Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) đ
- Author: Gray Cavender
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He nodded a kind of exaggerated nod, and said, âOKâŠso, youâre a believer in terms of the intelligence-led policing approach?â
âYes, I am. I mean, itâs not a substitute for police workâŠit actually depends on police work, and then may augment police workâŠbut yes, I do.â
âAnd, I take it that Larry Gruber wasnât too enthusiastic about your models, am I right?â
This time she actually laughed. âThatâs an understatementâŠwhatâs with him? I wasnât trying to tell him how to do his jobâŠI just had some information that I thought he might could use.â
âI donât know what to sayâŠguess thatâs just Larry being Larry. Heâs a good detectiveâŠâ he said, and tapered off, and Jillian assumed that he didnât want to say anything bad about his colleague.
âSomeone said he was moving toward retirement and wanted to close one last case. I understand thatâŠitâs just thatâŠhe was insulting. He made it as if this was about gender or technologyâŠand that somehow both were a bad thing.â
âYeah, itâs hard for some people to change. I imagine back when Larry was hired, Tempe PD was a different world from what it is now. Look at you, a civilian employee whoâs using computers, a woman, and an ASU grad student. Youâre threatening to the Larry Gruberâs of the world. But then, you know that because youâre studying women in policing.â
This freaked Jillian out a littleâŠhowâd a detective know things about her? It must have shown in her expression because he made a calming gesture with his right hand, and said, âThe story was in the paper. And, I did a little homework.â
âWhy?â Jillian asked, and stopped abruptly, causing the detective to have to stop and then take a step back toward her.
She figured heâd say, âwhy what,â but he didnât. Instead, he gave her a straightforward answer. âThe Chief wanted me to talk with you.â
âAm I in trouble?â
âAbsolutely not.â His next comment was out of the blue. âEver given any thought to being a police officer?â
Jillianâs jaw literally dropped and at first, she was at a loss for words. Finally, she said, âNot really, no. Why?â
âFor several reasonsâŠall of them good,â he said and again made a calming motion. âYou considered fact-based dataâŠarmed with the data, you went through channelsâŠyou presented your results to Gruber, as ordered. When he blew you off, you kept at it, even figured out a list of possible targets. That shows brains and determination. And you went there, and, when the action started, you went toward it. Thatâs instinct, and in my world, thatâs a good thing.â
âWell, I donât know about any of that, but honestlyâŠI donât even know how it all happened. I was watching the guy rob a wine shop, totally freaked, and then somehow I was standing in front of him.â She held up her hands, at a loss for words.
âThatâs what I meanâinstinct. Most people donât have that, Jillian, and, Iâm not sure itâs something that can be taught.â
âWhateverâŠbut everyoneâThe Chief, Lt. Timmsâthey all say that this was a mistake. Actually, the Chief said it was foolhardyâŠand my mom agreed.â
Webb chuckled. âAnd yet, there you wereâŠ.and you captured an armed robber. Look, Jillian, Iâm not saying itâs a good thing to be an iconoclastic cop like Eddie Murphy in Beverly Hills Cop, you know, with the Captain yelling at you all the time. Donât get me wrong, I like Eddie, I like Beverly Hills Cop. I just think thereâs a difference between being problematicâŠa maverick, and acting like you acted.â
âThanks, I guess, Jillian said, and they started walking again.
âTell me, what were you thinking as Neely attacked you.â
âWell, with judo, you practice these moves, again and again, but at the same time, you get into a peaceful zoneâŠwhere youâre both thinking and not thinkingâŠif that makes any sense?â
Webb nodded silently, then asked, âWere you scared?â
âYes,â she answered and nodded. âEspecially afterward.â
âGood,â he smiled again, âthat shows that foolhardy was accompanied by common senseâŠitâs good to be scared. And yet, you still actedâŠagain, instinct.â
They walked without speaking for ten seconds or so. Then Wes said, spoke. âYou said that you believed in intelligence-lead-policingâŠhow did you end-up in the Research Division?â
âOK, Iâm sure you know that Lt. Timms is working on her PhD at ASUâŠin Justice Studies.â Wes nodded that he did, and she continued. âWell, we have the same advisor: Professor Carolyn Patek. She introduced me to Linda, who hooked me up with women police officers across the Valley. Iâve been interviewing them, and Linda, too, for my research project. A few months after I interviewed Linda, a position opened-up in the Research Division, and she encouraged me to apply. Of course, I had to go through a set of interviews and a background check, but once I was approved, Linda officially offered me the position, and I accepted.â
âAny qualms about taking such a position? Not everyone wants to work with a police department, especially some people in the university.â
Jillian exhaled, nodded, and said, âAbsolutelyâŠI thought about itâŠa lot. I discussed it with my parents, with CarolynâŠProfessor Patek, and with several friendsâŠsome were fellow students, although mostly it was with non-grad student friends. So, I guess I did have some qualms, yeah. But, you know, the other factor wasâŠwell, money. ASU doesnât typically give masterâs students assistantships or stipends, anything like thatâŠmost of those go to the doctoral students. So, the Research Division job was a way of paying my own way through grad school. It was a good salaryâŠwith benefits, and it gave me even better access to police womenâŠbesides, it was interesting work.â
âGiven the business with Neely, you must be pretty good at it. Are you OK with working for the police?â
âI think so, yeah. In some ways, itâs almost like taking classes at ASU...I actually did have
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