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The Founding Fathers risked everything in the Revolution. The new nation is struggling to survive. The Constitution emerges bringing a form of Government the world has never seen. It must be protected at all costs, even from its own citizens. The Founding Fathers form a secret Committee to preserve those freedoms they fought and died for. Or will it? The Committee, everything is destined to be under their control, Senators and Congressman even the newly elected President. Dan Oliver is looking forward to retiring from the FBI, until his daughter comes home from college with a letter penned by James Madison. He has always suspected there were secret power brokers behind the Government, now he knows. Can he find them, can he stop them and will he even survive The Committee…
He Seemed So Normal . . . By day, Robert Lee Yates, Jr., was a respected father of five, a skilled helicopter pilot who served in Desert Storm and the National Guard, and a man no one suspected of a deadly hidden life. By night he prowled the streets where prostitutes gathered, gaining their trust before betraying them with a bullet to the head. On August 26, 1997, the decomposed bodies of two young women were discovered in Spokane, Washington. Within months four more women were added to the mounting death toll. In 2000, Yates pleaded guilty to thirteen murders to avoid the death penalty. But in 2001 he was convicted of two more murders and is now on death row in Washington State, waiting for the day when he will die by lethal injection. Updated with the latest disturbing developments, awardwinning author Burl Barer's reallife thriller is a shocking portrait of one man's depravity. "Brilliant investigative journalism. . .a nonstop chilling thrill ride into the mind of an evil and savage killer." Dan Zupansky, author of Trophy Kill Includes 16 pages of photos "A must read." True Crime Book Reviews
A background in systems delivery led him to Finbark. With a mountain to climb Dan Justice works hard to find a solution to the corruption within this major Finance organisation. What he discovers is a hierarchy designed to make a few individuals a great deal of money and make the business primed for a controlled takeover. With a blueprint for syphoning off money those participating had to be stopped despite the risk or cost to himself. Unsure who to trust, the deeper he investigates, the more pressure there becomes to stop him in his tracks. Intensive care his final stop over leaving only his presentation to shareholders with justice the only option.
The Korean experience changed the way Americans viewed war. The lack of a clear-cut victory inspired filmmakers to try to make sense of fighting another country's civil war and risking American lives for an unpopular cause. This filmography details more than 90 English-language films. Each entry includes complete cast and credit listings, a plot synopsis, evaluation, review snippets, and notice of video availability. This book places each film in its historical context, assesses the essential truthfulness of each film and evaluates its entertainment value, and discusses how--and why--Korean War films differ from other Hollywood war genres. Four appendices list the films by chronology; production company and studio; level of historical accuracy; and subject and theme. Additional appendices list films with incidental references to the Korean War; documentaries on the Korean War; and South Korean films about the war. Photographs, a bibliography, and an index are included.
"[These volumes] are endlessly absorbing as an excursion into cultural history and national memory."--Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.
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