Arkhaven logo

Truth Emerges panel 1

Detective William Short shifted uncomfortably beneath the glare of camera lights as Chief Warren Lancaster approached the podium. The press room at Dallas Police Headquarters was packed, journalists jammed shoulder to shoulder, the air heavy with tension. William had worked Homicide for fifteen years, but he'd never seen the media this hungry.


Standing to the left of the Chief, William kept his face professionally blank despite the knot in his stomach. The Foster case had become a political battlefield before the man's body was even cold, with competing narratives flooding social media and cable news.


Until twelve hours ago, when that YouTube video had changed everything.


"Ladies and gentlemen," Chief Lancaster began, his voice slightly strained. "I'm here to provide updated information regarding the John Foster homicide investigation."


William noticed how the Chief deliberately avoided the words "incident" or "death" that had been used in earlier statements. The language had shifted since the video emerged.


"Based on evidence that has recently come to light, I want to clarify several points about this case." Lancaster gripped the podium. "First, the Dallas Medical Examiner has determined that Mr. Foster died from asphyxiation due to hanging. Though the family declined a full autopsy for religious reasons, they consented to advanced imaging which confirmed severe trauma to the victim's windpipe and cervical vertebrae consistent with death by hanging."


A reporter from the Dallas Morning News shot up her hand. "Chief, your department previously suggested Mr. Foster may have died from the beating he received prior to the hanging. Are you now saying—"


"I'm saying," Lancaster cut in, "that we now have definitive cause of death. The medical evidence is clear."


William exchanged a glance with his partner, Detective Emilio Gonzales. They both knew the change in narrative wasn't from new medical evidence—the ME had known the cause of death immediately. This was damage control after the video had exposed earlier department statements as politically motivated spin.


"Second," the Chief continued, "regarding reports about a white supremacist bumper sticker on Mr. Foster's vehicle. Our investigation has confirmed through multiple witness statements and video evidence that the sticker reading 'It's OK to be White' was placed on Mr. Foster's BMW after he was pulled from the vehicle by assailants. The sticker was not previously on the vehicle and did not belong to Mr. Foster."


William watched the reporters react, some furiously scribbling notes, others exchanging stunned glances. For two days, certain media outlets had framed the narrative around Foster allegedly being a white supremacist who had "provoked" protesters.


"Are you saying Mr. Foster was targeted randomly?" shouted a reporter.


"Our investigation is ongoing," Lancaster replied. "But we have made several arrests in connection with this homicide, and we are treating this as a premeditated murder."


The room erupted, journalists shouting over each other. William spotted Amelia Chen from Channel 8 pushing forward, her expression thunderous.


"Chief Lancaster!" Chen called out. "Your department's initial statement suggested Mr. Foster was involved in an altercation he may have initiated. Are you now retracting that position entirely?"


William watched Lancaster's jaw tighten. The Chief had been pressured by the Mayor's office to downplay the racial aspects of the case initially.


"Based on the evidence we now have, we believe Mr. Foster was specifically targeted when his vehicle was surrounded. He did not initiate the confrontation."


"What about reports he fired a weapon?" called another reporter.


Lancaster nodded. "Mr. Foster was legally armed and did discharge his firearm twice in what appears to be self-defense as he was being pulled from his vehicle. One shot struck his driver's side window, and the other went through the roof of his vehicle. Neither shot struck any individuals. His weapon was then taken from him during the assault."


"Regarding the arrests," Lancaster continued, "we have taken seven individuals into custody thus far. We are still confirming identities as several provided false information at booking. Five are charged with first-degree murder, and two with accessory to murder."


"Can you confirm that the rope used in the hanging was brought to the protest specifically for that purpose?" asked a reporter William recognized from the Tribune.


"The evidence suggests that the rope used to hang Mr. Foster was the same rope used earlier in the protest to hang an effigy. This indicates premeditation and coordination among certain individuals within the larger protest group."


Lancaster raised his hands as the room again dissolved into shouted questions. "We want to be clear that the protest organizers have cooperated fully with our investigation and have condemned this act. This appears to be the work of a radical element operating within the larger peaceful demonstration."


"One at a time, please," Lancaster said firmly. "You, from the Post."

"Has the department verified claims on social media that Mr. Foster was targeted because he was white?"


The room fell silent. William felt the weight of that question. He had interviewed two of the suspects himself, had heard their explicit statements about targeting Foster for his race. The YouTube video had captured one attacker shouting racial slurs as they dragged Foster from his car.


