoining drawer for the taped-in-place hidden key to the one locked part of a bureau, in which was found Johnson's bank deposit book, with a credit balance of $260,402.
As Dingley said they were seizing the book, Johnson started: âI want to say â¦' before Clarkson said: âNo, you don't!' stopping the man.
âDo you carry a notebook, a message pad?' asked Dingley. âMaybe there's one in your office ⦠around somewhere?'
Johnson reached into the drawer in which the deposit book had been locked and groped a plastic-bound pocketbook from its rear.
âWhy do you want that?' intruded Clarkson.
âThe warrant gives us legal right to seize whatever we decide to be necessary,' said Benton.
âNecessary for what?' demanded the lawyer.
âThere has to be later disclosure, but not at this stage,' reminded Dingley.
There was no conversation whatsoever during the journey out to McLean, Johnson and Clarkson in the rear of the FBI car, Peter Baldwin following in his own vehicle, ahead of the forensic scientists. The flick knife Parnell had described Johnson carrying in his trouser pocket was found in a locker drawer, as well as a set of brass knuckledusters. The forensic examiners extracted the entire drawer and sealed it for further laboratory tests upon what appeared to be small specks of grey paint among debris and dust at its corners and bottom. The holstered .38 Smith and Wesson was in another drawer, along with two spare clips of ammunition. In a top drawer of the desk in Johnson's office, the search uncovered complete photocopies of both Richard Parnell and Rebecca Lang's personnel files.