"Wild Florida police procedural"
Florida state police brass felt fellow officer Bill Tasker
killed a cop, but wanted to avoid the messy scandal of an
inquiry. Thus, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement
transferred him from the West Palm Beach Field Office to
the Miami Regional Center. Bill would have welcomed the
investigation because he knows he did not kill the cop,
but goes along with the bureaucracy because he does not
trust the political hacks who run the department. Four
years later, he still watches his step. Former convict Cole Hodges embezzled one and half million
dollars of money donated to Miami's Committee for
Community Relief. Tasker investigates the shortfall.
However, FBI Agent Tom Dooley decides to take the loot.
To insure that he gets away with the crime and knowing he
has the perfect patsy, he stuffs cash in Tasker's outdoor
grill; Tasker is investigated and pulled off the
embezzlement case. Police officer Rick Bema concludes
that Dooley stole the money and set up Tasker to take the
fall. Instead of turning in his findings, Bema makes a
bid for a piece of the action. WALKING MONEY is a wild Florida police procedural filled
with cops coming down with gold fever while the only
police officer who stays pristine becomes the prime
suspect. Fans will think of It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad
World with everyone double crossing and chasing one
another in pursuit of the embezzled funds. The bad cops
make the tale a fun police procedural, but the tainted
divorced Bill, father of a ten year old, keeps the tale
focused so that the audience will appreciate a zany
cynical ride. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted June 13, 2004
SummaryFor more than seventeen years with the U.S. Marshals
Service, DEA, and Florida Department of Law Enforcement,
Jim Born has seen just about everything Florida crime and
criminals can throw at him, and he's put it all into as
entertaining and accomplished a first thriller as you'll
find anywhere this year.
State cop Bill Tasker has had problems in the past, but
nothing compared to what's about to happen to him. A
satchel with a million and a half in skimmed money is about
to go walking. A phony community activist has decided to
cash in, but a local FBI agent also has his eyes on the
prize, a key witness gets murdered, and it's Tasker who
ends up framed for the whole thing. Soon, other people
become seduced by the cash as well, and as the bag passes
from hand to hand and the body count mounts, Tasker
realizes it's all up to him. If he doesn't retake his life
right now . . . someone's going to do it for him.
Filled with a rich array of characters, a constantly
twisting plot, and an authenticity so deep you can't help
wondering how much of this is actually true, Walking Money
is indeed proof that "Jim Born is the real thing."
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