Family Blood: The True Story of the Yom Kippur Murders
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Gerald Woodman, an Englishman and an Orthodox Jew, came to American penniless and hungry for the good life. By 1980 he had gained and lost two fortunes, had built his plastics company into a cash cow that supported his large extended family in great luxury. Killed in 1985 along with his wife Vera, the police asked Vera's sister if the Woodmans had any enemies, she replied , 'Yes, their sons.' Family Blood follows the investigation of these murders and reveals a story of the American Dream gone wrong. Gerald, behind his facade of charm, piety and filial warmth, was a ruthless, amoral businessman, a philandering husband, a ferociously abusive father, and a compulsive gambler. His sons, Neil and Stewart, inherited his charm and business principles. This is the story of the hidden dynamics of an outwardly successful American family that came to a shocking and violent end. It is also the story of a clan of whose menfolk guarded a dark secret from their wives - and everyone else - for three generations. Further it is the chronicle of two dogged police detectives who exposed the Woodman's sordid secrets to the light of justice.
Marvin J. Wolf
Marvin J. Wolf served as an Army combat photographer, reporter, and press chief in Vietnam and was one of only sixty men to receive a battlefield promotion to lieutenant. He is the author, coauthor, or ghostwriter of seventeen previous books. He lives in Asheville, North Carolina, with his adult daughter and their two spoiled dogs.
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Family Blood - Marvin J. Wolf
FAMILY BLOOD
The True Story of The Yom Kippur Murders
MARVIN J. WOLF
Antenna Books
Brooklyn, NY
All rights reserved. Published in the United States of America. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
PUBLISHING HISTORY
This is a derivative work based in part on the book published by HarperCollins, New York, Copyright © 1993 by Marvin J. Wolf and Larry Attebery. Family Blood: the true story of the Yom Kippur murders: one family’s greed, love and rage.
Antenna Books edition by Marvin J. Wolf published January 2013
ISBN: 978-1-62306-023-7
www.antennabooks.com
Also By Marvin J. Wolf
Fiction
For Whom the Shofar Blows
Nonfiction
Family Blood
Fallen Angels
Rotten Apples
Perfect Crimes
Cons by Pros (Platinum Crime)
Where White Men Fear To Tread
Buddha’s Child
Beating The Odds
The Japanese Conspiracy
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1—Last Supper
Chapter 2—Seven Foot Ninjas
Chapter 3—Sins of the Fathers
Chapter 4—Suspects
Chapter 5—Family Business
Chapter 6—Alibis
Chapter 7—Plastics
Chapter 8—Gut Feelings
Chapter 9—Manchester
Chapter 10—Showtime
Chapter 11—Glory Days
Chapter 12—The Big O
Chapter 13—Family Drama
Chapter 14—The Homicks
Chapter 15—A Fish in the Desert
Chapter 16—Leads, Dead-Ends, Blind Alleys
Chapter 17—Clan Clash
Chapter 18—Cutthroats, Swindlers and RICO
Chapter 19—Pledges
Chapter 20—Conversations
Chapter 21—Riding A Tiger
Chapter 22—Endgames
Chapter 23—Arrests
Chapter 24—Trials
Chapter 25—Confessions
Epilogue 1990
Acknowledgments
About the Authors
Addendum 2013 ebook
I just want to say one word to you. Just one word: Plastics.
Exactly how do you mean that?
There’s a great future in plastics.
—Mr. McGuire (Walter Brooke) to Ben Braddock (Dustin Hoffman), The Graduate, Embassy Films, 1967
I’d guess a thousand guys came up to me and said, ‘Plastics. Like they thought they were the only one who saw the movie. Shit, maybe it was ten thousand guys.
