The Case of Vanishing Blonde
		
		
	 
	
    
        
        
        
         
         
    
        
            After a woman living in a hotel in Florida  was raped, viciously beaten, and left for dead near the Everglades in  2005, the police investigation quickly went cold. But when the victim  sued the Airport Regency, the hotel’s private detective, Ken Brennan,  became obsessed with the case: how had the 21-year-old blonde  disappeared from her room, unseen by security cameras? The author  follows Brennan’s trail as the P.I. worked a chilling hunch that would  lead him to other states, other crimes, and a man nobody else suspected.
 
From the start, it was a bad case.
 A battered 21-year-old woman with long blond curls was discovered  facedown in the weeds, naked, at the western edge of Miami, where the  neat grid of outer suburbia butts up against the high grass and black  mud of the Everglades. It was early on a winter morning in 2005. A local  power-company worker was driving by the empty lots of an unbuilt  cul-de-sac when he saw her.
And much to his surprise, she was alive. She was still unconscious  when the police airlifted her to Jackson Memorial Hospital. When she  woke up in its trauma center, she could remember little about what had  happened to her, but her body told an ugly tale. She had been raped,  badly beaten, and left for dead. There was severe head trauma; she had  suffered brain-rattling blows. Semen was recovered from inside her. The  bones around her right eye were shattered. She was terrified and  confused. She bent English to her native Ukrainian grammar and syntax,  dropping pronouns and inverting standard sentence structure, which made  her hard to understand. And one of the first things she asked for on  waking was her lawyer. That was unusual.
 Miami-Dade detectives learned that she had been living for months at  the Airport Regency Hotel, eight miles from where she was found. It is  one of those crisply efficient overnight spots in the orbit of major  airports that cater to travelers needing a bed between legs of long  flights. She was employed by a cruise-ship line and had severely cut her  finger on the job, so she was being put up at the hotel by her  employers while she healed. The assault had begun, she said, in her  room, on the fourth floor. She described her attackers as two or three  white men who spoke with accents that she heard as “Hispanic,” but she  wasn’t certain. She remembered one of the men pushing a pillow into her  face, and being forced to drink something strong, alcoholic. She had  fragments of memories like bits of a bad dream—of being held up or  carried, of being thrown over a man’s shoulder as he moved down a flight  of stairs, of being roughly violated in the backseat of a car, of  pleading for her life. Powerful, cruel moments, but there was nothing  solid, nothing that made a decent lead. When her lawyer soon after filed  a lawsuit against the hotel, alleging negligence, going after  potentially deep corporate pockets, the detectives thought something was  fishy. This was not your typical rape victim. What if she was part of  some sophisticated con?
 The police detectives did what they could at  the hotel, combing the woman’s room for evidence, interviewing hotel  employees, obtaining images from all of the surveillance cameras for the  morning of the crime, going over the guest lists. The hotel had 174  rooms, and so many people came and went that it would have taken months  working full-time to run checks on every one of them, something beyond  the resources of a police department in a high-crime area like  Miami-Dade. The sex-crimes unit set aside the file with no clear leads,  only more questions. After several weeks, “we were dried up,” recalled  Allen Foote, the detective handling the case.
 So the action was all headed toward civil court. The hotel engaged a  law firm to defend itself from the woman’s lawsuit, and the firm  eventually hired a private detective named Ken Brennan to figure out  what had happened.
 Foote was not pleased. It was usually a pain in the ass to have a  private detective snooping around one of his cases. Brennan was right  out of central casting—middle-aged, deeply tanned, with gray hair. He  was a weight lifter and favored open-necked shirts that showed off both  the definition of his upper pecs and the bright, solid-gold chain around  his neck. The look said: mature, virile, laid-back, and making it. He  had been divorced, and his former wife was now deceased; his children  were grown. He had little in the way of daily family responsibilities.  Brennan had been a cop on Long Island, where he was from, and had worked  eight years as a D.E.A. agent. He had left the agency in the mid-90s to  work as a commodities broker and to set up as a private detective. The  brokering was not to his taste, but the investigating was. He was a  warm, talkative guy, with a thick Long Island accent, who sized people  up quickly and with a healthy strain of New York brass. If he liked you,  he let you know it right away, and you were his friend for life, and if  he didn’t … well, you would find that out right away, too. Nothing  shocked him; in fact, most of the salacious run-of-the-mill work that  pays private detectives’ bills—domestic jobs and petty insurance  scams—bored him. Brennan turned those offers away. The ones he took were  mostly from businesses and law firms, who hired him to nail down the  facts in civil-court cases like this one.
 He had a fixed policy. He told potential employers up front, “I’ll  find out what happened. I’m not going to shade things to assist your  client, but I will find out what the truth is.” Brennan liked it when  the information he uncovered helped his clients, but that wasn’t a  priority. Winning lawsuits wasn’t the goal. What excited him was the  mystery.
 The job in this case was straightforward. Find out who raped and beat  this young woman and dumped her in the weeds. Had the attack even  happened at the hotel, or had she slipped out and met her assailant or  assailants someplace else? Was she just a simple victim, or was she  being used by some kind of Eastern European syndicate? Was she a  prostitute? Was she somehow implicated? There were many questions and  few answers.
 
