The Grim Reaper: Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 21: Bank Robbery free porn video

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Fall 2023

The summer progressed nicely. I spent a fair bit of time down in Sullivan County and the nearby environs, first analyzing what they had and then developing the options everybody needed to consider. One thing I stressed with them was that by standardizing on similar doctrine, training, and hardware, the SWAT teams created would be suitable for any eventual regional coordination. How the politics would work out was questionable, but it would be easier if the local units had similar systems.

Also working out nicely was Slave Patrols. Simon & Schuster had received the foreword from Al Sharpton, though it was four pages long and showed he was as much a pompous windbag on paper as he was in person. Publication was scheduled for late-October, timed to hit the New York Times Nonfiction Bestseller List by Christmas. A book tour would be scheduled, and excerpts would be leaked as needed.

In late September I visited a small city in Anderson County, South Carolina, I was working with on an analysis and operational upgrade package. That was about a four-hour drive, so I planned to stay overnight. I drove over Tuesday morning, September 19, and spent the afternoon in talks with the police chief and a member of the county council. They knew about my work in southern Georgia and were interested as well. I spent the night at a Motel 6 and drove home the next morning. After crossing back into Georgia, though, the Lincoln began bucking and thumping, and the Check Engine light lit up.

I’d never had any luck or training with auto repair. The closest I had ever come to working on a vehicle had been in Iraq when I occasionally had to help hold spare armor onto the side of a busted-up gun truck while somebody in the motor pool welded it on. I took the next exit and nursed it into the nearest town. That was Conover, Georgia, county seat of Conover County. I pulled into the first repair shop I saw.

Conover County wasn’t much bigger than Matucket County and was the quintessential feudal shithole. Conover County dated back to the Civil War and was basically owned by the Conover family. For a hundred years the place was run by the mayor of Conover, who was always a member of the Conover family.

Being the boss of Conover County was a nice paying gig. For many years, the way to get stuff done in Conover County was to pay off the mayor with bags of cash. Eventually that got to be a little too bald, so the next system was to require anybody in business in the county, or anybody who wanted to do business in the county, to have to pay for annual permits and such. You want to build a new mill in the county? Great! You just need a building permit and construction permit and land use permit and water use permit and waste regulation permit. Many of these permits needed to be renewed annually, and most of the permit money found its way into the Conover family coffers. The Justice Department put a stop to that back in the 1970s, but that only hid the problem. Since then, the Conovers had retained control through the Conover County Sheriff’s Department.

The current Conover running Conover County was Sheriff George Conover, who was in his late forties. I had met George a couple of years ago at a convention in Atlanta. He had a breezy and folksy style that I could see playing well to the white voters of Conover County, the only ones who counted. Like most southern counties, blacks simply weren’t allowed to vote until the 1960s. After that it was still problematical. Special polling stations were set up in minority areas and then ignored. The ballots were thrown away or destroyed or altered to be useless. Supposedly this had ended, but there continued to be reports of electoral shenanigans. At least once a year the Atlanta Journal-Constitution would run an article or two on the latest crap going on.

Also at the convention was Sheriff Conover’s son, Ronald, who looked to be in his early twenties, and was wearing black tactical SWAT clothing with SWAT badges and patches all over. Ron headed the Conover County SWAT team or was the SWAT team; it wasn’t clear which. In general, Ron struck me as a nervous fucking moron overly impressed by the fancy title his father had bestowed on him. They had spoken to me about a SWAT upgrade package at the convention and something about them just didn’t sit right with me. What did a small sheriff’s department need with a full-blown SWAT patrol? Worse, the kid just wanted to talk hardware and nothing about training or doctrine or procedure; he just wanted to talk about guns and ammo. I never did any follow-up with them.

I pulled into Kennelly’s Towing and Repair and prayed they knew what was wrong with my car, but I wasn’t hopeful. I wasn’t sure the guy I found had even seen a Lincoln built in this century.

“Where’s the nearest Lincoln dealership?” I asked.

The guy scratched his head and said, “I don’t know, but Joe does.” He went inside the shop, and I followed. “Joe! Who’s the nearest Lincoln dealer?”

A guy about ten years older than me came around the corner wearing a set of coveralls with Joe stenciled on a breast pocket. “What’s up?”

“This fellow just came in with a fucked-up Lincoln.”

Joe nodded. “Yeah.” He looked outside and shook his head. “We can’t fix it, but we could haul it up to Eastanollee for you.”

I shrugged and nodded. “Well, that’s what we’ll have to do.”

“You got cash?”

I gave him an odd look. “I’ve got a credit card.”

“Sorry, cash only.” I gave him a look and he held up a hand to stop me. “Hey, don’t blame me. My youngest is our secretary and bookkeeper and she just had a baby last night. She’s the only one who knows how to run the damn machine! My wife will be with us tomorrow, but today we’re shit out of luck.”

“Christ,” I muttered. Then I shrugged and smiled. “Congratulations, grandpa.”

