This I would like to thank Francois101 for the editing, and Lastman for his advise and initial impression. Both were a tremendous help in finally getting this out.
Right when I published Without a Whisper, I started a new position at work, and you can tell how much that pulled me away from writing. I'll be done with that position in June, so hopefully the job that follows allows me more free time.
For newcomers, this is the 9th installment of what I'm calling the Criminal Affair Series, which started with the ten-part Criminal Affair. Order of stories for continuity is as follows.
Criminal Affair (ten-part series)
The Sorority
The Irishman at the End of the Bar
A Shoulder to Cry On
A Perfect Match
The Second Booth at Horseshoe Diner
If You'll Believe In Me
Without a Whisper
--
Wednesday - September 9, 2020
-Chase Kramner-
On the fifth of May earlier this year, Oliver Spencer was killed two hours after a bar fight. His body was found the next morning in an alley two blocks away from the bar in question. He was killed when an assailant shot him once in the side of the head when he was standing, and again when he was already dead face first on the asphalt. There were no direct witnesses of the event or the shooter, but people did report they heard two gunshots in quick succession. A puddle of his own urine was found inches away, and his fingerprints were on the brick wall above the puddle. His blood/alcohol was .28%.
All that information makes me assume Oliver stumbled out of the bar and needed to relieve himself. He went to the nearby alley to piss and held himself stable by placing his hand on the wall. While doing so, someone snuck up behind him and shot him with a 9mm pistol. The location of the shell casings tells us the shooter was about eight yards away when they fired. The first hit him in the side of the head, killing him instantly, but the second hit the wall he was pissing on.
54 days later, on June 28, a suspect was arrested in connection with the murder of Oliver. Deshawn Vickers made the mistake of talking to police without a lawyer when initially interviewed on May 6. Deshawn openly admitted he was the man Oliver had gotten into a fight with. His girlfriend Leia pulled him away, and they left together two hours before the estimated time of death. Deshawn hurt his hand when he punched him and went to get x-rays the next morning. He had fractured two fingers. Deshawn thought that was the end of it, until June 28 when five police officers kicked down his door and arrested him at two in the morning.
The prosecution's case hinges on three pieces of information.
Deshawn's confession of the bar fight.
His cellphone being traced to a nearby cell site.
He owned a firearm that chambered 9mm.
His attorney called me on July 20 to help investigate the bar fight and interview witnesses. Since I took the case, my investigator Jo Zielinski and I have interviewed eleven witnesses who were at the bar, an additional seven who lived nearby, and the hospital staff who treated his hand. It's no wonder the prosecution didn't want anyone from the bar as a witness. They all said Oliver started the fight. Patrons and staff.
Oliver was belligerent and tried to get grabby with Leia. Deshawn got between the two of them, and Oliver sucker punched Deshawn as he started to turn away. Dashawn hit him once, and only once, and left with Leia. No one called the police, thinking it wasn't worth the trouble. One witness filmed part of the altercation, but the cellphone only started recording after the sucker punch, removing the context when the prosecution played it to the jury.
One of the servers, Camila Chambers, had her own problems with Oliver in the past. His hands inappropriately touching females was not an isolated incident. Oliver's hands often found their way up women's skirts, on their breasts, and on their butts. Camila tolerated him because he was a good tipper the drunker he got. Oliver was always drunk.
Did any of that mean Deshawn was, or was not, his killer? No.
Did any of that suggest Oliver had possibly pissed off more people than just Deshawn? Yes.
That's not even getting into the peculiar timing of the arrest. Why did the police wait 54 days to arrest him? Five officers were sent to arrest a suspect with no criminal record who had already spoken to them on his own volition.
After the interviews, my employees and I got to work on answering that question.
Lance Portman is my researcher who lives in Pennsylvania. I met him earlier this year when a small-town Sheriff threw me in the trunk of a car and pushed me off a cliff and into a lake. That's a long story. Lance helped me gather information to go after the Sheriff who committed suicide by cop. When my wife Jenn and I started the firm, Lance answered the ad for a researcher, and I gave him the job.