—STEWART WOODMAN, 1992
Important Locations
CHAPTER 1
LAST SUPPER
SEPTEMBER 25,1985
More exclusive even than adjacent Beverly Hills, Bel Air’s rolling, landscaped, perpetually green lawns define an expansive yet tightly defended enclave where spectacular homes with breathtaking views nestled along canyons shaded by towering eucalypti. Here five the most bankable movie stars, big-league sports superstars, heavyweight studio executives, power-broker agents, oil magnates, moguls of all manner, and more than a few flush with inherited or married money. Ten-million-dollar chateaus are not the least unusual in Bel Air, where garages are often bigger than an ordinary Los Angeles tract home and driveways are casually littered with Jaguars, Mercedes-Benzes, Porsches, and Rolls-Royces. The occasional Toyotas, Chevrolets, and Volkswagens on the streets belong mostly to hired help.
From the west, Bel Air is accessible via Sepulveda Boulevard, Los Angeles County’s longest street, where it snakes through the Santa Monica Mountains in the shadow of the San Diego Freeway’s ten frenetic lanes. A mile beyond Sunset Boulevard, well below Sepulveda Pass, twists Moraga Drive. A block east of Sepulveda, Moraga becomes a private road guarded by iron gates and armed security officers in a glassed-in booth.
About a half mile beyond the gates is a gracious, two-story Tudor mansion, the home of Muriel and Louis Jackson. http://goo.gl/maps/dO8mI And on this particular September 25th, as late afternoon’s golden sunlight melted into slanting rays of amber, as pools of mountain shadows gathered in the hollows to herald the end of Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement, the Jacksons’ sumptuous home began to fill with friends and relatives. When the sun had set, all would celebrate the end of this solemn day with a hearty meal shared with virtually their entire family—sisters and their spouses, children, grandchildren, cousins, and a handful of close friends.
The Jacksons’ kitchen was enormous, three times the size of an ordinary one. Equipped with restaurant-sized refrigerators, mammoth stoves and ovens, oversized sinks, industrial-capacity dishwashers, and virtually every culinary appliance available, it reflected Muriel Jackson’s lifelong passion for cooking and her resources to feed, on occasion, a small army.
Muriel employed several servants and had hired two extra kitchen helpers for this family gathering, but she preferred to do most of the actual cooking herself, leaving only the cleanup for hired hands. As the day faded, the doorbell chimed endlessly. Muriel dispatched her butler to greet arriving guests. As her expansive house began to fill with family, Muriel and two of her three sisters, Vera and Sybil, retired to the kitchen to make final preparations for the traditional break-the-fast dinner.
More than fifty people were expected, virtually all of whom had obeyed the commandment to fast since the previous sundown. In order that the holiest day of the Jewish year be devoted entirely to prayer and introspection, work and eating are forbidden on Yom Kippur. So, the food Muriel’s ravenous guests would consume to break their fasts had all been prepared a day earlier. Muriel and her sisters had chopped, sliced, peeled, simmered, basted, boiled, steamed, fried, baked, and roasted Himalayas of comestibles, including vegetable, potato, macaroni, and Waldorf salads, traditional fare such as chopped liver, gefilte fish, blintzes, creamed herring, and salmon loaf, cauldrons of mashed, fried, and boiled potatoes, hearty entrees of roast turkey and beef brisket, and, as always, Muriel’s chicken matzoh ball soup.
All four sisters—Vera (at 63 the oldest), Muriel, Sybil, and the baby, the now-tardy Gloria, forty-five—had toiled for hours preparing the feast.
Thin-boned and delicately feminine, her oval face still smooth- skinned in old age, Vera was a petite, elfin figure beneath a cloud of white, silken hair. A galaxy of sparkling diamonds—pendant, bracelet, earrings, and rings—beamed back the rays of a crystal chandelier. Vera tied on a lacy apron to protect her ruffled silk blouse and dark skirt, but she seemed distracted as she bent over a huge crystal serving bowl heaped with chopped herring. Scattering a final pinch of salt over the bowl, Vera straightened up, wiped her hands, then pulled a tissue from an apron pocket.
This is ready,
she said. Now what about the soup?
