"They made almost two million from it," said Merci.
Komer nodded. "And you'll be interested to know they were more involved than just as investors. Gwen was, anyway. She became an employee for almost six months. She helped raise capital. I'm not sure how much. I'm not sure what her arrangement was. But she spent a lot of time at the OrganiVen building."
"We wondered," said Zamorra. "With all the promotional material we found in their home office."
Komer sat back and looked at them. "OrganiVen received early money from a venture company called SunCo Capital. Heard of it?"
Merci shook her head and saw Zamorra doing the same.
"You're not alone," said Komer. "It existed for roughly two years, then evaporated. I ran across it when I got into the financial side of OrganiVen. I recognized the players immediately. SunCo is actually spelled ROC."
"Russian Organized Crime," said Zamorra. Komer was already nodding. "Right here in the home of Disneyland and the master-planned community. SunCo was just two guys, as far as I can tell. Sonny Charles is an Anglicized alias for Sergei Cherbrenko. Nice guy. Came to the United States when he was twenty years old. A gay man. Did okay in insurance fraud up in L.A.-standard car accident stuff. But he really scored here in Orange County when he started up a company that bought out the life insurance policies of AIDS patients for fifty cents on the dollar. He called the company Rescue Financial. Heroic, isn't it? It was even legal. He was the scourge of Laguna Beach in the early eighties, made a lot of money watching his customers die. We got him on a boiler-room scam eight years ago-working senior citizens on a phony group medical insurance deal. He's been out for three years, so he obviously found gainful employment with SunCo Capital."
Komer handed Merci a file. Attached to the inside of the front cover were reasonably good booking shots-two profiles and a frontal. Sonny Charles was a sharp-faced blond who looked about as trustworthy as a scorpion.
"Of course Sonny didn't accomplish all this alone," said Kome "He's got a helper-Zlatan Vorapin. Vorapin's got half a dozen aliases, one of which is Al Apin-which he used for his SunCo dealing: He's also got a Soviet jacket-robbery, extortion, debt collection, extortive money lending. He came west in eighty-two. In eighty-eight we had a high-level ROC captain cold on an extortion case. But the victim was shot in the head before he could testify. We think Zlatan was the shooter but we couldn't prove it. LAPD got him on assault back in ninety-a nineteen-year-old girl. He was bringing poor young women in from the Balkans, making them work as prostitutes to pay off their transport. Nobody would talk to us, especially the women. Since then, nothing. We heard that he and Cherbrenko moved here to Orange County for a more affluent and trusting work environment. They're supposedly more into the white-collar things. Less violence, more profit. Vorapin's a hard guy to find, considering that he's six-ten, three thirty."
Merci's heart was beating steady and true and she felt it in her temples. Vora peen, she thought: like a hammer. She looked over at Zamorra, who wore a cold smile.
"We got size sixteen shoe prints by the Wildcrafts' walkway," she said. "About eight feet from where Archie went down."
Komer looked at her and said nothing.
"And more prints by an abandoned Cadillac with plates similar to one seen leaving the Wildcraft’s crime scene. Two witnesses say huge, dark hair, short beard, thick glasses. The other blond and slender."
A smile crossed Komer's face as he handed Merci another file. She opened it and studied the enormous head, the unimpressed eyes and the wronged, infantile lips of Zlatan Vorapin. The top set of mugs showed him with his shaded rectangular eyeglasses, the bottom set without.
"Oh, man," she said quietly. Vorapeen.
Komer just shook his head.
"SunCo is long gone, Sergeant. Hit and run, these guys-they start a new company for every new scam. Our last contact with Cherbrenko was early nineteen ninety-nine. For Vorapin, two years before that. They're the most accomplished bureau-rats in the world. They just vanish into the system-multiple ID's, driver's licenses, credit cards. Burn companies within burn companies. The whole thing. We got four different sets of pretty good ID off of Vorapin. Five off of Cherbrenko. And that's just what we found."
"I don't imagine their fellow Russians are too helpful in finding them for you."
"Nobody knows anything. Let me tell you, the Russians are great at stock scams because they're educated to survive in a bureaucracy. So they can find a way to use the system. They love the taste of red tape. Seventy years of life under the KGB makes you resourceful. Life as KGB makes you ruthless. Put people like that together and you get very effective bad guys."
"But you don't know what the scam was?"
"I'm looking. I'm working it. Sistel's squawking about the supply of the venom, and that's all I should say right now."
"You'd think rattlesnakes are pretty easy to get," said Rayborn. "All those reptile farms in Florida with the big ugly things crawling over each other. Those roundups in Texas and Oklahoma. You know, belts and key chains and snake chili."
"Yeah. But according to Sistel, not true."
Merci tried to think this one out-can't they milk the damned things, put the stuff in the refrigerator with the butter and cheese?"
"I know the scam was good," said Komer. "It had to be to fool B. B. Sistel. Whatever it was, it just started coming home to roost a couple of months ago. That's when Sistel launched their own investigation. A month later they contacted the FTC, which vetted the story, then contacted us. Sistel tried to time the announcement of the restructure with an optimistic earnings forecast for the fourth quarter. Didn't really work. I know for a fact that when Sistel cries foul and guys like Charles and Apin are involved, it spells fraud. Capital letters. And when a murder victim was working for these guys, well, I don't know what to think. Nothing good, I can tell you that."
Komer shook his head and sat back.
Merci looked at the pictures again. "Can I get file copies?"
"You're looking at them. They're yours."
"Thank you."
"Sergeant, as far as I'm concerned, this is your murder and my stock fraud. I'll help you all I can. And I'd sure appreciate your help back."
"You'll have it."
"May I have a copy of your file, when it's convenient?"
"I'll have one on your desk by two this afternoon. Would it be possible for you to clear Ron Billingham over at Sistel to talk with me? He asked me to call back when I'd talked to Ardith Day."
He looked hard at her. "I'll clear it. Ron's a good guy. He was with us for quite a few years."
"Can you connect Apin to a local limousine service?"
Komer thought for a moment, eyes roving the ceiling. "No. But the ROC had their hands in some of the Los Angeles limo operations back in the early nineties. Give me a couple of days, I'll see if there a local angle."
"Agent Komer, thanks again."
They stood. Komer regarded her with the casually optimistic look that in law enforcement always means suspicion. "Is Deputy Wildcraft still at large?"
She nodded.
"That video was damaging. I understand the evidence against him is strong, and he talked suicide. But if the size sixteens were Vorapin' maybe he was there that night. Maybe these gentlemen framed Wildcraft for it."
"I think it's possible," she said. And she thought: nobody's framing a fellow deputy on me again, ever.
She felt the skin on her face betray her but she didn't care.
Komer offered his hand and she shook it.
They walked down Flower toward the Sheriff's Headquarters. The noon heat was close and personal, and Rayborn was thinking about the Russians.
"I talked to Priscilla after work yesterday," said Zamorra. "I don't think she was after Archie. I think she had her hands full with her own husband."