Excerpt from The Restless Sleep
Ten days before Christmas in 1996 a six-year-old boy calls 911. We don't
know how long it takes him to work up the nerve to call, but it's just
before eight o'clock at night. Speaking clearly, he tells the 911
operator, "You know, my father died." "What?" she asks. And he repeats,
"My father died." The operator is all business. "What is your address?"
When he tells her, the operator doesn't immediately respond. "Okay?" he
asks, to prompt her. "I'm just trying to verify the address," she answers.
"Where's your mother?" "Died. Died. I'm here on my own. My father and my
mother died. Somebody killed my mother and my daddy." In the background,
his two younger brothers don't even sound human. They make noises like
animals grunting. It's an ugly sound, ugly because it's so not right.
Then, it sounds like they are roaring. Finally, their voices resolve into
something more human, and they sound like children again, children wailing
and crying. Apparently, these are the sounds young children make when they
come upon the remains of their tortured and murdered parents. The 911
operator asks the boy what apartment he's in and how old he is, and he
gets progressively more upset. He thinks she doesn't understand the
problem. "My mother and my daddy died," he tells her again. And then he
begs, "Please help me, okay?" The first officers on the scene find the
boys in their underwear climbing over the bodies.
Linda Leon, twenty-three years old, and Esteban Martinez, twenty-nine
years old, were tortured, then shot in the head while their three children
listened from the next room. The kids were meant to die too, it was later
learned, but the girlfriend of one of the killers argued "you got what you
want, let's just get out of here" and the kids were left alone to cry.
Leon and Martinez were drug dealers. So who cares, right? Pathetic lives,
pathetic deaths.
Linda and Esteban were doomed. Limited by circumstance, talent,
imagination, and character, dealing drugs was the best they could manage.
They weren't going to get to do something fun or worthwhile in life.
Instead they would live soul-destroying lives and die, scared, after being
stabbed in the ear with a Sheetrock saw for perhaps an hour, according to
the police estimate, before being shot, while the only things in the world
they cared for listened to every word, every scream, every plea for their
lives, reduced to animal noises. The wretched killing the wretched, the
case goes "cold," who gives a fuck?
###
Since 1985, in New York City alone, the killers of 8,894 people remain
free. That's 8,894 murderers among us. Even if you want to say some of
these murders were committed by the same people, as if attributing the
crimes to serial killers were a better way of looking at this, that's
still a lot of murderers walking around who get to go see the new Steven
Spielberg movie, eat their favorite dinner, and have sex. What could be
uglier than a murderer transported by pleasure, living years and years and
years, sometimes long enough to make it until a nice, relaxed old age?
Unsolved homicide cases are never closed, but some can go cold if enough
evidence can't be found to convict anyone. Sometimes detectives find
themselves overrun with murder. Whenever someone is killed in their
precinct they have to drop what they're doing to investigate. The cases
they were working on get pushed farther and farther back, some all the way
into oblivion. And the fact is, most murder victims are people the general
public cares little about. Middle-class people, people with lots of
friends who never break any laws, famous people, wealthy people, sure,
they're stabbed to death from time to time, but chances are you haven't
heard of a single one of the 8,894. They had so little going for them to
begin with, and now this. They've become nothing more than a cast-off
case.
In the New York Police Department there's a unit called the Cold Case and
Apprehension Squad. While the rest of the world has forgotten the cases
that have gone cold, if they ever even noticed them in the first place,
the Cold Case Squad reaches into our worst past and yanks these victims
back from oblivion. Who were they? What happened to them? Who did this to
them? Someone deliberately, knowingly took away whatever time in life they
had left. They're supposed to answer for that. For the families who figure
the world isn't going to give their son, daughter, husband, or wife
another thought, the Cold Case Squad is their one shot to correct a
terrible imbalance, however inadequately.
Cases find their way to the Cold Case Squad through a number of different
channels. Sometimes the commanding officer is told, "Do something with
this," when someone sends a letter to the mayor, or the police
commissioner, or some other important person. A couple of years ago, the
sister of a man who was killed with a meat cleaver in 1971 wrote, "This is
the 28th year of this heinous crime and the injustice was terrible then
and to this day is still quite overbearing. Are you still working on this
case? Or have you decided that since 28 years have past [sic], we may as
well let another murderer walk away free?" The Cold Case Squad soon
discovered that her brother's killer had already been dead ten years when
she mailed that letter. He died of smoke inhalation from a kitchen fire in
his tiny, squalid one-bedroom apartment in Philadelphia. After three
decades of waiting, it was a very unsatisfying ending for the victim's
sister. She was sorry he didn't burn alive.
A record of every murder in New York, solved or unsolved, is kept at the
Homicide Analysis Unit at 1PP, in homicide logbooks. (Police headquarters
is always referred to as 1PP, short for One Police Plaza, the address for
NYPD headquarters. It's pronounced OnePeePee. For months I'd look up to
see if the grown man or woman saying OnePeePee was saying it with a
straight face. Another name for OnePeePee: "the Puzzle Palace," except the
people who work there don't like that name, so no one uses it to their
face.)
The oldest remaining logbook in the NYPD's possession is from 1964. There
were 697 homicides listed that year. Of the 697, 122 cases are cold. We'll
probably never learn who killed 122 men, women, and babies that year. Most
of these victims were stabbed. After that, they were killed by guns and
cars. Fists and feet are listed as weapons in 21 cases. In 1964, abortions
were officially considered homicides, and there were 12 of them in the
logbook, including one "charred fetus." One person was killed by a pumpkin
(no explanation was given). Other unusual weapons listed are a television
stand, a bar stool, acid, a beer can opener, a candle. On October 6 of
that year, in the 73 Precinct, Anni Malzen died of wounds made by a
sledgehammer. (Detectives don't say the "73rd" Precinct, they say the
"seven three" Precinct. The "one two oh" Precinct, not the "120th." This
is true for all the precincts above the 19th.) And while an arrest was
made, someone later added, in parentheses, "suicide." How do you kill
yourself with a sledgehammer?
