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Civil War, Terrorism and Gangs

Raddai Raikhlin

Civil War, Terrorism and Gangs Raddai Raikhlin Amazon Price: $26.99
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Underworld Secrets: Jimmy Hoffa to Las Vegas

Jerry Van Hoorelbeke

Underworld Secrets: Jimmy Hoffa to Las Vegas Jerry Van Hoorelbeke Amazon Price: $25.00
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 2 Average rating: 3.0 of 5

Bad, Bad, Bad 1 out of 5 stars.
2 of 3 people found this review helpful.

This book is very unorganized and hard to follow. Events and thoughts at times do not make sense I.E chapter one page 5 "I went to live with my sister and Dennis's father gave me a job in his factory". No where is it mentioned who Dennis is and why he is mentioned, or was that his sisters name and they had different fathers? In the same sentence it goes on to say something about Oakland Community College and football with reference to the the colleege retruning to the Reformatory? What is the Reformatory and what does it have to do with football
is th
It is full of events, names and happenings that just don't "gel" together..with no explaination of why a particular person or event is/was or what the relevence is in the story..

I had to give up reading it less then half way through, do to the lack of consistant thoughts...too confusing...

Editorial Review:

Jerry Van, friend of Jimmy Hoffa, describes his association with underworld figures in Las Vega and Los Angeles. The people he associated with included Eddie Nash ("four-on-the-floor" Hollywood murders); Tony Spilotro and Tony Spalatro, infamous Las Vegas mob figures; sex and prostitution in Las Vegas.

The Umbrella of U.S. Power: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Contradictions of U.S. Policy (The Open Media Pamphlet Series, 9)

Noam Chomsky

The Umbrella of U.S. Power: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Contradictions of U.S. Policy (The Open Media Pamphlet Series, 9) Noam Chomsky List Price: $5.95
By: Seven Stories Press
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 9 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Big Money Buys Poverty and Kills, Citizens Being Looted 5 out of 5 stars.
28 of 30 people found this review helpful.


This is one of Noam Chomsky's most interesting pamphlets (actually a quarter-size booklet of 78 pages). It has a special relevance and importance to citizens in the aftermath of 9-11 because he directly links our corporate criminality ("Justice Department estimates the cost of corporate crime as 7 to 25 times as high as street crime") to our national policies against human rights (poverty pays, for the corporate class that strives to liquidate Third World nations in their predatory roving of the planet).

He pointedly identifies the U.S. arms industry as being among the worst violators, but even more importantly, points out that U.S. policies favoring our arms dealers are opposed by 96% of the U.S. population. While that number might be high, I believe there is no question but that Washington is being instructed by corporations rather than its citizens on this vital point of policy. It is time for citizens to take the power back.

Chomsky notes that in 1996 the World Health Organization characterized extreme poverty as the world's most ruthless killer and the greatest cause of suffering on earth. This ties in with the United Nations finding that human suffering is now a legitimate basis for intervention, and with George Soro's observation in The Washington Post of 24 February 2002, that "We can't be successful in fighting terrorism, unless we fight that other axis of evil--poverty, disease and ignorance."

This little gem of a book also includes well-footnoted observations about how nations seek to carry out trade negotiations in secrecy, in part because they are agreeing to overlook if not actively participate in the looting of poor countries as a condition for prosperous trade among the already developed nations.

The book begins and ends with thoughts from Chomsky on the intellectual discipline he founded, the relationship between linguistics, ethics, and action. He begins with pointed observations on how the most horrible crimes are allowed to go without comment because of *self* censorship, and ends by noting that our citizens do not need to be forbidden to speak of these monstrous deeds that our corporations and government are secretly agreeing to perpetuate, because we have chosen to remain ignorant and silent.

U.S. policy today is *not* founded on moral values, and it is *not* representative of the will of the people in so far as it is carried out in secret collaboration with major corporations and in opposition to the minimal mandatory needs of developing nations for water, food, disease, and economic security.

This is not about political ideology--Ralph Nader, the ultimate spoiler, has one thing right: the parties are irrelevant, this is now about the people versus the corporations. Absent a huge popular turn-out *prior* to each election, to make it clear to candidates that they will be held accountable by the people for keeping all trade and other negotiations in the public domain, and for voting on issues mindful of the will of the people rather than their corporate Enron-like paymasters, then we are the ones ultimately responsible for U.S. policy's misdirection.

