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When Officer Daniel Wright, of the South San Francisco police,
responded to a routine shoplifting call at South City lumberyard, he
had no idea what he was about to uncover. All that he knew was that
a sales clerk had witnessed an Asian man hiding a bench vise inside
his jacket, and had asked another employee to call the police.
When he arrived at the scene he pulled up next to a 1980 Honda
Prelude and was approached by the clerk and another larger man with
a beard. The clerk pointed out the vise, which lay in the open
trunk of the Honda and told Wright that he had seen the Asian man
put it there before running off.
Wright looked into the car and saw another bag containing what he
thought was a handgun. After a closer inspection of the bag, he
found a loaded .22 revolver and a silencer. At this point, the
bearded man approached Wright and showed him a sales receipt.
"Here's the receipt," he said. "I've paid for
the vise my friend took, there's no need for the police."
Without answering, Officer Wright returned to his car and used his
radio to check the Honda's registration number. While he was
waiting for a response he asked the bearded man,
"Who does this
car belong to?"
The man replied, "Lonnie Bond."
"Where is he?" Wright asked.
"Up north," came the reply.
At that time, Wright returned to the radio and was informed that
the Honda's registration number "838WFQ" belonged to a
Buick, registered in the name of Lonnie Bond. After advising
the man that swapping registration plates was a crime, Wright asked
for I.D. and was given a driver's licence in the name of Robin. S.
Stapley, a 26-year-old San Diego resident. At that point,
Wright became increasingly suspicious, as the bearded man looked
considerably older than the age stated on the licence.
Wright then picked up the gun and asked the man, "Don't you
know it's illegal to carry a silenced weapon."
"It's not mine, it belongs to Lonnie. I just use it to
shoot beer cans."
Wright then used the radio a second time to check the serial
number of the weapon and found that it was registered to Robin. S.
Stapley.
"You're under arrest," Wright told the bearded man.
"What for?"
"Owning an illegal weapon."
"I told you, it's not mine," the man replied.
"You say that you're Stapley right? Well the gun is
registered in your name."
After handcuffing the man and reading him his rights, Officer
Wright locked him in the rear of the car and returned to the sales
clerk to obtain a description of the other man, which he then
broadcast. - "Asian male, slight build, about twenty-five, last
seen wearing a parka."
After arranging for the Honda to be towed to the police impound
yard, Wright drove his prisoner to South City police station where
he was placed in an interrogation room and told to empty his
pockets. Among his possessions, he had a travel receipt in the
name of Charles Gunnar.
"Who's Gunnar," Wright asked.
At that point, another officer advised Wright that the vehicle
identification number on the Honda revealed that it belonged to a
man named Paul Cosner who had been reported missing to the San
Francisco Police nine months earlier. When Wright told the
bearded man what he had been told, the man went pale and asked for a
pen and paper and a glass of water.
"Are you going to write a confession," Wright asked.
"No," the man answered, "Just a note to my
wife."
After asking for his handcuffs to be released, the man scribbled
a short note and placed it in his shirt pocket.
"I can have that delivered for you if you like," Wright
told him.
The man then said, "I didn't think a lousy bench vise would
bring me to this."
When Wright asked him to repeat what he'd said, the man
continued. "My friend's name is Charlie Chitat Ng,
Chitat, pronounced Cheetah and Ng, pronounced Ing."
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| Leonard Lake (AP) |
He then told Wright that his real name was Leonard Lake and that
he was a fugitive wanted by the FBI. Without saying another
word, Lake then took something from the lapel of his shirt and
placed it in his mouth. Within seconds, his eyes rolled back
in his head as he went into convulsions. Wright called for
help and checked the prisoner's pulse. He was alive but just
barely. Police later discovered that Lake had taped two
cyanide capsules to the underside of his shirt lapel.
As the paramedics carried Lake to an ambulance and conveyed him to
hospital, Wright wondered why a man would want to kill himself over
a stolen car; he was soon to get his answer.
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