Authors: Dennis Larsen
smelling the doorknob and he began to
growl, and then barks, in a low, deep tone
that reverberated in Natalie’s chest.
“Good boy, good boy,” she said,
scratching behind his ears. The dog sat
and waited further instructions, his tail
still going a mile a minute.
“Anything?” the Sheriff inquired,
standing in the doorway of the kitchen.
“Yeah, lots of hotspots, especially
in the bedroom and here,” she said,
pointing to the table and the sink. “I think
he must have actually used the items that
were washed and placed next to the sink.
Do we have any word from the victim on
any of this?”
The Sheriff pulled the picture from
his pocket. “Nothing from the victim, but
an absolute affirmative from the intruder,“
he said, turning the picture around for the
handler to inspect.
“Okay, well Otis’s hit on the sink
was accurate then. I know for sure that he
entered the woman’s bedroom and must
have sat down or kneeled by the side of
her bed. Other than that it’s pretty obvious
that he was in the living room moving the
furniture and all, but I’m pretty sure that he
didn’t enter any of the other rooms in the
house. Otis didn’t hit on anything other
than the three rooms and the hallway. I
suspect as you said, that he exited the back
door, Otis is really anxious to get out there
and take a look.”
“Go ahead, see where it takes you,
but don’t be a hero, if you need us send for
help. Check your radio with base before
you get too far away,” Angelo instructed,
moving back to the front of the house.
“Hey Breland, you coming with
us?” she hollered from the kitchen.
“Yeah, yeah hold your horses, I’ll
be right there,” he yelled back, pulling a
shotgun from the cruiser and walking
quickly to the house.
The trio moved about the backyard
catching another strong sign in the back
corner where they could see the grass was
matted as if someone had sat there. Otis
thoroughly sniffed his way around the
backspace showing particular attention to
a section of the fence where the intruder
had climbed over. Once they managed to
find a way to the other side of the fence,
the group took off at a run, as Otis
bounded along the trail that led to the train
tracks and beyond.
The sound of Otis barking, hot on
the trail, was scarcely audible when the
forensic unit arrived complete with their
on site van. Sheriff Lupo filled the
technicians in on what had been done and
left it to them to scour the house for clues.
He also turned the picture over to the
techs to receive an ID number, and then
tucked it away in his shirt pocket for
further scrutiny back at the office.
Confident that a deputy left at the site,
along with the forensics crew, could
handle anything else that needed to be
done,
the
Sheriff
and
other
law
enforcement officials at the scene returned
to their duties and the Sheriff contacted
Natalie on his radio.
“Officer Guest, Sheriff Lupo here,
where are you and what have you found?”
“We’re
about
half
a
mile
northwest of your location moving through
some fields that lie between some of the
neighborhoods over here. It looks like he
didn’t take a straight line back to his
vehicle but he definitely avoided any
lighted areas and did not come close to
any other houses. Kept to the tracks, then
fields, at some point he’s got to hit the
blacktop, but not yet. We’ll keep you
posted,” the officer said, trying to both run
with Otis and talk into her shoulder
microphone at the same time.
“You do that, if nothing turns up
return to the office and issue a verbal
report for me before you do your written,”
he instructed.
“Affirmative, out,” she responded.
Once the house was processed the
remaining
units
returned
to
their
respective responsibilities and the search
for evidence began in earnest. The Sheriff,
as the head of the department, now had
some difficult decisions to make. The
processing of a crime scene can get
expensive very quickly. Anything sent to
the crime lab had a substantial bill
associated with it, as well as, slowing
down other investigations that may prove
to be more important. On the surface, this
and the previous B&E with Thelma,
seemed harmless really, nothing taken, no
one hurt, no damage to property, just
seemed to be geared at scaring someone,
and not at the time, but after the perp was
safely away. Still something in the back of
his mind told him there was something
more to it than that, especially after
looking at the malevolent picture of the
thief eating his cereal. Weighing his
alternatives he had his secretary call the
press and arrange for a press conference
the next morning, followed by a meeting of
all pertinent officers, tech support,
forensics and others that may have any
impact on the investigation, to bring him
up to speed on the crime. Based on that
information and his gut feeling he would
need to decide if it should be pursued
beyond the normal bounds of a routine
B&E.