“Thanks. It’s her first, a little girl, and my fourth. Listen, the bank is right down the road. Billy can run you down and you can use the ATM. I can at least give you a handwritten receipt. When you get back, we’ll load you on the flatbed and drive you to Eastanollee.”

I agreed and called Kelly to let her know I was going to be late, very late. The odds were that it would be mid-afternoon at best by the time I got to the dealership, and I’d need to rent a car to come home. Then Billy and I climbed into a wrecker, and he drove me about half a mile into the heart of Conover. I hopped out and went inside. The NationsBank branch was in the middle of the block and the ATM was inside the airlock entrance.

I pulled out my wallet and dug out my card, but when I stuck it in the machine, rather than ask me for my PIN, it beeped and spit the card out. I tried twice more, and the same thing happened. It just wasn’t my day. I went inside and got in line for the tellers. When I got to the front, I explained, “I don’t know what’s wrong, but your machine isn’t reading my card.”

She smiled and said, “Sorry about that. The machine has been doing that all morning. If you give me your card, I’ll be happy to help you.”

“Thank you.” I handed her my card.

That was when everything went to shit!

“EVERYBODY! DOWN ON THE GROUND! DOWN ON THE GROUND! GET DOWN! GET DOWN!” BLAM! BLAM! BLAM!

The sound of gunfire brought forth an instinctive trained reaction - I dropped flat on the floor! What the fuck? I looked around and found three people in hoodies and masks waving handguns around and firing at the ceiling. One guy was screaming while a second was waving around what looked like a Beretta 9mm. The third person looked like a woman. Both she and the second guy had red eyes under their masks.

The second guy was screaming and yelling for us to get down and the way he and the woman were acting, they didn’t look all that stable. The first guy kicked open the swinging door to get behind the counter and I knew that everything was about to turn to shit. The electronic lock on the door had probably just sent out a silent alarm.

“GET DOWN! GET DOWN! STAY DOWN! WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING AT? STOP LOOKING AROUND!”

The first guy grabbed a teller and had her start filling a gym bag with money from the drawers, but he wasn’t paying much attention. If the girl had any smarts or guts, she was passing him a dye pack and hitting the silent alarm. He’d have never noticed. I kept my eyes moving as best I could and wondered just when it would get worse. The woman was yelling at the first guy to hurry up and waving her gun, another Beretta, wildly.

As I expected, things began to go to shit. The silent alarm worked, but the response was anything but silent. Almost as soon as everybody else got on the floor a siren could be heard outside. That really set the woman off, who began screaming they had to leave and to get the money and take all of us as hostages. She was jumping around and shaking, as was the second guy who was still yelling at us to get down and stay down. The first guy decided, no, we would need to get up as hostages and started screaming at the woman to shut up. She began waving the gun at him, too.

Another siren could be heard approaching and the three of them began to lose it. The woman was screaming, “WE’LL KILL THEM! WE’LL KILL THEM ALL! LET’S KILL ONE AND SHOW THEM WE’RE SERIOUS!” A third siren was getting closer.

The first guy was screaming at her to shut up and let him think and the second guy was telling the first guy to not talk that way about her. The woman was complaining that this wasn’t supposed to be happening and how she needed something, a drug of some sorts but I didn’t recognize the slang nickname. They were losing it completely. I moved as slowly and quietly as I could, bringing my right hand towards my jacket.

Then it went completely off the rails. The woman fired her gun, and a woman began screaming. I needed to end this. Rolling onto my back my right hand came up and pulled my Glock from my shoulder holster. I stretched out and brought my gun over my head and fired once, hitting the woman center mass. I continued rolling and fired a second time, hitting the second man, the one who was standing in the middle of the lobby waving his gun around and turning towards me. Blood blossomed on his chest, and I twisted away and sat up, to shoot the last guy, who was screaming and grabbing for a teller. I shot him in the face. I looked around to see what was happening, but all three were dead. I rolled face down again and tossed my gun to the side and then stretched out spread-eagle. The local cops were about to barge in, and I didn’t want them to think I was one of the bad guys. Meanwhile, people all around me were screaming and jumping to their feet. I yelled for them to stay down, but it was useless.

Right on schedule, the front door of the bank crashed open, and a police officer burst in. He was dressed all in black and buried under body armor, had a Kevlar helmet on, and was waving around a Heckler & Koch MP5. As soon as he got through the airlock and was in the lobby, he started firing wildly. The guy following him grabbed him a moment later and half the magazine went up into the ceiling, but it was too late. Two people dropped to the floor, blood pouring from their chests. One was a middle-aged guy, and the other was a little old lady. Oh, sweet Jesus, this was a clusterfuck and a half!

“Ronnie! Ronnie! Calm down! Calm down!” The deputy who had come in second had his arms wrapped around the SWAT guy who had just blown away two customers in the bank. “Ronnie! Ronnie!”

The guy in front struggled but he was wrapped up. After a second, he settled down and the guy behind him took the MP5 from him. I looked at them and saw that the SWAT guy was Ronald Conover, the entirety of the Conover County SWAT team. None of the other cops who came in behind him were in SWAT gear. Ronald was looking kind of jerky and agitated, his eyes were red, and his face was flushed. Something was wrong with him.

