"It's a real slumgullion. At first I thought Mitchell was concentrating his investigation on the murder of his brother in South America, six years ago. That seemed to be what got him started. He left his teaching position right after his brother's death and wrote dozens of letters to the army trying to get more information about it.
The army stonewalled him."
Sloan took a sip of coffee from the jumbo-size takeout container the chief had bought him on the way to the library. It was cold and bitter tasting.
"But when you watch the videos you'll see that they jump from one subject to another, so I don't know where Mitchell was going."
"We can start with the fact that Mitchell didn't buy the story of his brother's death," Kerney said.
"Okay, at the very least a cover-up took place," Bobby said.
"Maybe the priest's brother wasn't whacked by banditos who simply wanted his cash and his car. But based on what I saw on the videotapes I watched, that theme isn't even touched on. There's an interview that concentrates on vague accusations that the army has been burying a sizable amount of money for the last five years in DEA aid to Colombia.
There's a Q and A with a U. S. Treasury official about drug money being laundered through banks in Panama. In another tape a retired army major is talking about the time he spent at the Fort Benning School of the Americas with the priest's brother that doesn't reveal diddly."
"Let's watch the tapes," Kerney said.
Some of the videos were brief, and none ran over twenty minutes. An ex-Canadian intelligence officer talked about the National Security Agency sending cryptologists to Brazil for an unknown purpose. A former DEA agent revealed that the Joint Military Intelligence College had developed a field-intelligence and drug interdiction curriculum for the Ecuadoran army. A professor of economics explained "dollarization," an effort to persuade Latin American countries to join Panama and Ecuador in adopting U. S. currency as their official legal tender.
A treasury official detailed information about a financial crimes advisory on Panamanian drug-laundering schemes. An expert on international banking summarized the ways in which large sums of money were electronically transferred between foreign and domestic financial institutions.
Kerney quickly ran through the tapes Sloan had previewed and then clicked off the VCR with the remote.
"What do you think, Chief?" Bobby asked.
"I've been thinking about geography," Kerney said.
"Panama, Ecuador, Venezuela, and Brazil. If I'm not mistaken, all of those countries border Colombia. Some political analysts are saying that Colombia could be our next Vietnam. Half of the country is controlled by rebels, including a lot of the coca-growing regions.
Maybe the government is getting all their ducks lined up before they send in the troops. That kind of planning can't be done openly. It would raise too much of a stink here at home."
"A secret trade mission might be the way to go," Sloan said.
"I'd say a major clandestine military and civilian intelligence operation has been launched," Kerney said.
"A trade mission could well be part of that strategy."
"We always seem to come back around to the ambassador," Sloan said. His butt felt numb. He shifted in his chair to ease the discomfort.
"It does seem that way," Kerney said. He straightened the leg with the blown-out knee and rubbed the sore tendons.
Sloan yawned.
"This stuff about banking, money laundering, and international finance may have something to do with cutting off the drug money flowing in and out of Colombia."
"Maybe so," Kerney said.
"Without money the jefes couldn't fund their private armies and pay off the rebel forces they do business with."
"So what did Father Mitchell learn that the government didn't want him to know?"
"That's what we've got to find out," Kerney said.
"Have you dug up any more background about him?"
"A couple of things. Like his brother, Mitchell pulled a tour of duty at Fort Benning. In fact, that was his last post before he retired. He could have probably stayed on active duty if he'd wanted to. I cruised the Internet and learned that army chaplains are in real short supply.
He made some trips back to Benning recently, but I haven't found any documentation by Mitchell about it yet. Maybe something will surface on the audiotapes.
"Mitchell ran up travel expenses of over five thousand dollars in the last three months. You don't have that kind of money to throw around on a retired major's pay, especially if you're sending half your pension to a group called the School of the Americas Vigil Committee. I think somebody helped Mitchell out financially. He made two recent deposits totaling ten thousand dollars."
"Follow the money, Bobby," Kerney said.
"First thing in the morning."
"What's this School of the Americas Vigil Committee all about?"
Sloan swallowed hard and pinched his throat to cut off the bile.
"It's run by a peace and human rights advocacy group. They want the school shut down and refer to it as 'the school of assassins." They say it violates U. S. foreign policy, doesn't promote democracy, and infringes on human rights. If that's true, I can see their point."
"Let's wrap it up," Kerney said, eyeing Sloan's tired face.
"I want you to make a complete copy of everything we've got-the papers, letters, videos, and audiotapes-everything. Do it first thing tomorrow and get it to me. Nothing goes into evidence until I say so."
"You've got it, Chief."
"Tell no one in the department about this," Kerney added.
Sloan nodded.
Kerney helped Sloan pack up. They carried everything downstairs, where library staff were roaming around announcing closing time.
"Remember when this building was city hall?" Sloan asked.
Kerney nodded.
"City hall, the jail, and a fire station combined."
"Doesn't seem that long ago," Sloan said.
"Stop it, Bobby. You're making me feel old. Let me buy you a late dinner."
Sloan rubbed his gut.
"No, thanks, Chief. I've had this gas thing in my gut all day."
Kerney drove through the quiet plaza. The stores were closed, only a few people were out, and traffic consisted of one car turning onto Palace Avenue. Crystal snowflakes drifted slowly past the streetlamps, glistened briefly in the soft light, and then melted away on wet sidewalks. At night downtown Santa Fe still felt like a small town.
After a quick run down Cerrillos Road he dropped Sloan at headquarters and headed home. He couldn't shake the notion that Charlie Perry and Agent Applewhite might be staying on in Santa Fe to monitor the Mitchell homicide investigation. What else was there for them to tidy up? If that proved to be the case, Kerney didn't know how he'd react.
He decided he would have to play it by ear and watch his back as much as possible.
Charlie Perry waited until the lights went out in the second floor room of the public library before stopping the tape recorder. Applewhite pulled out her earphone and shut down the video camera.
"That's it," Perry said.
"We only got half of it," Applewhite said.
In the darkness Perry gave Applewhite a nasty look. After tailing Kerney and the detective to the library and spotting them with binoculars in a second-floor room, he'd hustled to find a way to gain fast entry to the bank office building across the way. Fortunately, the Internal Revenue Service housed criminal-investigation agents in the building, so he'd been able to get in after cooling his heels waiting for the man with the keys.
Perry had called Applewhite as soon as he had a fix on Kerney's location. She'd breezed in well after Charlie had the sensitive long range directional recording equipment up and running. Where she'd been all day and what she'd been doing, Perry didn't want to know.