"excellent Joe Pickett mystery"
Attorney Clay McCann walked into the Bechler River Ranger
Station in Yellowstone National Park holding a still warm
weapon while informing the ranger that about a half hour
ago he killed four campers. A few months later Wyoming
Governor Spencer Rulon visits former State Game and Fish
Department Game Warden Joe Pickett, who was fired by the
agency's Director Randy Pope (see IN PLAIN SIGHT), at the
ranch of Joe's father-n-law to ask a favor. Though McCann
got away with murder on a technicality, Rulon shows him a
note from one of the victims just before he was murdered
that implies the illegal stealing of resources that could
impact the revenues of the state. He wants to look into
whatever this "Yellowstone Dick" was alluding to as a
state has no jurisdiction in a national park. Joe begins his quiet investigation with the help of his
friend falconer Nate Romanowski. They soon obtain the
assistance of park ranger Judy Demming, who like most of
her peers remains reeling that the cold blooded killer
freely roams Yellowstone while four caring
environmentalists are dead. They begin to find a link
between the homicides and questionable bio-mining rights
that would destroy Yellowstone's famous hot springs, but
McCann and his partners do not mind adding three more
murders to their count. In his seventh Joe Pickett mystery, C. J. Box is at his
best as he describes the "Stone" with adulation for its
exquisiteness while also using a loophole over
jurisdiction between the Feds and the state. The story
line is fast-paced as Joe and his teammates begin to
uncover the contemptuous illegal waste of natural
renounces to make a profit without regard by stripping the
beauty from the "Stone". Fans and environmentalists
(except perhaps the EPA political appointees) will
appreciate FREE FIRE as Joe investigates as a private
citizen what some amoral avaricious antagonists are doing
to make millions. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted May 27, 2007
SummaryJoe Pickett, having recently been fired from his job as a
Wyoming game warden, is working on his father-in-law's ranch
when he receives a call from the governor's office. Governor
Rulona devious but down-home politicohas a
special request, one Joe knows he can't refuse. For weeks,
the headlines have been abuzz with the story of Clay McCann,
a lawyer who slaughtered four campers in cold blood in a
far-off corner of Yellowstone National Park. After the
murders, McCann immediately turned himself in at the nearest
park ranger station. It seemed like a slam-dunk case for law
enforcementexcept that the crimes were committed in a
thin sliver of land with zero residents and overlapping
jurisdiction, the so-called free-fire zone. McCann had taken
advantage of a loophole in the law: neither the state of
Wyoming nor the federal government can try him for his
crime, so he walks out of prison a free man.
Governor Rulon, sensitive to the rising tide of public
outrage over the McCann case, wants his own investigation
into the murders. The governor will reinstate Joe as a game
warden if he'll go to Yellowstone to investigate. Joe, happy
to get his badge back, even under these circumstances,
agrees. However, it quickly becomes clear to Joe that McCann
is deeply involved with some illegal activity taking place
in the parksomething tremendously lucrative and
unusually dangerous. As Joe and his partner Nate Romanowski
search in the unlikeliest places to find the key to the
murders, they find out that it may be hidden in the rugged
terrain of the park itself.
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