One of the cops who followed Ronnie in started asking questions and one of the tellers pointed at me. I stayed on the floor as a couple of cops came over to me and cuffed me and lifted me to my feet. “He’s the killer! He’s the killer!” said Ronald Conover.

“Yeah, Ronnie, he’s the guy, he’s the guy,” said the guy behind him. He motioned to the guys holding me and I was dragged out of the bank.

It was surreal to be Mirandized. I had spent ten years giving various bad guys, felons, and other naughty people the standard Miranda warning,” You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can be used against you in court. You have the right to talk to a lawyer for advice before we ask you any questions. You have the right to have a lawyer with you during questioning. If you cannot afford a lawyer, one will be appointed for you before any questioning if you wish. If you decide to answer questions now without a lawyer present, you have the right to stop answering at any time.”

Now it was my turn. The only thing I said was, “I want a lawyer.”

Five minutes later I was hauled into the sheriff’s department. From Grand Street, Conover’s main drag, the station was a long sprawling pleasant-looking building, but I was taken in the back entrance. From there it was obvious the place was two stories built into the side of a hill. The top story was offices and conference rooms and happy public stuff. The downstairs was only seen by cops and criminals and was a considerably less pleasant location. To the left was a small women’s wing and to the right was the much larger men’s wing; in the center was processing.

The arresting officer was the deputy who followed Ron Conover into the bank and then wrapped him up when Ron began shooting everything in sight. I was processed into the system, with my photo and prints taken, my possessions taken, strip searched, and given an orange jumpsuit. Then I was pulled down a hallway and ignored when I asked to use a bathroom. Instead, I was pushed into an empty cell with a toilet without a seat.

“When do I get my phone call?” I asked.

Deputy Washell, Ronnie’s backup, and my arresting officer, replied, “What phone call?”

“Like you said, I have the right to a lawyer. Do I get to call my lawyer, or do I have to put up with your legal aid lawyer?”

The answer was quick to come. Washell stepped up to me and cuffed my hands behind my back. Then he slammed a haymaker into my stomach, causing me to keel over. “What lawyer?”

“What the fuck?” I gasped.

That earned me another gut punch. “No lawyer, no phone call. You’re going to confess and do it right smart, understand?”

I straightened up and looked at the deputy. “You’re kidding me, right?”

He yelled down the hallway, “Tobe, somebody needs an attitude adjustment!”

A second deputy came down the hallway and into the cell. I began to get a thumping from the two deputies. I tried to protect myself and not act provocative in case there were any cameras, but I doubted they’d try pulling this shit without being sure they weren’t being recorded.

A third deputy came along and yelled at the first two to knock it off. “Get out of here! Knock it off!”

“Go fuck yourself, Warner!” answered Washell.

“You think the Undersheriff is going to put up with this shit?”

“You think he wants to see Ron Conover go down on this?” asked Tobe.

“Ronnie’s going down no matter what! He’s fucked up once too often with this one! Now get out of here!” said Warner.

My tormentors left, but not before slamming my face into the bars of my cell. I could feel my left eye beginning to swell up and my lip began to bleed. I straightened up and turned to face the third deputy. “Thanks. What’s with those two?”

‘They’re buddies of the Sheriff’s son. As long as Ronnie stays out of trouble, so do they.” He came closer and removed my cuffs. Warner looked at my face and said, “You’ll be okay, but you’ll need a few stitches.” He reached into a pocket and pulled out a phone. “Here, make your call.”

“Thanks.” I dialed a number from memory, but it wasn’t to the house or to Kelly. Nobody answered but it ended up at voicemail. “Bo, it’s Grim. I’m in the Conover County Sheriff’s Department jail. Call the Feds and get me out of here.” I hung up and handed the phone back. “What’s the plan now? Those two shoot me while I try to escape?”

“Nah. Not that they wouldn’t like to, but that won’t be happening. Sit down and wait for your lawyer to show up.” He pointed me towards the bunk bolted to the floor and locked me in the cell. “How long were you on the job?” I gave him a curious look. “I processed in your belongings and saw the LEOSA card.”

“Ten years in Matucket, mostly on our SWAT team.”

“And you really got the Medal of Honor?”

I smiled. “A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away...”

“Get some sleep. You aren’t taking a midnight ride. Don’t worry about it.” Warner went back down the hallway.

If I didn’t get shot trying to escape, this was all going to collapse almost immediately. There were five bodies on this mess, which meant that the FBI was going to be all over it, as was the media. If it bleeds, it leads. Even if I hadn’t shot the robbers, bank robberies were a favorite for detectives since there was always a ton of evidence. Banks were filled with good quality video cameras, some with sound, and there were always fingerprints, bullets, fibers, and other physical evidence. Most bank robberies were solved within one or two days. In addition, bank robberies were a federal crime, and even if the locals caught the robbers, it was guaranteed the FBI would stick their noses in at some point. I lay down and went to sleep.

