KAGEN: He said that?
RENSCHEL: I have a right to my opinion.
MONK: But did you put your words into action, Renschel? Like that time after the ’92 riots when you and some of your more eager members jumped those kids coming out of Canter’s on Fairfax?
RENSCHEL: There had been two gang shootings in that neighborhood in less than a week.
MONK: So any blacks would do, huh? Only these guys were UCLA basketball players and you got the shit sued out of you.
RENSCHEL: I’m a big enough man to admit my mistakes, Monk.
KAGEN (gesturing): We all want the same thing here, find the guilty party.
RENSCHEL: I can say without fear of contradiction, the AJA had nothing to do with these distasteful incidents. I suggest, as I did to the police, that you and your UPN Herculot Perot here could better use your time following up leads elsewhere.
MONK: Like with Josef Odeh?
RENSCHEL (nodding): I’ll give you credit, Monk, you do your homework.
MONK: Like I said, I try.
EXT. WILSHIRE BOULEVARD-CONTINUOUS
KAGEN: This Odeh I gather is a leader in the Arab Community?
MONK: Yeah, he’s considered a moderate, particularly compared to your boy.
KAGEN: So why do we need to talk to him?
MONK: It’s pretty fascinating what you can find on-line added to some old-fashioned working the phones, Walsh. One of the service organizations Odeh sat on the board of was caught up in the Justice Department net around the hawala method of money laundering to the Al Qaeda.
INT. ’64 FORD GALAXIE
KAGEN: So this charity was a front that skimmed off money to the terrorist network?
MONK: That seems to be unclear. But the point is that Odeh was tainted and did some back-peddling. He proclaimed he knew nothing of money transferring, etcetera. He wasn’t arrested, but I bet he’s been under watch.
KAGEN: But he could be jiving, and he really was part of some scheme to move funds.
MONK: Something like that.
KAGEN: You gonna be more objective this time?
MONK: You’re right, Walsh, I was being unprofessional. I’ll be on point.
EXT. ’64 FORD GALAXIE: DAY
The car zooms along.
EXT. MASJID AL-FALAH ISLAMIC CENTER,
INGLEWOOD: DAY
CU
MONK (into intercom): Hi, I’m Ivan Monk with Walsh Kagen to see Jabari Hatoom. I had an appointment.
WIDEN
INT. MASJID AL-FALAH ISLAMIC CENTER-
CONTINUOUS
SUNAR: Gentlemen, this way.
INT. KITCHEN-DAY
HATOOM: Homeboy.
MONK: Glad you could see us.
MONK (cont’d): This is Walsh Kagen.
HATOOM (shaking the director’s hand): Man, what a pleasure. You don’t know how many times I’ve seen
KAGEN: That’s flattering. And how is it you know Ivan?
HATOOM: He busted me.
MONK: Long time ago, when I used to do bounty hunting.
KAGEN (to Hatoom): And you converted in prison?
HATOOM: Exactly.
MONK: Will you set up a meeting for us with Odeh?
HATOOM: I have not made the call.
MONK: I know it’s hard, Jabari, but you know good and well it’s the Muslim community that has to step up if there’s an extremist running around.
HATOOM: Is that just another way to say we have to be good, shuffling handkerchief