Vanishing Act
 ‘I used to be a cop and a federal agent,”  Brennan told Detective Foote, introducing himself at the Miami-Dade  police sex-crimes-unit offices. Foote had long strawberry-blond hair,  which he combed straight back, and a bushy blond mustache. He was about  the same age as Brennan, who read him right away as a fellow member of  the fraternity, somebody he could reason with on familiar terms.
 “Look, you and I both know there’s no fucking way you can investigate  this case,” Brennan said. “I can see this through to the end. I won’t  step on your dick. I won’t do a thing without telling you about it. If I  figure out who did it, you get the arrest. I won’t do anything to fuck  it up for you.”
 Foote saw logic in this and did something he ordinarily wouldn’t do.  He shared what he had in his file: crime-scene photos, surveillance  footage from the hotel security cameras, the victim’s confused  statement. Foote had interviewed a couple of hotel staff members, but  they hadn’t seen a thing. He’d gone about as far as he could with it. He  thought, 
Good luck.
 The insurance adjuster had fared no better than Foote. As Brennan  reviewed the adjuster’s detailed summary of the case in early November  of 2005, eight months after the victim had been found, it was easy to  see why. The woman’s memory was all over the map. First she said she had  been attacked by one man, then three, then two. At one point she said  their accent might have been not Hispanic but “Romanian.” There was no  evidence to implicate anyone.
 The hotel had a significant security system. The property was fenced,  and the back gates were locked and monitored. There were only a few  points of entry and exit. During the night, the back door was locked and  could be opened only remotely. There were two security guards on duty  at all times. Each exit was equipped with a surveillance camera. There  was one over the front entrance and one over the back, one in the lobby,  one at the lobby elevator, and others out by the pool and parking lot.  All of the hotel guests had digital key cards that left a computer  record every time they unlocked the door to their rooms. It was possible  to track the comings and goings of every person who checked in.
 Brennan started where all good detectives  start. What did he know for sure? He knew the victim had gone up to her  fourth-floor room at the Airport Regency at 3:41 A.M., that she had used  her key card to enter her room at about the same time, and that she had  been found at dawn in the weeds eight miles west. Somewhere in that  roughly three-hour window, she had left the hotel. But there was no  evidence of this on any of the cameras. So, how?
        
 
        
        
     
	
    
        
        
        
         
         
    
