Acclaimed
Author Renews Fight for Answers to Daughter’s Murder
New Book
“One to the Wolves: On the Trail of a Killer” Opens New Powder Keg
ALBUQUERQUE (Aug. 20, 2013)—When acclaimed author Lois
Duncan’s first book about her daughter’s 1989 murder in Albuquerque came out,
it uncovered scenarios that involved Asian crime activities and police
cover-ups. The family feared for their lives so much that they left their
Albuquerque home and eventually moved out of state.
With this summer’s release of the sequel, “One to the Wolves: On the Trail of a Killer,” Duncan has compelling new information gathered over almost
25 years of private investigation that she hopes will convince a
newly-appointed Albuquerque police chief to reopen the case and turn it over to
the FBI. New Mexico no longer has a
statute of limitations on a capital felony or a first degree violent felony, Duncan says.
“Kaitlyn Arquette ,
who was 18, was shot to death as she drove home from a friend’s house on a
Sunday evening. Police closed the unsolved case as a random shooting, refusing
to investigate information that indicated otherwise, although it had all the
earmarks of a professional hit,” Duncan
says.
Six months after the July 1989 shooting, police
arrested three men for Kait's murder, announcing Kait was shot on a dare. But after a key witness recanted his
statement, the district attorney dropped all charges against the men. No other arrests have ever been made.
Duncan’s 1992 book, “Who
Killed My Daughter?” examined information that Kait’s
estranged friends were allegedly part of an Asian crime ring including
insurance fraud and drug smuggling. The family believes that Kait was ready to
blow the whistle on the group’s illegal activities.
“One to the
Wolves”
chronicles all that has occurred in the legal
system and in the family’s lives since the first book was published in 1992. It lays out compelling reasons for
further investigations, including key witnesses who were never interrogated by
the Albuquerque Police Department and crime scene
photos of the car damage that sources said proved Kait was targeted and assassinated. Questions remain like why no
traces of the bullets that killed Kait or impacted her car were ever
found. And, why police left the scene
before an ambulance arrived?
Duncan is the
author of over 50 books. Eight of her novels have been made into motion
pictures, including “I Know What You Did Last Summer,” and “Hotel For Dogs.” In
honor of Kait, Duncan and her husband, Don Arquette, founded www.realcrimes.com where families of other murder victims who believe the victim’s case was
mishandled can receive media exposure.
“One to the
Wolves,”
is published as an ebook by Planet Ann Rule, a digital publisher bringing Ann Rule’s classic true crime
catalog and other select authors’ works to new audiences in e-book format. Direct media interview requests to kathiekerrpr@gmail.com.
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