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Where epidemiology and criminology meet, perps and germs find defeat
What do you do if you’ve moved to New York City from Alaska in the fall of 2006 only to find you can’t start your new job because of a hiring freeze? If you are epidemiologist Mackey Dunn you solve the biggest outbreak your generation, which also happens to be the number one, unsolved crime in America: the 2001 anthrax mailings.
Dunn believes his wife committed suicide. He blames himself and cannot silence his demons who speak to him through the lyrics from a mental jukebox. The only thing that keeps self-recriminations at bay is to keep his mind otherwise occupied, hence his interest in the anthrax investigation. He meets FBI agent Charo Chen a first generation Asian-Hispanic American who possesses a strong sense of duty and is as straight a shooter as her Glock 22.
In the male dominated culture of the FBI Chen has been relegated to fighting child pornography. A rookie in 2001 she was removed from the anthrax investigation and harbors a smoldering resentment. Initially reluctant to get involved and risk her career the quirky Dunn convinces her to undertake an unofficial investigation.
Dunn and Chen race against time as the FBI again accuses the wrong man. Chen’s fears her snooping will attract the attention of superiors and the financially strapped Dunn must soon begin his new job. Borrowing a method from epidemiology they identify possible vehicles from highway toll data. Dunn retraces the investigation finding clues overlooked by a FBI badly shaken by their failure to prevent 9/11. Through their collaboration both Chen and Dunn find a measure of redemption, she through preventing another FBI gaffe and he through learning the truth about his wife’s death.
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