Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Retired LAPD detective Jackson teams up with true crime author McGough (The Lazarus Files) to recount how Jackson and his partner, Frank Garcia, spent six years solving the bizarre murder of Ron Baker. The 21-year-old Baker was found dead in a Los Angeles train tunnel on the summer solstice in 1990, his throat slashed with a Marine Corps knife. Almost immediately, Baker's two roommates, Nathan Blalock and Duncan Martinez, became the sole suspects, but the case stalled after Martinez faked his own kidnapping and disappeared for 18 months. Jackson and McGough's account of the investigation, which is dotted with strange red herrings--Baker was interested in Wicca, and his family received cryptic ransom calls--unfolds like a mind-bending prestige TV crime drama, with the details liable to grip readers as tightly as they did the authors. If the final product is occasionally long-winded, and the prose more serviceable than striking, those minor flaws fail to break the story's spell as a stirring testament to Jackson and Garcia's persistence. Readers drawn to complex, slow-burn investigations will be rapt. Photos. Agent: Andrew Blauner, Blauner Books. (Mar.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
True-crime memoir that minutely details the labyrinthine investigation of a brutal murder. Retired Los Angeles Police Department homicide detective Jackson (writing with McGough) surveys his 34-year tenure via the long road to justice in the 1990 stabbing of UCLA student Ron Baker in a train tunnel near Chatsworth Park. Given the era's suspicions of occult conspiracies, investigators first pursued "a possible 'devil worship satanic connection.'" Yet Jackson's suspicions soon fell on Ron's roommates, Duncan and Nathan, white and Black military veterans, respectively; despite their affability, once Duncan fails his polygraph, "the evidence [soon] stubbornly suggested that Duncan and Nathan had had a hand in Ron's killing, whether or not it made sense." Duncan, a committed fabulist, faked his own kidnapping and disappeared, only to be later apprehended for passport fraud; he agreed to record Nathan admitting to their planning of the killing as a faux kidnap for ransom, an "outlandish motive." This convoluted investigation plays out against the backdrop of the Rodney King beating and O.J. Simpson's trial: "In the span of just a few years, Los Angeles and its criminal justice system had become ground zero for the country's racial divisions." Regarding Duncan's and Nathan's divergent fates, Jackson ruefully observes, "Little did we imagine at the time how perceptions about race would enter the equation later." After five years, both were convicted at trial and "thus deserved the same sentence: life without any possibility of parole." Yet 25 years later, Duncan successfully received clemency while Nathan has not, deepening the appearance of structural racial bias in this bizarre case. Interviews are represented at length, which seems exhaustive, yet it allows the reader to follow a complicated homicide investigation with only senselessness at its heart. Satisfyingly intricate journey into the policing of urban violence. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.