It was late when I woke up. The other inmates were hooting and hollering. I groaned and tried to sit upright but I was stiff and had a medium size dose of agony in my midsection. I couldn’t even sit upright. I twisted around and heard boots marching down the cell block. I turned towards the cell door and saw a group of armed officers dressed in black tactical gear. Then a cell phone came up and flashed and I heard a CLICK as a photo was taken. A voice said, “Oh, shit!” and another flash and CLICK happened. “Okay, get him out of there.”

Another voice said, “Jesus!”

“Christ, we need to get him to the hospital!” said a third voice. “Get an ambulance!”

The cavalry had arrived.

Another photo was taken and my oldest friend, Bo Effner, came into the cell. “Jesus, Grim, you look terrible!”

“What took you so long?”

He laughed and I had a chance to look at my rescuers. They were dressed in FBI tactical black gear, armed and armored, and looked very serious. “Doctor Reaper, you okay?” asked the lead guy.

“Better than I was. Who are you guys?”

“I’m FBI Special Agent Jonathan Blackwood and we’re a Bureau Response Team. Come on, let’s get you outside. You need to see a doctor.”

Bo said, “Come on, Grim. Let’s get you out of here.” He helped me to my feet, and they walked me out of the cell. Suddenly I felt weak, and I stumbled. Bo grabbed me and hugged me. “Come on, Grim. Let’s get you out of here and get you on the phone with Kelly. She’s worried sick.”

“Kelly?” How did she know about this?

“Come on.”

Bo and one of the agents helped me down the cell block to the back entrance, with two agents leading the way and a fourth in the trail position. They did not look amused when they went past the deputies. While waiting for an ambulance, Bo explained what had happened.

“Kelly called me around lunchtime and said she’d been called by a tow truck operator in Conover who said you’d been arrested, and what were they supposed to do with the car? She called the sheriff’s department and they told her they’d never heard of you. Then she saw the news that said there’d been a failed bank robbery in Conover and five people had been killed. Then she called me! I didn’t get your message until hours later. Now, tell me what happened, and we’ll call Kelly.”

“Maybe that can wait until we see Special Agent Delahoye,” said Blackwood.

Bo snorted and laughed. “Special Agent Blackwood, before we ever talk to Irene Delahoye, my client will be talking to me.”

He gave us a wry smile and nodded. “I’ll let her know.”

“Please do. That doesn’t mean we don’t appreciate what you’ve done here, Special Agent Blackwood. I mean that.”

“Yes, sir. Thank you.”

An ambulance showed up and Blackwood and Bo got into it with me. Blackwood ordered two of his team to follow us, and the third was told to find their boss and inform her what was going on. Bo filled me in on what had happened. After hearing from Kelly, he had contacted the Atlanta FBI office and spoke to the Assistant Special Agent In Charge, the ASAIC. She was somebody we both already knew, Irene Delahoye. We had met when the Somali terrorists had tried to kill me and my family five years before. She had grabbed a Response Team and as many spare agents as she could grab and come running.

Five minutes later we were at the hospital and being taken into an examination bay. Bo handed me his cell phone and said, “Call Kelly. She’s worried sick!”

I rolled my eyes and took the phone. Kelly answered on the first ring and immediately said, “Bo, what’s going on?”

“Hey, babe, it’s me, not Bo,” I replied.

“Grim! How are you? Where are you? What’s going on? Grim!”

It was impossible to answer her questions since she was asking them before I could even answer the previous ones. I just concentrated on telling her I was fine and all right. After a bit, Bo took the phone back. “Kelly, it’s Bo. Calm down, you need to calm down ... He’s fine. We have him ... Calm down ... No, you can’t see him tonight.” Then a doctor came in. “Kelly, I’ll call you in a few minutes.” He hung up and tucked the phone away. “I’ll sort this out with her. You need to talk to her.” He indicated the lady doctor.

I went through the standard ‘tell me where it hurts’ routine and had my pulse and blood pressure checked. Then I was sent down to radiology for X-rays and an MRI. Even though Bo stuck with me mostly, Special Agent Blackwood had one of his men follow me everywhere, and I don’t think it was because he didn’t trust me. It was more a matter of protection than anything else. The Response Team was not amused with what they found in the Conover County holding cells.

The result wasn’t terribly surprising. I’d been put through the wringer more than once over the years. I had four cracked ribs which got taped up, and some blood in my urine, though the MRI didn’t show any damage to my kidneys. My split lip got a couple of stitches. My black eye didn’t get any treatment; the swelling and discoloration would diminish on its own.

When Bo came back in he was smiling. “I’ve got your wife under control. She doesn’t like it but she’s staying home tonight. She’ll come up tomorrow with your parents and some clothing. Sam and the kids will go over to your place tomorrow until Kelly’s folks can come by in the afternoon. They’re flying in from New York. I had to swear on a stack of bibles you’d survive until she got here, so don’t die on me tonight.”

“I’ll see what I can do,” I replied.