        
            The victim was colorfully present on the video record, with her  bright-red puffy jacket and shoulder-length blond curls. She had been in  and out all night. After months of living in the hotel, she was clearly  restless. She made frequent trips down to the lobby just to chat with  hotel workers and guests, or to step outside for a smoke, and the  cameras caught her every trip. She had gone out to dinner with a friend  and returned around midnight, but she wasn’t done yet. She is seen  exiting the elevator at about three in the morning, and the camera over  the front entrance catches her walking away. She told investigators that  she had walked to a nearby gas station to buy a phone card because she  wanted to call her mother back in Ukraine, where people were just waking  up. Minutes after her departure, the camera catches her return. The  lobby camera records her re-entering the hotel and crossing the lobby.  Moments later she is seen entering the elevator for her final trip  upstairs. A large black man gets onto the elevator right behind her, and  the recording shows them exchanging a few words. The police report  showed her entering her room 20 minutes later, which had led to much  speculation about where she was during that time. The victim had no  memory of going anywhere but directly to her room. Brennan checked the  clock on the camera at the elevator and found that it ran more than 20  minutes behind the computer clock, which recorded the key swipes,  solving that small mystery. After she entered the lobby elevator, she  was not seen again by any of the cameras.
  The surveillance cameras were in perfect  working order. They were not on continually; they were activated by  motion detectors. Miami-Dade detectives had tried to beat the motion  detectors by moving very slowly, or finding angles of approach that  would not be seen, but they had failed. No matter how slowly they moved,  no matter what approach they tried, the cameras clicked on faithfully  and caught them.
 One possibility was that she had left through her fourth-floor  window. Someone would have had to drop her out the window or somehow  lower her, presumably unconscious, into the bushes below, and then exit  the hotel and walk around to retrieve her. But the woman showed no signs  of injury from such a drop, or from ropes, and the bushes behind the  hotel had not been trampled. The police had examined them carefully,  looking for any sign of disturbance. It was also possible, with more  than one assailant, that she had been lowered into the grasp of someone  who had avoided disturbing the bushes, but Brennan saw that such  explanations began to severely stretch credulity. Sex crimes are not  committed by determined teams of attackers who come with padded ropes to  lower victims from fourth-floor windows.
 No, Brennan concluded. Unless this crime had been pulled off by a  team of magicians, the victim had to have come down in the elevator to  the lobby and left through the front door. The answer was not obvious,  but it had to be somewhere in the video record from those cameras.  “Needless to say, the big mystery here is how this woman got out of the  hotel,” read the summary of the case prepared by the insurance adjuster.  It was a mystery he had not been able to crack.
 Brennan penciled one word on the memo: “Disguise?”
 He began studying the video record with great  care, until he could account for every coming and going. Whenever a  person or a group arrived, the camera over the front door recorded it.  Seconds later, the entries were captured by the lobby cameras, and then,  soon after, by the elevator cameras. Room-key records showed the  arrivals entering their rooms. Likewise, those departing were recorded  in the opposite sequence: elevator, lobby, front door. The parking-lot  cameras recorded cars coming and going. One by one, Brennan eliminated  scores of potential suspects. If someone had left the hotel before the  victim re-entered her room, and did not return, he could not have  attacked her. Such people were eliminated. Those who entered and were  not seen to leave were also eliminated, and likewise anyone exiting the  hotel without a bag, or carrying only a small bag. Brennan eliminated no  one without a clear reason, not even women or families. He watched  carefully for any sign of someone behaving nervously, or erratically.
 This painstaking process ultimately left him with only one suspect:  the man seen entering the elevator behind the victim at 3:41 A.M. He was  a very large black man with glasses, who looked to be at least six four  and upwards of 300 pounds. He and the woman are seen casually talking  as they enter the elevator. The same man emerges from the elevator into  the lobby less than two hours later, at 5:28 A.M., pulling a suitcase  with wheels. The camera over the front door records him rolling the  suitcase out toward the parking lot at a casual stroll. He returns less  than an hour later, shortly before dawn, without the bag. He gets back  on the elevator and heads upstairs.
 Why would a man haul his luggage out of an airport hotel early in the  morning, when he was not checking out, and then return to his room  within the hour without it? That question, coupled with Brennan’s  careful process of elimination, led him to the conclusion that the  victim had been taken out of the hotel inside the big man’s suitcase.
 But it seemed too small. It looked to be about the size that air  travelers can fit into overhead compartments. But the man himself was so  big, perhaps the size of the bag was an illusion. Brennan studied the  video as the man exited the elevator and also as he left the hotel, then  measured the doorways of both. When he matched visible reference points  in the video—the number of tiles to each side of the bag as it was  wheeled out the front door, and the height of a bar that ran around the  inside of the elevator—he was able to get a close approximation of the  suitcase’s actual size. He obtained one that fit those measurements,  which was larger than the bag on the video had appeared to be, and  invited a flexible young woman whose proportions matched the victim’s to  curl up inside it. She fit.
 He scrutinized the video still more closely,  watching it again and again. The man steps off the elevator rolling the  bag behind him. As he does, the wheels catch momentarily in the space  between the elevator floor and the ground floor, just for a split  second. It was hardly noticeable if you weren’t looking for it. The man  has to give the bag a tug to get it unstuck.
 And that clinched it. That tiny tug. The bag had to have been heavy  to get stuck. Brennan was now convinced. This is the guy. No matter what  the victim had said—that she had been attacked by two or maybe three  men, that they were “white,” that they spoke with accents that sounded  Hispanic or perhaps Romanian—Brennan was convinced her attacker had to  be this man.
 The detective was struck by something else. His suspect was entirely  collected. Cool and calm, entering the elevator with the woman, exiting  with the suitcase, pulling it behind him out to the parking lot, then  strolling back less than an hour later. Brennan had been a cop. He had  seen ordinary men caught up in the aftermath of a violent crime. They  were beside themselves. Shaking. Panicky. If a man rapes and beats a  woman to the point where he thinks she’s dead, and then hauls the body  out to dump it in the weeds, does he come strolling back into the same  hotel as if nothing happened? An ordinary attacker would have been two  states away by noon.
 What this man’s demeanor suggested to Brennan was chilling.
 He’s good at this.
He’s done this before.
 The “Mercury” Man
 Brennan called a meeting at the hotel on  November 17, 2005. The owners were there, the insurance adjusters, and  the lawyers—in other words, the people who had hired him. They met in a  boardroom. On a laptop screen, Brennan pulled up the image of the large  man pulling his suitcase off the elevator.
 He said, “This is the guy that did it. That girl is inside that suitcase.”
 There was some snickering.
 “How do you come up with that?” he was asked. Brennan described his  process of elimination, how he had narrowed and narrowed the search,  until it led him to this man.
 They weren’t buying it.
 “Didn’t the victim say that she was attacked by two white guys?” one of them asked.
 “I’m telling you,” said Brennan. “This is the guy. Let me run with it  a little bit. If you’re willing to give me the resources, I’ll track  this guy down.”
 He told them that it was a complete win-win. The hotel’s liability in  the civil suit would go way down if he could show that the woman had  not been attacked by a hotel employee. “What could be better?” he said.  “Think how good you’ll look if we actually catch the guy responsible.  You’d be solving a horrible crime!”
        
