Next book

OPERATION DEVIL HORNS

THE TAKEDOWN OF MS-13 IN SAN FRANCISCO

A suspenseful, informative take on an ambitious criminal investigation.

Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

  • Our Verdict
  • GET IT

A nonfiction account reveals how a dedicated law enforcement team dismantled one of San Francisco’s most notorious gangs over the course of four years.

If gangs commit so much of their mayhem in the open, with members flaunting their allegiance and violent achievements, what makes it so difficult to catch and prosecute them? In their book, debut author Santini, a special agent, and journalist Bolger (Near Side of the Moon, 2013) demonstrate all of the challenges involved. They meticulously reconstruct how Santini and his team from Homeland Security Investigations finally brought San Francisco’s branch of MS-13 to justice. The authors take readers back to the gang’s founding by Central American immigrants in Los Angeles in the early 1990s, tracing MS-13’s expansion into an international criminal web and detailing the complicated rules and hierarchies of the San Francisco offshoot. By the early 2000s, MS-13 and other gangs had made the city’s streets infamously unsafe, viciously killing one another to protect their turf while frequently catching innocent bystanders in the crossfire. But putting individuals behind bars fails to deter crime overall, so in 2004, Santini set about infiltrating MS-13 with a series of undercover informants who collected varied evidence against dozens of members, waiting for the right time to bring them down. In these politically charged times, readers will be quick to notice that although fairly businesslike in tone, the book is singular in focus, squarely presenting the views of law enforcement officials. (Sanctuary city policies are seen almost entirely through the lens of how they obstruct police, and misguided hippies and liberals are gently but clearly derided.) Nevertheless, Santini and Bolger provide readers of all backgrounds with valuable insights into the psychology of both individual gang members and MS-13 as a whole, portraying the deep-rooted feelings of loyalty and pride that young men especially derived from their shared identity. But the crimes they committed in the service of this identity were gruesome, as the authors adeptly illustrate, and with the investigation’s stakes building ever higher both publicly and privately, Santini and his team became increasingly determined to finally punish those responsible.

A suspenseful, informative take on an ambitious criminal investigation.   

Pub Date: Oct. 18, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-5381-1563-3

Page Count: 264

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Review Posted Online: Dec. 4, 2018

Categories:
Next book

LUCKY

Told with mettle and intelligence, Sebold’s story of fierce determination to wrest back her life from her rapist will...

A stunningly crafted and unsparing account of the author’s rape as a college freshman and what it took to win her case in court.

In 1981, Sebold was brutally raped on her college campus, at Syracuse University.  Sebold, a New York Times Magazinecontributor, now in her 30s, reconstructs the rape and the year following in which her assailant was brought to trial and found guilty.  When, months after the rape, she confided in her fiction professor, Tobias Wolff, he advised:  “Try, if you can, to remember everything.”  Sebold heeded his words, and the result is a memoir that reads like detective fiction, replete with police jargon, economical characterization, and film-like scene construction.  Part of Sebold’s ironic luck, besides the fact that she wasn’t killed, was that she was a virgin prior to the rape, she was wearing bulky clothing, and her rapist beat her, leaving unmistakable evidence of violence.  Sebold casts a cool eye on these facts:  “The cosmetics of rape are central to proving any case.”  Sebold critiques the sexism and misconceptions surrounding rape with neither rhetoric nor apology; she lets her experience speak for itself.  Her family, her friends, her campus community are all shaken by the brutality she survived, yet Sebold finds herself feeling more affinity with police officers she meets, as it was “in [their] world where this hideous thing had happened to me.  A world of violent crime.”  Just when Sebold believes she might surface from this world, a close friend is raped and the haunting continues.  The last section, “Aftermath,” has an unavoidable tacked-on-at-the-end feel, as Sebold crams over a decade’s worth of coping and healing into a short chapter.

Told with mettle and intelligence, Sebold’s story of fierce determination to wrest back her life from her rapist will inspire and challenge.

Pub Date: Aug. 1, 1999

ISBN: 0-684-85782-0

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Scribner

Review Posted Online: Jan. 2, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 1999

Next book

THE EVIDENCE OF THINGS NOT SEEN

The Atlanta child murders comprise the starting point for this virtuoso polemic against racism in America. Baldwin writes bluntly: "Others may see American progress in economic, racial and social affairs—I do not." It is this distinctive Baldwinian voice of outrage that powers his penetrating examination of why color still divides America. Baldwin thinks that Wayne Williams, the black man accused of the murders of 28 black children over a 22-month period, was railroaded. No matter that his conviction was presided over by a black judge in a Southern city governed by a black mayor. Williams was prosecuted under intense pressure to close a case that might tarnish Atlanta's reputation as a "city too busy to hate." A black administration's presence, says Baldwin, did not change the fact that the legal system served the commercial interests of a booming Southern city. To consider this only as an issue of class, contends Baldwin, is a denial by blacks and whites alike of America's legacy of slavery. He writes that ". . .this country, in toto, from Atlanta to Boston, to Texas to California, is not so much a vicious racial caldron—many, if not most countries are that—as a paranoid color wheel." By sketching the emergence of the black middle class and its complicity in maintaining the "white" rules, and the white flight from the city to the suburbs—leaving a mostly black, impoverished city. Baldwin describes how the wheel goes round. And its consequence remains: How do you become "white" enough to get up and out of the ghetto? Ironically, it was the rage of the parents of the murdered children that set Atlanta's color wheel spinning. Once they provoked national attention, according to Baldwin, the pressure to solve the crimes began. Until then, no one was ". . .compelled to hear the needs of a captive population."Baldwin delivers his judgment in cranky, idiosyncratic exposition that links the state of race relations with the prosecution of Williams. He details the official maneuvering that brought Williams to trial and the extraordinary legal decision to charge him with the murders of two black men, but permit the accusations and evidence of all the children's murders to be discussed at his trial. Baldwin has penetrated a sensational crime with his considerable novelist's skill for seeing things the rest of us don't. In the process, he's delivered a stinging indictment of racial stagnation.

Pub Date: Oct. 28, 1985

ISBN: 1568495757

Page Count: -

Publisher: Holt Rinehart & Winston

Review Posted Online: Sept. 16, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 1985

Categories:
Close Quickview