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White Death

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by Philip C. Baridon




  First published by Roundfire Books, 2013

  Roundfire Books is an imprint of John Hunt Publishing Ltd., Laurel House, Station Approach,

  Alresford, Hants, SO24 9JH, UK

  office1@jhpbooks.net

  www.johnhuntpublishing.com

  www.roundfire-books.com

  For distributor details and how to order please visit the ‘Ordering’ section on our website.

  Text copyright: Philip Baridon 2013

  ISBN: 978 1 78279 080 8

  All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publishers.

  The rights of Philip Baridon as author have been asserted in accordance with the Copyright,

  Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  Design: Stuart Davies

  Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon, CR0 4YY

  We operate a distinctive and ethical publishing philosophy in all areas of our business, from our global network of authors to production and worldwide distribution.

  CONTENTS

  Chapter 1 – Rise of the Triumvirate

  Chapter 2 – Ambience

  Chapter 3 – The Beat

  Chapter 4 – Rain and Snow

  Chapter 5 – Bail

  Chapter 6 – Return of the Titles

  Chapter 7 – Steelworkers in Paradise

  Chapter 8 – Midnights

  Chapter 9 – Business Problems

  Chapter 10 – The Weight of Responsibility

  Chapter 11 – A New Plan

  Chapter 12 – The Crime Beat

  Chapter 13 – High Times

  Chapter 14 – Narcotics Division

  Chapter 15 – Filleted Princess

  Chapter 16 – Double Cross

  Chapter 17 – Intelligence Division

  Chapter 18 – Insertion

  Chapter 19 – Under and Outside

  Chapter 20 – Smuggling Drugs

  Chapter 21 – A Family Feud

  Chapter 22 – Textbook Investigation

  Chapter 23 – One-Way Ticket

  Chapter 24 – The Calls

  Chapter 25 – Back to Work

  Chapter 26 – The Takedown

  Chapter 27 – A Gambler’s Chip

  Chapter 28 – Showdown

  Chapter 29 – An Odd Triangle

  Chapter 30 – A Pact

  Chapter 31 – Afterthoughts

  Chapter 32 – Sparks

  Epilogue

  Notes

  Chapter 1

  Rise of the Triumvirate

  Barranquilla, Colombia, November 1968

  El Patron turned to one of his lieutenants, “Get rid of the body.” His voice sounded flat, emotionless. El Patron had just shot a drug mule twice in the head at point-blank range. Perhaps a little too close, as he casually flicked a piece of brain matter from his shoulder. “Cut off both hands, leave the wedding band on, return the truck to the factory with the right hand, and tell them to find drivers who won’t short me a brick. The left hand is for the widow. Make the message clear: Cheat me, and you die.”

  As a wisp of smoke curled up from the barrel tip, he held the gun flat in his hand and eyed it for a moment. This C-96 Broomhandle Mauser, a top-loading 9 mm, was a trophy that always brought him good luck. He believed the story Marcus Sterling, his Cuban partner, told him when Marcus gave him the gun: An old soldier, down on his luck, had taken it from a dead German officer in 1944. The Cuban had picked it up for a fraction of its value, one more piece for El Patron‘s extensive gun collection.

  The gun brought back the scene about six months earlier. He had met Sterling in a Miami hotel and a new partner. Tyrone (the Professor) Jones was a respected and self-educated heroin dealer in Washington D.C. The Professor had been well-recommended by associates trusted by Gonzalez and Sterling for years.

  With the amphetamine market in tatters, cocaine they agreed could fill that void. People would be willing to pay for stimulants. In addition, a new middle-class market was emerging, one that did not attach a stigma to cocaine use. Jones had a well-established distribution network in place, which already controlled most of the city’s heroin, adding cocaine would not be difficult. Of course, the plan required hiring some white dealers who could fit into the go-go bars and suburbs.

