Author of Dear Diary, a murder mystery set in the Nation's Capitol, shares a unique and witty blog. Criminologist in Washington, DC specializing in issues related to police misconduct, police-community relations, crime and victimization (ex. domestic violence), and popular culture.
Dear Diary | You Have the Right to Remain…Informed
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You Have the Right to Remain…Informed
A Crime and Justice blog by author L.J. Samuel
Dear Diary
JUNE 25, 2015JUNE 25, 2015 ~ L.J. SAMUEL
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Today I’m sharing a chapter from my crime novel, Dear Diary. It is a murder mystery set in the
Nation’s Capitol and highlights the length one will go for lust, greed, and jealousy. Enjoy!
CHAPTER ONE
The Murder Case
My name is Samantha Harris. I am 30 years old and I head up the Homicide Branch, a premier
homicide squad with the DC Police Department. I am tough, tenacious, smart, and I am good at
what I do. I have been assigned to Homicide for just over a year, but have proven useful to my
superiors as I have “the gift.” When it comes to solving homicides, I am able to see the full picture
and drill down to minute details -details often missed by others- that help me solve some of the
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most difficult murder cases. I am easy on the eyes, as they say, well educated, and well-spoken so
I am often thrust in front of the camera to give statements on behalf of the department. I get along
with families of murder victims no matter how rich or poor and I am able to put together the
puzzle pieces that lead me to the murder suspect. It’s rare that I don’t get my man.
I just arrived on the scene of a brutal murder in Crestwood, a small area within the 16 Street
Heights neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Crestwood is one of the few neighborhoods that
make up the Gold Coast, an affluent area in the northwest section of the city known for its
educated, connected, and well-off residents. Massive million dollar homes, perfect lawns,
expensive cars, and toy dogs are a permanent part of the neighborhood landscape. The latest
census figures show that nearly 40% of Crestwood residents possess a law degree, medical
degree, doctorate, or Master’s degree with the neighborhood ranking among the top 15% of the
wealthiest residents in the entire country. As such judges, top hospital officials, and university
presidents call this home.
It is an early evening in September. It has been unseasonably warm so people are milling around
and neighbors are hanging out trying to get a look at what is going on. Range Rovers, Porches,
and Benzes occupy residence in every other driveway. Au pairs push strollers up and down the
street while personal drivers patiently wait in black Lincoln Town Cars waiting for their next
assignment. Every now and then, a soccer mom drives up and hops out of a Volvo SUV sporting
Lululemon yoga pants, Gucci sunglasses, and diamonds so large you could see them from down
the street. I side step and maneuver around the privileged Crestwood residents who fire questions
at the officers guarding the perimeter of the crime scene demanding to know what is going on.
The victim is a 30-year-old female lawyer, a rising star at a swanky downtown corporate law firm.
Megan Smith. She was a tall, beautiful woman with fiery red hair and an athletic body. She played
varsity volleyball at Stanford University, where she attended for both undergrad and law school.
But, unfortunately, none of that matters because Megan is dead.
“What do we have, Jay?” I say to my sergeant as I slip on a pair of blue latex gloves. Sergeant
James Thomas, affectionately known as “Jay,” is a big, burly, black teddy bear who can crack a
skull or coo at a baby. I bend down to put shoe covers on over my boots and slowly survey the
room. It is what you would expect in a neighborhood like this. Brazilian cherry hardwood floors
gleam under antique furniture and strategically placed oriental rugs. Someone had great taste.
Expensive paintings line the walls in the hallway. I am no art expert but there was a Norman
Rockwell painting on the wall near the front door that I was certain was authentic.
“What’s that sound?” I ask Jay, my attention on the kitchen in the back.
“Water,” Jay says.
I walk slowly into the gourmet kitchen where the body was found. I take in every detail from the
scuffs on the floor, to the smell of men’s cologne, to the faint sound of a television in the
background.
“Looks like she was washing some vegetables for dinner when she was interrupted,” I surmise, as
I look up and down the kitchen countertop.
th
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I step over pieces of glass.
“Glen?” My forensics guy pokes his head around the corner.
“Did you get pictures of this?”
“Yes ma’am,” he says, “but I left everything in place without moving items just the way you like
it.”
“Good,” I say and I look up at the ceiling trying to digest what happened here, my mind racing.
“Where’s the husband? I thought someone said she was married.”
“She is, Doc, but we haven’t gotten a hold of him yet,” answers Jay.