Muriel and Sybil, engrossed in their own tasks, did not look up to notice the tears Vera dabbed from her eyes. She pushed the thoughts of her son away. There was work to do, and Vera could share her good news later, at the table.
In the den, three husbands—Vera’s Gerald, Sybil’s Sidney, and Muriel’s Louis—call me Lou
—watched the ABC news on Channel Seven. Gerald Woodman craved a drink. A splash of Cutty on the rocks would do, but he wouldn’t ask, not with Lou Jackson, Mr. Religious, right there, fasting. Gerald would wait just a little longer, until sundown.
Gerald—Gerry to everyone—was sixty-seven, a short, powerfully built man with a British accent, but not the kind usually heard in movies. Did I tell you I’m lifting weights now?
barked Gerry to the room at large. "I’ll be the next Schwarzenegger. Imagine, an alte kocker [old fart] like me, with muscles. My doctor suggested it. Helps to strengthen my heart."
Gerry rolled up the short sleeve of his shirt to expose his upper arm. He squeezed his fist, made the biceps jump. Not so bad, eh, Lou,
he bellowed to the quiet, stooped man relaxing in a La-Z- Boy rocker. Might do you good, too, going to the gym. Or have one built here, you’ve got room.
Gerry, you never fail to amaze me,
said Lou, turning back to watch the news.
As the house filled with people, the living room became the center of chaotic juvenile gravity, filled with children of all ages. The teenagers talked excitedly, gesturing expressively with their hands, their faces animated and lively. Younger children squealed with excitement, chasing and dodging each other across the thick carpets and between floral sofas and Queen Anne chairs, stopping only to argue the rules of the game. A magnificent cherry wood coffee table served as home base, its surface already covered with sticky fingerprints as a few toddlers, too young to fast, nibbled on thick slices of bread or purloined sweets from the overflowing bowls Muriel had scattered everywhere.
The older generations—attractive and confident professionals ranging from their twenties to their sixties—lounged on couches and exchanged family gossip, oblivious to the clamorous chatter, raucous laughter, and piercing shrieks. They were a sleek, well-fed, exceptionally well-dressed group, success—defined by these Southern Californians as wealth and influence—radiating from every pore.
The Woodman family: (Left to right) Hilary Woodman, Mickey Stern, Maxine Woodman Stern, Gerry Woodman, Vera Woodman, Melody Placek Woodman, Stewart Woodman, Maxine Shepard Woodman, Neil Woodman, Wayne Woodman (Courtesy Melody Woodman)
***
As the condor soars, it’s about four miles from the Jacksons’ luxurious Bel Air home to the corner of Butler and Santa Monica Boulevard in Sawtelle, a trip, in light traffic, of perhaps eight minutes via surface streets. Measured in economic terms, however, there is an astronomical distance between the lavish opulence of Bel Air’s great wealth and Sawtelle’s comfortable middle-class life.
Santa Monica Boulevard runs east and west beneath the San Diego Freeway. With traffic signals on almost every corner, it’s the slowest-flowing street in the entire county. From the freeway to the ocean, Santa Monica is a succession of small specialty shops, mini-malls, smallish, low-slung office buildings, homey restaurants and cafes, gas stations, supermarkets, art film theatres, and local government offices. Side streets, running north and south from Santa Monica Boulevard, are a jumble of flimsy, stucco apartment buildings, none over three stories, and a few private residences, most of them single-story frame structures built just before or just after World War II.
Even to its own residents, Sawtelle is an almost invisible community; most prefer to think of themselves as living in West Los Angeles. But the pocket between upscale Brentwood in the foothills to the north and the city of Santa Monica to the west is officially Sawtelle, named for an early merchant. Sawtelle Boulevard, a north-south thoroughfare adjacent to the freeway, is overwhelmingly a street of small Japanese restaurants and grocers, Japanese-American-owned real estate and insurance agencies and specialty shops offering assorted Japonica.
