Casey Brown’s blogging received a fair bit more attention once he started talking about Kate Meadows.
It might have had to do with the fact that he approached the case a little differently. He’d never considered himself a conspiracy theorist, but that’s certainly how a lot of his new readers did. Casey leaned into the Malkovich mob theory, but went further than that, all the way to Guantanamo Bay.
It was actually kind of a coincidence. A few years earlier one of Casey’s blogging buddies had drawn his attention to the plight of Val Vinokur, who had been detained in Cuba since 2008. There’d been a movie made about him, although by the time of its release there wasn’t all that much interest in what had become known as Gitmo, based on Vinokur’s journal, which had been heavily redacted. Casey was certainly a movie buff, and he was particularly a fan of the actor who played Vinokur, so it wasn’t that hard to draw him in.
Eventually he obtained a copy of the book published from Vinokur’s journal, which was itself, in order to sell the concept, redacted. Casey found it fascinating, and for the first time could honestly say he found one of the inmates sympathetic. It was one thing to question the legal or moral implications of the place, quite another to look at even one prisoner and see a human being.
The human Casey saw had closer connections home than he would’ve ever expected. Vinokur had been used as an unwitting courier by Whitey Bulger’s crew, which was a process that had tangentially included Malkovich (all that being mere speculation, too), which Casey assumed was something Meadows had stumbled upon, and the reason she had to die.
His readers ate this up, and he became a minor celebrity as a result, which only made Casey nervous. He feared, most of all, that the Boston mafia would take it seriously. He wasn’t even sure he took it seriously. It had seemed so innocent. He’d never had any real readership, and never expected that to change, until it did.
He didn’t sleep well at night.