Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) đ
- Author: Gray Cavender
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Davidos didnât answer at first. He stared at Jillian for a few seconds. She thought that he must have been expecting them to give him information, not to ask him questions.
Finally, he responded, âActually, the promotion was to Associate Dean, which had not been approved, so it was not rescinded.â
Jillian again, âAnd we learned that Professor Keefer is also âoutâ as the Chair of the English Department.â She ended with a declarative sentence but her demeanor was asking a question?â
âDetective Sergeant, Iâm not in the habit of having to justify my decisions.â
Wes, who rarely took notes during interviewsâhe had once told Jillian that not taking notes was better for the flow of the interview and for observing expressions and gesturesâmade a point of taking a pen from his shirt pocket and opening his notebook. When he finished, he looked up at President Davidos and gave a slight nod, but remained silent, his pen poised.
Davidos filled-in the silence. âVery well. Letâs just say that it was a team decision not to promote Professor Keefer to Associate DeanâŠand, that he not should continue as the Chair of ASUâs English Department. This was a Prime decision. Prime is my closest advisory group, consisting of The Provost, two senior deans, the University CFO, and ASUâs General Counsel. Prime is advisory, but more often than not we are on the same pageâŠas we were in this case.â He looked at them again, and, perhaps because sheâd asked the questions, his look lingered on Jillian.
When he continued, his look shifted back to Wes. âOnce the affair was known, and in light of the murder, we deemed it not in ASUâs best interest that Professor Keefer serve in a highly visible administrative capacity. That is simply not an image that we want out thereâŠit is not consistent with ASUâs brand.â Although Davidos said this in a matter of fact tone, he seemed irked to Jillian.
âMy question to you, to both of youâŠare you suggesting that Professor KeeferâŠI believe the way you put itâŠis a person of interest?â
Jillian answered, âAt this stage, President Davidos, we are interested in anyone who was linked into Professor SiemensâŠand if there are any possible motives for any of these people.â
âAnd you think that losing a promotion might be a motive. How?â
âAn affair with someone whoâs been murdered is a relevant connection, as is a lost promotion. These are interesting coincidences, and we are doing everything possible to gather more details.â
âI see.â
Jillian dreaded the next part, but forged ahead. âBecause this is a murder investigation, we did have a proper search warrant for all of Professor Siemensâ possessionsâŠcarâŠhomeâŠboth campus officesâŠand, of course her electronic devices. We saw that she had had an exchange with you after the two of you attended a conference in Charlotte, North Carolina. You flew back to Phoenix on the same flight and in adjacent seats.â
âThatâs no secret, and surely itâs not a crime, either.â
âWhat is interesting,â she continued, âis that Professor Siemens changed flights at the last minute and also obtained an upgrade from coach to first class.â
âI assume that changing a flight and upgrading to first isnât a crime, either.â He paused, then continued, âAnd how did you obtain this information?â
âThrough our investigation,â Jillian answered being as vague as possible.
âAnd why was this aspect of the investigation necessary?â He looked first at Wes, then settled his gaze again on Jillian.
âWe were following a communication thread that started with Professor Siemensâ change of flight from Charlotte, and then continued through emails and texts with you.â
âI see,â he nodded. âWell, since you asked, Professor Siemens and I started a âthread of conversationâ that began at the conference in Charlotte, and continued through our return flight. She had a promising idea for an upcoming conference on Ayn Rand. She wanted to invite business leaders in the Valley to the conference. I though the idea had merit and wanted to vet it further.â
He seemed about to stop, but after a couple of seconds, continued. âAs for the expense, my time is valuable. My schedule is always fully committed, and having her change flights and sit in adjoining seats wasâŠefficient. The follow-up emails and texts were just that: follow-up. I certainly cannot remember them, but cannot imagine that they were suspicious in any way.â
Wes spoke. âApologies for the personal nature of this next question, President Davidos. We know that the affair between Professor Siemens and Professor Keefer started at a conference. We also know that you and Professor Siemens were at a conference togetherâŠand then flew back together. SoâŠâ
Davidos interrupted him, âIf you are implyingâŠâ
Wes interrupted him, âWe are not implying, President Davidos. Weâre askingâŠa simple yes or no.â
âThen no. And if, as you say, youâve read my messages to her, then you know most assuredly that there was no questionable communication on my partâŠfull stop.â
Wes said, âYes, although her comments could be taken as more suggestive.â
âMine, however, could not be so construed. Even though I do not recall all of them, I know that they were appropriate. As for Professor Siemensâ sense of thisâŠwell, she is beyond asking. I will only say that ASU continues to be a place where we do not tolerate sexually problematic behaviorâŠat any level.â
He turned toward Jillian and said, âPerhaps you can speak to this, Detective Sergeant Warne since you are on our Sexual Assault Task Force. By the way, what is the status of that report? â
Jillian recognized that he was trying to volley the ball back to her court, and she was prepared. âOur meetings have gone wellâŠthe team is a strong one and weâre working well together. I expect a draft soon, although of course, the teamâs recommendations will have to be vetted by Chief McCaslin and Chief Rosas before they come to youâŠand your team.â
âYes, Iâll be in contact with both your chiefs on these mattersâŠrest assured,â he said and looked at
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