Despite a slightly run-down appearance, the streets of Sawtelle are mostly clean. The owners of apartment buildings are likely to invest in flowering shrubs or plant fragrant blooms in interior atriums and along walkways. Automobiles parked at curbside are, more often than not, late models in good condition. This is one of Southern California’s safer middle-class neighborhoods, a haven for white-collar employees of the sprawling University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) campus, the nearby Veteran’s Administration Hospital, the vast, multi-agency Federal Building, or one of the myriad advertising and public relations agencies or television production companies that dot Los Angeles’s West Side.
Concealed from passersby on Santa Monica Boulevard is one of the city’s almost forgotten cultural icons. On narrow, black-topped, residential Butler Avenue, a few yards south of the boulevard, on the south-facing brick wall of a two-story building next to the post office, is the faded remnant of The Isle of California, a 1972 mural by the Los Angeles Fine Arts Squad. http://goo.gl/maps/yNEzU
The enormous painting depicts a furiously wave-wracked stretch of rocky coastline beneath an azure, cloud-dotted sky. In the foreground, offshore, atop a sheer, massive pile of fractured brown rock, is the shattered remains of a familiarly mysterious structure. Only when the viewer’s eye works its way to the top of the painting is a recognizable object discerned: an overhead sign from the San Diego Freeway. Suddenly the painting’s scale is revealed. The shattered structure emerges as a ruined section of freeway. One is confronted with an apocalyptic vision of Los Angeles after The Big One, the massive, mystically inevitable temblor that many imagine will one day shake most of the state into the sea.
There is no evidence that any of the men gathered at dusk— just past six-thirty P.M.—at the corner of Butler and Santa Monica had ever gazed on the mural, much less understood it, but it would be astonishing if at least one, who lived nearby and often used pay phones on this corner, hadn’t pondered the irony of the painting’s message of sudden, violent transformation from dynamic civilization to abandoned ruin.
The leader of the group on the corner was Steven Homick, forty-five, who concealed a thirst for violence beneath a facade of facile charm. Steve sometimes earned his living as a Las Vegas roofing contractor and cabinetmaker. At other times he was an airline and jewelry store security consultant, and occasionally did fieldwork to discourage union activity among hotel employees. He also sold guns and cocaine. Steve was a failed minor league baseball player, a fired casino dealer—and a former Los Angeles police officer.
Steve’s brother, Robert, was ten years younger. Robert, who preferred to be called Jesse, was an ursine creature. He sported a full black beard, in contrast to Steve’s brown hair and clean-shaven cheeks. Except for his bulk and blue eyes, Robert bore only a vague resemblance to Steve. An unemployed lawyer and welfare cheat, he eked out a living as a part-time collection agent and as a monumentally successful shoplifter and book thief. Jesse lived in an apartment two blocks away.
The Homicks were big men. Steve, six feet one inch tall and 205 pounds, was taller, but Jesse, six feet even, was much heavier. Both towered over Tony Sonny
Majoy. But forty-seven-year-old Sonny, all of five feet, nine inches, stood out in a crowd because of his bushy snow-white hair. Sonny’s arrest record included busts for sodomy, sex with minors, and aggravated assault and battery. Now he was a video salesman in the San Fernando Valley.
You fucking moron!
hissed Steve, impaling Jesse with a look calculated to freeze mercury. "I broke my ass sending you to law school—and you’re still a fucking moron. Shit, you’re not even a moron. What’s worse than a moron, an idiot?"
Keep it down,
said Jesse, glancing around nervously. A steady stream of pedestrians meandered along Santa Monica Boulevard, and just a block south on Butler was a police station. Every few minutes a black-and-white cruised by. Calm down,
said Jesse. Unlike his companions, who were in slacks and sport shirts, Jesse was dressed, as usual, in dark, baggy trousers and a T-shirt, none too clean, with a picture of a white-topped ocean breaker cascading across his massive chest. It was just a little accident. A fender-bender. Nobody got hurt.
