from:
http://www.maraleveritt.com/kirkus.htm
Click Here: <A HREF="http://www.maraleveritt.com/">Mara Leveritt The Boys on
the Tracks</A>
-----
Much more at site.
Om
K
-----
Welcome to my site

THE BOYS ON THE TRACKS is set in Arkansas, but the questions it raises are
national in scope. For years, only parts of this story were reported.
Accounts of some elements were distorted. Over the years, many parts were
forgotten-or buried, as were the boys themselves.
To me, this story was too important to be buried. Some of its events were
horrific. I wrote this book to place them in context. I wrote it to put a
human face on the consequences of corruption. I wrote it, most of all, to set
the record straight.

The link at left will lead you to some important background on the book, as
as well as to hundreds of pages of FBI files that were released after the
book was written. The files on the smuggler Barry Seal have never been
available before.

I am commited to this story and will stay with it until the last question has
been answered. As an investigative reporter, I am continually turning up new
information. And more records from the FBI have been promised. I will add
these to this site. So, please, check back often.

Mara Leveritt
=====
Author�s statement
I was a reporter at the Arkansas Gazette in 1987 when Don Henry and Kevin
Ives were murdered. I followed the investigation with increasing amazement as
responsibility was passed from county to state, and finally, to federal
officials. In the early 1990s, I also became intrigued by another odd story
that was then struggling to unfold�this in the town of Mena. The two stories
had four things in common: drugs, politics, secrecy and disturbingly peculiar
investigations.

In 1995 I filed a federal Freedom of Information request for records relating
to the events at Mena. In 1996, I filed a similar request for records
relating to the deaths of Henry and Ives. That same year I resigned from the
Arkansas Times, where I was senior editor, to write a book about the two
cases.

If you have not seen THE BOYS ON THE TRACKS, you might want to check out a
couple of reviews, via the link at left, or read the entire first chapter.
For those of you who have read the book, I have posted hundreds of pages of
background information. There is an article on Dr. Fahmy Malak, published a
year before then Gov. Bill Clinton removed him from office. I've posted
several pages from a lengthy deposition of Clinton's mother, Virginia Kelley,
concerning two deaths that occurred during surgery, while she administered
the anesthesia, one of which resulted in an autopsy by Dr. Malak. Readers
interested in Mena, will want to look at the deposition of William C. Duncan,
the IRS agent who investigated money laundering connected to the drug
smuggler, Adler Berriman "Barry" Seal.

In late 1999, just as THE BOYS ON THE TRACKS was going into print, the FBI
released to me several hundred pages of documents relating to Barry Seal. The
pages I received were heavily censcored. And, according to the FBI, they
represent only about two-thirds of the total file. Nonetheless, to my
knowledge, I was the first person outside the agency ever to see even this
much of his file. Everything I have received to date is posted at this link.

Over the years, I have expressed some of my opinions about these events in a
column per the Arkansas Times.. Those related columns are posted, as is my
response to the question I am frequently asked by readers: What can anyone
do?
 =====
>From Kirkus Reviews
Award-winning investigative reporter Leveritt�s debut is a wrecking-ball tale
of tragedy, malfeasance, and machine politics that resembles an all-true
Arkansas Confidential. In 1987, Linda Ives suffered a parental
worst-nightmare when her son and a friend were run over by a train, whose
crew observed them supine and covered with a tarp before impact. Local law
enforcement attributed the deaths to a massive overdose of marijuana and
dismissed the crew�s tale as �optical illusion,� in the first of many
suspicious official fumbles. Ives compelled a series of investigations that
began promisingly yet were inexplicably stifled by such malign forces as the
state�s notoriously incompetent medical examiner (protected by then-Governor
Clinton) and an admired local prosecutor who championed her cause as
camouflage for his own criminal activities. As years passed, and more
unsolved killings occurred, Ives assembled evidence that the boys had
stumbled upon a diffuse conspiracy involving CIA-backed air suppliers to the
Contras, who ran an enormous cocaine-trafficking operation from a remote
airport.

