THE THESEUS PARADOX: The stunning breakthrough thriller based on real events, from the Scotland Yard detective turned author. (18 page)

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Authors: David Videcette

Tags: #No. 30, #Subway, #Jake, #Victim, #Scotland Yard, #London Underground, #Police, #England, #Flannagan, #7/7, #Muslim, #British, #thriller, #Bus, #Religion, #Terrorism, #Tube, #Tavistock Square, #Extremism, #Metropolitan Police, #Detective, #Fundamentalist, #Conspiracy Theory, #Britain, #Bombings, #Explosion, #London, #Bomb, #Crime, #Terrorist, #Extremist, #July 2005, #Islam, #Inspector, #Murder, #Islamic, #Bus Bomb, #Plot, #Underground, #7th July, #Number 30 (bus), #Capital, #Fundamentalism, #terror

BOOK: THE THESEUS PARADOX: The stunning breakthrough thriller based on real events, from the Scotland Yard detective turned author.
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Jake’s head hurt; he seemed to be drinking more and more in the evenings. It didn’t matter which day of the week it was. He drank to blot out the boredom of filling in pointless reports twenty hours a day. He drank to alleviate the loneliness of nights in his hotel room. He drank to blur the thoughts of Wasim’s world.
When he slept sober, Wasim was with him there too.
Jake’s drunken world was the only place Wasim didn’t inhabit. Jake found himself going there more and more often.
The only drop of pleasure he could wring from the situation was the thought of what he was doing with the money he was being paid to investigate Wasim. He derived great amusement from the fact that he could deliberately spend it on alcohol, clubbing and – when Claire snubbed him – potentially meeting women for no-strings-attached encounters. He wanted to use his salary for everything the extremists were opposed to. All the Western extravagances that the fundamentalists were against.
Swallowing four paracetamol, he opened the first file of the day. Yet another MIR action created via the HOLMES system. It read: Investigate rice packet DB/14 found at Victoria Park.
He cursed aloud to Lenny who was sat opposite.
‘Fuck me, Lenny! We’ve done pitta bread, pasta, now rice. We’ve investigated 265 items in the past three weeks. I’m fed up of finding out where food was made and looking at fucking sell-by and use-by dates. All this stuff! We’re knee-deep in it. There’s
too much
of it for one flat. How did they move around in there? They wanted us to look at this stuff. They even left the receipts so we could go and visit the shop they bought it in and investigate the bastard CCTV to see them actually buying it. Why? They’re trained terrorists. Why would they leave this trail behind for us? This isn’t right. We’re missing something else.’
‘Yeah,’ nodded Lenny over his computer monitor. ‘No one we’re interviewing seems to know anything. None of their stories add up. It’s all shit.’
‘Well…’ replied Jake, ‘there’s going to be an end to this shit…’
He stood up and dropped the note about rice packet DB/14 in the bin. This wasn’t the first time he’d done this and it wouldn’t be the last where MIR actions were concerned.
‘I can’t bear it, Len. I just feel like we’re getting nowhere.’
‘I know, boss. No one has a handle on this case. We need to do something different.’
‘So what else do we have, Lenny? What do you suggest?’
‘I dunno, guv. Witness statements? You could look at those?’
‘I like your style, Lenny – try a new approach. At the moment, nobody can see across the board.’
Jake went to the store cupboard and grabbed a couple of unopened boxes of computer paper. He needed a fresh start. He filled the printer trays of every printer in the borrowed office to the brim with blank sheets of paper.
This would be a new beginning, he thought.
Jake settled down to begin the mammoth task of printing out every single witness statement obtained in the entire investigation to date. All 1,392 of them.
‘Cup of tea please, Lenny. Two sugars.’
48
Sunday
7 August 2005
1950 hours
Longthorne Oak Hotel, central Leeds, West Yorkshire
There was little that Jake didn’t know about the 7/7 witness statements by the end of trawling through almost 1,400 of them. But it had thrown up absolutely nothing new.
So he’d gone through the exhibit records. There were already thousands. He’d looked at every description and every photo of the items that had been found in the Victoria Park flat to date.
Still nothing.
He was back to square one.
He called Claire, sober for once.
‘The investigation is going round in circles,’ he said. ‘We’re all working in silos.’
‘Well, what about the friends and relatives up in Leeds? Have you got anything out of them?’ she asked.
