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Slip Cue

Chapter One

It was a small thing, not much bigger than a parking ticket or an ATM receipt. A flimsy sheet of wire service copy with five lines of 10-pitch Courier type, the raw hole-punched edge of the tractor-fed paper trailing from one side.

If I had known then the dangers that scrap of paper would lead too-and the demons it would force me to dance with-I would have shoved it in the recycle bin and let the wire services cover the story.

I re-read the bulletin that had just flashed over Associated Press and let the emotions come flooding back. And the memories. The night of the John Lennon shooting. The death of Princess Di, that freeway chase in a white Bronco. I felt a combination of dread, sorrow, and anticipation. Oh, hell. Scratch that. I was excited, dammit. I rode that adrenalin rush like a junkie, the incredible high of knowing a big news story is breaking. God, I love moments like this! Anyone who works in the news business will admit to the same, if they're honest.

America's latest celebrity bad girl had just escaped from jail.

The fact that she had local roots made the story all the juicier.

In the background, I could hear the thrum of afternoon traffic on Highway 160 beating its way past the bullet-proof glass and through the walls of the on-air radio studio. Newspaper clippings and faxes cluttered the control console. The call-in lines blinked in two-beat harmony with a car dealer's jingle. "Save your dough, deal with Joe." A television monitor suspended over the console, the sound muted, carried the first game of the World Series.

"You're tuned to The Shauna J. Bogart Show," I said into the mike. "T-N-A- talk, news and attitude-for Sacramento's drive home. We'll be right back after this."

I punched the button on the top cart deck, activating a promotional announcement for the sports talk show that followed my three hours of airtime. I handed the wire copy to my executive producer and gestured to the guest mike. "We'll break in with a bulletin soon as I finish this stop-set," I told him through the intercom.

A few months ago, I wouldn't have trusted Josh Friedman to nuke a bag of microwave popcorn without setting off a second-stage smog alert, let alone go on the air with a breaking news story. He was only a college intern, eager but green. That was before he proved to me how loyal and resourceful he could be. Okay, okay. The kid helped save my butt. Not only did Josh earn a fancy title for his efforts, but I wangled some money out of the boss to actually pay him to be my producer-slash-flunky.

"You're back with Shauna J. Bogart. Before we take your calls, Josh Friedman joins us in the Sacramento Talk Radio newsroom." I flipped the on-air switch to the guest mike and pointed a finger at Josh.

The student's voice was rapid but steady. "A spokesman for the Monterey County Sheriff has confirmed reports that the television star known as Jasmine has escaped from custody. She was being transported from a routine appearance in the courthouse in downtown Salinas back to the county jail when the escape occurred."

I picked up the remote and flicked the TV monitor to CNN. Even with the sound off, I could follow the story from the on-screen images: The 70s-era album cover, Jasmime Soup, the singer at the peak of her rock diva glory, an exotic nymph in flowing rich hippie garb, surrounded by the symbols of the zodiac. If you listen to oldies radio, you can undoubtedly recite all three verses to her one big Top 40 hit, "Meet Me at the Casbah." Next came footage from her more recent incarnation as a sitcom star, playing the middle-aged earth mother to a Partridge Family-style band. Then Jasmine in handcuffs and jail overalls, defiant in front of the TV cameras. The map of northern California, blinking buttons to indicate the Monterey peninsula, scene of the crime, and the county seat of Salinas some 20 miles to the east. The People magazine cover-From Songbird to Jailbird-and the gritty black-and-white of the tabloid headlines-Bad Trippin' with Jasmine.

Sex, drugs and rock'n'roll. It always sells.

"Repeating our top story, officials in Salinas confirm Jasmine has escaped from custody. Keep it tuned to Sacramento Talk Radio for the latest." Josh pointed, throwing it back to me.

No matter what, stay with the story. If a quarter-century working behind the mike has taught me nothing else, I've learned the importance of never to letting anything stand in the way of a breaking news story. That, and never letting callers named after flowers or months get on the air.

"We'll go live to the network as soon as they have new developments," I told my listeners. "In the meantime, we're lining up phoners from Salinas, so don't go away."

WHERE THE HELL IS SALINAS, ANYWAY? My executive producer, tapping a message on the computer linking his call screener booth with the on-air studio.

Jeez, don't they make college students read Steinbeck these days? East of Eden, The Pastures of Heaven?

SOUTH OF SILICON VALLEY, NORTH OF L.A. THE NATION'S SALAD BOWL. TRY DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE IN 831. I returned the message while keeping my ears tuned to Debbie from Carmichael on Line Two. Debbie claimed to have known Jasmine when she was just plain Cynthia Pepper, a B-plus average student at El Camino High School.