Fanciful as this may sound, Leveritt documents how Ives�s quest for
transparency was consistently stymied, first by local agencies, then the
state police, finally by the FBI. A portrait emerges of state governance as a
deeply corrupted good-ol�-boy network, funded by drug money and protected by
blackmail and violence. Leveritt�s prose is less than taut, and she too often
indulges in repetitive emotional rhetoric regarding the Iveses� loss. That
said, her investigatory efforts seem impeccable; little within this
page-turner reads as implausible �conspiracy theory.� Unlike many works that
have dug for the dirt of the Clinton gubernatorial era, this is an
authentically shocking, deeply unsettling portrait of contemporary American
power backstopped by arrogance and callous greed�and of the �drug war� as a
weapon of social control from which insiders enjoy impunity. One hopes for
sufficient outrage garnered to substitute for justice denied; also, for an
inevitable movie adaptation that won�t dilute the story�s uglier civic
dimensions.
Copyright �1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sunday, December 26, 1999



BOOKS: Unraveling mysteries in Saline County murders




LINDA SATTER
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The Boys on the Tracks: Death, Denial, and a Mother's Crusade for Justice, by
Mara Leveritt, 370 pages including notes and index, St. Martin's Press,
$25.95.
REVIEW

     Finishing Mara Leveritt's new book, The Boys on the Tracks, can leave a
person depressed. But that's not because it's a sorrowful book that you wish
you wouldn't have read. It's because the exhilarating, eye-opening,
thought-provoking ride it took you on has come to an end, and you want more.
You want the remaining questions answered. You want the mystery solved.

     But while the book doesn't provide any definitive answers for what
happened to two Saline County teenagers on a dark stretch of railroad tracks
early Aug. 23, 1987, it certainly provides some substantial possibilities.

     Yes, it's a true story--"true crime," if you prefer. But it's not the
sort of true-crime drama that relies on cheap, sensational references to
pools of blood and hardened cops. It is, instead, a straightforward, engaging
and extensively researched account of a real-life unsolved mystery and one
woman's relentless pursuit of justice. Concentrating on intricate dealings
and their emotional and political consequences rather than unnecessarily
gruesome details, it reads more like a psychological thriller--one that makes
a reader think and calculate and sympathize all at the same time. And all
while keeping the pages turning--even long past midnight, on a work night.

     While the events it brings to life are intriguing, most of them have
been reported before in newspaper articles scattered over the years. But
never have they been put together so carefully and cohesively so as to allow
a reader to fully comprehend the links between them, and in the process, to
understand their significance.

     Those who have read or heard the sporadic news accounts of the
forever-evolving saga of the boys' deaths may have felt at times as though
they couldn't see the forest for the trees, that there was undoubtedly a lot
more going on than was publicly known. But by organizing the massive amount
of material into a coherent, chronological and highly readable narrative,
with footnotes for those seeking the origin of various facts, Leveritt allows
readers a tree-top view of the forest. And what a forest of secrets and lies
it is!

     The fact that the characters are real-life people, many of whom still
live in the community, makes the story even more compelling.

     While written in the third person, the book is told largely from the
perspective of Linda Ives of Benton, whose son, Kevin, was one of the two
boys killed on that otherwise innocent summer night more than 12 years ago.
Kevin Ives was 17 and his friend and fellow victim, Don Henry, was 16.

    The book opens with the boys being run over by a train at about 4 a.m. as
they lay motionless on the tracks, unresponsive to the frantic train crew's
attempt to rouse them with a horn while unsuccessfully slamming on the
brakes. It then goes on to recount details that anyone who lived in Arkansas
at the time, or for several years thereafter, probably knows, but that anyone
who had never heard of the case would find equally fascinating.

