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Chapter 95~

Fortunately, Biden had no intention of asking further questions, at least that's what it seemed.

He stood up first, smoothed the wrinkles on his coat, and patted away a little dust that had fallen on his body. His face was calm and he said with a hint of excitement: "Now that the cooperation has been negotiated, I will take the first step to summon the people in the department and let them

I'll help you find the kidnapped child, and I hope you can send Morris' evidence to my desk as soon as possible."

Hank nodded, and reminded Bailden before he turned around to open the door: "I will let you catch Morris, but you should know that I not only need the people in your department, but also the people on the street.

Those relationships..."

Bairden waved his hand, shook his head, and said with emotion in his tone.

"OK, OK, I understand. I will contact my informants later to see if they can find any useful information. I didn't expect that Hank Boyt also needs help from others to find out information about the neighborhood.

What a fun day!”

Facing his last sentence, which seemed to be both mocking and sighing, Hank pretended not to hear it and walked out of the office with him with a calm expression. He looked at his subordinates who were looking at him one after another and said.

"Okay, the violent crime department under Chief Baiden will help us solve Matteo's problem. Ervin, you are responsible for contacting him. Erin, you can go to Gene now and ask.

Did he find any useful information from the Chicago Department of Transportation?"

After saying that, after Irene left to find Jean, he hooked his fingers at Roang and shook his head towards the office behind him.

"Boy, come here and talk to me. I think you have a lot to say to me, don't you?"

Bailden, who was walking through the middle aisle and preparing to leave, heard Hank's words and suddenly stopped when passing by Roang, looking ahead and whispering to himself.

"I don't know what you want to do, but the deal between us will continue. Keeping promises is one of my few strengths, but you'd better not do something outrageous. I don't want anything to happen.

I will personally lead people to arrest you one day!"

After saying the reminder, Bailden walked quickly towards the stairs. He couldn't wait to catch Maurice Owens back from his house.

With him and Adras Diaz already locked up in the branch, if he catches one or two big fish in the past two days, he will probably be able to avoid the scrutiny of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

These days, as long as the Internal Affairs Department really wants to track down the detectives in the Southern District, who won't be found out?

Just like facing a vicious criminal, it is extremely difficult to expect the detectives to admit their guilt unless they use some ruthless tactics.

That is not a petty theft and misdemeanor, which can be solved through community work. Criminals in the South District commit illegal armed robbery, or sell contraband. The more serious ones are murder charges.

These are all felonies that start at least ten years and can last for thirty or forty years. It is too difficult to expect the suspect to confess when he comes to the interrogation room. In addition, after the damn Fifth Amendment was reported by the media, everyone

Everyone knows that you have the right to remain silent when questioned by police detectives.

One or two, either asked to see a lawyer or kept silent. Among the prisoners that Baiden has sent to prison under his hands over the years, which one has not been taught a lesson by him?

Just like Hank likes to interrogate in a 'cage', he also has his own unique interrogation room, where the cameras are often damaged for no reason and are in a state of repair all year round.

It's just that Hank's bad reputation has spread widely, and after he was imprisoned in a case involving Ord five years ago, some newspaper media reports made him known to many people, thinking that he was a bad cop in the South District.

Explore examples.

In fact, it is normal for the police detectives in the Southern District to use violence, especially the old detectives. They are all full of tricks. They have an address book four fingers thick on their chests, and cover their mouths and noses with tissues and wet them with water. They are considered technical types.

Such as Baiden, direct action is considered rough, such as Hank.

Only newcomers will follow the content learned in school and sit across the table in a serious manner for interrogation.

The top brass of the police station generally turn a blind eye to the brutal behavior of the detectives in the Southern District. After all, the community environment in the Southern District is here, and if everything is done according to the rules, the case will not be solved.

Therefore, the police detectives from the South District are famous throughout the Chicago metropolitan area for their bad temper and cruel methods.

If the regulations hadn't become stricter in recent years, and police detectives were required to submit reports when shooting, and the reviewers were particularly fond of finding fault, the 21st Precinct alone would have received a lot of bullets every day.

In the past ten years, when faced with a suspect who was trying to escape or put his hand behind his back, the police detectives would shoot you without saying much. They would kill you with a gun first, and then discuss whether the suspect was real or not.

He wanted to resist. Is the gun he was carrying a real gun or a toy?

This tough and violent style makes the police detectives in the Southern District very intimidating when facing street members. Only street members are afraid of police detectives, and no detectives are afraid of street people.

Hank is a top figure in this field. He has spent more than ten years trying to make the old people on the street lose their momentum by three points when they face him. Many of them are even made of ruthlessness and are willing to pay him a monthly fee.

Of course, Bailden is not as famous as Hank, but if you take a closer look, he still has a lot of stains on him. He beats suspects, threatens others with guns for no reason, and has U.S. dollars from unknown sources at home, etc. His problems are not big, but Nan

He has everything a district police detective should have, and he also has some things he shouldn't have.

That's why he cares so much about the Department of Internal Affairs' review. Over the years, those bastards from the Department of Internal Affairs who have been targeting their own people have sent many South District police detectives to jail. The entire Chicago police force has been arrested by the Department of Internal Affairs.

Among the total number of detectives, 80% are from the Southern District!

Not long ago, three police detectives from the 26th Precinct responsible for Jackson Park were sent to Stateville Prison. When they think about entering the prison and facing the criminals they once imprisoned, what will they feel and what will happen to them.

, Baierden shuddered and walked three minutes faster on the stairs.

He doesn't want to be next!

Bailden believed that he did not have Hank's ability to enter and exit Stateville Prison safely. He only remembered that there were at least a dozen South Side bastards who were sent to Stateville Prison by his own hands.

Many of them were framed by him for finding no-brainer cases and sent in. Who knows what kind of treatment he will encounter when he goes in.

Of course, those who are framed by Baiden are usually big D dealers. Those scumbags are too cautious in doing things. They have money and understand all kinds of rules. It is difficult to successfully catch them, so special methods are occasionally used.

.

Of course, Director John, his former immediate boss, knew it very well. The newly appointed Director Perry, who was also a veteran police detective in the Southern District, knew in his heart that everyone was just trying to solve the case. He would ignore it if he could, and cover it up if he could.

But ultimately, doing so is illegal.

Even if the original intention is to catch criminals as soon as possible, as long as someone is willing to take it seriously and spend time looking through files to investigate and collect evidence, especially people from the Ministry of Internal Affairs, they will definitely be able to find prisoners from prison who are willing to appeal.
Chapter completed!
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