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Authors: William S. Cohen

BOOK: Collision
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“Meaning?” Sarsfield asked.

“Meaning that there was no way to steal data through the USB, the way that guy in the Pentagon did. And—”

“Watch it, Suni. That's classified,” Sarsfield said. Turning to Falcone, he added, “I must warn you that willful communication of classified information—”

“I can assure you, Agent Sarsfield,” Falcone said irritably, “that, first, I still hold very high clearance and, two, I know all about the case that Ms. Agrawal referred to. The Pentagon's temporary solution, by the way, was to glue all USB slots shut.”

Sarsfield did not respond. He looked at Agrawal and nodded.

“There was a complex commands structure that enabled a witting operator to make the USB slot work,” she said. “In other words, if you knew the command series, you could insert a thumb drive and download data from the hard drive.”

“And did you find that happened?” Falcone asked.

“Yes,” Agrawal said. “Twice.”


Twice?
” Falcone asked.

“We will be discussing that in due time, Mr. Falcone,” Sarsfield said. He nodded again to Agrawal.

“While we were examining that system to see if the slots had been activated,” she continued, “we discovered another anomaly, a very sophisticated tracking device. That same unique chip card had a tiny chip that functioned like a GPS, recording the location of the laptop and saving the geographic data onto the hard drive. We were able to reconstruct that part of the hard drive. The drive's prime data area was another matter.”

She looked at Sarsfield, who said, “That's of no interest here. From that tracking device you were able to develop a timeline, correct?”

“Yes, sir. However, in terms of chain of evidence—”

“Thank you, Suni. That will be all for now.” Sarsfield pointed a finger at the other technician and said, “Okay, Poindexter, let's hear about the car.”

“Excuse me, Agent Sarsfield,” Falcone said. “I assume you're talking about the car the shooters used.”

“That's right,” Sarsfield said. “We got it from the New Jersey State Police and shipped it to the Quantico lab.”

“I touched the laptop—but I didn't have a damn thing to do with that car. And I wonder about that ‘chain of evidence' remark—”

“There's nothing to wonder about, Mr. Falcone. We are investigating a crime that you witnessed, a death that you caused, and an important piece of evidence that you had in your possession.”

“I'm beginning to think I'm a ‘person of interest.'”

“That's right. You are.”

 

53

Falcone knew he should
have ended the so-called interview right then and there, but he felt a surge of memories about his days as a trial lawyer and then as a prosecutor. He decided to stay in the game.
Of course, it's never a game. It's always
Les Mis
é
rables
, and you're either playing the role of Valjean or Inspector Javert. Only,
Falcone thought,
I'm a Valjean who did not commit a crime.

Poindexter chose to stand rather than sit, as Agrawal had. He was a pudgy, balding young man in his midthirties. He wore a blue blazer with golden buttons over a white shirt and flowery tie, and he had that ineffable look of a man not used to wearing a tie. Agrawal handed him the remote. He brought up an image of a black Mercedes-Benz S600 on a lift in a garage that looked as sanitary as a surgical theater. A click on the remote changed the image to the inside driver's door and showed the opened pocket that had contained Viktor Yazor's gun.

“An extra accessory,” Poindexter said.

The image shifted to focus on the navigation screen to the right of the steering wheel. “This car is a treasure for us. The navigation system produces what we call a bread-crumb trail that shows dates, time, routes, and destinations and saves it all on board. The user would undoubtedly like to encrypt or dump that data to keep it secret. But because the car's navigational electronics is so intertwined with the car's other suites of electronics, tampering is limited and encryption is weak, unlike the laptop. We attacked the car encryption with relative ease. We were able to download everything it had. One of the—”

“Results,” Sarsfield cut in, “is that we can construct two timelines. Okay, Poindexter, put them on screen.”

Onto the screen came what at first looked like two Google Maps pages, one labeled
Laptop Timeline
, the other
Car Timeline
.

Falcone leaned forward as, under
Laptop Timeline
, a blue, arrow-headed line appeared on a map of the Washington area.

