A bit farther afield and less personal but also based in fact—contentious, murky fact—is the role the CIA played in drug trafficking in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War, and in Central America during the Iran-Contra affair. British journalist Christopher Robbin’s 1979 book Air America: The Story of the CIA’s Secret Airlines sheds light on the agency’s dealings in Southeast Asia’s “Golden Triangle,” as well as illuminating the remarkable derring-do of the Air America pilots who flew perilous missions to deliver rice, weapons, commando teams, and more questionable cargo. Numerous reports have chronicled the links between CIA-backed Nicaraguan “Contra” rebels and known drug traffickers. Among those reports is an official government document informally called “The Kerry Report,” which was published in 1989 after a three-year investigation headed by then-Senator John Kerry. At the time, Kerry chaired the Senate Subcommittee on Terrorism, Narcotics, and International Operations; he is now U.S. Secretary of State. Do the ends justify the means? It’s a question American foreign policy gives us the chance to ponder on a regular basis.
Joaquin Guzmán Loera—“El Chapo”—is a real-life, larger-than-life drug lord who did indeed escape in 2001 from what was supposedly Mexico’s top-security prison. Guzmán’s remarkable drug distribution network—which included a fleet of planes, a flotilla of boats (and even submarines), and the ingenious tunnels beneath the border fence in San Diego’s industrial suburb, Otay Mesa—made him the world’s wealthiest and most powerful narco trafficker for years. El Chapo remained at large for thirteen years after that escape, heading the Sinaloa cartel, until February 2014, when he was recaptured in a beachfront condominium with his young wife (a former beauty queen) and their twin two-year-old daughters (born, ironically, in America). El Chapo’s recapture marked another victory in the War on Drugs . . . and created another opening at the top for the next ambitious, ruthless entrepreneur, someone able and willing to meet the seemingly insatiable demand for drugs in El Norte.
—Jon Jefferson
Tallahassee, FL
AS ALWAYS, WE HAVE THE PRIVILEGE OF THANKING many people for helping with this book. We’ll start with the FBI—always good friends for crime novelists to have. Angela Bell and Ann Todd, both of the FBI’s Office of Public Affairs, were gracious and swift to line up interviews with technical experts. And those experts were terrific: Special Supervisory Agent Richard Marx, of the Evidence Response Team Unit, answered many, many questions about evidence recovery procedures, and Special Agent Freddie Vela shared valuable insights into drug trafficking, Mexican cartels, and undercover drug investigations.
Aviation expert Bob Macintosh—a longtime investigator for the National Transportation Safety Board until his retirement—was extremely generous with his time and expertise. We’ve repaid Bob’s kindness by giving our fictional NTSB investigator a pivotal role in the action. (This might be an appropriate time to remind Bob and other readers of the standard fiction disclaimer: “Any resemblance between actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental . . .”)
Ace pilots (and good friends) Don Shreve, Rob Cherney, and Ed Dumas helped with details about airplanes, jets, and autopilots, and Jim Gerrish of Sierra Industries, Ltd.—the go-to company for performance-enhancing modifications for Cessna Citation jets—was patient, enlightening, and good-natured in response to countless questions about customizing our ill-fated fictional aircraft. On a grimmer but equally helpful front, search-and-rescue expert Kimberly Kelly offered helpful perspective on searching for fragmented remains of crash victims.
Many forensic-anthropologist friends and colleagues pitched in to share their expertise. Anthony Falsetti, Angi Christensen, and Elias Kontanis offered useful insights into the effects of high-speed crashes and fire on the human body. Robert Mann—who spent years identifying the remains of U.S. military personnel recovered from Southeast Asia—provided helpful perspective on the Vietnam War period of U.S. history. Samm Hurst gave useful entomological and meteorological information about San Diego and the nearby mountains.
Dr. Stephanie Blank, a gynecological oncologist and professor at New York University School of Medicine, provided helpful (and heartrending) details on the aggressive uterine cancer known as leiomyosarcoma; our thanks to her for helping us, and for helping women fight this and other merciless forms of cancer. Thanks also to Ellen Sullivan, communications director at the Society of Gynecologic Oncology, for the referral to Dr. Blank.
Our team at William Morrow Publishers—publishers Liate Stehlik and Lynn Grady, editor Lyssa Keusch, editorial assistant Rebecca Lucash, production editor Stephanie Vallejo, copyeditor Laurie McGee, cover designer Richard Aquan, publicist Danielle Bartlett, and marketing guru Kaitlin Harri—transformed ideas and words into a finished book: a book that people will actually hear about, read about, and even buy! We couldn’t be more grateful. Sincere thanks in that vein also to our agent, Giles Anderson, who has kept roofs over our heads and food on our tables for 13 years now.
On the personal front, Cindy and Joe Johnson rode to the writer’s rescue yet again by providing a quiet, lovely writing retreat at their off-the-grid cabin on the Ochlockonee River, where the only distractions were the sightings of manatees, dolphins, kingfishers, and alligators. Jim Bass provided wise counsel, legal and otherwise. And last but not least, our wives, Jane McPherson and Carol Bass, kept us—constantly keep us—flying straight and level.
—Jon Jefferson & Dr. Bill Bass
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