Editorial Review:

The United States government often invokes a moral imperative to honor human rights as justification for its foreign-policy decisions. But, according to Noam Chomsky, America's actual track record falls far short of the principles iterated in 1948's Universal Declaration of Human Rights--the accepted international standard. This slim but passionate volume lists case after case in which the United States has provided aid to grossly abusive regimes--among which Chomsky includes Israel and Indonesia--and examples of how the American government seeks to limit the human rights of its own citizens. With equal criticism for Democrat and Republican administrations, The Umbrella of U.S. Power refuses to remain silent about "the things it 'wouldn't do' to mention" as it works to expose the contradictions between what government leaders tell their people and what they actually do. --Ron Hogan

On...A Planetary Court of Justice

William W. Morgan

On...A Planetary Court of Justice William W. Morgan Amazon Price: $14.99
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Editorial Review:

We have no single, moral and rational system of justice on this planet. One appropriate for all members of a thinking specie. In every political régime more criminals get away than are caught. And even the definition of what constitutes a crime is relative to the régime. Worse, our adopted societal system is itself a crime against humanity. When a criminal is caught they are locked up at enormous expense to the victims, executed, or go free within a short time. In all cases, there is never restitution for victims. The criminal, the victim or society does not receive justice. There is a simple solution to this that does not require a political police, court or prison system. One that ensures restitution for crimes. On. . . a Planetary Court of Justice describes such a system.

An Expendable Man: The Near-Execution of Earl Washington, Jr.

Margaret Edds

An Expendable Man: The Near-Execution of Earl Washington, Jr. Margaret Edds Amazon Price: $22.00
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

"Best work of non-fiction about Virginia or by a Virginia author."—
Manasas Journal Messenger

'One of the unique features of the book is its detailed explanation of the death penalty procedure in Virginia, which is second only to Texas in its number of executions."
Library Journal

"Edds's powerful telling of Washington's experience uses court documents, personal interviews, and a variety of other sources to illustrate the political and social circumstances surrounding this extraordinary case. This book invites the reader to think about how due process is carried out and implemented. An Expendable Man is a valuable study of not only the Virginia legal system, but also that of the United States."
Virginia Libraries

"The book is provocative for its vivid characterization and its study of the death penalty's inherent flaws."
Newport News Press

"Somewhere between the personal narratives found in H. Bruce Franklin's collection Prison Writing in 20th-Century America, the critical work of Mumia Abu-Jamal, and the recent profusion of sociological studies of America's accelerated prison economy, An Expendable Man gives us a moving portrait of a broad-based struggle on behalf of one man, and implies ways in which the halls of justice might become more just."
Trial & Error

"Careful documentation. Edge-of-the-seat human drama. An exploration of loopholes in judicial safeguards against wrongful executions. 'An Expendable Man' contains all of these—and more."
The Virginian-Pilot

"An Expendable Man forcefully describes how a number of deeply committed people resurrected the hope of an innocent man. Edds's narrative painstakingly follows the sinuous protocols of due process in America. An Expendable Man gives us a moving portrait of a broad-based struggle on behalf of one man, and implies ways in which the halls of justice might become more just."
Rain Taxi

"One of the unique features of the book is its detailed explanation of the death penalty procedure in Virginia, which is second only to Texas in its number of executions."
Library Jounal

"A fascinating story, told colorfully and with the law and justice the final victor."
New York Law Journal

"With chilling clarity, Margaret Edds peels back the layers of the legal, judicial and social orders to explain how an innocent man comes within nine days of execution."
—William Raspberry, Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The Washington Post

"Earl Washington's story reveals the dark side of a system that is not known for admitting its mistakes. We have a lot to learn from this case, which highlights many of the problems we see over and over again in cases of wrongful conviction."
—Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), chief sponsor of The Innocence Protection Act

"Margaret Edds' book on Earl Washington shows the heavy handedness with which our society deals with those it deems expendable. It demonstrates how the politics of the death penalty skews our moral compass and how a small group of volunteers toiled for many years to set it straight for one expendable man. Whatever your position on the death penalty, if you want to know how it actually works, read this book."
—Sister Helen Prejean

"In An Expendable Man, Margaret Edds gives a whole new meaning to the "Virginia Reel," sending the reader spinning off into dizzying fits of confusion and rage. As she carries us deeper and deeper into the Virginia justice system, one almost understands how helpless Earl Washington must have felt in the hands of those intent on killing him for something he didn't do. Edds here exposes criminal justice in Virginia as a triumph of style over substance, laying bare the ease with which the ‘seat of democracy' became a fortress of hypocrisy."
—Mike Farrell, actor and human rights activist