        
        
     
	
    
        
        
        
         
         
    
        
            They seemed distinctly unmoved.
 “Look at how cool this guy is,” he told them, replaying the video.  “He just raped and beat a woman to death, or thinks he has, and it’s not  like he’s all nervous and jittery. He’s cool as a clam! Tell me the  kind of person who could do such a thing and be this nonchalant. This  ain’t the only time he’s done this.”
 A discussion ensued. There were some in the room who wanted to find  the rapist, but the decision was primarily a business calculation. It  was about weighing the detective’s fee against a chance to limit their  exposure. Brennan didn’t care what their reasons were; he just wanted to  keep going. Old instincts had been aroused. He had never even met the  victim, but with her attacker in his sights, he wanted him badly. Here  was a guy who was walking around almost a year later, certain he had  gotten away with his crime. Brennan wanted what all detectives want: the  gotcha! He wanted to see the look on the guy’s face.
 It was close, but in the end the hotel suits decided to let him keep  working. Having overcome their skepticism so narrowly, Brennan was even  more determined to prove he was right.
 The hotel’s records were useless. There were too many rooms and there  was too much turnover to scrutinize every guest. Even if the hotel  staff remembered a 300-pound black man with glasses, which they did not,  there was no way to tell whether he was a registered hotel guest or a  visitor, or if he was sharing someone else’s room. Even in cases where  they photocopied a guest’s driver’s license, which they did not do  faithfully, the image came up so muddy that there was no way to make out  the face.
 So he went back to the video. Now that he knew whom he was looking  for, Brennan scrutinized every appearance of his suspect, at the  elevator, in the lobby, at the hotel restaurant, at the front door. In  one of the video snippets at the elevator, the suspect is seen walking  with a fit black man wearing a white T-shirt with the word “Mercury” on  the front, which meant nothing to Brennan. His first thoughts were the  car company, or the planet, or the element. There was nothing there he  could work with. The manner of both men on the snippet suggested that  they knew each other. They walked past the elevator and turned to their  right, in the direction of the restaurant. So Brennan hunted up video  from the restaurant surveillance camera, and, sure enough, it captured  the two entering. As Brennan reviewed more video, he saw the big black  man with the other man quite frequently, so he suspected that the two  had been in town together. The man in the T-shirt had an ID tag on a  string around his neck, but it was too small to read on the screen.  Brennan called NASA to see if they had a way to enhance the picture. He  described the camera and was told that it couldn’t be done.
  Again, back to the video. In the restaurant  footage, the man in the T-shirt is momentarily seen from behind,  revealing another word, on the back of the T-shirt. The best view comes  in a split second as he sidesteps someone leaving, giving the camera a  better angle. Brennan could see the letter V at the beginning of the word, and O  at the end. He could make out a vague pattern of script in the middle,  but could not be sure of the exact letters. It was like looking at an  eye chart when you need stronger glasses; you take a guess. It looked to  him as if the word was “Verado.” It meant nothing to him, but that was  his hunch. So he Googled it and found that “Verado” was the name of a  new outboard engine manufactured by Mercury Marine, the boat-engine  manufacturer.
 There had been a big boat show in Miami in February, when the  incident happened. Perhaps the man in the white T-shirt had been working  at the show for Mercury Marine, and if he had, maybe his big friend  had, too.
 Mercury Marine is a subsidiary of the Brunswick Corporation, which  also manufactures billiards and bowling equipment and other recreational  products. Brennan called its head of security, Alan Sperling, and  explained what he was trying to do. His first thought was that the  company might have put its boat-show employees up at the Airport  Regency. If it had, he might be able to identify and locate the man in  the picture through the company. Sperling checked, and, no, Mercury’s  employees had stayed at a different hotel. Brennan racked his brain. Had  any of the crews who set up the company’s booth stayed at the Regency?  Again, the answer was no.