Murders committed from 1985 on are now entered into an electronic
database, but every entry from 1964 to the present bears exactly the same
information: entry number, date of homicide, precinct number, name of
victim, type of weapon, and whether an arrest has been made. That's it. A
detective can't tell just by looking at these records if there is anything
he can solve.
Sometimes the squad commanders themselves go out to the precincts and
bring back a case. Perhaps they got a phone call from an old friend, "I
got a tip about this case...," or there's a case from their younger days
in another precinct that they never quite forgot.
Every time the Cold Case Squad solves a case and it hits the local papers,
they get calls about other murders and sometime manage to pick up a few
leads. Now they get e-mail, too. Tips can come from anywhere.
Last May, a forty-four-year-old Queens man named Eddie Delmage called Opie
& Anthony, a Howard Stern-like radio show that was on WNEW at the time,
and confessed to the 1977 murder of two Colombian drug dealers during a
segment called "Total Truth Tuesday." Eddie said he shot them during a
drug deal, burned the bodies, then threw what was left away in the
meat-packing district by the river in Manhattan. He was calling Opie &
Anthony, he said, to offer his place to a homeless woman known on the show
as Stalker Patty. He wanted to make up for his past mistake. "He didn't
sound like the kind of guy to make this up," cohost Anthony Cumia said.
Detectives from the squad couldn't find a case fitting his description,
but they had to look into it nonetheless.
Anthony was wrong. Eddie was making it up. When detectives arrived to
investigate he answered the door to his dark apartment in nothing but an
undershirt and slippers. "I asked, would he like to get dressed before we
start talking," Deputy Inspector Vito Spano, the commanding officer of the
Cold Case Squad, said, "because he really wasn't a pretty sight standing
there." Eddie was nervous. "It felt like a sad house that time had
passed," Spano continued. "Something had happened here and Eddie was too
devastated to pick up the pieces. Things were out of place or left out,
not put away, a heavy dust over everything. He was like a man still
waiting for his wife to come home." These are the glimpses the detectives
get into our lives. "It wasn't nice to look at," Vito told me. "I felt
depressed." Eddie had worked for a cargo-handling company at the airport,
but he'd been on disability for the past twelve years. Eddie felt that
Opie and Anthony hadn't appreciated his generous offer to Stalker Patty,
and he took it as an insult to his manhood. The phony confession was a
desperate shot at building himself up. He wanted to be the romantic,
dangerous but reformed killer, looking for redemption by rescuing the
damsel in distress, not the pale, paunchy, middle-aged man living
downstairs from his mother, abandoned by life, who, if he had ever had any
dramatic moments in his life, had few left now. "Defending his manhood" is
a recurring theme in Cold Case Squad investigations.
More often, though, cold cases are picked up and brought back by
detectives themselves. They say "I'm assuming a case" or, simply, "I'm
working the case." There's also the more crude but popular "This is my bag
of shit." The detectives have their own contacts and informants, their own
resources, and their own ambitions. Sometimes they read about a case in
the newspaper and think, Okay, they did this, but I would have done that.
Assuming someone else's case can be a delicate matter, but not always.
When someone is murdered, the case belongs to the Homicide Squad in the
precinct where the body is found. Back in the eighties and early nineties,
when there were more than two thousand murders a year in the city, no one
wanted to pick up yet another homicide in their precinct, especially if it
looked like it was going to be "a loser," what they call cases that are
difficult to solve. Precinct commanders literally fought over which side
of the precinct lines a body fell. Spano remembers a 1987 murder committed
in the 83 Precinct. The killer moved the body and it sat for a week in a
Dumpster in the 72 Precinct, where at the time Vito Spano was a young and
less experienced Detective Squad commander. Then the body was carted off,
along with the trash, to the 94 Precinct. Thinking the case was a loser,
the 94 Precinct Detective Squad commander, who was older and meaner,
called Spano and made him take it, even though by rights the homicide
should have been the 94's. Mistake. Spano's squad solved the case two days
later. Fingerprints were lifted off the linoleum the body was wrapped in,
and when Vito and his detectives went to the address listed on the
suspect's record and peeked inside, there on the floor, with a large piece
missing, was the same linoleum.
Assuming someone else's case once they've put some effort into it,
however, is something else. You're saying, "I think I can solve the case
you couldn't." The initial reaction is often "You think you're going to
show me up? Piss off." Technically, if the precinct detective isn't
actively working the case, the Cold Case Squad detective can simply say,
"Fuck you. Give me the case." If the precinct detective balks, Vito can
call the squad boss at the precinct, and now it's Vito's delicate matter.
But no one wants the running-back-to-daddy stigma of that. And there are
other reasons the cold case detectives would prefer to handle it
themselves than go to Vito. People get transferred, special units are
dissolved. The guy you screwed carelessly today could be your boss or
partner tomorrow. The smartest detectives use a little diplomacy and make
the precinct detective comfortable with handing over the case: "You've got
all these other cases, and I have a little time on my hands, would you
mind if I take a look?" Once the case is formally signed out with the Cold
Case Squad it's got the Cold Case Squad detective's name on it. He's
responsible now. The precinct detective is off the hook. The case is
logged into the Cold Case Squad's database and given a brand-new case
number. If it's never solved, now it's because the Cold Case Squad
couldn't solve it.
###
There are three reasons a case goes cold. Either they couldn't solve it
(no evidence or witnesses), they didn't want to solve it, or someone
screwed up.
Order The Restless Sleep: Inside New York City's Cold Case Squad
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