Chapter 104 Culprit, and Case Solved
She could ask Luke later whether her purchase of weed would be exposed during the investigation.
Thinking that, Jenny carefully put Lukeās card in her purse.
She was slightly reassured by Lukeās promise. At least, she felt that she could pay the young officer for inside information from the police department.
Luke, however, had other plans.
Jenny had bought weed from drug dealers. For Luke, she was a gold mine.
As long as he kept an eye on her and even pretended to befriend her, Luke might be able to catch a big fish with her help.
Luke had never realized the importance of money until he came to Los Angeles.
He would need a tremendous amount of money to establish the network of informants that he had in mind.
After solving Katieās case, he could cripple the dealers who had provided Jenny with the illegal drugs and shake them down for the money he needed.
He returned to the police department with Elsa. They began to watch the footage which they had just acquired.
Based on the timestamp from Davidās videotape, they soon found the shadow again.
On the videotape from Jennyās camera, the person appeared twice, at 3:35 and 3:57 respectively. Altogether, there was almost thirty secondsā worth of footage of him on video.
It was a pity that the manās face was blocked by a cloak. He was also intentionally keeping his head down, so it was impossible to tell what he looked like.
The footage gave them a clear idea of his height and physique, however, which was important progress.
Elsa wasnāt in a hurry, and continued watching the videotape with Luke.
They rewound it clip by clip.
It was a weekās worth of surveillance footage on the videotape, and few people appeared on this back road. Thus, they were able to skim through it quickly.
When the videotape was rewound to the evening of the day before yesterday, Luke suddenly called out, āStop!ā
Elsa instinctively hit the pause button.
Luke said, āPlay it back a little. Right there! Elsa, do you see him?ā
Elsa squinted at the man who was walking toward the camera, his back to the setting sun. His face happened to be turned to the side, allowing the sun to illuminate it.
She said, āCall a technician. Ask them to compare the man with the suspect.ā
A technician soon arrived to process the image of the man on the videotape, before he generated a model on the computer.
Comparing the model with the person on Davidās videotape, the technician said decisively, āItās a 92% match; most likely, theyāre the same person.ā
Elsa said excitedly, āRun his profile through the facial recognition system and see if we get any hits.ā
The technician was immediately on it.
Elsa and Luke went to Dustinās office with the photo.
Elsa had barely presented the photo to the commanding officer of the Major Crimes Division when he frowned. āSergei Mazanov?ā
Elsa was stunned. āBoss, do you know him?ā.
Dustin said, āHeās not active in our territory, but heās the leader of a Eastern European gang in New York. Iāve seen his file before. Heās brutal and vindictive. Why are you investigating him?ā
Elsa said, āHe could be our suspect in Katieās murder.ā
Dustin exclaimed, āWhat?ā
His head throbbed fiercely when he heard the answer.
Things were tricky now!
If his guess was correct, this man wouldāve returned to New York after the crime.
That meant that in order to investigate the case, they would have to work with NYPD, which could be complicated.
More importantly, the man was a gang leader.
NYPD might not be interested in challenging a notorious gangster over a Los Angeles case.
The gangs from Eastern Europe were famous for their insanity and brutality.
They wouldnāt hesitate to use bombs or RPGs in downtown city areas if they were cornered.
Would NYPD risk that over a case in Los Angeles?
Dustin waved his hand and said, āWork on the case and verify that heās the criminal first. As to when the criminal can be arrested, that will be another matter.ā
It wasnāt exactly the best solution.
After all, a case was never really closed until the culprit was caught.
The public didnāt consider the practical problems that the police department faced in law enforcement, and would only curse the policeās ineptness.
The rich upper-class would know better, however, so the pressure from them wouldnāt be as bad.
Interstate law enforcement had always been a problem in America. Most of the time, it required FBI intervention.
Few local police departments, however, would be glad to invite the FBI to share the credit; they would never ask for the FBIās help unless it was absolutely necessary.
Elsa and Luke looked at each other and shook their heads with bitter smiles. This case was truly depressing.
Now that they had a suspect, the investigation became a lot easier.
Soon, they got word from the forensics department that the John Doe and Sergei were a 99.99% DNA match.
John Doe was actually Sergeiās biological son.
At that point of the investigation, Elsa and Dustin basically figured out what had happened.
It was still unknown how Sergeiās 200-pound son had died in Katieās pool, but Sergei obviously blamed Katie for it.
He even took action personally and drowned Katie in the exact same pool.
Katieās autopsy report wasnāt out yet, but Elsa learned that there had been a sedative in Katieās system.
Sergei had obviously drugged Katie before throwing her into the pool
Thus, she didnāt cry for help, and there were no signs of a struggle. Katie had simply drowned in the pool without a sound.
The case was basically solved.
Elsa and Dustin werenāt exactly happy, but they were in much better moods than before.
They now knew who the criminal was, although he had yet to be apprehended. The police department finally had something to tell the public now.
Luke wasnāt interested in staying any longer with the two old detectives. He simply said that he had things to do at home because he had just moved here, and left.
He left without hesitation because the system had already rewarded him for solving the case.
Mission: Solve Katieās murder.
Total experience: 50. Total credit: 50.
Contribution rate: 80%. EXP +40. Credit +40.