ManhuntEdwin P. Wilson was the Great Gatsby of the spook world, the rogue CIA agent who had already begun to amass a fortune while still in U.S. intelligence. His lavish estate outside Washington, D.C. was a favored gathering place for senators and congressman, admirals and generals, for key intelligence officers. In addition, Wilson was also raking in millions in the service of the godfather of worldwide terrorism. Wilson seemed above the law. Both the ICA and the FBI were aware of what he was doing, but they had done nothing to stop him. Then, U.S. attorney Larry Barcella discovered Wilson's sinister machinations, and began a manhunt that he vowed would not end until he saw Wilson behind bars. |
Från bokens innehåll
Resultat 1-3 av 40
Sida 102
He hoped Kevin wouldn ' t be offended , but one of them was arms sales . Mostly
legal , and always in the best interests of the United States . Still , he ' d try to
keep Kevin out of that part of things as much as possible . It amused Mulcahy that
...
He hoped Kevin wouldn ' t be offended , but one of them was arms sales . Mostly
legal , and always in the best interests of the United States . Still , he ' d try to
keep Kevin out of that part of things as much as possible . It amused Mulcahy that
...
Sida 103
first assignment for Terpil was an arms shipment . He would later claim that the
shipment involved machine guns and silencers for Zambia , that it was the
sinister significance of the silencers that caused him to ask the Bureau of Alcohol
...
first assignment for Terpil was an arms shipment . He would later claim that the
shipment involved machine guns and silencers for Zambia , that it was the
sinister significance of the silencers that caused him to ask the Bureau of Alcohol
...
Sida 206
Peter Goulding had gotten a price quote of $ 300 per M - 16 from an arms
merchant in Belgium that Wilson often used , so he decided to charge the
Libyans $ 350 , for an easy profit of a quarter of a million dollars , and there would
be ...
Peter Goulding had gotten a price quote of $ 300 per M - 16 from an arms
merchant in Belgium that Wilson often used , so he decided to charge the
Libyans $ 350 , for an easy profit of a quarter of a million dollars , and there would
be ...
Så tycker andra - Skriv en recension
Manhunt
Användarrecension - Not Available - Book VerdictIf the story of Edwin Wilson, the ex-CIA agent who came to serve Muammar el-Qaddafi as a freewheeling dealer in explosives and the technologies and tactics of terror, were laid before a reader as ... Läs hela recensionen
Andra upplagor - Visa alla
Vanliga ord och fraser
agency agent airport American appeared arms arrived asked Barcella Barnes brought Brower called charges chief Clines contract deal Department didn't Edwin everything explosives father finally Force former give going gone Goulding guns hand happened Harper he'd head heard Heath idea included intelligence interest International interview Italy John Justice Keats keep Keiser knew Larry later lawyer learned least Letelier letter Libya London look meeting ment military months Mount Mulcahy needed never once operation passport Pedersen plane problem Qaddafi Quintero records remembered returned Richard Schlachter secret sent Shackley ship shipment showed started story sure Tafoya taken talk tell Terpil thing thought tion told took Tripoli trying turned United Wadsworth wanted Washington wasn't wife Wilson York