I found Larry to be surprisingly calm, considering a strange man was in the kitchen with his wife, and she was holding a firearm.
“Everything is fine, honey. I’d like you to meet JP Warner.”
Larry and I shook hands, and he affably offered me a beer. But it was time for me to leave and take the troubling past with me. When Dani ran to the kitchen, shouting “Daddy, you’re home!” my presence officially became an afterthought. So I slipped out of the house without anyone noticing.
Once I got to the car, I called Christina. She wasn’t home and didn’t answer her cell, but I left a message to check on television news programs the Sunday before Labor Day in 1995. Especially one about a judge with a habit of giving light sentences to drunk drivers.
Chapter 68
I headed for Lake Havasu City. The ride would be over two hundred miles and I wanted to make it there before dark. I originally planned to do some digging at Luke Air Force Base-Benson and Jones’ old stomping grounds-but scrapped the idea. JP Warner was the last person anyone in the US military would be divulging information to.
I was driving through the town of Parker, situated on the northern corner of the Colorado River, nestled between the Sonora desert and rugged mountains, when Christina called.
“Do you have the information I asked for?” I greeted her.
“Sure do, boss.”
“Let’s hear it.”
“You know that glass table in the living room?”
“Yes,” I said, not liking where this was headed.
“Do you really like it?”
“What happened to my table?”
“It’s not important JP. What’s important is that nobody got hurt.”
I sighed. “Just make sure it’s fixed when I get back. So did you find the news program I asked for, or not?”
“I did, but I was surprised you needed to ask me for it. You would think you would’ve remembered it.”
“Why is that?”
“Because it was your report. On the Sunday before Labor Day in 1995, GNZ and their dashing young reporter did a segment about a Judge Raymond Buford from North Carolina. Buford was from the school of ‘drinking and driving is only a problem when you spill your drink.’ Nobody really noticed until a guy named Craig Steele, a repeat offender whom Buford kept sending away with a light tap on the wrist, killed an entire family that was traveling on vacation.”
The report was starting to come back to me, but the details were a little hazy. But what was very clear, was that it had set Benson off.
“It gets better,” Christina continued. “Buford owned a home on Ocracoke Island just down the street from … guess who?”
“How did Buford die?”
Christina began to chuckle. “Let’s just say the judge had an accident.”
“What kind of accident?”
“I would say an embarrassing one. Ever hear of auto-erotic asphyxia?”
I thought for a moment, wondering if it was a name of one of those crazy bands she listens to. “Doesn’t ring a bell, no.”
“Well, it’s a solo sex act where the participant constricts air flow to heighten the pleasure during orgasm. But I’m guessing the fact that Judge Buford accidentally hung himself made it less pleasurable.”
I continued to be puzzled. “How could that heighten the pleasure?”
Christina laughed again. “I have no idea. All I know is those things you guys carry around make you do some strange things.”
I got back on track. “What was the date Buford died?”
“This is where the plot thickens a little. All the others were on Benson’s favorite holiday-the one with the fireworks-but the judge died on October 10, 1998.”
I tried to think of any significance of the date. “Was Steele the only one who caused a fatality after Buford let them off?”
“I didn’t find any besides Steele.”
“Was his accident on October 10?”
“Nope-April. He only received a six month suspended sentence and probation for killing the family, thanks to a clean record that was helped by Buford continually letting him plead to lesser traffic violations, which I’m sure Benson didn’t take kindly to. He moved to Panama City, but must not have been able to kick the habit because he crashed into a telephone pole on July 4, 1998. The police report indicated they thought it was a suicide because there were no skid marks, but after they saw the blood work, they decided he had passed out behind the wheel due to alcohol consumption.”
A suicide. Just like Noah. My blood began to boil. “Good work. Anything else?”
“I was able to obtain a copy of the sealed documents from the settlement Kyle Jones received for his parents’ death.”
“Since Jones is no longer a suspect, and likely a victim himself, I’m not sure how that would help.”
“I thought it might add some insight into the Benson/Jones relationship. Just got it like two minutes ago, so I haven’t had time to even look at them yet. If I find anything interesting I’ll email you the PDFs.”
I found a receipt from my fast-food lunch and jotted down Benson’s 1998 timeline. He likely killed Real Jones in May, moved to Ocracoke, took care of Steele on his favorite holiday, and finally his new neighbor, Judge Buford, on October 10. It was a busy year.
“Anything else before you hang up on me?” Christina asked.
“Yeah, keep trying to find a connection to October 10.”
Chapter 69
When I arrived in Lake Havasu, I went directly to the office of Kelly Dumas, the deputy sheriff who worked the Leonard Harris case. Luckily for me, it seemed that nobody in Arizona ever changed jobs.
Kelly stood to greet me. She was a plain but pretty woman with a boyish bowl cut. But what caught my attention was her height-she towered over me.
We exchanged pleasantries, but I could tell she was less than enthused by my visit, especially at this late hour. I took a seat facing her cluttered desk and noticed a bumper sticker push-pinned to a cork bulletin-board behind her: I know I’m tall-please don’t ask me if I play basketball. I saw my icebreaker.
“So do you play basketball?” I asked with a smile
“As a matter of fact I played for Northern Arizona University. Three time all Big Sky Conference.”
“I’m impressed.”
My niceties didn’t fool her. “Did you come here to discuss my basketball career? My guess is you’re here to discuss the only two issues the national media is interested in talking to me about. So is it MTV Spring Break or Leonard Harris?”
“MTV Spring Break? I can’t watch that crap-it makes me feel two hundred years old,” I replied with another smile.
“So what do you want to know about Mr. Harris’ death?”
“I would like to know why your department called it an accident when it was a homicide?”
She looked annoyed. “Unless you have some evidence I wasn’t privileged to see, that’s a baseless claim. And you’re wasting my time.”
She opened a file drawer and pulled out the folders from the Harris case. The fact that they were so accessible after all these years told me that it must come up often.
I scanned through the reports. The folder was littered with pictures of Harris’ corpse that made my stomach queasy. It also contained sworn statements from the many witnesses. I searched until I found the statement given by Grady Benson and skimmed it.
“I notice you weren’t present at the crime scene?” I said, trying to buy time while I looked through the records.
“Mr. Warner, it’s late, so I’ll make this fast. It was the Fourth of July and there was only one of me. I usually traveled to an incident with the dive team, but it was impossible that night. The only thing out of the ordinary in this case was that one of the persons who died was a famous athlete. Besides that, it was a textbook carbon monoxide poisoning case. And if you read further into the reports, you’ll see that the coroner backed up the finding at the scene.” She let out an exasperated sigh. “A UNLV student died on a houseboat in the same manner last year and nobody shows up here to discuss it.”