A confidential call was made to the police department of drugs activity occurring at the After Hour city bar. The caller indicated that bar owner by the name of Cruz with three others, has been selling crack cocaine to customers. The Agents compiled information and appointed Officer Adam Hays to conduct an undercover drug investigation at that city bar. His mission was to pose as a customer, dawdle and associate in attempt to collect any information or any illegal drugs from customers or workers. Three weeks into the attempt, Officer Hays wasn’t able to make the deal. Suspiciousness drove the regulars away. Although he didn’t achieve his goal, he did discover one thing, Cruz complete name when he overheard a man ask the bartender his
a guy who couldn’t be much older than he answered the door with a crazy loud party behind him, he was said to thank Asher and shut the door without paying. Confused Asher waited a few minutes before knocking in case he was going to get the money but after waiting a total of twenty minutes he left and went back to pizza hut to ask what he should do. He was told by his boss Henry Harvester to ask the police to assist him in collecting the amount owed. However upon their
An additional significant interest group pushing for the abolition of alcohol was the Anti-Saloon League, founded in Ohio during 1893. The Anti-Saloon League was a special interest lobbyist group which initially worked towards prohibition and the suppression of the saloon, on a smaller, more regional scale, beginning with counties and had hopes of changing Ohio into a dry state. Eventually the league transformed into the largest congressional lobby for prohibition in America. Howard Russell, the leagues founder, began by framing the ASL as trapped in a war of good citizenship versus bad citizenship, for which he would certainly be on the winning side (Lamme 125). From the beginning the ASL leaders were politically effective as they began working
Once a year a sadness comes over football fans. Although not always on the same day, it's the same feeling. Once a year every fan's team has their dreaded bye week. And the result is a sickness so somber that fans are forced to root for other teams. It's the bye week blues.
They discover the phone number of Mr. James Reardon. They dial the number and find out he works for the FBI.
In the Rio Grande Valley, public corruption runs rampant. The border city of Mission is a hot spot for drug traffickers and has become an area of concern for the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area Program, also known as HIDTA, since the 1990s. Every day drug runners, private drug dealers, and the continuous flow of illegal immigrants create an atmosphere of temptation for law enforcement agents. Unfortunately, the small town of Mission has witnessed federal, state, and local law enforcement officers drift toward the dark side, letting temptation cast a shadow over their morals and beliefs.
Once I realize the mayor is calling me, I pick my phone faster than the speed of sound. “Hello Mr.Willis, Detective Leonardo Smith is here.” I formally state. “Hello Mr.Smith, I need you to stop an illegal drug trade between the Reinhardts and Dominos, and I will give you ten-thousand dollars if you complete this assignment.” Mr.Willis reports.
A Sexy Bad Boy Romance! Everyone at the Rough & Tumble Saloon has a secret… Colin “Buzz” Burton has lived on the outskirts of Vegas for his entire cowboy life, yet in spite of the naughty shenanigans he’s taken part in, he’s never gotten this down and dirty! When Leticia Bravo, a wine consultant who’s ready to shed her cosmopolitan skin for the night, mistakes him for a gigolo, the rancher goes from beer fan to wine lover with a whole lotta sinning in between… This novella has steamy sex and lots of wine. It also includes a brief excerpt from Wet and Wild, a Rough and Tumble series prequel, at the end. The word count is approximately 28,000.
The only people that can help him unravel the mystery of who set him up and to what end, are a beautiful woman and a disgraced former FBI agent. Stephen Hunter weaves a multi-layered story full of additive nonstop action
Timothy Shay Arthur’s “Ten Nights in a Bar-Room” is a novel filled with unfortunate events that change the lives of many families. It illustrates the lives of a few men, who were once proper gentlemen, but transformed into undesirable people due to intemperance. Their stories demonstrate how destructive alcohol was to their lives, not only for them, but for their families as well. One of the characters that immediately caught my attention was Joe Morgan. Joe went from being an enviable father and husband, and even Mr. Slade’s former business partner, to the town drunk and an absent father.
The theme is further reinforced at the end of the story by the remarks made by Captain Torres as he leaves the barber shop. “They told me that you’d kill me […] But killing isn't easy. You can take my word for it” (Torres 4). Torres’ statement as he leaves the barbershop shows that he experience similar struggles as the Barber does.
Police corruption has been the largest ongoing problem in the United States criminal justice system. In the documentary, “The Seven Five” directed by Tiller Russell, he sheds light onto the story of former NYPD officer Michael Dowd and how he and his prescient were involved in committing numerous crimes, including running their own cocaine ring while on the job in the 1980’s, early 90’s. Per the Criminal Law- Lawyer Source, police corruption is defined as “the abuse of police authority for personal gain or to gain advantage for the police organization. Police corruption can take the form of a variety of criminal activities ranging from actual commission of serious criminal (i.e. drug trafficking and money laundering) to the instances where
Joe Swanson, a police officer, plays his part in serving his community by keeping the town safe from criminals. The teachers at James Woods High School, doctors in a hospital, and an airport all play their roll to keep society
The Bar in 1970 NY Red spent Friday finishing up paperwork and Saturday morning doing turnover and finagling a car from the motor pool. Since Kane had attended a New York college for two semester, they voted for him to drive the three tedious hours into the city while they slept after their all-night poker game. It was dark when he found Jax’s bar and squeezed into the first parking place they spotted. Other than No Neck, they were a noisy group as they headed toward the music for their last night of freedom.
Al shot the man, and being a good employee, carefully took $1,500 out of the dead man’s pockets. Later, however, Al ordered a hit on Yale, himself. The murderers he hired to kill Yale did such a good job that he hired them again, as well as several other experts for his next job. They dressed in police uniforms and stormed into a garage owned by Al’s arch-nemesis. The “cops” announced a police raid and the criminals dropped their weapons and lined up on the wall.
When he's assigned to cover the grisly death of a witness to a multi-million dollar bitcoin fraud, Will Finch discovers some troubling complications: A Mercedes-Benz abandoned in the wilderness. A wounded bear. A cop who rules a remote town with an iron fist. TRUE DECEIT A dead wife. An underworld organization.