 “Well, who got those shirts?,” Brennan asked.
 Sperling checked and called back two weeks later. He said the only  place the shirts had been given away was at the boat show’s food court.  The company in charge of food for the show was called Centerplate, which  handles concessions for large sporting events and conventions. It was a  big company with employees spread across the nation. Brennan called the  head of human resources for Centerplate, who told him that the company  had put up some of its people at the Regency, but that it had hired more  than 200 for the boat show, from all over.
 “Somebody has to remember a big black guy, 300 pounds at least—in glasses,” said the detective.
 A week later, the man from Centerplate called back. Some of their  workers did remember a big black man with glasses, but no one knew his  name. Someone did seem to recall, he said, that the company had  initially hired the man to work at Zephyr Field, home of the New Orleans  Zephyrs, the minor-league baseball team in Metairie, a sprawling  suburb. This was a solid lead, but there was a bad thing about it:  Hurricane Katrina had devastated the city just months earlier, and the  residents of Metairie had been evacuated. It was a community scattered  to the winds.
 Good News, Bad News
 Brennan was stubborn. He was now months into  this effort to identify and find the man responsible for raping and  beating a woman he had never met. There was no way that what he was  being paid for the job was worth the hours he was putting in. Nobody  else cared as much as he did. What the hotel’s insurers really wanted,  Brennan knew, was for him to tell them that the victim was a hooker, and  that she had been beaten by one of her johns, which would go a long way  toward freeing them from any liability. But this wasn’t true, and he  had told them at the outset that the truth was all they would get from  him. Detective Foote was openly skeptical. He had given Brennan all the  information he had. He had more pressing cases with real leads and real  prospects.
 But Brennan had a picture in his head. He could see this big man with  glasses coolly going about his business day to day—smug, chatting up  the girls, no doubt looking for his next victim, comfortable, certain  that his crimes left no trail.
 Katrina was the bad thing about the New Orleans lead, but there was  also a good thing. Brennan had a buddy on the police force there, a  Captain Ernest Demma. Some years earlier, on a vacation to the French  Quarter with his kids, Brennan had risked his hide helping Demma subdue a  prisoner who had violently turned on him.
 “The guy had broken away from me,” Demma recalled, “and out of  nowhere comes this guy in a black jacket flying down the sidewalk, who  runs him down, tackles him, and held the guy until my men could subdue  him. He was fantastic.” It was the kind of gesture a cop never forgets.  Demma dubbed Brennan “Batman.” New Orleans may have been down for the  count, but when Batman called, Demma was up for anything.
 The captain sent one of his sergeants out to Zephyr Field, where the  club was working overtime to get its storm-ravaged facility ready to  open the 2006 season. Demma called Brennan back: “The good news is: I  know who this guy is.”
 “What’s the bad news?”
 “His name is Mike Jones, there’s probably only a million of them, and  he doesn’t work there anymore, and nobody knows where he went.”
 Still, a name! Brennan thanked Demma and went  back to the Regency database, and, sure enough, he found that there had  indeed been a guest named Mike Jones staying at the hotel when the  attack occurred. He had checked in on February 14, seven days before the  rape and assault, and he had checked out on the 22nd, one day after he  was seen rolling his suitcase to the car. The full name on his Visa card  was Michael Lee Jones. The card had been canceled, and the address was  for a Virginia residence Jones had vacated years earlier. He had left no  forwarding address. Brennan lacked authority to subpoena further  information from the credit-card company, and the evidence he had was  still too slight to get Miami-Dade police involved. The phone number  Jones had left with registration was a number for Centerplate.
        
        
        
     
	
    
        
        
        
         
         
    
        
