Page 92
"What's your gut feeling, Tony?" Chief Coughlin asked, interrupting.
"Chief, what I think is he saw something, a couple of kids, a drunk, a hooker, nothing he considered really threatening. And he stopped the car and got out and they-or maybe evenshe -shot him."
"Why?" Coughlin asked.
Harris shrugged and held his hands up in a gesture of helplessness.
"So where are you now, Tony?" Coughlin asked.
"Going over it all again. There are some people in the neighborhood we haven't talked to yet. We're going to talk to people who work in the neighborhood. We're going to check everybody Magnella ever arrested. We're going to talk to his family again, and people in his neighborhood-"
"You need anything?" Coughlin asked.
That's my question, Wohl thought. But Coughlin wanted to ask it so that when Tony says, "Can't think of anything," he can say, "Well, if there's anything at all you need, speak up." And Lucci will report that to the mayor, that Chief Coughlin is staying on top of things.
"Can't think of anything, Chief," Tony Harris said.
"Well, if there's anything you need, anything at all, speak up," Coughlin said.
"You getting everything you need from Homicide?" Wohl asked.
"Yeah, sure," Harris said. "Lou Natali even called me up and asked if there was anything he could do. Said Chief Lowenstein told him to."
"I'm sure that it's just a matter of time, Tony," Coughlin said.
"Jason?" Wohl asked.
"Nothing. Well, not quite nothing. We found out the Detweiler girl uses cocaine, and we found out she knew DeZego, so that's where we're headed."
"You're sure about that?" Coughlin asked. "Detweiler's daughter is using cocaine?"
"I'm sure about that," Washington said evenly.
"Jesus!" Coughlin said. "And she knew DeZego?"
"I got that just a couple of minutes ago when I came in," Washington said. "Matt Payne left a message."
"I thought he was working with you. I mean, why isn't he here?" Coughlin asked.
"He's at the wedding. I thought he might hear something. He did. I wouldn't be surprised if he heard a little more at the reception."
"I thought you were working on the scenario that the Detweiler girl was just an innocent bystander," Coughlin said.
"That was before we found out she's using cocaine and knew DeZego."
"Any other explanation could turn into a can of worms, Jason," Coughlin said.
"I'm getting a gut feeling, Chief, that what happened on the roof was that somebody wanted to pop DeZego. I have no idea why. But if that holds up, if DeZego getting popped wasn't connected, in other words, with cocaine or robbery- but had something to do with the mob is what I'm trying to say-then the Detweiler girl could very easily really be an innocent bystander."
"Yeah," Coughlin said thoughtfully, adding, "It could very well be something like that."
You'd like that, wouldn't you, Chief? Wohl thought, somewhat unpleasantly. That would eliminate that can of worms you 're talking about.
"I'm going to see Jim Osgood when I leave here," Washington said. "Maybe he'll have something."
Lieutenant James H. Osgood, of the Organized Crime Division, was the department expert on the internal workings of the mob (actually, mobs) and the personal lives of their members.
"You waited until now to get into that?" Coughlin asked. It was a reprimand.
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