“Okay,” Sarsfield said. “The computer arrives at Reagan National Airport on the night of October second at a time coinciding with the time that an American Airlines Los Angeles flight arrives. Cole Perenchio is on that flight.”

“Under his own name?” Falcone asked.

“Yes,” Sarsfield responded, frowning at the interruption. “Carrying a stolen laptop.”

Agrawal's laser beam hit the blue arrow, which moved from the airport to the Rosemont neighborhood in Alexandria, Virginia.

“The laptop goes to Locust Lane in Alexandria. Investigation shows that it was carried in a Town Car, owned by Luxury Autos of Washington and hired by Harold Davidson, a partner in the law firm Sullivan and Ford, which maintains an account at Luxury Autos.”

Falcone knew that FBI agents were extremely proficient at courtroom testimony, often embellished with charts and maps. Even the tone of an agent's voice was modulated so that it was flat, unemotional, thorough, and therefore trustworthy to a juror's ears. He was listening to a bravura performance of FBI testimonyspeak.

“The laptop spent the night at Davidson's home, and—”

“How do you know that?” Falcone asked.

“His wife—widow—was shown a photograph of the laptop,” Sarsfield said, his voice turning from that of a testifier to that of an interrogator. “She says that Davidson brought a Dell laptop, which she had not seen before, into the home on the night of October second. On the morning of October third he took it with him when another Luxury Autos vehicle picked him up and took him to the Sullivan and Ford Building, arriving at nine thirty-five, according to his elevator-entry card.”

Sarsfield nodded to Poindexter, who aimed his laser at the car timeline and controlled the movement of a red, arrowed line as Sarsfield narrated its October 2 passage from the airport to a hotel at Thomas Circle—“following the taxi that Cole Perenchio took, because the driver of his taxi said in an interview that he dropped him at this site, the Washington Plaza Hotel, at ten fifty p.m. The car then drove to a motel at New York Avenue in Washington, where, earlier in the day, three men had registered for individual rooms.”

Sarsfield continued his narrative, noting that the men spent October 3 in their rooms, except for venturing out to eat lunch and dinner at places that Sarsfield did not include in his narrative, probably because they left the motel on foot, separately or together. “The only use of the car, according to the GPS data,” Sarsfield said, “was a drive to the area around the Sullivan and Ford Building, apparently to plan the attack.”

“Does the car show up on security cameras on that day?” Falcone asked.

“I am confining these two timelines to data obtained from the computer and the car that pertain only to this interview.”

“So far,” Falcone said, “I have not seen any reason for this interview. May I ask why I am here?”

“Very well, Mr. Falcone. I am examining the chain of evidence regarding an exhibit from the crime, the SpaceMine laptop. Through the use of the laptop tracker and the car's GPS data, we have determined that there is a gap in the movement of the laptop from the crime scene at the law firm to the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police, prior to when that organization turned the laptop over to the bureau.”

“Gap? Where's the gap?”

Sarsfield pointed to the car timeline and motioned to Poindexter. The red arrow point moved to Eleventh and D. “The car stops here,” Sarsfield said. “We think the driver picked up the surviving shooter here.” The arrow kept moving. “They pull into a public parking garage, where they spent nearly two hours—and then they stop at 701 Pennsylvania Avenue, where you happen to live.”

Falcone said, “What the hell are you—”

“Switch to the laptop timeline,” Falcone ordered, and Poindexter moved that map's blue arrow to accompany Sarsfield's narrative of the laptop's passage from the Sullivan & Ford Building to the homeless shelter and then to 701 Pennsylvania Avenue.

“Paul Sprague told me, in a sworn statement,” Sarsfield continued, “that you, Mr. Falcone, called him at approximately three thirty p.m. and said you had the laptop. My question, Mr. Falcone, is how did you obtain the laptop?”

“I told Paul how I obtained it. I got it—along with a gun and a black jacket—from a homeless guy who had picked it up from behind a Dumpster near the Second Street shelter.”

“That is not what Mr. Sprague told me. He merely said you handed him the laptop, gun, and jacket and asked him to give it to the DC police. But these two timelines indicate that the car stopped at the homeless shelter on Second Street Northwest, discovered that the laptop was no longer there, and then drove to your address, where the laptop next appears.”

