I raise a finger. One more point.
Whats troubling to me is why Templeton invited us to file the Brady motion immediately. Why not wait? He knew the feds would be forced to come out of the shadows, to show their hand the minute it was filed. You have to wonder why.
Unless Im wrong, this little tidbit will have Rhytag and his underlings looking for a stick to tie the Dwarf to so they can burn him at the stake. The quick Brady motion was Templetons idea. The feds had taken the photos from his files, but they wouldnt tell him why. The curiosity must have been killing him, so he stirred the pot to see what would happen.
We need to talk to Katia about everything, go over it all one more time, everything she told us, and we need to do it soon.
Its already been arranged, says Harry. Shell be on the morning bus day after tomorrow with the early arraignments. We dont meet with Quinn until one in the afternoon. That gives us all morning to huddle with her and pick her brain.
And it gives Rhytag two days to wire the courthouse holding cell where we will talk to her. Hes going to be very disappointed when Nitikins name never comes up. But we can convey Templetons offer to her, the LWOP, and make sure the judge is satisfied she understands all the terms before she turns it down. Harry is convinced its the only way were going to get Templeton off my back.
We cant get her in any sooner? Why not tomorrow? I say.
I already tried. Quinns not available, says Harry. Thats as soon as we can do it. So whats next? Where do we go from here?
We go back to where we started. Pike was killed for the photographs. Theyre still the key to our case. We go after the pictures.
And just how do you propose doing that?
I check my watch. Its just after ten thirty in the morning and our script has run dry. But its always best to leave them with an unanswered question. How about an early lunch? I say. For some reason Im hungry this morning. I give Harry a wink.
Sure, why not?
As we head out of the conference room, Harry turns toward his office. I grab his arm.
I need to get my jacket, he says.
Lets take a walk. We go out through the front door of the office in shirtsleeves. Instead of turning left toward Miguels Cocina, through the little plaza and out under the arch onto Orange Avenue, we turn right and go out the back way, past the trash cans, to a small gate that leads to the parking area behind the buildings.
Whats going on? says Harry.
You asked me how I was going to get the photographs. Rhytag thinks he has the only copies. Its possible that he doesnt.
If youre gonna tell me you got Pikes laptop, says Harry, Im going to start thinking the Dwarf may be onto something after all.
No, its not the laptop. But the day I met with Katia alone out at the jail, I think you were busy with something else. She told me something and I let it slide, because at the time I didnt think it was important. She told me that her camera, the one her mother used to take the shots down in Colombia, is at her mothers house in San José. She told me that as far as she knows, the original images that her mother took are still in the camera. Pike told her that he didnt erase them from the media in the camera when he copied them to his laptop.
Thats assuming we believe him, says Harry.
If were going to get the photos, its the only shot weve got.
TWENTY-SIX
If he ever got drunk and unruly in a bar, Herman Diggs would be the bouncers worst nightmare, though you wouldnt know it from his smiling face and glistening bald head as it pops around the corner of my office door this morning.
Understand you got something for me, he says.
I have never actually put a tape measure on Herman, but as he comes through the door he fills it with only a few inches to spare at the top and nothing on the sides. Herman is our investigator. African American, in his thirties, he is a human brick. A blown knee in college crushed Hermans dreams of a football career and left him with a slight limp, though if you ever saw him run someone down and bury him from behind, you might question this.
Lets go grab a cup of coffee, I say.
Herman and I stroll out to Miguels Cocina, under the palm fronds over the patio. We sit at one of the small tables.
I dont think theyre open yet, says Herman.
Harry and I have decided that certain things shouldnt be discussed in the office, I tell him.
Herman gives me a sideways glance.
The walls have ears, I say.
Who would do a thing like that? he says.
You dont want to know. But be careful using your phone or talking in your office concerning the matter were about to discuss. Harry and I are using nothing but notepads and carrier pigeons for the moment, I tell him. Dont send any e-mails or leave any voice mail on any of our office systems, or for that matter, our residential phones or e-mail. Well have to find other ways to keep in touch. And forget the cell phones because theyre now party lines.
Federal government, says Herman.
I nod.
What did you do, forget to pay your taxes?
Hows your calendar? I ask.
Im booked tomorrow afternoon. I got a court appearance for another client. After that Im open for a few days. How much time do you need?
It depends on how fast you can work and whether you can find what were looking for. Its the Solaz case.
I pull my wallet out of my hip pocket. I open it and fish out a tiny folded slip of paper. Its the one I gave to Katia that day at the jail so she could write down her mothers address. I folded it up and put it in my wallet. I kept forgetting to put it in the file. It is part of the reason the camera had slipped my mind.
Its not a street number. They dont use street numbers the way we do. Its in Spanish. Its a written description of how to get to the house. She wrote it on this slip of paper.