  Sterling was enthusiastic, but Gonzalez less sanguine and clearer about potential problems. The production of cocaine paste was scattered from the Upper Huauaga Valley of Peru to the San Jorge Valley of Colombia. “Who is going to oversee the three distinct steps? Specifically – leaf to paste; paste to base; and base to the final product, cocaine hydrochloride. The paste also has a short shelf-life and must be converted rapidly to base. This last step requires a yet-to-be-constructed laboratory near Barranquilla.”

  Gonzalez’s questions were pertinent and to the point. He then offered, to nobody in particular, that he had established a friendship with a Paez Indian chieftain, who had left his tribe to join the Colombian military to fight the FARC – a five-year-old communist insurgency, which had already clashed with the Paez. “They may be interested in money or arms to help protect their lands, and they cultivate significant amounts of leaf and convert it to paste.”

  Sterling said he would be willing to fly to Peru to investigate possibilities for establishing reliable connections there.

  Jones asked about the lab. “What will it cost? What does it need? How much space is required?”

  Gonzalez had replied, “A good lab consists of several buildings including dormitories, eating facilities, generators, and filtering and drying equipment. The cost is considerable.”

  After further discussion, the three men agreed to divide lab costs evenly, but profits as follows: Gonzalez 35 percent; Sterling 30 percent; and Jones 35 percent. Jones argued that his risk exposure was greater, and the primary function of Sterling was logistics. The plan included construction of the lab in an industrial zone in Barranquilla, a convenient location close to the Ernesto Cortissoz International Airport.

  These men had just formed the Barranquilla Cartel, which would control cocaine from Richmond to Philadelphia.

  Yes, thought Gonzalez, as his gazing at the gun ended. It had seemed so much easier then, when risks could be assessed and shares divided.

  Chapter 2

  Ambience

  Washington, D.C., May 1969

  I worked in the Fifteenth Precinct in the northwest part of the city, a short block from Georgia Avenue, a principal urban corridor. After a year of cajoling, my friend Mike had signed up with the Metropolitan Police Department (MPDC), completed “Rookie School,” and was assigned to my precinct. A converted old brick colonial, the station house’s gray slate roof had seen a half-century of winters. On the main floor, cheap partitions replaced walls, and government furniture made in federal prisons was dropped everywhere. Painters, apparently, had been told to use light green or brown on every non-moving thing. The building stank of fast food, cigarette smoke and, during hot spells, sweat. Telephones rang from everywhere, and both emergency and non-emergency calls came into the desk sergeant’s area. Across from there was a space for paperwork and informal interviews, full of metal desks facing each other and never enough wooden chairs.

  Walking toward the back of the station, a right turn led you to a cellblock for short-term detentions. A standard prank was to lure a rookie into one of the cells and lock him in for at least an hour. A left turn in the precinct brought you to a circular staircase, perhaps reminiscent of a grander time, which led upstairs to the roll-call room.

  The basement—cluttered with desks, mechanical typewriters, and governm
ent-issue ballpoint pens—featured one table with stacks of forms for all necessary reports. Officers interviewed and processed prisoners here, including, for example, a standard Form 252 for each misdemeanor or felony arrest. The most coveted desk sat by a rusting cold-water pipe that ran vertically near the corner of the room‘s entry. One cuff fit around the pipe and the other around a wrist, while the officer completed the paperwork.

  Officers with dangerous or agitated prisoners got priority. Out the back center door was an overhang where police brought in prisoners, and cruisers rolled in to be “hot-seated” during shift changes. The motor kept idling; the radio turned up loud; and the relieving officers were often handed a clipboard with new radio runs that the prior crew was unable or unwilling to take. Squabbles about fast-food trash in the back, or shoved under the seat, were common.

  An eight-foot cyclone fence enclosed the area around the building, including a parking lot and a gas pump.

  The workload was intense during late afternoons and night. The “power shift” ran from 6:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. Roll call for each shift started one-half before. Therefore, day work began at 5:30 a.m.; the evening at 3:30 p.m.; and midnights at 11:30 p.m. (As a paramilitary organization, they use the 24-hour time system.)