Lancaster hesitated only briefly. "We are investigating all aspects of motive. The evidence does suggest racial animus played a role in victim selection."


The press room erupted again. William caught snippets of indignation: "Are you suggesting this was a hate crime?" "Reverse racism isn't a thing!" "Are you equating this with systemic oppression?"


Chen pushed forward again. "Chief, how do you reconcile this new narrative with your department's initial statements downplaying the racial component?"


Lancaster's face tightened. "Our initial statements were based on preliminary information. As with any investigation, our understanding evolves as more evidence becomes available."


"Detective Short," Chen called out, suddenly directing her attention to William. "You were first on scene. Did you see evidence that this was racially motivated?"


William felt all eyes swing to him, including the Chief's warning glare.


"Detective Short is not taking questions," Lancaster intervened smoothly. "Next question."


But Chen persisted. "Sources say you documented racial slurs in your initial report that were omitted from the department's public statements. Is that accurate, Detective?"


"That's enough," Lancaster snapped. "This press conference is to share official information, not to speculate or pressure individual officers."


A reporter from a conservative outlet raised his hand. "Chief, the Foster family has claimed that Dallas PD initially tried to discourage them from viewing the YouTube video when they reported its existence. Can you address that allegation?"


William saw beads of sweat forming on Lancaster's forehead despite the room's air conditioning.


"We handle all evidence according to established protocols," Lancaster answered, his tone clipped. "The video in question was processed and verified like any other potential evidence. Now, as to the additional arrests—"


"But did someone in your department try to dismiss the video as 'internet conspiracy nonsense'? That's what Anthony Foster claimed in his statement yesterday," the reporter pressed.


"I'm not aware of any such communication," Lancaster replied. "The Foster family has been treated with the utmost respect throughout this difficult process."


William kept his expression neutral, but he'd personally heard Lieutenant Griggs complain about the "entitled rich family" making demands about the investigation.


"We have time for two more questions," Lancaster announced. "You, from the Star."


"Can you address rumors that the Mayor's office influenced how this case was initially characterized to the public?"


Lancaster's left eye twitched almost imperceptibly. "The Dallas Police Department conducts its investigations independently based on facts and evidence. We provide accurate information as it becomes available. Last question."


"Will the suspects be charged with hate crimes in addition to murder?"


"That determination will be made by the District Attorney's office once our investigation is complete. We are providing them with all relevant evidence regarding possible motives.”


Lancaster stepped back from the podium. "Thank you all for coming. We will provide updates as the investigation progresses."


As the Chief turned to leave, the press room erupted again. William followed Lancaster and Gonzales through the side door, relieved to escape the cacophony.


In the hallway, Lancaster rounded on them, his public composure cracking. "This is a nightmare," he muttered. "The Mayor's furious, the Governor’s on my ass, and now we've got racial tension exploding on both sides."


"The evidence is what it is, Chief," Gonzales said quietly.


"Evidence doesn't exist in a vacuum, Detective," Lancaster snapped. "It exists in a city with a history, in a political reality we can't ignore."


"All due respect, sir," William found himself saying, "but that's exactly what got us into this mess. Trying to shape the narrative instead of just stating the facts from the beginning."


Lancaster's eyes narrowed. "When you're sitting in this chair, Short, you can lecture me about transparency. Until then, do your job and build a case that will stick. We've got enough problems without the arrests falling apart in court."


The Chief stalked away, leaving William and Gonzales standing in the hallway.


"He's not wrong about the political reality," Gonzales said quietly.


William sighed. "Maybe not. But we've got a family that lost their father and husband to a lynching, perhaps only because he was white. Politics shouldn't dictate how we handle that."


"And yet it does," Gonzales replied. "Always has."


As they walked toward the elevator, William's phone buzzed. A text from his wife: "Saw the press conference. You OK?"


He typed back: "Fine. Long way to go on this one."


William had a feeling the Foster case would define the rest of his career. The truth was finally emerging, but he wondered if it had come too late—if the damage done by those early misleading narratives could ever be fully undone.


For John Foster's family, he hoped it could. They deserved that much, at least.

Prophet to the Remnant series cover
Truth Emerges episode cover
1.6K views0 likes
0 comments

Prophet to the Remnant

Created by
author avatar
Nibmeister
Jesus Christ sends a resurrected Prophet to Christendom and gives him a year and a day to deliver a message and a warning to the remnants of the faithful.
,
List icon
Comment icon
Prev icon
Next icon
Fullscreen icon