Costa Rica, says Herman.
How did you know that?
Only place in the western hemisphere doesnt have mail service, he says. Been there, know it well. What city?
San José.
No problem.
Its the thing about Herman. He knows the central and southern part of the western hemisphere like the back of his hand. He and I first met in Mexico on a case that turned violent. When we finally popped up our heads, we realized we were the only two people in sight who could trust each other.
What is it youre looking for?
A camera. I dont know what it looks like or where its located in the house.
Still or video?
Stillpoint-and-shoot, probably something small.
Can you talk to your client and get a description?
Ill see her tomorrow in the lockup at the courthouse. Im sure I can get a description, the problem is how to do it without having the world listening in.
You think theyre gonna wire the lawyers conference cubicle in the courthouse?
Yes.
Herman gives a long, slow whistle. Whats this lady involved in? Besides murder, I mean.
Thats the problem. We dont know. And Im not sure she does.
Use notes, says Herman.
I doubt if she can read English all that well, and I havent written any Spanish since high school.
Get somebody to write the questions down ahead of time, this afternoon, in Spanish. Have her write the answers and you can have em translated when youre done.
Good thought.
Dont get me wrong, I dont mind taking a trip to Costa Rica, but why dont you just have her call somebody down there to look for the camera? says Herman.
I thought about it. If I have her call from the jail, the feds are going to know about the camera immediately. The FBI
always has a resident agent at the embassies. If they get there ahead of us, we lose the camera and the pictures. Second, if were correct in our assumptions, the camera contains some photographs we believe are central to our case. We dont know if we can trust the family. If we ask them for the camera, the pictures may disappear. We think the pictures are the reason Emerson Pike was killed. So be aware that there may be some risk involved here.
Youre telling me Im gonna get hazardous-duty pay?
Be careful. You may earn it. The house in San José belongs to the defendants mother. Shes the one who took the pictures. Other than that we dont know anything about her. She may be a player. She may be an innocent bystander. She may not even be there. We dont know. According to Katia, there are no other family members who hang out at the house, just her and her mother, though she has friends who apparently have access, enough to leave a note at the house. Harry called one of them, a girlfriend of Katias, and asked her to leave a message at the house for Katias mother in case she came home. The mother was supposed to call the law office, but so far weve received no word. So we have to assume shes still gone. What Im saying is that Im not giving out any character references, so be on your guard.
Got it.
One other thing; when youre down there, keep your ear to the ground. In addition to the camera, were looking for a lead on a man named Nitikin. Hes the defendants grandfather.
Do you have a first name?
No. Ill put it on the list of Spanish questions. Given what we dont know, I tell him, thats going to turn out to be a very long list.
TWENTY-SEVEN
Kim Howard entered the room, followed by Zeb Thorpe, head of the FBIs National Security Branch. They were meeting in the conference room at the FBI field office in San Diego, out on Aero Drive and not far from the Marine Corp Air Station at Miramar.
How was your flight? Jim Rhytag was already set up at the table, going over reports from the FBI transcripts.
Dont ask, said Thorpe.
What have we got so far? Thorpe dropped his briefcase on the table and shed his suit coat.
Has anybody briefed the White House yet? said Rhytag.
Im told the national security advisor included it in his briefing to the president yesterday morning, said Thorpe. The president wants an update every morning.
I just started going over the summaries of the transcripts from the recordings, the office and phones, said Rhytag. According to the analysts, theres not a lot. Unfortunately, we got a late start. If we could have gotten the warrants a few days earlier, and surveillance in place faster, it would have made a big difference.
We did the best we could, said Thorpe. You forget, we had to shop for the judge.
Thorpe had a point. There were eleven judges appointed by the Chief Justice of the United States to serve on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. In any close case the FBI and the Justice Department had a pretty good idea which members of the court would give them a warrant and which judges might give them a hard time.
Rhytags lawyers and Thorpes agents had to wait nearly two weeks until the judge they wanted was on call. Then last weekend, when most of the judges on the special court were gone, they filed their application and snagged the judge they wanted.
It was a tough sell convincing a federal judge to allow them to electronically record conversations between lawyers, as well as between those lawyers and their client, who was already behind bars on state homicide charges.
The pitch they made was that the defendant, Katia Solaz-Nitikin, was believed to be a foreign agent working at the behest of an as-yet-unidentified foreign power. She had entered the United States in the company of a retired operative of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, Emerson Pike. She was then believed to have murdered Pike at his home in San Diego County. They then used the old Soviet intelligence documents linking Nitikin to the missing nuclear device. They used the photographs taken by Katias mother, along with the information they had concerning the disappearance and possible homicide of the photo analyst in Virginia, which they claimed identified Nitikin as being alive. They established the family relationship between Katia and her grandfather. They then summed it all up. It was the governments belief that Emerson Pike had stumbled onto a plot involving Yakov Nitikin and a nuclear device in his possession, possibly involving the transport of that device to an unknown destination within the United States for the purpose of committing an act of terrorism.