"She was just the sweetest thing," Debbie said. "There's no way she could have done all those horrible things you media people keep saying she did. Just no way."

"I'm not saying you're wrong," I replied. "And I believe in innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. But you've got to admit it looks bad."

"Who's to say someone else didn't kill Johnny Venture? Jasmine could have just been in the wrong place at the wrong time. How do we know for sure?"

"If she really didn't do it, why break out of jail? Why not wait for the verdict and walk away a free woman?"

The callers pretty much reflected the tabloid court of opinion. Take your pick. Jasmine was a victim of male aggression who finally fought back. Or she was an innocent waif who got into something way over her head. Or a ruthless diva who would stop at nothing to make sure she stayed in the national spotlight. My attention darted from the callers to CNN, the program log, the control board, back to the screener booth. Judging from the body language coming from the other side of the glass-lots of palm slaps to the forehead-things were not going well, telephone-wise, between Sacramento and Salinas.

"No luck?" I asked Josh on the intercom during a commercial break.

"The sheriff's holding a news conference at five, so no one's saying anything 'til then."

"Live at five. How convenient for the TV cameras."

"The AP stringer's in the field and I can't track her down. The local network affiliate's on deadline and won't help."

"You tried the courthouse, of course."

"Can't get through. Every line is busy."

Truth is, it doesn't mean squat whether we get anyone from Salinas to agree to talk to us on the air. We could simply have let the network run, any network, and the listeners would have known everything there was to know about Jasmine's jail escape. Or we could have kept reading wire service copy. But a live interview with someone on the scene creates the illusion our station is one-up on everyone else. Even if all the interviewee is doing is parroting Associated Press copy.

"AP just sent over a longer story," Josh said.

"I'll throw it to you cold coming out of the last spot."

A taped announcement ended with a caution that my actual mileage will vary. I played my theme music, re-introduced the Shauna J. Bogart show, announced the time and temperature, and let Josh take over.

"The escape apparently took place two hours ago," Josh read into the guest mike. "A van transporting Jasmine and four other female prisoners from the courthouse back to the correction facility was surrounded by armed men. Witnesses say the van was stopped at a traffic signal next to the Salinas rodeo grounds. The men forced the driver out of the van and took control. The van was last seen traveling at high speed on the Highway 101 northbound onramp. It was followed by a vehicle described by witnesses as a late 70s Chevy Impala. The other prisoners in the van have been identified as Ofelia Hernandez of King City and Irmalinda Guzman, Marcelina Villareal and Bobette Dooley, all of Salinas."

The AP update ended by informing us Jasmine had been in court earlier in the day for all of five minutes on a reduction of bail motion. The DA asked for a continuance, which the judge granted.

Meanwhile, Captain Mikey in the traffic chopper had a particularly juicy tie-up on US 50 to warn us about, complete with alternate routes. That interruption gave me time to dash to my desk and pick up the latest Broadcasting Yearbook. I heaved the thick paperback through the door of the call screener booth. "Look up the jazz station in Monterey and see if you can track down Donovan Sinclair."

Josh gave me a quizzical look, but picked up the receiver and began flipping through the pages.

"Make sure he can go on the air with us before the sheriff's news conference," I added through the intercom as I popped the headphones over my ears and adjusted the mike.

Five minutes later, and a full fifteen minutes before the sheriff was due to face the press, Josh flashed a thumbs-up. SINCLAIR'S HOLDING ON THE HOTLINE. WHERE DO YOU KNOW THIS GUY FROM, ANYWAY?

JUST ONE OF THOSE RADIO THINGS.

One of the many things I love about this business is how everyone knows each other in the radio community. Go to any town in America and chances are you'll find a friend, someone you once worked with on the climb up or on the long slide down. Or at least someone who knows the same people you do, and shares your passion for and insider's knowledge of the most intimate of the communications media.

GOOD JOB, I added to my message to Josh.

"In case you've just joined us, repeating the hour's top story, the pop music star known as Jasmine, accused of homicide in the death of an elderly man in a Monterey peninsula hotel, has escaped from custody," I told my listeners. "The correction facility van carrying Jasmine and four other female prisoners was hijacked by armed men while she was being transported from an appearance at the Monterey County courthouse in Salinas back to the county jail.

"The Monterey County sheriff is holding a news conference at five. Of course, we'll be carrying it live. In the meantime, exclusively for Sacramento Talk Radio, we bring you a live interview with a Monterey County insider, an eyewitness to the local scene."

Well, I didn't actually say he was an eyewitness to the escape, did I?

"This isn't about Jasmine," Sinclair said in a radio announcer school baritone after I'd introduced the Monterey disc jockey to my listeners.