Barely able to restrain himself, Steve grabbed Jesse’s shirt and pulled his brother’s head until their faces were almost touching.
An accident-on-purpose? Nineteen years of school and you don’t have the brains of a small dog. I swear, Pepper—that mutt—is smarter than you,
Steve hissed, the massive cords in his neck standing out. You have shit for brains. I’ll tell you what your fucking problem is, you’ve had too much education. Sometimes I can’t believe we’re brothers.
Steve shoved Jesse away. It was true: he often wondered if Jesse had been left on the doorstep. Certainly, few brothers could be less alike. Steve moved with the grace of an athlete, and when he built furniture, the wood seemed almost alive in his hands. Around a construction site or working on something special for the mobbed-up thugs he hung around, Steve had earned a reputation as a problem solver, a man who made things happen. He reveled in the fast-paced life that Las Vegas offered to those with money.
Steve thought about Jesse, letting his rage feed on disgust. Jesse held degrees in psychology and law, but six years after passing the tough California bar exam, he dressed like a homeless bum, rented a room in a tiny apartment from some greasy foreigner, and couldn’t even hold down a bank teller’s job, much less find a position in a law firm. All Jesse wanted to do was go surfing, listen to rock and roll, work out at the gym, and hole up in his room with his books and magazines. Reads everything and knows nothing, thought Steve.
But Jesse, after all, was still his baby brother. Steve trusted him, and there were few people whom Steve totally trusted. When this job came up—Jesse, of course, had known all about it, and, as always, needed money—against his first inclinations, Steve had brought his brother in to help.
And now the idiot had gone and run into some joker’s car coming out of the very alley where Steve and Sonny would be working in a few hours. http://goo.gl/maps/fUs7C
Steve willed himself to let go of anger, to focus on the job at hand. What would Jason Bourne, superhero of Robert Ludlum’s fictional epics, do here? he asked himself, and he felt the madness recede, control returning.
So the cops came?
said Steve, his voice calm.
Nah. But the guy took off, so that makes it a hit-and-run. Otherwise they won’t even take a report, not unless someone’s injured,
said Jesse.
What the fuck could possibly be on your mind?
spat Steve, angry all over again. Ramming a guy’s car in that alley. You must be the stupidest shit in the whole world. Right, Sonny?
Sonny Majoy had been hanging back, over by the pay phones, listening. He saw no point in responding to a question like that: Sonny knew the Homicks well enough to know that only Steve was allowed to pick on Jesse. He just shrugged.
Suddenly hungry, Steve glanced at his watch. Almost seven. It would be dark soon, and there was much to do.
Come on,
said Steve. Let’s get going. Someplace around here to eat, Jesse? Someplace quick?
Jesse pointed down the street, and the three men crossed at the light, then trooped a short block east to Delores’, a Fifties landmark with carpets and waitresses both colorful and worn out. http://goo.gl/maps/w4rAK The menu was a mixture of deli and hash house, nothing fancy or expensive, everything edible. They ordered New York strip steaks, french fries, and milk shakes, food, Steve thought, that would stick to their ribs. It was going to be a long, hard night, and he didn’t want anyone pooping out from hunger.
***
It almost broke her heart, but Vera Woodman had to admit that the table her sister Muriel set was magnificent. Muriel’s imported, lead- crystal serving bowls were heaped with all the delectable homemade treats the sisters had labored over. The wine goblets, glassware, and fine bone china were elegantly framed by an immaculate Irish linen tablecloth. Muriel’s heavy sterling silverware reflected the warm light of the dining room’s crystal chandelier.
Vera sighed, remembering better days.