They told the judge that it was the governments belief that Katia Solaz had murdered Emerson Pike to silence him and had taken the photographs in order to ensure that they did not fall into the hands of the United States government. In so doing she was engaged in assisting Nitikin in furtherance of a plot to plant a nuclear device on U.S. soil for purposes of terrorism.
They told the judge that the government did not wish to arrest Katia Solaz on these charges as of yet. Since she was already in jail, she was no longer at risk of furthering the conspiracy. But she was a valuable asset in the governments surveillance. The government lawyers told the court they understood that none of the information conveyed by Ms. Solaz to her lawyers could be used in a later prosecution on charges of espionage or terrorism. But given the risk of a loose nuclear device finding its way onto U.S. soil, the government had little choice but to lose the evidence against Ms. Solaz and gain the necessary intelligence to find the device. They would build a wall around the state murder case. None of the information obtained under the federal surveillance warrants would be shared with the state prosecutor or the local police, thereby avoiding any problems in the states prosecution for the murder of Emerson Pike.
To these conditions, the court added one more. The government could record conversations between the defense lawyers or between the lawyers and their employees or agents, but only those conversations involving the Solaz case. Recording of conversations in the office involving any other matter were prohibited, and all such information coming into the possession of federal agents was to be treated as confidential. On these conditions the warrants were signed by the judge, allowing audio surveillance and telephone taps.
The problem for Rhytag and Thorpe was that because of the delay in obtaining the warrants, none of the electronic surveillance had been in place at the jail until after the last meeting between her lawyers and Katia Solaz.
We know that Solazs mother took the photographs. That much they let slip during the meeting at the courthouse, said Rhytag. And if theyre to be believed, Madriani and his partner know where the photographs were taken.
Kim told me in the car on the way in, said Thorpe. But they wouldnt tell you.
They wanted to trade it for concessions in the states case.
Rhytag couldnt share what he knew with the two criminal defense lawyers for fear that they would use it to go public. The information that there was a loose nuclear device somewhere in the hemisphere, probably in the hands of terrorists, and that this was the reason Emerson Pike was murdered, might shift the focus of suspicion away from their client. It could also result in a national panic, and cause whoever had the device to expedite their timetable. Even if Rhytag suspected that this was the reason behind Pikes murder, there was no hard evidence to support it. Templeton had a solid case against the woman, and she had a motive, money.
Do you think Solaz is involved with the device? said Thorpe.
I dont know, said Rhytag.
If so, she may have told her lawyers what Nitikin has, said Thorpe.
To listen to the lawyers in the judges chambers, they know a lot. Whether or not they really do only the phone taps and wire transcripts will tell us.
So far the only conversation we have between the lawyer, Madriani, and Solaz is one telephone conversation Rhytag finds the sheaf of pages. Here it is. He passes it over to Thorpe. It was recorded off
the lawyers cell phone. He called her at the jail. She called him back. It was right after the meeting at the courthouse. Very brief, nothing in it. Hes holding everything until he meets with her at the courthouse tomorrow morning. He told her he didnt want to discuss things over the phone.
You think he knows? said Thorpe.
I was hoping to have everything in place for a while so we could be listening in before they filed anything formal to obtain the photographs. That way we wouldnt have to mention the federal courts and surveillance right away. Unfortunately, it didnt work out.
Well, taking her before a grand jury is not going to do any good. Kim Howard, the U.S. attorney, is looking at one of the transcripts. This was yesterday. Its a conversation in the office between the two lawyers. If we hit her with a grand jury subpoena and offer immunity on any federal charges, apparently theyre prepared to tell her to take the heat, sit tight, and let a federal judge issue a contempt citation.
Thats what I was afraid of, said Rhytag. Unless we can talk the prosecutor into offering something on the murder charge, her lawyers arent willing to bargain.
What about the prosecutor? said Thorpe. Cant you get him to budge?
He made an offer, but its not much. Heres the problem. He thinks one of the lawyers, this guy Madriani, is involved with Solaz. He suspects that the lawyer may be a co-conspirator in the murder.
Youre kidding me, said Thorpe.
No, Im not.
If thats the case, how do we know the lawyers not involved with Nitikin? What kind of evidence has your prosecutor got?
We dont know. Were not sharing with him, so hes not sharing with us, said Rhytag. Its not just the national security angle. Weve had to keep the state prosecutor in the dark to protect his case. If we let him partake of our information, we end up contaminating his entire prosecution, especially now with the surveillance warrants, listening in on the lawyers.
Whats he like? Thorpe wants to know about the prosecutor.
Guardian of Lies: A Paul Madriani Novel Page 18