That was criminologia —the soul of the monster, not just his footprints.
She called two experts to a meeting in her cramped office.
When they arrested him, they found a pair of pliers with micro-fractures matching the soda can shim (Ana’s work) and a journal filled with manifestos about “cleansing the city with fire” (Marco’s work). criminologia y criminalistica
Detective Laura Mora hated two things: an unsolved case and a lazy conclusion.
Marco pointed to a map on the wall. “Three warehouses. All historic. All slated for demolition by the city to build a new luxury condo complex. Silvio Herrera owned El Molino . He was fighting the demolition order in court. He was losing.” That was criminologia —the soul of the monster,
Marco arrived late, smelling of coffee and old books. He didn’t look at the evidence photos. He looked at the people .
“So he burned his own building for insurance?” Laura asked. Detective Laura Mora hated two things: an unsolved
She was staring at the file of the “Northside Arsonist.” Over six months, three historic warehouses had burned down. The latest was El Molino , a century-old grain silo turned art studio. The fire had killed a night watchman, a man named Gerardo.