“I told Paul Sprague about getting the items from the homeless man—his name was Thomas Crawford. I asked Sprague to give the laptop, gun, and jacket to Detective Emmetts, along with the name Thomas Crawford.”

“Mr. Sprague
did
hand the laptop and other items to Detective Lieutenant Emmetts, but there was no mention of a Thomas Crawford,” Sarsfield said. “The laptop tracker shows that the laptop was briefly in the Sullivan and Ford Building.”

“This is ridiculous,” Falcone said, raising his voice and staring at the laptop timeline. “Your timeline shows that Sprague had it for thirty-two minutes. The building is so close to DC police headquarters that Emmetts would be there in, at most, ten minutes after Sprague called him.”

Before Sarsfield could respond, Agrawal said, “There's an explanation. The phone calls.”

Sarsfield glared at her as Falcone asked her, “Phone calls?

“Using a national security letter, we obtained records of the firm's phone calls on the day of the shootings,” Sarsfield said. “Mr. Sprague appears to have made two phone calls during the time that he was in possession of the laptop.”

“To whom?” Falcone asked.

“I am not at liberty to say,” Sarsfield mumbled.

“And did Verizon get a national security letter from you to get a record of my home phone calls and Ben Taylor's calls?”

“Again, I am not at liberty to say.”

Falcone turned to Agrawal and asked, “Does the tracker show that attempts were made to use the laptop's USB ports during the time that Sprague made those two calls?”

“Don't answer that,” Sarsfield ordered. That was answer enough for Falcone, remembering his favorite Pynchon quotation.

“This is a farce, Sarsfield,” Falcone said “I'm beginning to feel like that poor son of a bitch in Atlanta whom you guys called ‘a person of interest.'”

“That's what your friend Dr. Taylor told me,” Sarsfield said. “But neither one of you is charged with anything … yet.”

“Well, then I'm through here.”

“I thank you. And I know all we need to know … for now,” Sarsfield said. “I'll make an appointment soon to obtain a formal statement.”

Sarsfield stood up. He told Poindexter and Agrawal to stay while he escorted Falcone out of the building and added, “I'll be back. We have a few things to tie up.”

“Like who killed Cole Perenchio,” Falcone said.

Sarsfield turned, pointed at the car timeline for October 5, and said, “At nine fourteen, they park near Perenchio's hotel. The night manager's log shows that at nine twenty he called for a cab. The cabbie who responded identifies Perenchio from a photo, and—”

“Excuse me,” Falcone interrupted. “A photo?”

“Correct. Obtained from NASA Human Resources,” Sarsfield said. “And the cabbie drops him off at Constitution Avenue near the Capitol Grounds. He remembers because there's nothing there, no bar, no restaurant, and he asked his passenger if he was sure this was the right spot. The cabbie figured maybe he was meeting someone. The car moves two minutes later, obviously following the cab to Capitol Hill. Nine minutes later, the car returns to the motel.”

“And Cole Perenchio is dead.”

“Correct,” Sarsfield said. “Let's go.”

 

54

Falcone stepped out onto
Pennsylvania Avenue and took a cab to the Taylor home. When a surprised Ben Taylor answered the door, Falcone said, “Sorry I didn't call ahead.” As he followed Ben to the entrance hall, he kept talking: “We both definitely have to watch what we say on the phone. Tell Darlene. And tell her to warn Sam. We all have to be very careful.”

“Sit down, Sean,” Ben said, pointing to the living room couch. “Can I get you anything?”

“No, thanks. I've just had an ‘interview' with Agent Sarsfield. We have to move fast. Now we're
both
persons of interest.”

“Welcome to the club. What's he after?”

“The shooters are dead. So the shootings case is closed. But he keeps working. I think he's obsessing to find out what's behind the shootings and the murder of Cole Perenchio. He knows there's a connection, but he doesn't know where to find it.”

“What are they getting off the hard drive? Was it completely cleaned?”

“You know better than I do that a good tech can pull a lot out of a hard drive. They'll eventually get some bits and bytes.”

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