For more than twenty years it had been Vera’s home at which the clan gathered at Yom Kippur and Passover. And what a home! A sprawling tri-level, half hidden among a grove of eucalypti, with a huge, free-form swimming pool sparkling in the dappled sunlight of the back yard. How she had loved hosting the family, working with the housekeeper, the maids, and the other servants for days before to ensure that the whole house practically shivered with cleanliness, grandly welcoming her sisters and their children—the whole mishpocha, or clan. It was lovely, the house echoing to the shouts of grandchildren. It made her whole life, all her suffering and disappointments, seem worthwhile.
But that was then, thought Vera, and this is now. A year earlier she and Gerry, her husband of forty-five years, had been forced into bankruptcy. The house and most of its fabulous furnishings went to creditors.
And now the family gathered at Muriel’s.
Vera loved her sister, cared about her deeply, but she felt robbed every time she realized that the role of clan matriarch had shifted. Muriel was now queen bee. Muriel was more reserved, more decorous. Vera thought that the parties and get-togethers at her own home were really a lot more fun. Gerry was in his prime back then, before all the trouble. He was outrageously funny, raucous as a gymnasium full of monkeys, cracking awful jokes that had people rolling out of their chairs with hysterical laughter.
Muriel’s husband, Lou, was a fine man, thought Vera, but he just wasn’t as lively as her own Gerry. Nobody was, really. Gerry was a star, one of a kind, the center of a universe that he pulled around with him, enveloping people in his aura, having everything his own way, no matter what.
Before the coronary and the family heartbreak that followed. Vera bit her lip and reminded herself: the past is past. It was better to live in the present, to enjoy the grandchildren climbing into their seats around Muriel’s massive oak table. If only all her own grandchildren could be here!
Vera brought herself back to the moment. She reminded herself to be grateful for what she did have. Gerry could never be his old self, she knew, but that was probably for the best. In the meantime, whatever time they had left together was getting more pleasant every day. Lately Gerry seemed solicitous, even, if a little tentatively, romantic.
Vera recalled a recent afternoon they spent together in Palisades Park, a narrow strip of grass and trees along the lip of the towering palisades that bar the sea from downtown Santa Monica. She had packed a picnic lunch, and they ate on a bench, basking in the mild afternoon sunshine. On the way back to the car, Gerry had given her hand a squeeze.
Smiling, Vera slipped into the chair next to her husband. Mothers shushed children, and around the table there was a moment, a bare instant, when the hush was almost palpable.
"Baruch atoh adonai, eluhainu melech ha’olom, ha motzi lechem min ha-auretz, chanted Lou Jackson, and the others joined in:
Blessed art thou, O Lord our God, King of the Universe, who has brought forth bread from the earth."
Lou reached for an enormous challah and tore off a piece of the chewy, pale yellow egg bread. He picked up a sterling silver shaker and sprinkled a few grains of salt on the bread, then bit off a piece and chewed. Around the table hungry men, women, and children tore into the challah with gusto. The fast of Yom Kippur was over, and it was time to eat.
Vera, like her husband, had been born in England, and although both had lived in America for nearly half a century, neither were citizens of their adopted country. That suited Gerry; he always said that when the Internal Revenue Service came after him, he would just get on a plane and go back home to Manchester. It suited Vera in a different way: she thought of herself as an Old Country wife, a woman whose life was defined by her family, and chiefly her husband.
What do you want, Gerry?
asked Vera, lifting his plate.
Everything,
said Gerry.
Vera began ladling food onto his plate.
Don’t be stingy with the chopped herring! God knows Muriel made enough.
***
After gobbling his steak, Jesse, who ate at Delores’ often, wanted cherry pie, baked fresh daily. All three men ordered a piece. Jesse bolted his piece down in four bites, scarlet juice dribbling out of his mouth to stain his beard. Because there was work to do, Steve had forbidden even a single beer, so the trio washed the tart-sweet pie down with cups of coffee. As he had several times during the meal, Steve glanced at his watch.
Seven-thirty. Time to rock and roll.
While Sonny and Jesse went to urinate, Steve tossed three singles on the table for a tip, nodded to the waitress, then strolled to the cashier and paid the bill. Sweeping everything into his pocket, e scarcely noticed if the change was correct, his mind racing nervously through his plan for the night.
