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Ulasewicz, Tony ListingsIf you cannot find what you want on this page, then please use our search feature to search all our listings. Click on Title to view full description
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Ulasewicz, Tony The President's Private Eye: The Journey of Detective Tony U. from N.Y.P.D. to the Nixon White House Westport, Conn. Macsam Pub Co October 30, 1990 0962615404 / 9780962615405 N Hardcover VG+ VG+ N From Publishers Weekly&newline;Ulasewicz achieved fame of a sort during the Watergate scandal, after a virtual lifetime of public service as a cop. Writing with freelancer McKeever, he here fills us in on his background. Ulasewicz spent time as a beat patrolman in Harlem, then, promoted to detective, worked for almost 20 years for the New York Police Department's Bureau of Special Services and Investigations. BOSSI's job was to investigate subversion, to infiltrate radical groups and to guard world leaders when they visited Manhattan, especially in connection with U.N. sessions. Among his cases were the disappearance of an anti-Trujillo Dominican leader, the rise of neo-Nazi George Lincoln Rockwell and a plot to blow up the Statue of Liberty. With Nixon's election to the presidency in 1968, he became a private investigator for the chief executive, who, he notes, did not trust the CIA, FBI and other intelligence-gathering apparatuses. Ulasewicz, who funneled money to the Watergate break-in defendants, provides an insider's view of the bizarre, paranoid Nixon White House in a book that is certain to be of value to historians. &newline;Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. &newline;&newline;From Library Journal&newline;New York City street cop Ulasewicz rose through the ranks to become a senior member of the Bureau of Special Services and Investigations (BOSSI) and then was hired by Richard Nixon to be his personal private investigator. Ulasewicz spends a great deal of time--over half the book--recounting his at times riveting experiences working in BOSSI during the tumultuous 1960s. It is a somewhat circuitous route by which we arrive at Ulasewicz's work for Nixon, which consisted of investigations ranging from Chappaquiddick to Watergate payoffs. While much of this is another engaging interpretation of these episodes of political history, there is nothing particularly revealing in Ulasewicz's version. Still, this book will appeal to those with a fascination for police work, as well as those still intrigued by Richard Nixon's presidency and Watergate.&newline;- Scott Hill, Univ. of California, Davis&newline;Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. Price:
21.50 USD
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