            But the trail was warm again. Brennan knew that Jones no longer  worked for Centerplate, and the people there didn’t know where he was,  but the detective thought he knew certain things about his prey. Judging  by the nonchalance he showed hauling a young woman’s body out of the  hotel stuffed in a suitcase, Brennan suspected that this was a practiced  routine. The Centerplate job had kept him moving from city to city, all  expenses paid, a perfect setup for a serial rapist with a method that  was tried and true. If Jones was his man, then he wouldn’t give up an  arrangement like that. If he wasn’t employed by Centerplate anymore,  where would somebody with his work experience go next? Who was  facilitating his predation now? Brennan got some names from Centerplate  and went online and compiled a list of the food-service company’s 20 to  25 top competitors.
 He started working his way down the list, calling the human-resources  department for each of the competing firms, and one by one he struck  out. As it happened, one company on the list, Ovations, had its  headquarters in the Tampa area, and Brennan was planning a trip up in  that direction anyway, so he decided to drop in. As any investigator  will tell you, an interview in person is always better than an interview  on the phone. Brennan stopped by and, as he can do, talked his way into  the office of the company’s C.O.O. He explained his manhunt and asked  if Ovations employed a 300-plus-pound black man with glasses named  Michael Lee Jones.
 The executive didn’t even check a database. He told Brennan, who was  not a law-enforcement official, that if he wanted that information he  would have to return with a subpoena. All the other companies had  checked a database and just told him no. He knew he had finally asked in  the right place.
 “Why would you want someone working for you who is a rapist?” he asked. He was told there were privacy issues involved.
 “Get a subpoena,” the executive suggested.
 So Brennan got a fax number for Ovations and called Detective Foote  at Miami-Dade; before long a subpoena spat from the machine. It turned  out that Ovations had an employee named Michael Lee Jones who fit the  description. He was working in Frederick, Maryland.
 The Interrogation
 Michael Lee Jones was standing behind a  barbecue counter at Harry Grove Stadium, home of the minor-league  Frederick Keys, when Detective Foote and one of his partners showed up.  It was an early-spring evening in the Appalachian foothills, and Foote  the Floridian was so cold his teeth were chattering beneath his  mustache.
 When Brennan had called him with the information about Jones, Foote  was impressed by the private detective’s tenacity, but still skeptical.  This whole effort more or less defined the term “long shot,” but the  name and location of a potential suspect was without question the first  real lead since the case had landed on his desk. It had to be checked  out. The department had a requirement that detectives traveling out of  town to confront suspected criminals go as a team, so Foote waited until  another detective had to make such a trip to the suburbs of Washington.  He got the detective to agree to take him along as partner. Together  they made the hour-and-a-half drive to Frederick to visit Jones in  person.
 Foote had called Jones earlier that day to see if he would be  available. The detective kept it vague. He just said he was  investigating an incident in Miami that had happened during the boat  show, and confirmed that Jones had been working there. On the phone,  Jones was polite and forthcoming. He said he’d been in Miami at that  time and that he would be available to meet with Foote, and gave him  directions to the ballpark.
 Jones was a massive man. Tall, wide, and powerful, with long arms and  big hands and a great round belly. His size was intimidating, but his  manner was exceedingly soft-spoken and gentle, even passive. He wore  clear-rimmed glasses and spoke in a friendly way. Jones was in charge of  the operation at the food counter and appeared to be respected and well  liked by his busy employees. He was wearing an apron. He steered Foote  and the other detective away from the booth to a picnic area just  outside the stadium.
 As Foote recalled it later, he asked Jones  about meeting women in Miami, and Jones said he had “hooked up” once.  The detective asked him to describe her. “I only have sex with white  women,” Jones said.
 Foote asked if he had had sex with anyone at the Airport Regency, and  Jones said no. He said that the woman he had had sex with in Miami had  been working at the boat show, and that they had hooked up elsewhere.
 “Any blonde women?,” Foote asked.
 “No.”
 “Foreign accent?”
 Jones said the woman he had sex with in Miami had been German.
 Foote was not making Jones as a suspect. The big man acted  convincingly, like someone with nothing to hide. The detective was  freezing in the evening air. Foote preferred coming right to the point;  he was not given to artful interrogation. Besides, he felt more and more  as if the trip had been a waste of time. So he just asked what he  wanted to know.
 “Look, I’ve got a girl who was raped that week. Did you have anything to do with it?”
 “No, of course not!” said Jones, appropriately shocked by the question. “No way.”
 “You didn’t beat the shit out of this girl and leave her for dead in a field down there?”
 “Oh, no. No.”
 “Are you willing to give me a DNA specimen?,” Foote asked.
 Jones promptly said he would, further convincing the detective that  this was not the guy. Do the guilty volunteer conclusive evidence? Foote  produced the DNA kit, had Jones sign the consent form, and ran a cotton  swab inside Jones’s mouth.
 He called Brennan when he got back.
 “I’m telling you, Ken, this ain’t the guy,” he said.
 “No, man, he’s definitely the fucking guy,” said Brennan, who flew up  to Frederick himself, traveling with his son, and spent time over a  three-day period talking to Jones, who continued to deny everything.
 Months after he returned, the DNA results came back. Brennan got a call from Foote.
 “You ain’t gonna believe this,” said Foote.
 “What?”
 “You were right.”
 Jones’s DNA was a match.
 Brennan flew up to Frederick in October to  meet Foote, who arrested the big man. It had been 11 months since he  took the case. Foote formally charged Jones with a variety of felonies  that encompassed the acts of raping, kidnapping, and beating a young  woman severely. The accused sat forlornly in a chair that looked tiny  under his bulk, in an austere Frederick Police Department interrogation  room, great rolls of fat falling on his lap under an enormous Baltimore  Ravens T-shirt. He repeatedly denied everything in a surprisingly soft  voice peculiar for such a big man, gesturing broadly with both hands,  protesting but never growing angry, and insisting that he would never,  ever, under any circumstances do such a thing to a woman. He said that  he “never had any problems” paying women for sex, and that he “did not  get a kick” out of hurting women. He did admit, once the DNA test  irrevocably linked him to the victim, that he had had sex with her, but  insisted that she was a “hooker,” that he had paid her a hundred  dollars, and that when he left her she was in fine shape, although very  drunk. They showed him pictures of her battered face, taken the day she  was found.
 “I did not hurt that girl,” Jones said, pushing the photos away, his  voice rising to a whine. “I’m not violent.… I never hit a fucking woman  in my whole fucking life! I’m not going to hurt her.”
 Brennan asked him why a man would roll his suitcase out to the  parking lot and stash it in his car at five in the morning, two days  before he checked out of the hotel.
 “I couldn’t remember if we were leaving that day or the next day. I  wasn’t sure.… For some reason, I thought, Fuck it, it’s time to go.”
 Brennan was able to trip Jones up with only one small thing. Jones  said that his suitcase had only his clothes, shoes, and a video game in  it, but when the detective noted the extra tug Jones had needed to get  it off the elevator, Jones suddenly remembered that he had had a number  of large books in it as well. He said he was an avid reader.
 When Brennan asked him to name some of the books he had read, Jones could not. He could not name a single title.
        