Steve wished he had better radios. Those damned walkie-talkies the Professor had loaned him were next to worthless. Maybe he’d better try them one more time before the job. They might work better at night.
Mike Dominguez was at the motel, a few blocks away. Steve decided to pick him up about eight-thirty.
Dominguez, sometimes known by his prison handle, Baby A,
was a fleshy, olive-skinned, dark-haired man of average height who appeared younger than his twenty-six years. He was a burglar, but occasionally worked as a roofer.
Steve decided to go over things with Dominguez one more time, just to make sure he had it right. Mike was a good man, within his limitations, but he didn’t always understand things the first time.
Dominguez didn’t do a lot of deep thinking. He hid his shallow intellect behind a wall of silence, earning a reputation as an enigma. Unlike Steve, who rarely missed a chance to expound upon his many adventures, Mike did not boast about his night work. In fact, he said very little about anything.
Steve liked that. Dominguez’s silent quality gave Steve confidence that no matter what dirty little job Mike was asked to do, if the cops ever nailed him for it, Mike would never roll over and snitch on Steve, not even to save himself. Steve seldom bet, but he would put his life on that.
On the other hand, Steve knew that Mike wasn’t up to handling a real big job on his own. He’d fucked up the hit on that broad in Vegas, put five into her boyfriend and the guy just ran away to call the cops. Mike was lucky to have gotten away with that, but he had cost Steve a fat fee. So Mike’s punishment was to be demoted to lookout this time.
Before picking up Mike, Steve decided, he’d have to deal with Jesse. Now that he’d gone and rammed that car, Jesse was out for the actual hit. No way he could let him near the condo when it went down—Jesse had to stay away. That meant Steve and Sonny would be in the underground garage with no lookout. No warning. They’d have to risk it.
Finally, he reminded himself to double-check the guns.
After a brief huddle in the restaurant’s narrow parking lot, Sonny, following Steve’s orders, went across the street to Steve’s rented gold Camaro, took one of the Professor’s radios from the trunk, and handed the other two to Steve. Steve climbed into the passenger seat of Jesse’s battered blue-green 1960 Buick, shoving empty cardboard boxes into the backseat with the others.
How the fuck can you live like this?
growled Steve, angry again at how his brother managed to screw up everything he touched. When are you gonna get rid of this damn trash,
he raged, indicating the boxes piled high in the backseat.
Jesse mumbled something about recycling, then wisely shut up.
Majoy, driving the Camaro, pulled up behind the Buick, ending the conversation, and Jesse made a right out of the parking lot onto Purdue, then stopped at the corner of Santa Monica to wait for the light. The boulevard was jammed, as usual, and it took them almost five minutes to reach Sepulveda, less than half a mile away. Threading their way through the heavy traffic near the Federal Building, they turned north and drove stop-and-go alongside a freeway still choked with traffic headed for the Valley.
With the Camaro following, the Buick turned right on Moraga Drive, then swept up the long, curving street until they reached a set of massive wrought-iron gates some twenty feet high. A uniformed security guard, a revolver in his polished leather holster, was visible inside the booth.
Jesse drove almost to the booth. Without stopping, he pulled the car into a U-turn. Majoy followed. At the bottom of the street, Steve told Jesse to turn left into the parking lot of the Chevron station next to a restaurant on the southeast corner of Sepulveda and Moraga. Jesse parked the Buick while Majoy got out of the Camaro, walked around, and eased into its passenger seat.
Jesse got out of the Buick and Steve handed him a walkie-talkie. He ran Jesse through the routine again: when he saw the beige Mercedes turn south on Sepulveda, he was to call Mike on the radio.
Steve slid behind the Camaro’s wheel. In his mirror he watched Jesse standing in the parking lot, the radio crammed into the pocket of his shorts, with only the plastic-coated antenna sticking out. It looked like a cellular telephone. Jesse looked like a bull kicked out of a china shop.