"Run that by us again," I said.

"The jailbreak. It doesn't have anything to do with Jasmine. She was just along for the ride."

"What makes you say that?"

"Look at the scenario," Donovan said. "Two of those young ladies in the van had connections with local Latino gangs. The men who surrounded the van have been described by witnesses as Hispanic. They were driving a low-rider vehicle. When this thing shakes out, it'll turn out one of those guys was trying to bust out his girlfriend. Or kidnap some rival's girlfriend. Everyone around here knows this had nothing to do with some out-of-town celebrity suspect."

"No way!" I knew I was gushing, but I couldn't help myself. This was great stuff! I just hoped the hosts at the other local news radio stations were tuned in. Not to mention the news directors of the TV stations and the editorial staff at the Sacramento Bee.

"You know, Jasmine wasn't even supposed to be in court today," Donovan continued.

"I thought it was some routine motion for reduction of bail."

"The hearing was calendared for tomorrow. They moved it up at the last minute because the judge had some sort of personal emergency."

I managed to squeeze in one last traffic update before the top of the hour and the start of the sheriff's news conference. Off mike, I told Donovan he'd been terrific. "No one else has the Latino gang angle."

"You're pretty terrific yourself," he replied. "You're the only media person who thought to call a local insider like me instead of dealing with that circus over at the courthouse."

"How do you know all this stuff, anyway? You can tell me and still protect your sources. We're off the air now."

"You know the sheriff? We're real close. In fact, we had a little thing going on a few years ago."

I don't know what I expected from the Monterey County sheriff when the law enforcement officer appeared on the network TV screens at five. Typical small town cop, I suppose. But the chief law enforcement officer for Monterey County wasn't fat or grizzled, didn't wear a rumpled suit covered with doughnut crumbs, and didn't speak with a cracker twang.

Sheriff Maria Elena Perez smashed a lot of stereotypes when she made her live, coast-to-coast debut, that's for certain.

"We're following up on several leads linking the hijacking of the correction facility van with Latino gang activity," she told reporters. "One of the prisoners who escaped was a known associate of the leader of a major Salinas street gang."

Thank you, Donovan Sinclair.

I opened the network pot, allowing the satellite feed to air live without interruption, and left the air studio for the newsroom, where I could watch four TV monitors instead of just one. ABC, CBS, NBC and CNN brought me Maria Elena Perez in quadruplet: an unsmiling woman in her 50s wearing a simple dark gray suit, blue silk blouse, masses of black hair shot with gray caught neatly in a silver comb above each ear.

She spoke forthrightly, directly into the cameras. "I pledge the full strength of my department in tracking down and recapturing the escaped inmates, including the suspect known as Jasmine. We take it seriously when a jailbreak happens in Monterey County on my watch."

If she could make good on her pledge, I had an idea we'd be seeing more of Maria Elena Perez on the political scene in the years to come.

Josh Friedman joined me under the bank of TV monitors and handed me a slick, four-color magazine. "It just came in today's mail." Sacramentomagazine, folded open to the "Out and About in Sacramento" section, which had nothing to do with gay nightlife but instead chronicled the capital city's A-list social circuit. Photograph of a frizzy-haired woman in a slinky black dress standing next to a man in a tux. "Sacramento's celebrity couple to watch continues to be Shauna J. Bogart and Pete Kovacs. She's the top-rated afternoon radio talk show host, and he's the Old Sacramento antiques dealer and hot jazz pianist. We caught up with this busy pair at the opening night gala for the State Fair."

I re-read the cutline and handed the magazine back to Josh.

Pete Kovacs. He'd called me just before the show, hoping we'd be able to get together this evening. He sounded serious, said he had something "important" to talk to me about, and something "interesting" to show me.

I was pretty sure I knew what Pete Kovacs wanted to talk about. And damned if I knew how I was going to respond.

The networks cut away from the news conference and back to filler material: stand-ups in front of the courthouse and the jail, maps with dotted lines showing the getaway route, more Jasmine career highlights. ABC had dug up footage from a headline performance at the Fillmore, Jasmine crooning the opening lines to "Meet Me at the Casbah."

Meet me at the casbah
The incense will light our way
It's twelve steps over a light wave
Then mellow out in a bright cave…

Never did figure out what all that was supposed to mean.

I continued to stare at the bank of TV monitors and wondered, not for the first time, why none of the attention was focused a meek man with a white beard, a quiet little fellow whom you'd never notice. Unless you listened to him, of course, and entered his private world. The man Jasmine was accused of smothering with a pillow in a cabin in a aged Monterey motor court.

An over-the-hill DJ named Johnny Venture.

End of Chapter One
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