  Coming late was never an option, and tonight we worked 3:30 p.m. to midnight. Outside the room hung a grease board with the “uniform of the day” written on it. The official uniform could be short sleeves, long sleeves, blouses, or heavy jackets. Beefs about short sleeves in fifty-degree weather or blouses in ninety-degree heat were common. Nevertheless, changing was not negotiable. In fact, nothing was changeable. Uttering the word union would cause lightning to strike your cruiser. The brothers shuffled into roll call alone, in pairs, or small groups, at least fifteen minutes early.

  The banter and bravado often boiled down to, “I got more testosterone than you do.” The room was self-segregated, with black officers on the right and white on the left.

  “Hey, Brinson,” came the taunt from the left, “you are one seriously ugly motherfucker.” Brinson’s voice on the radio was one of several that you wanted to hear when you needed serious backup, fast. Brinson swaggered up to the podium and addressed the room. “I’m the biggest, blackest, and meanest, nigger in this room. Anybody got a problem with that?” Hearing no objections, he returned to his seat, only for the usual buzz to resume. Footsteps pounding up the stairs signaled the beginning of work.

  Sergeant Townsen and Lieutenant Dominik scanned the room for missing faces in the platoon. As usual, the next thirty minutes followed an orderly sequence of assignments (partners, special details); teletype (who has been robbed, shot, or flimflammed in the last sixteen hours); and the distribution of auto “hot sheets.”

  Today, he circulated an artist’s sketch of a man wanted for the murder of a Maryland state trooper. The look-out-for was a red Ford model 110 with Maryland tags. Everybody memorized the information not only to avoid being the next victim of a shotgun clamped to the inside of a driver’s door, but also to acknowledge how often the fraternity of police crossed jurisdictional and racial boundaries. It could happen to anyone. In this case, as the trooper approached, the killer opened the door to the correct angle and shot him. All listened to assignments with anticipation, because the chemistry between you and your partner (if you had one) would color the next eight hours.

  “Rip and Country in 64; O’Day, you’re alone in 65; Preacher, you’re also 10-99 in 66; 67 is out for brakes. If you assholes don’t stop riding the brakes with your left foot, I’m going to put you on permanent midnights, on foot beats eight and nine, and you can eat that biker-bar food. Grabowski and Crash in the wagon. Grab, you drive; Flyboy, you got Jansen the rookie, three and four beats, pull on the half; PT, take one and two beats on the hour.”

  “Shit, Sarge,” said PT with a huge smile radiating across the room. “Let’s make it interesting,” he pulled five new twenties from his pocket and spread them apart, like a poker hand. “I got a hundred dollars here that says, with a half-hour head start, I can pull every box, and you’ll never find me.”

  Grabowski farted his approval of the proposed wager as laughter replaced the momentary silence.

  This was a familiar jibe by PT, but Townsen was in no mood for it.

  “Let’s make it more interesting. You will pull every box, and I will see you on the street working your beat. If I don’t, I keep the money, and you don’t need directions to the Trial Board because you’ve been there before.”

  “Sure, Sarge,” now with wild laughter. “You can blindfold me on the front steps of headquarters, and I’ll still find the right room.”

  The litany of assignments continued. Roll call ended with an inspection of uniforms and revolvers.

  Lieutenant Dominik looked at Grab’s filthy pants. “When is the last time you changed the oil in your pants?”

  “Huh?”

  “For Christ’s sake, Grab, take your uniforms to the cleaners before I see you again.”

  The lieutenant concluded with, “Take your beats, men.”

  Chapter 3

  The Beat

  Washington, D.C., May 1969

  The next day, Jansen and I took PT’s normal one and two beats. We had barely started strolling when I noticed a familiar-looking figure ambling down the sidewalk.

  “Mike, I know that guy with the dark sweater stepping toward us. I arrested him a couple of years ago for selling stolen property out of the trunk of his car. As a second conviction, he pulled a little time.”

  “Leroy, you remember me?”

  “Yeah.”