Steve pulled into traffic as a well-dressed, middle-aged couple in a big new car pulled off Sepulveda and into the lot. The woman riding in the front passenger seat glanced at Jesse curiously, then at the battered Buick with the Nevada plates. Jesse ignored her.
Steve drove a half mile down Sepulveda to Church Lane, where he turned right and went under the freeway, then curved around and drove to Sunset Boulevard, where he turned right. Sunset here is a four-lane blacktop meandering toward the Pacific Ocean, following the contours of foothill canyons in broad, sweeping curves. This is Brentwood, a genteel community extending from the canyons down to Sawtelle and filled with expensive single-family homes, pricey condominiums, and high-security apartment buildings.
At Barrington Avenue, Steve turned left through Brentwood Village, a series of low, rambling brick buildings housing a post office, specialty shops, and restaurants. Passing a Little League field and tennis courts, he drove carefully through the heavy traffic. At the stop sign guarding San Vicente Boulevard he halted. He eyed the bus shelter across the street.
After waiting for traffic to clear, Steve turned right—west—on San Vicente Boulevard and drove two short blocks to Bundy. Sonny’s car was inconspicuous in the parking lot in front of Vicente Foods, a local supermarket. Steve pulled into the lot to let Sonny out. http://goo.gl/maps/7c08f
Nine o’clock, Westgate and the alley. Got it?
I’ll be there,
said Sonny.
Gonna leave your car in the lot, or put it on the street?
Nobody will notice it in the lot.
Sure you can find your way back here on foot?
No sweat,
said Majoy. Walked it once, drove it twice. See you in the alley at nine.
Two blocks below San Vicente, the former creek bed now called Bundy Drive takes a hairpin turn, twisting from due east to southwest. In the middle of this arc, on the left, is the mouth of Gorham Avenue, which leads back two blocks to San Vicente. In the Buick, Steve turned left from Bundy onto Gorham, coasting to a stop three buildings from the corner, in front of an ostentatious, three-story, twenty-seven-unit condominium. Brentwood Place is at 11939, on the north side of Gorham. http://goo.gl/maps/kSkRJ Steve held the walkie-talkie to his lips, pressing a button. I’m here, can you hear me?
Gerry and Vera Woodman lived and died in Brentwood Place, a condominium complex.
I hear. You hear me okay?
Jesse’s voice crackled through the tinny speaker. It wasn’t clear like the TV cop shows, but Steve could understand what Jesse was saying.
Steve found a place to park and walked up Gorham, turning to climb a few steps to the front door of 11939. The glass door opens into a spacious vestibule; access to the interior is controlled by an electrically activated inner door that can be buzzed open by residents. The vestibule wall is lined with twenty-seven doorbell buttons, one for each unit.
Squinting in the dim light, Steve peered at the rows of names, looking for Woodman.
Finding the right button, he pressed it and waited.
Nothing happened. Waiting a few minutes, he pressed again. Still there was no answer. The Woodmans were gone, just as they were supposed to be.
Satisfied, Steve walked back to the Camaro, cranked the engine, and headed a mile east to the Westwood Inn, on Wilshire, to pick up Mike Dominguez. Majoy would stay out of sight until just before show time. He was from the old school, a real pro, and saw no reason for anyone except Steve and Jesse, whom he knew anyway, to know he was involved. Humoring him, Steve kept Dominguez away from Sonny. Unless Mike had seen Sonny in Jesse’s car after that fender-bender earlier in the evening, he wouldn’t even know what Sonny looked like.
***
Although he had never voted in an American election, Gerry Woodman was a great admirer of Ronald Reagan. Somewhere between the challah and dessert, Gerry launched into a nonstop monologue, praising Reagan to everyone at the table.
A brilliant man,
said Gerry. "The public doesn’t know how brilliant. Look what he’s done. Look how proud the country