The press conference had gone as
well as he had expected, always had to be
at least one reporter that tried to press for
more information than they were willing
to give. “Jackass,” he thought, thinking
back on the exchange. He’d returned to his
office long enough to get a fresh cup of
coffee and allow a few minutes for all
those invited to the investigative review
meeting to make their way to the
conference room. Sitting at his desk, a
notepad resting before him, Angelo
organized his thoughts and jotted down
details he wanted to discuss with the
group. Leaning back in the leather chair,
he looked at the pictures arrayed on the
wall, his father in uniform, medals
decorating his left breast. Another of his
wife and two children taken when they
were much younger, but it still filled his
large chest with pride when he recognized
how blessed he had been. He understood
that nothing was more important than
family and he took his oath to protect all
families within his jurisdiction as a sacred
covenant. Once he was confident that
everyone was assembled, he checked to
make sure the picture taken from the
Criddle home was in his shirt pocket,
picked up his coffee mug, the notepad, and
headed to the meeting.
Entering the room, a respectful
silence replaced what was, a few
moments ago, a circus atmosphere.
Approximately 20 people were scattered
around the long table that extended down
the center of the room. Most stood, but a
few were seated around the table, pens at
the ready. Some were easily recognizable
as troopers, uniforms with hats, but many
were dressed much more casual, the
support staff and forensics people. This
was his extended family, the men and
women that he loved to serve with, he
knew within his heart that he would take a
bullet for any of them, and they for him, if
circumstances dictated. The Sheriff’s
Department was a close knit, cohesive
unit that had fused together as one over the
past 10 years of his leadership, they knew
he expected the best from each of them
and wouldn’t tolerate bullshit of any kind.
He both demanded and gave respect and
praise when it was worthy. The members
of the department anxiously awaited his
direction.
“Thank ya’ll for coming,” he
began. “We are going to take some time
today to review both the cases that have
fallen into our laps over the past couple of
weeks involving these single ladies,” he
said, pointing to the pictures of Thelma
Riddle and Katherine Criddle that were
thumb tacked up on a rollaway display.
“I’d like to begin with what I know you
are all thinking, Riddle and Criddle. Is
this a joke or a random occurrence? Is he
selecting his victims based on some
strange last name comparison? You’ll note
I said individual rather than group, I
believe this to be the work of one man
based on the evidence that I’ve seen.
Anyone think otherwise?” he asked the
group. No one offered an alternative
theory. “Good, so back to the names, any
thoughts?”
“Sheriff, we did some checking
yesterday afternoon on the backgrounds of
both of the victims. There is absolutely
nothing that links them. They don’t know
each other, never met, don’t attend the
same church, don’t shop at the same
stores, have different circle of friends.
There was nothing we could find, at least
to date, other than the fact that they live
within a few miles of each other and that
could just be random as well,” one of the
investigators offered.
“Good. I’ve done some thinking on
this myself and I think we need to consider
a couple more things. Both women were
single, had no steady boyfriends, no
children, no pets, owned their own homes,
we shouldn’t overlook the obvious just
because they didn’t know one another.
Does anyone else have any ideas on how
he selected these two women? Did he just
go to the phonebook and randomly pick
these locations or did he pick the women
first?” the Sheriff stood, waiting for a
reply.
An answer came by way of the
smallest person present, “I believe he
must have a criteria that he’s sticking to.
First, he picks a house based on the entry.
Is it dark and secluded, does it have fairly
easy access from the back without any
other homes close by? Then once that
satisfies him he does his homework on the
victim. For what he wants to do he has to
have lots of time, doesn’t want to be
interrupted. I mean, for God’s sake, he sat
down and ate a bowl of cereal in the
woman’s kitchen while she slept in the
next room. So no kids, no pets, no
boyfriends, no unexpected surprises, no
pesky neighbors and he’s smart, real
smart. He knows dogs too. He ran us
around in circles for the better part of two
hours yesterday trying to get old Otis to
lose his scent, and he finally succeeded,
but we estimate that he parked the car
within a three-mile radius, probably in an
alley somewhere. We have plans to go do
some interviews this afternoon with some
of the late night establishments in that
northwest quadrant. If that’s okay with you
Sheriff?" Officer Guest requested.
He liked her eagerness. “Yup, do
what ya gotta do. I think, Natalie here, is
right. The only way I see the two names as
a common denominator is, if in fact, these
are total pranks done by somebody with a
sick sense of humor. I’d like the public to
believe that for now. But as far as we are
concerned we are going to move ahead
with the assumption that there is something
more sinister at work here. Officer Guest
mentioned the photo, has everyone seen
it?” Several of the officers indicated that
they had not, so Angelo passed it around.
“Much like the first photo, same camera
it’s been confirmed, less of his face
visible this time around, but the portion
showing is much more detailed due to the
better lighting. He was careful to
demonstrate for us what he was up to. I
expect that’s some power trip or some
kind of a taunt directed at us. Note the
black face paint, possible ex-military or
survivalist, somebody check that angle.