        
        
     
	
    
        
        
        
         
         
    
        
            But Jones was unfailingly compliant, and his manner worked for him. Even  with the DNA, the case against him was weak. He had ample reason for  not having volunteered initially that he had paid a woman for sex—he had  a prior arrest for soliciting a prostitute—so that wouldn’t count  against him, and if he had had sex with the victim, as he said, it would  account for the DNA. The fact that Jones had willingly provided the  sample spoke in his favor. In court, it would come down to his word  against the young woman’s, and she was a terrible witness. She had  picked Jones out of a photo lineup, but given how foggy her memory of  the night was, and the fact that she had seen Jones before, unlike the  other faces she was shown, it was hardly convincing evidence of his  guilt. Her initial accounts of the crime were so much at odds with  Brennan’s findings that even Foote found himself wondering who was  telling the truth.
Miami prosecutors ended up settling with Jones, who, after being  returned to Miami, pleaded guilty to sexual assault in return for having  all of the more severe charges against him dropped. He was sentenced to  two years in prison, an outcome that Brennan would have found very  disappointing if that had been the end of the story. It was not.
 Three More Hits
 Brennan never doubted that Jones was a  rapist, and given what he had observed, first on the surveillance video  and then after meeting him in person, he was convinced that sexual  assault was Jones’s pastime.
 “This ain’t a one-fucking-time deal,” Brennan told Foote. “I’m  telling you, this is this guy’s thing. He’s got a job that sends him all  over the country. Watch him on that video. He’s slick. Nonchalant. He’s  too cool, too calm. You’ll see it when you put his DNA into the  system.”
 The “system” is the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS). The  F.B.I.-administered database now has well over eight million DNA  offender profiles. Local, state, and federal law-enforcement officials  routinely enter DNA samples recovered from convicts and from the scenes  and victims of unsolved crimes, and over the years the system has  electronically matched more than 100,000 of them, often reaching across  surprising distances in place and time. It means that when a DNA sample  exists a case can never be classified as entirely “cold.”
 Michael Lee Jones had left a trail. The  Miami-Dade police entered Jones’s DNA into CODIS in late 2006, and  several months later, which is how long it takes the F.B.I. to  double-check matches the system finds electronically, three new hits  came up.
 Detective Terry Thrumston, of the Colorado Springs Police Department  sex-crimes unit, had a rape-and-assault case that had been bugging her  for more than a year. The victim was a blond-haired, blue-eyed woman who  had been picked up early in the morning on December 1, 2005, by a  stranger—a very large black man with glasses, who had offered her a ride  and then talked his way into her apartment and raped her, holding his  hand tightly over her mouth. Thrumston had no leads, and the case had  sat for two years until DNA collected from the victim matched that of  Michael Lee Jones.
 There were two victims in New Orleans. One of them, also a blonde,  had been partying in the French Quarter a little too hard, by her own  admission, and very early on the morning of May 5, 2003, she had gone  looking for a cab back to her hotel when a very large black man with  glasses pulled his car over to the curb and offered her a ride. As she  later testified, he drove her to a weedy lot and raped her. He pressed  his large hand powerfully over her face as he attacked her, and she  testified that she bit his palm so hard that she had bits of his skin in  her teeth afterward. When he was finished, he drove off, leaving her on  the lot. She reported the rape to the New Orleans police, who filed her  account and took DNA samples from the rapist’s semen. The case had sat  until CODIS matched the specimen with Michael Lee Jones. The other New  Orleans victim told a similar tale, but failed to pick Jones’s face out  of a photo lineup.