“See that you do. Delahoye’s coming over in a bit. In case you weren’t aware of it, you’re in the middle of the investigation. Either tonight or tomorrow you’ll be asked to give a statement.”

I glanced over at Blackwood, who nodded. He tapped the earbud he was wearing. “Figure about fifteen minutes before she gets here, and yes, we are going to want to have a nice long chat.”

The doctor looked up at that and said, “Better figure on chatting tomorrow. We’re admitting you to the hospital overnight. You need a good night’s sleep.”

I just nodded. I just wanted to go to sleep.

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The Grim ReaperChapter 43 Aftermath

It looked like almost the entire platoon had arrived, led by Lieutenant Southerland. They rolled up to the front gate, actually driving over various body parts as they did so and stopped. The crashed Apache blocked the way in. The first guys to come inside the compound simply stood there and stared at the carnage, though a couple of guys tossed their cookies. Eventually somebody noticed I was standing there and Southerland and another couple of guys ran over to me. “Sergeant Reaper! Sergeant...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 14 in Sickness and in Health

September 2022 “How was your trip?” asked Kelly once I sorted out Seamus and Riley bickering about something. “Pretty good. Straightforward, anyway. Just not successful, so to speak.” Kelly gave me an odd look, but before I could answer, the kids started up again. Seamus was teasing his older sister about something. I reached out and grabbed him by the back of the neck and asked, “Do I need to give you a lesson in barnacle clearance?” He grinned at me. “Think you can catch me? I’m not the...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 7 Aggravated Battery

Sunday & Monday, February 18 & 19, 2001 I came to slowly. I was surprised that I didn’t hurt as much as I thought I would, but I couldn’t really move all that well, and things seemed weird. It was warmer than I remembered it being, and brighter, and my sweatshirt and windbreaker were missing. I groaned and tried to move some more. That did hurt, quite a bit, and I tried to find a position it didn’t hurt, and I realized I hurt all over. I blinked my eyes, but only my left eye was...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 68 Television

I knew what the citation said; whether I believed it was a different question. It didn’t matter much. I stood there, kept my mouth shut, and looked straight ahead. The President put the ribbon around my neck, and everybody saluted and applauded. He gave me a whispered, ‘At ease.’, and I was able to break position and shake his hand in thanks. That was the end of the official ceremony, and it was time for a meet-and-greet. Mister and Mrs. Obama escorted me down off the stage and over to where...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 19 Rescue

I never really passed out, but I wasn’t in a mood to keep talking. The immediate threat was contained, and since I was trapped under a tree and wounded, I wasn’t going to wander around the battlefield. After a few minutes I began to hear sirens, both police and fire department; I wouldn’t be alone for long. I twisted my head to the left but couldn’t see to the end of the driveway out on Lakeside Drive. I did see flashing lights approaching, and the sirens went silent. Moments later I heard a...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 17 Preparations

Chief Crowley called the meeting to an end. He told Captain Abernathy to light a fire under the detectives and see if anybody had seen any African-American strangers recently. At best we had maybe a day or two before something might happen. Captain Bullfinch and Lieutenant Roscoe were told to give whatever support possible, including moving watch schedules around. Hank was told to assist me and dial up TRT. As far as I was concerned, Priority One was taking care of my family. What was even...

3 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 8 Scholar

Tuesday, January 7, 2019 The rest of the semester was a bitch, a stone-cold cast-iron bitch. I don’t know what I had been expecting, but it was just unrelenting work. Maybe it was because I had taken a lot of time on the two consulting jobs or maybe it was because of the time taken up with Tolley’s book project. More likely it was because I didn’t know what the hell I was doing trying to get a doctorate in history. I mean, I knew there was a lot of reading that was going to be involved....

1 year ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 16 Moving Forward

Fall 2022 to Spring 2023 I was beat when I got home Sunday night. I’d been living out of a suitcase and eating fast food while traveling in a taxi for almost two weeks. I just wanted to decompress and get to know my wife and kids again. When I got home, Kelly waved the pink canoe at me and told me it was my turn to paddle, and that I had fallen behind and needed to catch up. I snorted out a laugh, which made Riley and Seamus curious. I dumped them on their mother, who just told them it was a...

4 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 15 Recuperation

Monday, September 26, 2022 Monday was a busy day. I bundled the kids off to school and then called Matucket State. While I didn’t go into details, I had to let her Department Vice-Chair know she was going to be away from work for a week or two. I didn’t know who to call at DARPA or the NSA, but Kelly didn’t talk to them daily anyway; she could handle that chore. Then I drove over to the hospital. By all accounts, I would be able to bring her home that day. First, though, she needed to be...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 30 Fort Drum

April 2005 - May 2005 A few days later I had to leave. I was due back at Fort Drum on Thursday, so Tuesday Kelly and I loaded up the back of the Outback with all my stuff. This time we added all my personal stuff that I had shipped home when I first deployed to Iraq in 2003. Jack was none too amused when I took the television set with me, since he had set it up in the bedroom, but I wasn’t impressed. “You want to keep it? Fine with me. Just buy me a new one,” I told him. “I don’t have the...