  “You must have built up your good time to be out so early.”

  “Yeah.”

  “Seems like you got a good job. Did I see you mowing fields in the park here?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Pays good?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Your parole officer happy?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Nice talking to you, Leroy.”

  “Yeah.”

  “I can tell he’s a close friend, Jake,” said Mike, laughing.

  “Yeah.”

  I reminded Mike about the blue call boxes every five or six blocks, with a phone going directly to the station. You pulled a box on the hour or half past it. Because the promised radios for footmen had not yet arrived, any arrests were taken to a box to call for transport – old-style police work. With a thin shift, we walked many beats alone at night. Citizens sometimes helped out officers with phone calls, but this unseen help gradually disappeared as the beats moved south into all-black neighborhoods. Here, many viewed the police as an unwelcome, even occupying army. One and two beats were on Georgia Avenue, about sixteen blocks in total. Beginning at Missouri Avenue, one and two moved south through a busy commercial corridor of clubs, cleaners, liquor stores, and bars.

  Everyone knew one bar near the beginning of the beat: the Zombies. I passed through the rusting iron security bars welded to the back door and into the kitchen with Jansen in tow. Maude, the cook, was a somewhat heavy black woman in her late thirties, with astonishing mammary development. Even when adding a little extra grease to her recipe, she greeted all cops coming through the back with a special treat.

  “Jake, honey, your hands look cold.” She put each hand inside her stained blouse and used both hands to rub them in a circular motion around her breasts. Looking at Mike, she said, “I don’t know you, baby, but you got that uniform on, so what’s your name?”

  I grinned at Jansen and said, “Close your mouth and use it to answer her.”

  “Mike,” he replied weakly. As she was giving Mike “the treatment,” she apologized that her boobs were “not as hot” because of my cold hands.

  As we walked into the bar, I leaned over into Jansen’s ear and said, “There are two ironclad rules here: First, don’t eat Maude’s food; and second, look but don’t touch any of the women. We come here after a shift to buy half-price drinks. Every woman in here is a lesbian. It’s
a straight bar during the day. You can see that most of the barflies are beginning to leave. At 6:00 p.m., one of the dykes puts a ten-dollar cover charge for men in the window, in case they’re new to town and think they just found paradise.”

  Some had begun to dance, a few were making out in the booths which lined the long wall, and others sat at the bar drinking and chatting. The Zombies was rectangular with a relatively small area facing the sidewalk and entrance, and Maude’s kitchen was out of direct sight in the back. The bar faced out onto a nice wooden dance floor.

  A bear dyke with a light brown crew cut walked slowly up to me with a half-smile on her face, her hobnailed boots clicking on the wooden dance floor as she approached. Large dykes, sometimes called “bear dykes,” are lesbians who present themselves in a masculine manner. Big Carol and I had a symbiotic relationship, meaning I accepted her without overt, or even implied, criticism. Of course, I took heat for this from some of the brothers. Because no man had accepted her before, Carol felt “special” toward me. Sometimes, we sat and got drunk together, talking like two men. She would occasionally ask for advice on behalf of one of her “femmes,” who constituted the majority of the bar’s denizens. I, in turn, used Carol’s apparently inexhaustible knowledge of the street scene. It was a delicate dance. I had to be hyper-alert not to push too hard or too often. Her information was almost always more credible than that of my other informants – two hookers and an ex-stickup man on parole looking at five years’ backup time if he tripped up.

  At six-foot-four-inches and about two-hundred-twenty pounds, Carol was larger than both of us. She wore motorcycle boots, jeans, a denim top, and a black leather vest with leather dangles.

  “How you been, Flyboy? Looks like they gave you a newbie to break in.” Jansen, who appeared recovered from Maude’s treatment, was staring up at the toughest-looking woman he had ever seen. Big Carol continued, “I hope you’ve already told this boy to keep his hands off my girls.”

  Looking around distractedly, I replied, “Yeah, we covered the rules. I don’t see Tina and Nina.”

 

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