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Sergeant Smack - The Legendary Lives and Times of Ike Atkinson, Kingpin, and His Band of Brothers (Paperback)
Loot Price: R543
Discovery Miles 5 430
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Sergeant Smack - The Legendary Lives and Times of Ike Atkinson, Kingpin, and His Band of Brothers (Paperback)
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List price R622
Loot Price R543
Discovery Miles 5 430
You Save R79 (13%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Sergeant Smack chronicles the story of North Carolina's Leslie
"Ike" Atkinson, an adventurer, gambler and one of U.S. history's
most original gangsters. Under the cover of the Vietnam War and
through the use of the U.S. military infrastructure, Atkinson
masterminded an enterprising group of family members and former
African American GIs that the DEA identified as one of history's
ten top drug trafficking rings. Ike's organization moved heroin
from Thailand to North Carolina and beyond. According to law
enforcement sources, 1,000 pounds is a conservative estimate of the
amount of heroin the ring transported annually from Bangkok,
Thailand, through U.S. military bases, into the U.S. during its
period of operation from 1968 to 1975. That amount translates to
about $400 million worth of illegal drug sales during that period.
Born in Goldsboro, North Carolina, Ike Atkinson is a charismatic
former U.S. Army Master Sergeant, career drug smuggler, scam
artist, card shark and doting family man whom law enforcement
nick-named Sergeant Smack. He was never known to carry a gun, and
today many retired law enforcement officials who had put him in
jail refer to him as a "gentleman." Sergeant Smack's criminal
activities sparked the creation of a special DEA unit code named
CENTAC 9, which conducted an intensive three-year investigation
across three continents. Sergeant Smack was elusive, but the
discovery of his palm print on a kilo of heroin finally took him
down. In 1987, Ike tried to revive his drug ring from Otisville
Federal Penitentiary, but the Feds discovered the plot and set up a
sting. The events that follow seem like the narrative for a Robert
Ludlum novel. Atkinson was convicted again and nine years added to
his sentence. Ike was released from prison in 2006 after serving a
31-year jail sentence. Atkinson's story is controversial because
his ring has been accused of smuggling heroin to the U.S. in the
coffins and/or cadavers of dead American GIs. As this book shows,
the accusation is completely false. The recent movie, "American
Gangster," which depicted the criminal career of Frank Lucas,
distorted Atkinson's historical role in the international drug
trade. Sergeant Smack exposes the lies about the Ike Atkinson-Frank
Lucas relationship and documents how Ike, not Lucas, pioneered the
Asian heroin connection. "Drug kingpin Ike Atkinson, is the real
deal, and not the stuff of Hollywood legend. The author delivers an
eminently readable book about a genuine Mr Big who knows that no
fictional makeover is required for his compelling story - the truth
is more than enough." -Steve Morris, Publisher, New Criminologist
"Sergeant Smack is meticulously researched and its prodding for the
truth by author Ron Chepesiuk makes it an excellent non-fiction
crime story. Along with a compelling history of Ike Atkinson's life
and criminal career in drug smuggling, the author has managed to
put the truth to numerous falsehoods contained in the major movie,
American Gangster, about the life of Frank Lucas." -Jack Toal,
retired DEA agent who worked the investigation of Frank Lucas
"Finally, the real story. I've waited 40 years for this book."
-Marc Levin, Director of the documentary, "Mr. Untouchable" "Ron
Chepesiuk has gone from publishing the Black gangster classics,
Gangsters of Harlem and Black Gangsters of Chicago, to crafting
Sergeant Smack, an astonishing masterpiece." -David "Pop"
Whetstone, Owner, Black Star Music and Video "Sergeant Smack
forcefully debunks the urban legend of Black family groups
smuggling heroin from Southeast Asia in the bodies of dead GI
soldiers while recounting the colorful saga of the authentic
American gangster. Highly recommended." -Gary Taylor, journalist
and author of the award-winning true crime memoir, Luggage by
Kroger.
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