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This book serves as a text for the Mississippi Enhanced Concealed
Weapons classes. It can be used for other classes or individuals
not seeking the Enhanced Carry endorsement. Mississippi Laws are in
an Appendix in the back. The subject matter and techniques, without
the laws particular to the State of Mississippi, are comparable to
any state.
A "how-to-do" and "what-not-to-do" book for anyone planning to
carry a gun in Mississippi. A must-have publication with
information for permit holders of other states having reciprocal
agreements with Mississippi. Don't come armed to Mississippi
without it. The author covers everything from firearms safety, to
nomenclature, judgmental shooting, post-shooting considerations, as
well as a review and analysis of significant citizen shooting
engagements around the country. Told in a down-to-earth manner,
with explicit photographs and sometimes candid humor. It defines
training required under Mississippi's new "enhanced" carry law,
over and above what the state has mandated. It is a benchmark for
other states to follow. Told by an expert.
Mississippi Governors have passed the wand of secrecy for almost 20
years, protecting the industry that owns it soul. Official facts
are erroneous, and not without omissions. Only now, have the
no-holds barred, cold, hard facts, been told. Lies, cover-ups,
manipulation, protection scams, and incompetency shock the reader.
It is a lawless template of prophecy filled with obstructions of
justice for other states with legalized gambling. This is a story
of the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. Please
help us God!
Wayne Lott, the young Mississippi attorney from Rick Ward's
breakout novel The Lawmaker, is back to fight political corruption
and bring down those who think that their power puts them above the
law. In his quest to further fight crooked politicians, Wayne
decides to pursue a career as a prosecutor and ends up in Stonewall
County, Mississippi, where he finds a mentor in John Chastain, a
charismatic DA with Senate aspirations. He also joins up with his
old friend Wallace Tischner, who's getting ready to wage his own
war against corrupt local officials-and no one is safe from the
dragnet. While following leads involving a missing businessman, a
suspicious airplane and a drug-running ring out of Colombia, Wayne
and Tischner uncover a deadly web of bribery and conspiracy
implicating a cadre of bankers, lawyers and newspaper editors. But
when Wayne's life and family are threatened, how far will he go to
expose the truth?
Wayne Lott, the young Mississippi attorney from Rick Ward's
breakout novel The Lawmaker, is back to fight political corruption
and bring down those who think that their power puts them above the
law. In his quest to further fight crooked politicians, Wayne
decides to pursue a career as a prosecutor and ends up in Stonewall
County, Mississippi, where he finds a mentor in John Chastain, a
charismatic DA with Senate aspirations. He also joins up with his
old friend Wallace Tischner, who's getting ready to wage his own
war against corrupt local officials-and no one is safe from the
dragnet. While following leads involving a missing businessman, a
suspicious airplane and a drug-running ring out of Colombia, Wayne
and Tischner uncover a deadly web of bribery and conspiracy
implicating a cadre of bankers, lawyers and newspaper editors. But
when Wayne's life and family are threatened, how far will he go to
expose the truth?
Blood for Molasses: A Mississippi Massacre based on a true story,
is about a slaughter that started over an accidental spilling of
molasses. The offended was a prominent white citizen. The offenders
were two half-breed black and Indian brothers. They were delivering
their products, used for "cutting" whiskey to a saloon in
Carrollton, Mississippi in February 1886. However, the incident was
only a match that lit the fire for the already-brewing pot. This
book is not just about a single incident, rather the moods and
attitudes of white supremacy and political domination following
post-civil war reconstruction. A small town with a population of
only 400, held the political might to tie the hands of the
governor, US Congress and President of the United States and to
hide it from history for 125 years.
Blood for Molasses: A Mississippi Massacre based on a true story,
is about a slaughter that started over an accidental spilling of
molasses. The offended was a prominent white citizen. The offenders
were two half-breed black and Indian brothers. They were delivering
their products, used for "cutting" whiskey to a saloon in
Carrollton, Mississippi in February 1886. However, the incident was
only a match that lit the fire for the already-brewing pot. This
book is not just about a single incident, rather the moods and
attitudes of white supremacy and political domination following
post-civil war reconstruction. A small town with a population of
only 400, held the political might to tie the hands of the
governor, US Congress and President of the United States and to
hide it from history for 125 years.
Wayne Lott is a young attorney out to make a name for himself. When
a state legislature seat becomes vacant, Wayne jumps at the chance
to run for office and enter what he thinks will be the glamorous
life of politics. But he is in for a deadly surprise. Naive and
idealistic, Wayne is a lamb being led to the slaughter. In no time
he becomes enmeshed in the violent high stakes underworld of a
sinister casino lobbyist. Caught with a hired temptress and
threatened with blackmail, Wayne is forced to choose between
cooperating with federal authorities and succumbing to the dark
side of Mississippi's gambling gangland.
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