3 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 6 60 Minutes

Sunday, September 23, 2018 We had a quiet Labor Day weekend. The weather had been warm, dry, and sunny the entire weekend and we spent it goofing off with the kids and taking them out on the pontoon boat. My parents put their boat in the water and came over as well. The amusing part was that rather than go home at night, they just tied up to the dock and slept on the boat a couple of nights. Well, if the boat is rocking, don’t come knocking. Kelly and I had been known to do the same sort of...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 10 Doctor and Teacher

So, it went with the rest of the semester. I also did classes on Use of Force and Autism/Mental Health. In each lecture my PowerPoint presentation included examples and videos of recent incidents where police officers had been videoed going way beyond what was needed. Is it necessary to shoot criminals? Sure! It happens all the time! Is it necessary to stand over the body of a dying criminal and put an entire magazine into their body? Is it necessary to shoot an unarmed teenager in the back...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 70 60 Minutes

Captain Crowley simply congratulated me on making it through SWAT and then told me that I needed to call CBS in New York. He gave me a phone number and told me to let him know what was going on. For my mind, I was basically done with publicity. The Army had mustered me out a second time, so they couldn’t order me back to New York, and if 60 Minutes wanted to do something on the MPD, they had to come to us in any case. The call went smoothly. Now that I was home from the Academy, CBS felt...

4 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 20 Back to the Salt Mines

Tuesday morning it was back to the salt mines, building the brand name of Reaper Security Consulting and solving law enforcement problems throughout the Old South. Something like that, anyway. What I did was contact Dom Ballantine and confirm that I was making a presentation to the county council of Sullivan County Thursday evening. The meeting was at seven and it was far enough away I needed to stay the night. I made a reservation at the Best Western and let Kelly know I’d drive down...

1 year ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 2 Reunion

It seemed late when we finished dinner. There was a Welcome Aboard talk in the ship’s theater and after that we did a bit more exploring. There were all sorts of stuff on the boat, including a shopping center with incredibly overpriced stuff, a casino, and a bunch more bars, restaurants, and lounges. We walked around the deck and then went back to our cabin, where we discovered it had been made up, the bed turned down, and an odd animal formed out of some folded towels. Kelly decided she...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperEpilogue

Tuesday, July 21, 2015 I got out of bed at 0600, but I hadn’t been asleep. I had slept fitfully at best all night, and I just gave in and got up. I went into the bathroom and turned on the shower, so the water would warm up, and then started brushing my teeth. “Can’t sleep?” asked Kelly, from our bed. “I need to get to the station early,” I told her. Any further discussion was ended when we heard a cry from the hallway. Kelly groaned and got out of bed. I smiled and shook my head and...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 61 The Goat Whisperer

Friday, September 5, 2008 I had to do a lot of yard work at that resort. Kelly was very insistent that the lawn needed to be mowed as often as possible. I also had to ‘clear the weeds’, ‘trim the shrubs’, ‘edge the lawn’, and perform every other possible type of yard maintenance. On the other hand, I considered it critical to provide the best customer service possible. It’s just the kind of guy I am. Still, we did have to get out of the room on occasion, if simply to gas up the mower....

1 year ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 7 Hold The Line

Saturday, October 20, 2018 There were a number of interesting results from the show. The Matucket County Council protested that nobody was forced out and then began threatening to sue anybody who said so. Nobody listened to them, and they didn’t sue anybody. The FBI issued another statement that Matucket had been an essential part of the elimination of the terrorist threat and that they had never really lost track of anybody. Bo got a couple of interviews where he pushed the law-and-order...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 64 Recovery

Thursday proved to be about as hectic as I expected it to be. By the time the detectives came to see me, I would be the last guy they would be talking to. By that time, they would have already interviewed everybody except the three dead guys, and they would have been autopsied. The crime scene crew would have been all over the last car they had been in, as well as all over the Quiki-Stop. The security videos from the Quiki-Stop would have been obtained, as well as any from any of the...

1 year ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 9 Professor Reaper

Fall 2018 to Spring 2019 Thanksgiving was at my parents’ house. Last year it was supposed to be there, but Kelly had inherited it when Dad had his heart attack that week. Another way of looking at it was that Mom gave him a heart attack, considering what the two of them were up to when the event occurred. With all the mayhem I’d been around in my life I’d prefer to check out the way he almost did. Regardless, this year it was at Mom and Dad’s, and it would give us a chance to tease them some...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 24 Boxie

2024 Sunday, I helped Jack get home. He had chartered a plane to fly from California to Matucket (“ Can you imagine flying commercial through Atlanta with a wheelchair?”) so I simply drove over to their house Sunday morning and helped him out of the house and down to his rental. None of our homes had ramps and I asked whether we should build some for their next visit. “Grim, I’m not sure you should bother. I don’t think I’ll be coming back here any time soon.” “Jack...” “Grim, I just...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 31 Fire Team Leader

