Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) š
- Author: Gray Cavender
Book online Ā«Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) šĀ». Author Gray Cavender
āMaybe he just didnāt like the odds,ā Jillian said.
āYeah, plus, killing Professor Siemensā¦that was a violent murderā¦maybe not Murder 1, but stillā¦. Then, moving the Professorās body through the tunnels, that undercut any ācrime of passionā argument that Roberts might have tried. And, once you discovered that the Professorās BAC office was the real crime scene, Angel and forensics revisited it. Maybe they didnāt find a lot, but it was one more piece of the puzzle.ā
āI couldnāt believe how they totally disassembled her officeā¦chairs, the desk, the carpet.ā¦that place was empty.ā
āYeah, but it paid offā¦a trace of blood on one roller of her chair, and a couple of specks on the inside of a desk legā¦all invisible to the naked eye.ā
Jillian nodded, lost in thought.
Wes continued, āMaybe that confirmed the thing about the BAC office, it just didnāt tie Roberts to the murder. At the end of the day, I think what made the difference, and this is what Diane thought, too, were his prints and his DNA on the screwdriver. That negated his āhe said/she saidā defenseā in terms of his attack on you, and, that was another really serious charge, and a slam-dunk in terms of the evidence.ā
The screwdriver had been left in the tunnel by one of workers on the asbestos abatement project. Roberts happened to see it, picked it up, and had tried to stab Jillian with itā¦another convenient weapon, like the paperweight heād grabbed from Professor Siemensā file cabinet in her BAC office.
Jillian didnāt respond. She was back in the tunnel. Walking slowlyā¦stopping to listenā¦walking forward againā¦
While Wes drove, it popped into her mind what ZZ had saidā¦that they would capture the killer. And, they had. Sheād also something about ābeware of the darkness.ā The tunnel. Jillian didnāt remember exactly what ZZ had said that dayā¦maybe she should ask her about this.
āAnd, well, you know Diane,ā Wes saidā¦they were stopped, waiting for a light rail train to pass. āShe had built a strong case, even if some of it was on the ācircumstantialā side. But then, she threw the kitchen sink at him: second-degree murder, attempted murder AND aggravated assault against a police officerā¦and also obstruction, leaving the scene of a crimeā¦and all of lesser included offenses, too. I think by the time she finished, there were seven charges in allā¦ā
āThat is a lot.ā
āYeah, and I think the icing on the cake is that she told Roberts and his lawyer that the state was going to seek the maximum penalties on the more serious charges, AND that state intended to ask the court to āstackā the sentences. In other words, Diane was pushing for consecutive rather than concurrent sentences. Roberts was looking at 40 years. Minimum.ā
āAnd the plea?ā
āTwenty. Of course, heāll earn good time and be out sooner. Still, thatās a long stretch.ā
Jillian and Wes displayed their credentials, checked their weapons, and were escorted to an interrogation room where Roberts was waiting, accompanied by his lawyer. They were there for no more than 20 minutes. At first, Robertsā comments came across as flat, rehearsed.
He told them that heād always seen themāhimself and Nelda Siemensāas the ultimate academic power couple: highly respected scholars who challenged the liberal professor orthodoxy. When he referred to their āideological synchronicity,ā he said it as if it was something precious.
As Roberts talked, his mood darkened. Heād been looking down at the table but now looked up, although still with no eye contact. Instead, he looked to the side of Wes and Jillian, a couple of ticks away from themā¦lost in his recollections.
āThat night in her officeāweād agreed to meet there late, to talk about usāshe kept going on and on about Jacques Davidos. I recognized her infatuation with him. Iād heard all of this before, and Iād had enough.
The interrogation room was quiet. No one moved or spoke, except Roberts. āWe argued, and she laughed at me when I told her about how I saw usā¦you know, about being āan academic power couple.ā She was so condescending. She made me madā¦I was insulted. So, I hit her with the first thing at hand: that damned paperweightā¦her little treasure. I didnāt really even think of what I was doingā¦it was on her file cabinet, and I was standing right by it.ā
Roberts shook his head, angry. āEven hurt, she laughed at meā¦more of a sneer, like I was weakā¦or whatever. She even tried to slap me, but only hit my shoulderā¦I must have just snapped.ā
At that point, when Roberts said he must have āsnapped, his lawyer nodded āyes.ā
Wes later told Jillian that Diane had said that the business about āhaving snappedā was an argument Robertsā lawyer had emphasized during plea negotiations, something that might mitigate his sentence. āBut,ā Wes added, āhis little trip through the tunnels didnāt help the cause.ā
āI hit her some moreā¦didnāt realize how many times.ā
Still not looking directly at them, he continued. āWhen I came to my senses, I knew what Iād done.ā
Roberts was quiet for a time, then continued, and now he made eye contact. āIād read about the tunnels in ASUās online newsletter. It was an interesting storyā¦had their history and even a link with photos down there.ā
Roberts was very matter-of-fact, almost as if telling an amusing tidbit at a dinner party.
āThe story said that because of asbestos abatement, there were no sensors or other controls. They were wide open. There was an entrance near my buildingā¦Iād seen workers entering there. And, then I rememberedā¦there was another entrance in the basement of our building. Thatās the one I usedā¦you know, away from prying eyes?ā
He again looked away, almost as if visualizing what had happened next. āI covered her body in a garment bag that was in my office, and circled it in a bungee cord that I had in my desk. Donāt know why I had that, but I did.ā
He seemed to be trying to remember about the bungee cord, then shrugged, and continued. āI got the department dolly that was kept
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