Font Size
15px

Jimmy never expected Curtis to surrender so quickly. In the afternoon, he received a call from Adam Maxwell, asking to et that evening. For him to call personally, it must an there is news from Curtis's side.

This ti, Adam didn't arrange to et at the club, but instead by the Hudson River after work.

When Jimmy arrived, Adam was already sitting on the bench. He sat down next to him, "Adam, is there a result?"

Adam: "Yeah, it's almost settled, but there's a problem now."

Jimmy looked around, took out a pack of cigarettes and gave one to Adam, lighting one for himself as well, "Go ahead."

Adam: "I previously made it clear that I would prosecute Peter. Even though I'm the lead prosecutor for this case, I can't change my decision without reason. I need a reason to exclude Peter."

Jimmy: "We still haven't found the suspect, Jas Bennett."

Adam: "He can surrender remotely too."

Jimmy smoked while looking at the Hudson River before him. There were quite a few boats on the river, and the Hudson River was not as peaceful as it seed; in fact, it was often very busy.

Remote surrender — Adam had already provided enough information. Now it was up to Jimmy to decide how to handle this.

After finishing his cigarette, Jimmy looked around and tossed the butt on the ground, stamping it out under his foot. "Got it. I'll give you a suitable reason. Goodbye, Adam."

Adam: "Goodbye, Jimmy. I'll wait for your update."

Jimmy got up and left, as did Adam in the opposite direction.

Back in his car, Jimmy didn't drive off. He hadn't yet decided how to handle things while smoking earlier. New ɴᴏᴠᴇʟ ᴄhapters are published on novel⦿fire

This case was no longer about Peter. It was about being accepted by Hughes and his faction, becoming one of them. Although Hughes didn't say it, this case would likely decide Jimmy's future path, whether he could return to fieldwork, and his potential for promotion.

So right now, the priority was to find a way to et Adam's needs. But how to find Jas Bennett?

After thinking for a while, Jimmy drove off to Neil's place.

He rang the doorbell, and the sa maid as before let Jimmy in. But this ti, he saw an elderly black woman in the living room. "Ma'am, I'm here to see Neil Cavrey."

He went upstairs and knocked, Jimmy opened the door to find Neil and Mozzie packing things.

Jimmy: "Neil, can we talk alone?"

Mozzie: "I'll leave this space for you two; I'll go first."

Once Mozzie left, Neil gestured for Jimmy to sit down, "What's up?"

Jimmy: "Do you want to save Peter?"

Neil's eyes widened, clearly surprised, "You have a way? You must have a way."

Jimmy nodded, "I need to contact your father."

The look of surprise on Neil's face vanished instantly. "If I could find him, I would have contacted him long ago."

Jimmy: "When was the last ti he contacted you?"

Neil: "On the day of the murder, I only saw him once before he left. It was later that I found out the senator was killed."

Jimmy: "Contact anyone who might reach him. All we need is a call from him."

Neil: "Why?"

Jimmy: "I need him to confess, even if it's just over the phone. The prosecutor needs a reason not to bring Peter to court. The pre-trial hearing is in a few days, and ti is short."

Neil stood up, paced back and forth a few steps, then looked at Jimmy, "Are you sure this will work?"

Jimmy nodded. Neil: "Give so ti to think it over."

Jimmy stood up, "Call when you get in touch with him. Rember, we don't have much ti." With that, Jimmy walked to the door, looked at Neil one more ti before leaving.

The thod had been given to Neil, and there was no more to say. There were many ways to arrange a remote phone confession, perhaps without even requiring a personal call. Jimmy couldn't share this with Neil, as it would imply fabricating evidence.

Jimmy only provided the goal; how to achieve it was up to Neil, a forr con artist, expert forger, and escape artist. Surely, he could figure out sothing.

Jimmy wasn't soone who stuck to the rules rigidly, but the matter at hand was an assignnt laid by Hughes. If he used any specific ans, even before considering getting himself exposed, it might not pass Hughes' scrutiny.

Moreover, if Jimmy got involved in fabricating evidence, he could forget about his promotion and possibly end up in prison for years.

Now with his prompt, how Neil achieves the end goal was unrelated to Jimmy. His instructions did not involve fabrication, as Jas Bennett was indeed the pri suspect. Jimmy was rely urging Neil to reach him and have him confess.

This case was set as such, with no better ans to fulfill the task without crossing any lines. What remains is waiting. The worst outco is Peter being prosecuted. If he is prosecuted, regardless of an eventual acquittal in court, his career would effectively be over.

In the following days, Jimmy didn't contact Adam Maxwell again. Frequent contact with the prosecutor wasn't good; it might draw attention or investigation. Neil hadn't called Jimmy either, which Jimmy had anticipated. Hughes did call Jimmy once, but didn't say much over the phone. He just scheduled a eting with Jimmy after the pre-trial hearing.

You are reading North America Gunman Detective Chapter 1008 - 575: Acquitted on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.