June 2005-March 2006 The next morning, we were back to the Army in earnest. Most everybody had filtered back, and we began with PT, physical training, including calisthenics and a four-mile conditioning run. I was hurting as bad as any of the other troops. Leave had left me soft. It didn’t matter, since I knew I would be back in shape in a few weeks, tops. Montoya and Gonzalez, the fuzzies just out of Benning, were in decent shape. Riley was coming off leave and was in about the same...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 47 Job Hunting

Nothing job-related came to my attention by Friday afternoon. I speculated what the perfect job ad would look like - “Wanted! Matucket Firearms Corporation has an immediate opening for product design and testing in their Machine Gun Division! Iraqi war veterans with PTSD desired! Call now, operators are standing by!” I remembered that the AK-47 was invented by a busted-up Russian sergeant during World War II. Too bad there really wasn’t a Matucket Firearms Corporation, either with or without...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 15 Background Briefing

Monday, March 19, 2018 “Dispatch to One-Six-Three.” “One-Six-Three to Dispatch, go ahead.” Dispatch to One-Six-Three, say location.” I was curious as to why Dispatch wanted to know where I was, since they had sent me to supervise an accident at Pinetree and Glen Aubrey. There was a three-car pileup on Glen Aubrey after the first car, a silver Nissan sedan had suddenly braked for a squirrel. The next car, a red Ford Fusion had slammed into the Nissan from behind and had then been...

3 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 12 Doctor Reaper

Spring 2019 to May 2022 Saturday morning things started getting silly. I was home when it started, sacked out while Kelly got up to tend to the offspring, when she came in and said, “You’d better get up.” “What’s up?” “The President is complaining about you again.” I looked at her curiously. “Trump?” She nodded. “What’s wrong now? Jack tweeting again?” “I don’t know, but something set him off. He’s tweeting that the Army needs to yank your medals again,” she replied. I rolled my eyes...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Adventures in Southern Law EnforcementChapter 20 Hospitalization

Mom got a text from Kelly that she and the kids would fly home early Saturday. Seamus was acting fussy, and it would be very late by the time they arrived on the East Coast. She told me she would call back when she got the kids fed and settled down. I was going to have to con my mother into loaning me her phone, so that she wasn’t listening in while we talked. It was late enough in the afternoon that it was time to watch the press conference on television. I turned it on and dialed through...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 17 Summer

June to August 2002 The following week we had finals, and that was it. Seniors had to go through graduation, but the rest of us were out for a couple of months for the summer. For me that meant I had about a week of goof-off time before I had to go back to the mill full time. That would take me through all of June and into July, at which time it was back to practice for the football season, running twice-a-days and sweating off about ten pounds under the July sun. Somewhere during that...

4 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 35 Chief Of Police

Holden looked at me curiously. “How can I help you, sir?” “Tell me about the department. How did you get the acting chief slot, for one thing? Seniority?” He nodded. “Basically. I was hired by Chief Babcock back when he was first hired. Shawn Warren was hired about a year later. He has Patrol.” “So, you’ve been a captain about two years, and he’s only been a captain one year.” Again, he nodded. “We weren’t even considered for the chief’s slot, at least not permanently. Besides, Chief...

4 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 19 Decisions

I was glad I had asked for a brunch meeting and not a breakfast meeting. Kelly not only thanked me for being a hero when we got back to the room, she insisted on thanking me again the next morning! It’s too bad that the Herndons were flying back with us, because I would have bet a significant portion of my net worth that Kelly could have been talked into joining the mile-high club otherwise. Ah well... Mike Forrester and Bob Jenkins met us at ten in the cafe for the breakfast buffet. They...

4 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 11 Hold the Line Part II

May 2019 The spring moved along, slowly at times, quick and harried at others. February saw Chris Balvin sending out advanced copies of his final draft for everybody involved to do a final edit. We were supposed to review it for any technical or factual errors; it was sent not just to Tolley and me, but also to Jose and Bob. The deal we all had was that any proceeds from the book would be split three ways. Chris was paid a flat $150k up front to write the book, and then he got a percentage...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 49 Training

October 2007 - December 2007 Mid-October, about when it became obvious that I was going to stick it out and go to the academy, Tim Hungerford showed up at the rickety-bench-with-delusions-of-grandeur that I called my desk. He had a packet of paperwork with him. “Take a break,” he ordered. “You need to look this stuff over.” I looked at him. “Why? What is it?” “It’s the packet from the academy.” “Ah!” I nodded at that. “Let’s take a look. You’ve been through this, right?” Tim nodded....

