What's Everyone Reading?

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
66
48
Minnesota: Gopher State
DESTINY OF THE REPUBLIC
A Tale of Madness, Medicine,and the Murder of a President



By Candice Millard



 

Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
11,596
141
63
Backwater, Ontario.
LITTLE SHIP, BIG WAR:
By Commander Edward Stafford U.S.N. (ret.)

The saga of DE 343:

An excellent first person account of this one ship and its battles; from the laying of the keel, to the peace treaty, Cmdr. Stafford served on board , first as the first lieutenant, and later as its Ex O.

Very detailed.

Exciting but sad, death and destruction.

ISBN 0-515-08810-2
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
66
48
Minnesota: Gopher State





BOOK REVIEW: ‘Busted’


BUSTED: A TALE OF CORRUPTION AND BETRAYAL IN THE CITY OF BROTHERLY LOVE


By Wendy Ruderman and Barbara Laker

Harper/HarperCollins, $24.99, 256 pages

In 2008, a visibly frightened drug addict named Benny Martinez entered the offices of the Philadelphia Daily News and spoke to Wendy Ruderman and Barbara Laker, two of the gritty tabloid newspaper’s investigative reporters.

Mr. Martinez, a confidential informant for a Philadelphia narcotics police officer named Jeff Cujdik, told the reporters that either the cops or the drug dealers he had informed on were going to kill him.

Mr. Martinez said that Mr. Cujdik used him to tell lies in the search warrants used to bust drug dealers. Mr. Martinez also claimed he rented a house from Mr. Cujdik and that their relationship had gone sour and Mr. Cujdik was evicting him. He showed the reporters his Landlord-Tenant Court paperwork, and he called Mr. Cujdik on his cellphone as the reporters listened in.

This meeting led the reporters to uncover serious allegations about Mr. Cujdik and his narcotics squad systematically looting bodega stores during raids staged owing to the owners selling Ziploc bags used by drug dealers. The officers destroyed video-surveillance cameras and cut wires, and one such act was captured on tape as the feed went directly to the owner’s home.

The reporters hit the street and interviewed 22 bodega owners, most of them recent legal immigrants, who had not called the police to complain about the thefts. Three women also told the reporters that one officer, Thomas Tolstoy, sexually molested them.

These allegations were presented in Ms. Ruderman and Ms. Laker’s 10-month series, “Tainted Justice.” The newspaper series won the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting.

The series also led to five officers being placed on desk duty and the formation of an FBI task force investigation.

Now Ms. Ruderman and Ms. Laker tell their story in a fast-paced, well-written true crime book called “Busted: A Tale of Corruption and Betrayal in the City of Brotherly Love.”

I contacted the two reporters and asked them why they took the word of Mr. Martinez, an informant who seems to me to be Philly’s answer to “Goodfellas” Henry Hill, over the word of a Philadelphia police officer.

“Benny gave us examples of fabricated search warrants,” said Barbara Laker. “He could pinpoint certain houses or certain jobs that were based on lies. We checked out everything that Benny said in addition to the documentation from Landlord-Tenant Court. I think that if the story didn’t move to the bodegas and the women with Thomas Tolstoy, there wouldn’t have been any book, any Pulitzer, any series. It would have stopped and been a simple story mostly about a cop and questions about his working relationship with an informant.”

“In the book, we describe how we found 22 merchants from all corners of the city, speaking all different languages, independently telling us the same story that these officers came in with guns drawn, smacked the video-surveillance cameras, and cut wires,” Ms. Laker said. “They all told us that the cops took thousands of dollars from the stores. They ate sandwiches there, guzzled drinks, and they took things like batteries, cellphones and lottery money. And they all independently told us the exact same story. For the women, we knocked on door after door where Tolstoy had been present during the raids. I would bet my children’s lives on the fact that they are telling the truth. Two of the three complained that very night and the third woman, the one we call ‘Naomi,’ she went to the hospital, and they did a rape kit. She could not name the officer. She didn’t know it was Tolstoy, but Internal Affairs knew it was him, because they pulled him off the street that very night.”

“This is not an anti-cop book,” Ms. Ruderman said. “It is not even necessarily about police corruption. The book takes you behind the scenes of an investigation done by a newspaper against the backdrop of the failing newspaper industry. Barbara and I don’t come off as angels in the book, and Jeff doesn’t come off all bad in the book. It is a story about characters, and it is a story about Philadelphia, and we tried to be as fair as we could about who we are and how we got the story. We could not have written the book or the series without really good police officers helping us, and I’m grateful to them. I think that good police officers represent the lion’s share of the officers on the street. They want to get rid the few bad apples, too.”

Finally, after five years, the FBI recently announced that no criminal charges would be filed against the officers, but Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles H. Ramsey said the officers will face internal charges.

On Monday, Commissioner Ramsey announced that Mr. Cujdik will be fired and three other officers face 30-day suspensions. There is also an ongoing criminal investigation by the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office into the sexual-abuse allegations against Mr. Tolstoy.

Paul Davis, a Navy veteran during the Vietnam War, is a writer who covers law enforcement, intelligence and the military.





BOOK REVIEW: 'Busted' - Washington Times
 

Ludlow

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 7, 2014
13,588
0
36
wherever i sit down my ars
I checked out "Fields of Blood" by Karen Armstrong a couple of weeks or so ago at the library. I've only been able so far to read the introduction and a few pages of the first chapter. Readers block I guess. I'm sure it's a good book all of the ones I've read from Ms, Armstrong have been but for some reason I just can't get into reading these days. I might have to renew it if they'll let me there's probably a waiting list for this one though.
 

Sal

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 29, 2007
17,135
33
48
I love browsing through this thread before I download...thanks to everyone who bothers...
 

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
33,676
1,666
113
Northern Ontario,
I tried downloading from the E-library, registered got the program and everything ....every book my wife and I picked out was already out and or reserved already, so I got P.O'd ....deleted the application and went back to torrent downloading.....although I don't do much of that either, because I have over 3000 books in my e-library
Currently reading "The Navigator" by Clive Cussler....7th in a series of 11 of the Numa Files



If there is a series or a single book you would like and I have it in my library I could easily upload it to my box at Box.net an ftp secure site...and I only have the free account so it doesn't collect the IP of anyone who downloads...
 

Ludlow

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 7, 2014
13,588
0
36
wherever i sit down my ars
Tried to read Ms. Armstrong's latest book but to no avail. Did manage to read the intro and the afterward. I guess when it comes to history the majority is hear say so it all becomes one persons opinion. In the long run it's just a pack of words.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,906
1,905
113
A very English creepy tale from Sadie Jones, like something written by a wicked Jane Austen, perfect to read on a cold, dark, winter's night when there's nothing much on the telly:



A sinister tale of haunting beauty, from The Outcast author Sadie Jones.

It is the eve of Emerald Torrington’s twentieth birthday and the family has assembled at Sterne, the once grand, now crumbling, family seat. The cake is iced, the wine decanted, the house gleams invitingly.

But before the first dish can be served, a mysterious group of strangers arrives at the door. Victims of a local train accident they are seeking shelter at the house.

The Torringtons welcome them in but there is something unsettling about the group and, as night falls and a storm rages outside, the family begins to wonder if something more malevolent than stranded travellers is in their home...