"Whether you support or oppose the death penalty, you need to understand what almost happened to a man named Earl Washington. Margaret Edds tells his tragic, arresting story with remarkable sensitivity and a clear-eyed understanding of the stakes not just for Earl Washington, but for all of us."
—Larry J. Sabato, Director, Center for Politics, University of Virginia

How is it possible for an innocent man to come within nine days of execution? An Expendable Man answers that question through detailed analysis of the case of Earl Washington Jr., a mentally retarded, black farm hand who was convicted of the 1983 rape and murder of a 19-year-old mother of three in Culpeper, Virginia. He spent almost 18 years in Virginia prisons—9 1/2 of them on death row—for a murder he did not commit.

This book reveals the relative ease with which individuals who live at society's margins can be wrongfully convicted, and the extraordinary difficulty of correcting such a wrong once it occurs.

Washington was eventually freed in February 2001 not because of the legal and judicial systems, but in spite of them. While DNA testing was central to his eventual pardon, such tests would never have occurred without an unusually talented and committed legal team and without a series of incidents that are best described as pure luck.

Margaret Edds makes the chilling argument that some other "expendable men" almost certainly have been less fortunate than Washington. This, she writes, is "the secret, shameful underbelly" of America's retention of capital punishment. Such wrongful executions may not happen often, but anyone who doubts that innocent people have been executed in the United States should remember the remarkable series of events necessary to save Earl Washington Jr. from such a fate.

An Army of Convicts: They Combed America's Prisons to Find Convicts Suitable for Military Service, Then Stuck Them on the Front Lines

Cliff Roehr

An Army of Convicts: They Combed America's Prisons to Find Convicts Suitable for Military Service, Then Stuck Them on the Front Lines Cliff Roehr Amazon Price: $14.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Everyone can be redeemed. Never give up on people. 4 out of 5 stars.
0 of 1 people found this review helpful.

This is a compelling and well paced novel unlike anything I've read prior or since. It's difficult to categorize. It's part prison story, part military story, and it's a rags to riches tome as well, where a kid from the other side of the tracks is involved in a tragic turn of events. Like all of us, I suppose, the hero of the book is a good person who involves himself in some ugliness, and pays the price. But the theme of redemption is strong here, and what could have been very dark and cynical, becomes an uplifting and inspirational story of a world that I for one, certainly wish were true. Nice work. This should be in any prison or barracks library.

Editorial Review:

When the lawmakers in the State Capital passed an ill-advised law that could potentially bankrupt the state an innovative governor presents a plan to shift some of the burden to the Federal Government. The plan was to form a National Guard unit in a maximum security prison and work a scheme to get the men of that unit on active duty in the army. The scheme worked better than he could ever have imagined. This is the story of those convicts and the active duty army unit they formed. More than that, it is the story of a very special young man. The one of a kind that comes along once or twice in every century and how he was able to make the most of the opportunity offered him as a member of the Expendable Force. Live with them their adventures in ridding a nation of drug lords, fighting a war in the far east and their participation in a war in the middle east. See how they fared in war games in the American desert against units of the regular army.

Capital Punishment - Cruel and Unusual? (The Information Series on Current Topics) (Reference Series)

Capital Punishment - Cruel and Unusual? (The Information Series on Current Topics) (Reference Series) List Price: $29.00
By: Information Plus (TX)
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Judicial Process in America

Robert A. Carp, Ronald Stidham

Judicial Process in America Robert A. Carp, Ronald Stidham List Price: $46.95
By: Congressional Quarterly Books
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 5 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

A easy and well written guide to American Legal System 5 out of 5 stars.
4 of 9 people found this review helpful.

This book is a comprehensive guide to professional who have an interest about the American Legal and Judicial System. Very well written is actually very easy to read. Really a very good book.

Editorial Review:

A thorough revision of a tried and true classic, the seventh edition of Judicial Process in America offers a comprehensive study of the American judicial system that integrates new scholarship and original research. Including analysis of the courts at all levels, the authors cover judges, lawyers, and litigants, as well as the powerful variables that influence judicial decision making, effectively linking the courts to public policy. In response to feedback from adopters, the authors have increased their coverage of state courts and further explore the impact of race, gender, and socio-economic factors on the judiciary. Discussion of the ideological impact of George W. Bush's judicial appointments, including two new Supreme Court justices, and inclusion of recent cases on end-of-life issues, property rights, and gay and lesbian rights bring the book fully up to date.

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