North America Gunman Detective

Chapter 356: 305 Unexpected Gains_3


"Manny Morley, FBI." As Jimmy saw Manny almost by his side, he shouted, when there was less than 20 meters between them. Manny immediately let go and ran toward the motorcycle.

"Manny, stop, I'm going to shoot." Jimmy ran towards him while shouting. Manny straddled the motorcycle, started it, and prepared to leave.

Jimmy immediately fired a shot at the rear wheel of the motorcycle. Manny, having not yet sped off, heard the gunshot and could only give up; he raised his hands.

"Turn off the engine, get off the motorcycle." "Lie down, put your hands on the ground." Manny complied step by step. Only then did Jimmy, holding his gun aimed at Manny, slowly approach him. He pulled Manny's left arm back behind him, then holstered his pistol, grabbed Manny's right hand, and finally subdued him. He took out handcuffs from his belt and cuffed him. Jimmy first pulled him up for a frisk: a handgun, a spare magazine, a wallet, a set of keys, and a cellphone – nothing more. Then he let him sit on the ground.

Jimmy took out his cellphone and called the surveillance van to come and check what Manny was about to throw away.

The surveillance van was following behind Jimmy, and when Jimmy got off and went under the bridge, they were on the road with flashlights. Three surveillance team members carrying bags came down, confirmed what Manny had discarded, and then began taking photographs of the exterior, followed by collecting evidence.

Thompson: "Jimmy, you better come take a look."

Jimmy walked over and under the light, frozen body parts appeared inside a large black garbage bag; damn, this was initially a chase for a shooting case, now it turned out to be a case of dismemberment.

Jimmy: "Call for backup, and if there's no identification, extract some DNA."

Jimmy turned to look at Manny, thinking about the big trouble he caused. Regardless of the time, he called Chris, then dragged Manny to the detention center.

It was already midnight by then, so no more fussing. Jimmy dropped Manny off at the detention center and went back to rest. Early the next day, he first met with Chris to help secure a search warrant, as now they needed to search that warehouse, and also needed Chris to accompany him to the detention center for Manny's interrogation.

Indeed, Chris was effective; a federal judge promptly issued a search warrant. Jimmy and Chris did not conduct the search themselves but assigned it to the support staff. They went directly to interrogate Manny. Being caught in the act, Manny had no chance of denial; the fingerprints on the garbage bag, the motorcycle, and the surveillance team's recorded footage directly nullified his attempt to deny.

Manny requested a lawyer's involvement; Jimmy and his team were helpless. Although it was a public defender, he was also tough to deal with. After idly chatting with the lawyer for two days, the testing center's DNA report came through. The limbs found at the scene matched the limbs found in the warehouse and those discovered over a month ago, confirming Manny's dismemberment and disposal of the body parts.

In the end, given that New York State actually had no death penalty, Manny and his lawyer came to an agreement. Accompanied by his lawyer, he admitted that he was responsible for the dismemberment case.

After coming out of prison, Manny, through connections, clarified whose goods his father had originally taken. Then, he killed two people who had directly murdered his father, and a week earlier, he had also killed the gang leader who had ordered the hit.

The limbs found a month before and later at the Queens garbage collection station were the ones he had discarded in batches, plus there were some that hadn't been found yet, as he had gradually thrown them into the sea. To prevent these limbs from being discovered and linked together, he disposed of only parts at a time and changed the dumping sites each time. The rest were stored in a freezer in the warehouse. This was the reason the disposal of the bodies had continued for over a month. If Manny hadn't been caught today, after one more disposal, all the remaining limbs in the warehouse would have been gone.

Chris was very happy; although he hadn't done much, solving the case was good news.

Jimmy, on the other hand, was less fortunate. He had been chasing a shooting case for days but ended up solving a case that Chris had originally made him familiar with instead of resolving the shooting itself.

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