     There is, of course, the declaration by former State Medical Examiner
Dr. Fahmy Malak that the boys died accidentally while in a deep sleep caused
by smoking too much marijuana. There is the public disbelief and outrage that
follows. There is the ordering of new autopsies by an out-of-state
pathologist. There is the unwavering public support of Malak by then-Governor
Bill Clinton. There are the eventual official findings that the boys were
homicide victims, probably slain before being lain across the tracks, and
Malak's resignation. And there are all those other mysterious deaths that
summer in Saline County.

     But the devilishly calculating activities of former Saline County
Prosecutor Dan Harmon, now a convicted felon serving 11 years in federal
prison on unrelated charges, takes center stage. The book introduces the
readers to Harmon, then an up and coming Saline County lawyer, as he was
widely perceived at the time: a hero who swooped in and acted as a special
prosecutor to lead a grand jury investigation into the deaths--an
investigation that he promised would solve the mystery once and for all.

     Meticulously, Leveritt takes readers through the gradual changes in
Harmon's public image while simultaneously detailing the law-enforcement
machinations that were secretly, silently swirling around him at the time
that he basked in public admiration.

     We see how easily Harmon fooled not only the Ives and Henry families,
but the public as well. We see how likable he was, and clever and how hard it
was to accept that he might be something other than what he portrayed himself
to be. And we see how, gradually, a different side of him came to light and
led to his prison term for racketeering, extortion, conspiracy and drug
convictions.

     By telling it all largely through the eyes and heart of Linda Ives,
Leveritt offers a fresh glimpse of the distraught, often demanding, mother
that readers of past articles may have come to perceive. Instead of seeing
her as a shrill woman whose son's death has driven her off the deep end,
readers see a rational, intelligent woman who remarkably manages to somehow
keep her sanity amidst the most insane of events. We see how she forges on
with a remarkable determination to get to the bottom of her son's death, and
wish that we could find that same strength if ever it is necessary.

     Even when Ives' beliefs venture outside whatever private theories the
book may have sprouted in the minds of individual readers, the readers can
understand how Ives came to believe what she does. She can no longer be
dismissed as crazy or hysterical, as some may at times have wondered about.

     Which brings up another element of the book. While it leads readers
toward some of the author's obvious conclusions, especially where certain
federal authorities and their cache of tightly guarded secrets are concerned,
it also offers a broad enough picture that readers are free to jump off the
path at any time and draw their own conclusions--to accept a little or a lot
of what the author or Ives may believe.

     In fact, while sympathetic to Ives, Leveritt doesn't necessarily agree
with all of the grieving mother's conclusions. Leveritt even reveals
respectful disagreements between Ives and her husband on the links, or lack
thereof, between certain events. In the process, she makes the couple more
touchable and Ives' sometimes high-volume crusade more understandable and
sympathetic. The book is by no means a quick read. It gets more complicated
as it progresses, sometimes prompting a reader to backtrack and re-read, to
make sure one set of facts is understood before attempting to digest another
that will play off the first. But that's not to say it's written in a
difficult way. It's not. It's written in about as easygoing and digestible a
manner as this sordid, complex string of events could be told.

     By the time the book gets into the subject of purported drug and
gun-smuggling operations at the tiny airport in Mena in Polk County, a few
readers may want to roll their eyes, fearing they've reached "conspiracy
theory" territory. But Leveritt presents an interesting compilation of
research on the subject that can really set a mind to wondering.

     Rooted in obviously extensive research, the book's theories are not
easily dismissable as mere conjecture. Though the public may never know
exactly what--or who--killed the two friends, or whether a string of bizarre
events across the state can actually be linked to the deaths, one thing is
certain: the story of whatever might have happened is interesting.

     There are a few readers who may not appreciate the book--Harmon and
former U.S. Attorney Chuck Banks come to mind. But it's a good choice for
anyone looking for some insight into the long-standing mystery of the boys'
deaths, or for anyone looking for the kind of book that lures you in and
holds you hostage until the end, keeping your mind wandering back to its pages
 in between readings and long after.

Copyright � 1999, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc. All rights reserved
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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