 Jones, it turns out, had been in both Colorado Springs and New  Orleans on the dates in question. So in 2008, as his Florida sentence  drew to a close, he was flown to Colorado Springs to stand trial. It was  a novel prosecution, because the Colorado woman had died in the  interim, of causes unrelated to the crime. As a result, Deputy District  Attorney Brien Cecil had no victim to put on the stand. Instead he  fashioned a case out of two of the other rapes, calling as witnesses the  Miami victim and one of the New Orleans victims, both of whom  supplemented the DNA evidence by pointing out Jones as their attacker in  the courtroom. Cecil argued that their cases showed a “common plan,  scheme, or design” that was as much Jones’s signature as his trail of  semen.
 The New Orleans victim proved to be a very effective witness. Her  memory was clear and her statements emphatic, the outrage still evident  six years later, along with her chagrin at the poor judgment she had  displayed that night. The Miami victim, on the other hand, was every bit  as bad on the stand as the Miami prosecutors had feared. One of Jones’s  lawyers made much of the different stories she had told police. Her  struggles with English further confused matters.
 Jones pleaded not guilty to all charges in the Colorado case. He  argued through his lawyers (he did not testify) that the sex had been  consensual, and that the woman claiming rape had been a prostitute. But  where jurors in Colorado might have been able to accept two prostitutes  in different states at different times unaccountably filing rape charges  after turning a trick, and in both cases immediately describing their  attacker as a huge black man with glasses, they clearly choked on a  third. There was no evidence that any of the victims were prostitutes.  And then, of course, there was the DNA.
 Michael Lee Jones is serving what amounts to a  life sentence at the Fremont Correctional Facility, in Colorado. He  received a term of 24 years to life for one count of sexual assault with  force, and 12 years to life for the second count, of felonious sexual  contact. He is 38 years old and will not be eligible for his first  parole hearing until 2032. The state estimates his term will last until  he dies.
 His Miami victim won a $300,000 settlement from the hotel and the hotel’s security company.
 Ken Brennan is back doing his private-detective work in Miami. He is  enormously proud of the efforts that have locked Jones away. “The cases  they got him on, they’re just the tip of the iceberg,” he predicted.  “Once other jurisdictions start checking their DNA files on cases when  this guy was at large, I guarantee you they will find more.”
 So far his hunches have been pretty good.
        
        
        
     
	
    
    
        
            Read about this case the other day. Scary - and a lot of ladies here and eslewhere need to consider the risk. 
 
Screening is so important, and well, Newbies, this is why you feel like it is so hard to 'break' into this hobby.
        
        
        
     
	
    
    
        
            True..I just posted this interesting case to keep LADIES SECURITY Antennas UPPPPP!!  
 
         
	
    
    
        
            Fuck!  I thought you were gonna tell us about how there are more dark haired Latinas and Asians working as providers and all the dumb bitches who keep pouring peroxide and bleach on their heads were going away.....
Oh well.  A guy can hope.
        
        
        
     
	
    
        
        
        
         
         
    
        
            
	
		
		Read about this case the other day. Scary - and a lot of ladies here and eslewhere need to consider the risk. 
 
Screening is so important, and well, Newbies, this is why you feel like it is so hard to 'break' into this hobby.
		Originally Posted by tigercat
			
		
	
I thought long and hard about posting this, so I ask you not to take offense.
 
Having read through the story in its entirety, I fail to see how you are linking hobby/provider screening to the events chronicled. The attacker appears to have chosen his victims based solely on opportunity--and none of the victims were providers solicited by him, so screening doesn't even come into play. They were quite frankly in the right place at the wrong time: when he was there and seeking his next victim of choice.
 
While the general caveat of "let's be careful out there" certainly gets more traction with the revelations of this man's crimes, I fail to see how anyone could have stopped him. He was cool, calm and methodical in his actions--to the point where even 
the seasoned police detective didn't believe him to be the culprit after questioning.
 
It doesn't get more chilling than that.