Phase Two: Disruption
The disruption phase began with the three corrupt police officers on Royce’s payroll. Marcus and his team had built detailed files on each one—Officers Bradley Morrison, Kent Chang, and Linda Vasquez. All three had been taking monthly payments to ignore certain criminal activities, tip off the organization about investigations, and generally ensure that Royce’s operations ran smoothly.
Sarah Chen had traced the payments through a complex network of shell companies and cash transactions, but the paper trail was there if someone knew where to look. She prepared packages for Internal Affairs at the police department, complete with bank records, photographs of meetings between the officers and known criminals, and enough evidence to trigger full investigations into all three.
The packages were delivered anonymously to both Internal Affairs and a local investigative reporter who had been writing about police corruption for years. Within twenty-four hours, all three officers were placed on administrative leave pending investigation, and suddenly Royce had no eyes inside the police department.
Next came the two judges who had been dismissing charges against Viper members. Judge Harold Brennan and Judge Stephanie Torres had both accepted bribes in exchange for favorable rulings, and Sarah had documented every payment, every dismissed case, every instance where justice had been sold to the highest bidder.

The evidence went to the state attorney general’s office and simultaneously to the judicial oversight committee. Both judges were immediately suspended and faced criminal investigations of their own. More importantly, every case they’d presided over was now subject to review, which meant dozens of Royce’s associates who had walked free would be facing new charges.
The final blow came when FBI Agent Kane executed warrants on the three businesses that formed the financial backbone of Royce’s operation. The raids were coordinated to happen simultaneously, with federal agents seizing computers, financial records, and physical assets while news cameras captured everything.
The used car dealership, the check-cashing store, and the construction company were all frozen by federal asset forfeiture procedures. Overnight, Royce’s organization went from moving five million dollars a year to being unable to pay for basic operations.

Shane watched the news coverage of the raids from Marcus’s office, seeing the stunned expressions on the faces of Royce’s associates as federal agents led them away in handcuffs. It was satisfying in a way that violence could never be—watching the entire corrupt structure collapse under the weight of its own illegal activities.
“He’s going to be desperate now,” Marcus observed. “Cut off from money, losing his protection, watching his organization crumble. That’s when people make mistakes.”
“Or when they get really dangerous,” Shane replied. “Desperate people do desperate things.”

“That’s what we’re counting on,” Marcus said with a grim smile. “Because now comes the hard part.”