Heard about it the way most everyone else did: third story on the
eveningnews, right after the trial of a hip-hop star accused of assault and
floods in Indonesia.
I was eating a solitary dinner and half listening to the
broadcast. This onecaught my attention because I gravitate toward local crime
stories.
Couple abducted at gunpoint, found naked and dehydrated in the hills
of Malibu. I played with theremote but no other broadcast added details.
The
following morning, the Times filled in a bit more: a pair of actingstudents had
left a nighttime class in West L.A.and driven east in her car to the young
woman’s apartment in the Pico-Robertsondistrict. Waiting at a red light at
Sherbourne and Pico, they’d been carjackedby a masked gunman who stashed them
both in the trunk and drove for more thanan hour.
When the car stopped and
the trunk popped, the couple found themselves inpitch darkness, somewhere “out
in the country.” The spot was later identifiedas “Latigo Canyon,in the hills of
Malibu.”
The carjacker forced them to stumble down a steep hillside to a
denselywooded area, where the young woman tied up the young man at gunpoint and
wassubsequently bound herself. Sexual assault was implied but not specified.
Theassailant was described as “white, medium height, and stocky, thirty to
forty,with a Southern accent.”
Malibu wascounty territory, sheriff’s
jurisdiction. The crime had taken place fifty milesfrom LASD headquarters, but
violent whodunits were handled by major crimesdetectives and anyone with
information was requested to phone downtown.
A few years back, when Robin and
I were rebuilding the house in the hills,we’d rented a place on the beach in
western Malibu. The two of us had explored thesinuous canyons and silent gullies
on the land side of Pacific Coast Highway, hiked theoak-bearded crests that
peaked above the ocean.
I remembered Latigo Canyon as corkscrew roadsand
snakes and red-tailed hawks. Though it took a while to get abovecivilization,
the reward was worth the effort: a wonderful, warm nothingness.
If I’d been
curious enough, I could’ve called Milo,maybe learned more about the abduction. I
was busy with three custody cases,two of them involving film-biz parents, the
third starring a pair offrighteningly ambitious Brentwood plasticsurgeons whose
marriage had shattered when their infomercial forFacelift-in-a-Jar tanked.
Somehow they’d found time to produce aneight-year-old daughter, whom they now
seemed intent on destroying emotionally.
Quiet, chubby girl, big eyes, a
slight stammer. Recently, she’d taken tolong bouts of silence.
Custody
evaluations are the ugliest side of child psychology and from timeto time I
think about quitting. I’ve never sat down and calculated my successrate but the
ones that work out keep me going, like a slot machine’sintermittent payoff.
I
put the newspaper aside, happy the case was someone else’s problem. But asI
showered and dressed, I kept imagining the crime scene. Glorious goldenhills,
the ocean a stunning blue infinity.
It’s gotten to a point where it’s hard
for me to see beauty without thinkingof the alternative.
My guess was this
case would be a tough one; the main hope for a solve wasthe bad guy screwing up
and leaving behind some forensic tidbit: a unique tiretread, rare fiber, or
biological remnant. A lot less likely than you’d thinkfrom watching TV. The most
common print found at crime scenes is the palm, andpolice agencies have only
started cataloging palm prints. DNA can work miraclesbut backlogs are ferocious
and the data banks are less than comprehensive.
On top of that, criminals are
wising up and using condoms, and this criminalsounded like a careful
planner.
Cops watch the same shows everyone else does and sometimes they
learnsomething. But Milo and other people in hisposition have a saying:
Forensics never solves crimes, detectives do.
Milo would be happy this one
wasn’t his.
Then it was.
When the abduction became something else,
the media started using names.
Michaela Brand, 23. Dylan Meserve, 24.
Mug
shots do nothing for your looks but even with numbers around their necksand that
trapped-animal brightness in their eyes, these two were
soap-operafodder.
They’d produced a reality show episode that backfired.
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