‘I don’t believe any of the witnesses up here. Half of them don’t know anything and I worry that the rest of them are not credible or are covering their tracks. No one wants to speak to us properly. And we’re inundated with exhibits. That’s all we do. We just spend every day investigating a new object from the flat.’
‘Then speak to London. Get them to send you more help?’
‘No one in London is taking this by the scruff of the neck. No one has got an overview on this. No one is telling us what’s really going on. We need to look at something else. We need to know what you lot know, Claire. Who’s behind this?’
‘We have no idea either, Jake! What else have you got?’ she asked.
At this stage, Jake didn’t know.
Later that evening, Jake lay in the bath in his hotel bathroom. The water was going cold.
‘What else have you got?’ he repeated Claire’s question before submerging his entire body under the water.
He sat back up. The water ran out of his ears and nose. He could almost recite by heart the thousands of inanimate objects his team had been given to investigate by the MIR. They were overwhelmed by the stuff – inundated by actions – as if they had packets of food coming out of their ears like bath water.
He got out the bath and pulled on a hotel robe before calling Lenny.
‘Len, do you think it’s all been put there, dumped in one place for a reason?’
‘Evening, guv. Good weekend? Do I think what has been planted where?’
Jake dispensed with the niceties and continued, ‘All that stuff in the Victoria Park bomb flat. It’s telling us nothing, but it’s keeping us busy. Keeping us from finding out other stuff. I wonder whether they were very happy for us to find this treasure trove of evidence. One that’s taking ages to investigate. We have a hideously slow chain of request and command. The whole thing is painful and useless.’
‘Yeah – but how do you take control away from the MIR? We have to do their bidding. That’s what we’re here for, right?’
‘No. We have to stop doing their work and come up with some leads of our own.’
‘What about re-interviewing the witnesses, guv?’
‘Len, you’ve said it yourself that we can’t rely on witnesses. This stuff is time critical. CCTV disappears. Witnesses forget things. People wash their cars and dispose of clothes. The faster you can get to these things, the better. Already we’re a month down the road! We need something that can’t lie to us. Something permanent, but something that tells a story. How about we look at the… phone records?’
‘But the analysts down in London are working on investigating the bombers’ operational phones, boss.’
‘Yeah, but who is tasking them? What are they looking at? We’re not getting any breakthrough information from them. That team is deathly quiet. They’re not detectives. What the hell are they actually doing?’
‘I really don’t know. There are loads of dirty phones. The bombers had tonnes of pre-paid, unregistered handsets, and they changed them regularly to avoid detection. There might be all sorts on those.’
‘Yeah. Exactly, Len. Phone records. They can’t lie to us or forget stuff like witnesses can. They’re not being washed to remove clues. We should be able to use them to look back in time six months or maybe even further? That data is impossible to fudge or tamper with.’
‘So what are you going to do with that data, boss? Why is it so important to you?’
‘Well, we can pinpoint where each handset was when it made a call or sent a text, because the network exchanges signals with it from the nearest mast. Once the phone sends a signal back, that mast or cell-site location is recorded by the service provider.’
‘So we can track them according to their cell-site locations?’
‘Yeah, from the list of phone communications that a network provider holds, we can work out exactly where our suspects were calling from and therefore where they’ve been, over a period of time. They’ll light up like a beacon. We need that phone data, Lenny. It’ll create a framework over which we can overlay the rest of our evidence.’
49
Monday
8 August 2005
0800 hours
Dudley Hill police station, Bradford, West Yorkshire
There was an urgent call from Helen. She sounded distinctly unhappy.
‘Jake, the MIR manager has been on the phone to me. He’s moaning that you’ve got 150 actions outstanding. He’s threatening to report you to Denswood.’
Jake skirted round the subject.
‘I don’t think we’re making headway fast enough here, Helen. The route we’re taking is a scenic one – or worse, it might not even be the right way.’
‘The actions from Victoria Park have got to be done, Jake. There could be something in there; we’ve got to work through each item properly.’
‘Helen, this is pointless. It will take eighteen months to complete all these billions of actions and this crazy system will still never solve the job. If we put crap in, we’ll get crap out.’
‘But, Jake, there’s a system in place and it’s there for all of us. We all have to do what we have to do.’
