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Vampires, Hell
Raises and Homeland Security
August 13, 2007 (San Dimas, CA)
Police-Writers.com is a website that lists over 700 state and local police
officers who have written books. The website added three additional police
officers who have authored books:
Frank Borelli,
James Lardner and
Willard M. Oliver.
Lieutenant Frank Borelli is the
Training Commander for the
Fairmount Heights Police Department (Maryland)
and has been a
law enforcement instructor since 1989. Using
his six-year military background and twenty-year police background,
Frank Borelli regularly writes equipment
evaluations and incorporates new
technology into his
police training programs. Currently Lieutenant
Frank Borelli teaches use of force programs at
all levels of
law enforcement and corrections.
In addition to his police and
military service,
Frank Borelli began a writing career in 1999.
With several dozen articles published internationally, he has become a
recognized expert on
police training techniques and technologies.
Frank Borelli is currently a weekly columnist for the Blackwater
Tactical Weekly as well as Officer.com, and
Editor of the Borelli Consulting Forum News & Intel page.
Frank Borelli s also the Editor In Chief for
New American Truth magazine, a monthly publication launched in January 2007;
and, a contributing editor for American Cop magazine, published bi-monthly. He
is also the author of A Cop's Nightmare: Cloning the Ancients, A Cop's
Nightmare 2: Vampires in the Old West (the first two installments of a
planned 12 series) and American Thinking.
According to the book description
of A Cops Nightmare 2, it pits Morgan Blackwell and his best
friend, Chuck Bendetti, against a conspiracy to recreate the state of Colorado
as a pure vampire region. Traveling back to the 1860s, Morgan and Chuck find
themselves pitted against a full team of vamp-clones, sent back to further the
success of the conspiracy. As Morgan and Chuck battle vamp-clones and Indians in
the old west, Karl and Don keep the modern-day vampire mayoral candidate from
successfully completing the plan of a pure vampire colony started one hundred
and thirty years before!
James Lardner is a senior fellow at Demos was a
police officer for the
Metropolitan Police Department (Washington, DC)
for two and half years during the early 1970s. Today, he is a well-regard
researcher and writer. As a journalist, he has written for the New York Review
of Books, The New Yorker, The Washington Post, and The Nation, among other
publications. He is the author of Crusader: The Hell-Raising Police Career
of Detective David Durk; and, the co-author of NYPD: A City and
Its Police and the editor of Inequality Matters: The Growing
Economic Divide in America and Its Poisonous Consequences.
According to the book description
of Crusader: The Hell-Raising Police Career of Detective David Durk,
When David Durk joined the
New York Police Department in 1963, he found an
organization with its own set of rules, where bribery and payoffs were routine
and no one wanted to be disturbed. Durk set out to fix the whole mess. For 22
years, until he was forced to retire at age 51, he was a thorn in the side of
mayors, police commissioners, commanders, sergeants, and beat cops alike. His
crusading led to an investigation into police corruption in the 1970s by the
Knapp Commission (credit for which usually goes to Frank Serpico) and more
recently, the Mollen Commission.
Willard M. Oliver began his
law enforcemen career as a summer police
officer for the Wildwood Police Department (New Jersey). In 1989, he enlisted
in the U.S. Army reserves and served as a military police officer in Desert
Storm. From 1991 to 1994
Willard Oliver was a police officer for the
Arlington County Police Department (Virginia).
In 1994,
Willard Oliver embarked on his academic career
by becoming an assistance professor of
criminal justice at Glenville State College
(West Virginia). Today, Dr. Willard M. Oliver, Ph.D.,is an Associate Professor
at the College of Criminal Justice, Sam Houston State University (Texas).
Willard Oliver is also a Major in the United
States Army Reserves, Military Police Corps.
Dr. Willard Oliver is the author of
Community-Oriented Policing: A Systemic Approach to Policing, Homeland Security
for Policing, The Law & Order Presidency, and Community Policing: Classical
Readings. He is the co-author of A History of Crime and Criminal
Justice in America and The Public Policy of Crime and Criminal.
According to the book
description of Homeland Security for Policing, is unique in
focus, Homeland Security for Policing presents a framework for understanding the
role police play in todays era of Homeland Security. The only book of its kind,
it examines the events that led up to this new policing era, the relationship
between national, state and local agencies, and specific strategies, operations
and tactics that can be used to prevent and protect against future threats.
Special emphasis is placed on understanding 9-11, the entire framework of
Homeland Security in the U.S. and the unique issues faced by local
law enforcement.
Police-Writers.com now hosts 705 police officers
(representing 325 police departments) and their 1521
police books in six categories, there are
also listings of United States federal
law enforcement employees turned authors,
international police officers who have written books and civilian police
personnel who have written books.
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