Hmmm. When I reach the body, I see Megan Smith, Esq. lying in a pool of her own dry blood. I
reflect on the irony of this type of violent death hitting the likes of this neighborhood as the sound
of my booties shuffle across the pristine marble floors. Residents from this neighborhood
believed they were immune from the crime and violence that touched other parts of the city, but
clearly, this was not the case.
I examine the body. The bruises on her face are blistering, signifying that she has been dead a few
hours. Rigor mortis has begun to set in. I lift her arms and move the fingers on her hands to look
for evidence of skin, fibers, or anything else that may add a piece to her puzzling murder. Her
hair, which looked to have been pinned up in a neat bun, is pulled out of its clip. Tears have dried
on her now lifeless face. She lies awkwardly on the kitchen floor, her right knee bent underneath
her – the position she fell in as her attacker punched, hit, and pushed her around in his rage. Yes,
his. I am almost certain she died at the hands of a man. There is so much trauma to her face.
Someone was very angry.
I move away from her body as something catches my attention. Papers and files lie in a heap on
the floor over near the massive kitchen table. They’re covered in a red stain that looks like wine.
Odd.
“Jay?” I look up at him. “Exactly what did our victim do?”
“She was a lawyer,” he says, glancing at his notebook. “Corporate law. Commercial real estate
deals, represented big corporations, that sort of stuff.”
“Okay, find out what cases she was working on. Maybe she had an enemy.”
“Doc?” I turn at the sound of Detective Gregory’s voice.
Trailing behind him is a middle-aged female officer in uniform. “This is Officer Loftus,” Gregory
says, pointing a thumb at the officer. “She was the first officer on the scene and did a good job
cordoning off the area and keeping the other uniforms out before we got here.”
“Officer Loftus,” I nod at her and she returns my greeting with a stiff nod of her own.
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“Ma’am, I am very familiar with this house,” she begins without prompting. “I have been
working this beat for 13 years and in the last four years, I have been called to this address at least
a dozen times. The victim was a pretty sharp woman. She was really professional and about her
business.”
“What about the husband?” I ask standing up so I could speak to her on eye level.
“Her husband was a piece of work. He was older than her by at least…15 years. I don’t know,
ma’am, but he had some hold on her. He’s some real estate bigwig. Travels a lot but drinks more.
He was always hitting her. Intimidating her.” I nod at her letting her know that she could
continue.
“Now, I know she was real athletic herself, but this guy was a beast,” she states emphatically. “I
know she was embarrassed and never wanted to press charges but it just wasn’t right!”
I take in what Loftus just shared and tell her, “I’m going to have one of my detectives sit with you
to get copies of your notes and we need to track down the incident reports.”
“Whatever you need,” she says. I can see the quiet sadness in her eyes as she turns to leave; I
know the look well. She’s thinking that maybe she failed the victim somehow. If we could work
every block and be in every house at all times, there would be no crime. But, we can’t. That is the
thankless job of the police.
I sigh and get back to what I’m doing. “Ok, Jay, let’s walk through this.” Like any other crime
scene, we try to re-create what may have happened to get a better idea of the details, a possible
suspect, the motive, and a resolution.
I turn on the voice recorder on my department-issued iPhone, and slowly and methodically walk
through the crime scene starting at the front door. “After a long day of work, Megan comes
home. She kicks off her shoes.” I point to her heels neatly lined up by the door. “She lays her keys
on the table and throws her coat over the chair.” I point to a side table and Queen Anne chair in
the sitting room adjoining the kitchen.
“With dinner on her mind, she moves into the kitchen, but not before she takes some paperwork
out of her leather portfolio. She takes a bottle of wine out of the dining room banquet, along with
a wine glass and pours some into it.” I turn back to the kitchen. “She moves into the kitchen, takes
some ingredients out of the fridge, and turns on the water in the sink when she is surprised by her
attacker. They argue? She turns her back and that’s when he strikes her the first time. She
stumbles but doesn’t go down. She turns to get away and he grabs her hair pulling it out of the
bun clipped on her head. She struggles to get away but he is too strong. He strikes her across the
face. Her stomach must have been in knots, fear overtaking her.” My stomach drops, a lead
weight pushing at my kidneys. “Hands grip her throat, squeezing the life out of her and she is
down. Before the killer leaves, he rifles through the papers Megan left on the table looking for
something. He does not find what he is looking for and crumbles the papers tearing some in the
process. He spills red wine over the papers and knocks the wine glass to the floor shattering it.
There are no signs of forced entry. Everything is pretty neat except for the kitchen area, so it has to
be someone she knew, someone with a key. The husband….”
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