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 59 Back to Work

Monday, May 26, 2008 Certain things worked out for me. The bullshit out of the CORB had gotten pretty extreme, and the Justice Department planned to investigate them and not me. The Review Board wasn’t helped when Pendergast was caught saying that he was hoping for the dissolution of the entire Matucket Police Department and its replacement by a federally supervised police force. That was considered more than a bit nutty, even for hard-core Democrats. In any case, it got me off the hook with...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 27 Returning Home

June 2004 - August 2004 Word came down from Battalion that the rest of Second Brigade would be deploying to Iraq soon. It was expected that they would show up sometime in July, but no dates were available. What they would do then was not known, or at least not known to us down at Camp Custer. Where exactly they would be positioned wasn’t known or might change before they got here. However, one interesting tidbit came out. Fourth of the Fourth was going to get some leave. Over the next few...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 22 Leave

I told my family to stay there, and I would get my gear and catch up to them. Kelly offered to follow me, but I had to explain that women were not allowed in the barracks, no way, no how! Luckily there was a parking lot near the barracks that would allow me to load my gear up. Dad had driven down in the F-150, so we could toss my stuff in the back and then ride home. The ride home was mostly taken up with my parents and Kelly asking me about the Army and my training. What did I do, what did...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 41 Abu Dhabi

January 2007 Mom was very upset that I wasn’t going to come home on my leave. She just wasn’t buying my explanation about losing my squad. She wanted me to come home, squad or no squad. I think Dad understood, and he told me that his father understood, but Mom was very unhappy. I had been in the Army now for four Christmases, and three had been spent in Iraq. I didn’t even bother telling her about the incident at Yankee North. One of her latest kicks was, “Are you the only soldier in Iraq?...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 56 End of a Career

I stared at Jerry for a second, and then ran over and knelt next to him. His upper right arm was mangled and bloody, and his face was covered in blood. “Oh, Jesus, Jerry!” I wailed, and then I grabbed the mike on my shoulder. ‘OFFICER DOWN! OFFICER DOWN! OH JESUS! OFFICER DOWN AT MATUCKET AND ELM! ONE-SIX-THREE TO DISPATCH! I NEED BACKUP AND AN AMBULANCE ... ROLL EVERYTHING! OFFICER DOWN!” Dispatch was saying something, but I didn’t pay any attention. “Oh, shit, Jerry, don’t you die on me!”...

4 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 12 The Perfect Game

I couldn’t take any more days off that summer. My time with Kelly was restricted to evenings and weekends, which was probably a good thing, at least as regards to my health. Keeping up with her appetite for sin was tiring! She might kill me, but I’d die with a smile on my face. I did speak to Dad about a temporary dock, and he nixed it, at least for this year. “One, it’s not as easy as you think, or as cheap, or as quick. You won’t get it done, at least not done right, until the end of the...

3 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 13 Professional Work

I had a problem with the academy in Athens related to graduation. Specifically, I would graduate with my doctorate mid-May, but the current Basic Law Enforcement class ran from the end of March through mid-July. I couldn’t stay in my apartment after graduating and we couldn’t justify my moving to a new apartment for just a month. I had been keeping Rich caught up with my schedule and plans over at UGA, but as May moved along, it was obvious my time in Athens was ending. Some of my lectures...

2 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 4 Matucket Middle School

1996 to 1999 In August, football started up again. Matucket Middle School didn’t have a real football team, only flag football, so I was still playing Pop Warner football. I turned twelve on March 1, so I changed to the Midget League team, the Spartans. At twelve I had jumped over the Junior Midget team, which was ages ten, eleven, and twelve. The Midget team was ages twelve, thirteen, and fourteen, so I could probably play there until I got to high school. I knew Matucket High played real...

4 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 37 Fixing Things

Seamus turned fourteen on May 8. Like every year before then, Kelly and I wondered whether he would live long enough to see another birthday. The eternal question was which one of us would kill him first. On the other hand, he could consistently manage to take my mind off the ongoing crisis in the Matucket Police Department. Over dinner that night he asked, “Dad, a mistress is a girlfriend, right?” I looked across the table at Kelly and she looked as confused as I did. I turned my head...

3 years ago
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The Grim ReaperChapter 23 Fourth of the Fourth

September 2003 - December 2003 Dad drove me over to Hartsfield International in Atlanta Thursday morning, sometime around the crack of dawn. Mom stayed at home, which was a good thing, because she spent most of Wednesday night and Thursday morning crying. She was a total basket case, even though I was only going to New York. I didn’t want to be around her when I ended up going overseas. I had to be there early, because I was on a very cheap Delta flight, and you had to be there two hours...

2 years ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 36 School Days

I went into the station the next morning at 0730. I figured I would go in early and see the shift changes and roll calls for a bit to get a feel for things from the bottom up. After roll call, I headed back to my office, only to get stopped by Mindy Hollis. She dragged me back outside to the department parking lot and over to the corner it shared with the impound yard. “This is where we should build a storage annex,” she said. “Why here? In this corner?” “It’s the best choice. It’s inside...

1 year ago
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The Grim Reaper Reaper Security ConsultingChapter 29 Summer Fun

2026 to 2027 We spent about a week cleaning up from the remodeling. There was dust on everything, even the ceiling, and everything needed to be wiped down and washed. Dust even got into all the clothing that hadn’t been boxed up and left in the closets, since the closet doors had to be open so the flooring in the closets could be replaced. We were doing wash nonstop for a week, and Custom Clean Dry Cleaning made a small fortune off us when we took all our good clothes over. The most amusing...

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