Read The Best American Crime Reporting 2008 Online
Authors: Jonathan Kellerman
Roughly two months after the shooting, I was in the high Himalaya on assignment. I had been on the trail in Nepal's Himalaya for days, trekking up to fifteen thousand feet along knife-edge ravines and scrambling over rocks and boulders attempting to avoid the Maoist insurgents who controlled the mountains and had killed thirteen thousand so far in their bloody campaign for power in this tiny, poverty-stricken country. Heaving for oxygen in the thin air, we had hiked to the Chinese-occupied Tibetan border from Namche Bazaar, a mountain village at eleven thousand feet and a hub for the Sherpa communities. It's the last place to hire porters and supplies before Everest base camp.
My Sherpa guide Ramesh, Tibetan translator Kunchok, and I were all trying to blend in as tourists and mountaineers. But while others went east to Everest base camp from Namche, we scurried west toward China. We were searching for Tibetan refugees escaping the murder, torture, and ethnic cleansing that were driving them from their homeland to the relative safety of neighboring Nepal, and then into safety in exile in northern India.
High up in the mountains in a hamlet called Thame, I was ushered into some traders' tents under cover of darkness. I met two brothers, their faces lit by a flickering yak-dung fire, who were helping their three sisters, quietly observing me, escape from China to live peacefully as Buddhist nuns. The same two brothers were camp cooks with the expedition that observed the killing at Nangpa La Pass. After the shooting, they realized Tibet was becoming increasingly dangerous under the Chinese, so they wanted their sisters to have the chance of a better life.
The brothers also told me that two years ago they had worked with a climbing expedition and encountered a seventeen-year-old girl who had fallen down a crevasse while fleeing Tibet. “The people she was with tied clothes together and tried to pull her out but it wasn't long enough,” said one brother, Tsering. “The other refugees could only string prayer flags over the hole, drop some barley for her to eat, and watch as the girl was swallowed alive as
her body heat melted the ice and she slipped further and further into the crevasse. The climbers watched through binoculars and did nothing,” says Tsering. “They had ropes but they climbed the mountain instead.”
It disgusted me. When I returned home I also dug into the story of the climbers who witnessed the shooting.
After the story was published, the mountaineering community polarized around the issue. Some readers wrote in to cheer Luis's brave whistle-blowing. But privately, still more attacked him for speaking out against his fellow climbers and the “brotherhood of the rope.” “This is a very dark secret at the heart of our community,” said Benitez. “I have been getting flak from a lot of people to keep my mouth shut. But this is a story that needs to be told. It's just sad that more aren't rallying around the cause. I have no regrets. I would do exactly the same again if I had to.”
G
RATEFUL ACKNOWLEDGMENT
is made to the following for permission to reprint previously published material:
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“The Ploy” by Mark Bowden, first published in
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“Badges of Dishonor” by Pamela Colloff, first published in
Texas Monthly
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“Dean of Death Row” by Tad Friend, first published in
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“Dangerous Minds” by Malcolm Gladwell, first published in
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“The Tainted Kidney” by Charles Graeber, first published in
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“Murder at 19,000 Feet” by Jonathan Green, first published in
Men's Journal
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“I'm with the Steelers” by Justin Heckert, first published in
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“Mercenary” by Tom Junod, first published in
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“The Story of a Snitch” by Jeremy Kahn, first published in
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“A Season in Hell” by Dean LaTourrette, first published in
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“Day of the Dead” by D. T. Max, first published in
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“The Caged Life” by Alan Prendergast, first published in
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“The Serial Killer's Disciple” by James Renner, first published in the
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“Just a Random Female” by Nick Schou, first published in
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“The House Across the Way” by Calvin Trillin, first published in
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J
ONATHAN
K
ELLERMAN
received his Ph.D. in psychology at the age of twenty-four. In 1985, his first novel,
When the Bough Breaks
, became a
New York Times
bestseller, was produced as a TV movie, and won the Edgar Allan Poe and Anthony awards for best first novel. Since then, he has written twenty-seven bestselling crime novels, including, most recently,
Compulsion
.
Â
O
TTO
P
ENZLER
is the proprietor of the Mysterious Bookshop, the founder of the Mysterious Press, the creator of Otto Penzler Books, and the editor of many books and anthologies, including the annual Best American Mystery Stories.
Â
T
HOMAS
H. C
OOK
is the author of twenty-one booksâtwo works of nonfiction and nineteen novels, including
The Chatham School Affair
, which won the Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Novel, and the recent
Master of the Delta
.
Â
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Editors
2002: N
ICHOLAS
P
ILEGGI
2003: J
OHN
B
ERENDT
2004: J
OSEPH
W
AMBAUGH
2005: J
AMES
E
LLROY
2006: M
ARK
B
OWDEN
Cover design by Allison Saltzman
Cover photograph © Geostock/Getty Images
Permissions appear before the About the Editors page.
THE BEST AMERICAN CRIME REPORTING
2008. Copyright © 2008 by Otto Penzler and Thomas H. Cook. Introduction copyright © 2008 by Jonathan Kellerman. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
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*
The victims' names have been changed to protect their identities.