It was the specific prudence of a man who understood that the operation had been exposed and that running another version of it would accelerate the attention that was already directed at him.

He was waiting for the extradition to fail conclusively, for the Interpole notice to age out of active priority, for the world to move on to something else.

He was patient.

He had always been patient.

Courtney Martin went back to work in September 2017 as an administrative assistant at a different company.

Not the marketing firm from before, somewhere smaller, a family-owned accounting practice in Westerville that had a staff of eight and a pace that didn’t require her to perform at a level she hadn’t rebuilt to yet.

She was still at the accounting practice in 2023.

She was still at Brenda’s house, not because she couldn’t afford to move.

She could barely by 2020, but because the house was where she could be what she was, which was a person who was still working something out.

And working something out required a specific kind of space that the Westerville House provided in a way that an apartment of her own did not.

She did not talk about Dubai publicly.

One journalist had reached her in 2017, had gotten Brenda’s number somehow, had called twice asking for an interview.

Brenda had told him politely and then less politely that there would be no interview.

The journalist had written a piece about the case without Courtney’s participation using public records and court documents and Alhammad’s case file, which had been partially released in connection with Farooq’s conviction.

The piece was accurate and thorough, and Courtney had read it once and not read it again.

She had one kidney and a nefologist she saw every 6 months, and a diet she mostly followed, and nights that were better than they had been, and some nights that weren’t, and a job that had its own small dignities, and a mother who was in the next room, and a friend who called on her birthday.

This was her life.

She had not chosen it, except in so far as she had chosen to get up every day and continue having it, which was a choice that required more than it sounded like it required, and which she made without ceremony or annotation every morning in the childhood bed in the Westerville House.

Diane Foster closed her active file on the case in 2022.

not the case itself.

The case remained technically open, the charges unfiled, the warrant outstanding, the Interpol notice active.

She closed her active involvement, which was different.

She had been promoted into a supervisory role in the Columbus field office, and the case load that came with the promotion required her to transfer ongoing cases to other agents.

She transferred Ramy’s file to a younger agent named Kevin Park, 32, who had joined the counter trafficking unit the previous year and who she briefed for 4 hours in a conference room in Columbus, walking him through every thread and every dead end and every piece of documentation accumulated since April 2016.

At the end of the 4 hours, Kevin Park said, What’s the realistic prospect for extradition? Diane said, Low, not zero.

He said, But low, she said.

The Lebanon situation is complicated.

It was complicated before 2020 and it’s more complicated now, but the file is complete and the charges are solid.

And if anything changes in Lebanon’s political situation, if a government comes in that wants to demonstrate cooperation on international crime, Ramy Aziz Khalil is there to be picked up.

Kevin Park said, And if that doesn’t happen, Diane looked at the file.

She said, Then he lives in Hamra and consults on import export until he’s old enough that the question becomes academic.

She said it the way you say true things that are also intolerable flatly without inflection because inflection would require you to feel it fully and feeling it fully was not compatible with being useful.

She left the conference room.

She drove home to the house in Clintonville where she lived with her husband and her daughter and the specific ordinary life that existed in parallel to the work which was the only way the work was survivable.

Al-Hamadi retired from the federal police in 2021.

He was 51.

He had served for 24 years.

He lived in a house in Mirddf, not far as it happened, from the apartment where Hassan al- Yazidi had been arrested 5 years earlier with his wife and their three children.

He consulted occasionally for Interpol on Gulf region organized crime cases.

He kept in touch with Diane Foster through an annual email exchange that had no required content and that both of them maintained because maintaining it was the thing they could do.

He had never stopped thinking about Ramy’s file.

Not actively.

He had let that go when he retired, understanding that the letting go was necessary, but in the way that certain cases stay with certain investigators.

Not in the foreground, but never fully in the background.

Present when he saw a news item about Lebanon.

Present when he passed a building in Jebel Ali on the way to somewhere else.

He wrote in the annual email to Diane in December 2022.

I still think about the case.

I hope you have news one day that I have not had.

She wrote back.

Same.

Nothing yet.

How are your children? He told her.

She told him about her daughter, the soccer, the math.

They wished each other well for the new year.

The Instagram account @shikcaled al-Mmansuri had been taken down in May 2016.

The posts were gone.

The 340,000 followers were gone.

The photographs of the jeans and the polo matches and the private jet and the Burj Khalifa and the desert camp were gone.

Somewhere in a meta server for farm in the archived data of a deleted account, they still existed in some technical form, bits and bites and timestamps.

The digital sediment of a persona that had been constructed to destroy people and that had been destroyed itself.

Courtney had 1,200 followers on Instagram in 2023.

The account was private.

She posted occasionally Brenda’s garden, a meal she’d cooked, June sunsets from the Westerville backyard.

The posts were small and unaspirational and genuinely hers.

She did not post about travel.

Rammy Aziz Khalil was 51 years old in 2023.

He was in Beirut.

He was in Beirut and the extradition request was pending and the Interpol notice was active.

And Farukq Tashkintov was in a UAE federal facility serving his 15th year.

And Hassan Aly Yazidi had been released in 2022 under the cooperation agreement and was living somewhere in Dubai under conditions that Alhammadi’s successor was monitoring with varying degrees of attention depending on more immediate priorities.

Ramy was in Beirut and Courtney was in Westerville and Samantha was in North Columbus and Brenda was working the register at the Kroger and Daniel was at his accounting firm and the nefrologist saw Courtney every 6 months and the file was open.

Everything that could be said about justice in this situation had been said by people more qualified to say it than anyone in this story.

The charges existed.

The warrant existed.

The Interpol notice existed.

Farooq was serving 15 years.

Assan had served six and been released.

The buyer, the 58-year-old man whose name was in Farukq’s records and whose fate was handled by a process Al-Hamadi had not been invited to participate in, was presumably still alive, which was the specific irony that nobody in this story could afford to think about too directly.

Rammy was in Beirut.

Courtney was in Westerville.

The kidney was gone.

The blue dress was gone.

The Instagram was private.

The file was open.

That was what it

 

« Prev