‘I understand that, but what if the systems are not being used in the right way and by people who aren’t detectives. A lot of the guys in the MIR have a background in traffic or community policing. Where is their detective nous? They’re not investigators. I want to know who helped the bombers commit these crimes, Helen, and why. None of the instructions sent up from the MIR are helping us to do that. There’s no crossover between any of the teams. I’m getting a different story from every other person I speak to. You know yourself what a rabbit warren HOLMES is. It’s a self-propagating system. It’s not really solving the job.’
‘Jake, just have more faith. We will solve the job in time, if we follow a logical route and use the proper system.’
‘But we don’t have time. We need to get moving from point A to point B. I need leads now. I need stuff cross-referenced with our other counter-terror cases. I need to know who we’ve seen before. No one’s got a handle on it! What if whoever masterminded this whole thing has no connection whatsoever to the bomb factory? What if he’s someone that they only made one phone call to?’
‘Stick with it, Jake. The analysts will throw up all the phone numbers to the MIR. We’ll get there…’
‘I’ve been looking into the phone stuff, Helen. Since May, the four bombers have been using four different operational handsets each. One of them used three. We’re approaching twenty phones already, and that’s not even including their personal ones. Then there’s the seven-page request form that needs to be filled in and signed off by the right people every time we ask for data from a phone network. The analysts have made nearly 4,500 requests to phone companies for information in the last fortnight alone! They are requesting everything. It’s the same with the MIR. We’re creating our own haystack and burying the needle ourselves. This won’t work. Both the MIR and the analysts are banking on the system throwing up the important stuff. They’re doing their best, but we simply do not have the manpower to use the system in this way and the analysts are not detectives. They don’t see what we see…’
‘But, Jake, that’s what the MIR is there for.’
‘Helen, the analysts are saying that they are focussing on two hundred priority numbers. Then there’s two hundred and fifty to three hundred calls and texts for
every single one
of those numbers. That’s around sixty thousand communications to look at in the entire investigation. Which one of those calls is the important one? It’s there, I’m sure of it – but I don’t think an analyst is the person that’s going to find it for us. That’s where all of our leads are. We need a magnet to retrieve the needle from the haystack, Helen. No one has got the helicopter view on this. A witness statement or a phone call or a piece of evidence has no meaning in isolation. You have to give it meaning. You have to link it into other things in order to understand the context. On its own, it’s worth nothing. No one is doing that. It’s like giving too many chefs a single, stand-alone ingredient to cook with. It doesn’t work until you put all the ingredients together.
Then
you can bake the cake. But the starting point needs to be the phone data. It’s pure. It’s the primary constituent in this recipe. I need that phone data.’
Helen sighed. She could see his point.
‘I’ll get the MIR to send you the data. Get those bloody actions done too, Jake.’
50
Tuesday
9 August 2005
0840 hours
Dudley Hill police station, Bradford, West Yorkshire
Jake had told his team to be in for 0830 hours. He’d made tea for each crew member, but began the meeting with two unclaimed cups slowly going cold. They were sat on pieces of paper adjacent to empty chairs. He’d written on the paper: ‘I must not be late for meetings.’
The entire team were slipping into laziness. They didn’t understand what the MIR was trying to get at. They took statement after statement that had little or no evidence in it. It was just background noise as a result. There had been some sloppy work over the past few weeks as they’d all plodded through the pointless MIR actions. Putting your brain into ‘neutral’ wasn’t what good detectives did. They worked better at identifying problems – why they were not moving forward – and then did something about it. Major investigation or not, you worked the same way.
Jake couldn’t stand it any longer – he intended on making sure the team turned up on time and worked hard.
‘Right. We’ll make a start without Martin and Alex – and on that point: we work hard. We play hard,
but
we fucking turn up for work on time with our brains engaged on the job. Anyone who does not do this from now on will go back to London. There are plenty of spaces on the disclosure team going. Is that understood?’
The seven of Jake’s team present nodded. No right-minded detective ever wanted to work on the disclosure team in a big case like this. It basically meant life as a librarian, indexing the items that they’d already investigated so that evidence could be accessed quickly and more efficiently. To Jake’s team this spelled never leaving their computer screens, never leaving the office, never interviewing a real witness and never seeing sunlight for years. If they thought they were hard done to in West Yorkshire, this was far more tedious work. People didn’t want to be stuck in the office, alone. The disclosure team was where bad detectives went to die.

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