Hot Shots and Heavy Hits: Tales of an Undercover Drug Agent

Author:   Paul E. Doyle ,  Peter Kirby Manning
Publisher:   University Press of New England
ISBN:  

9781555536039


Pages:   224
Publication Date:   30 June 2004
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Hot Shots and Heavy Hits: Tales of an Undercover Drug Agent


Overview

The mean streets of Boston in the 1970s played host to a nefarious underworld of pimps, pushers, and addicts, and Paul Sully Doyle was there. From Kenmore Square hippies to South Boston junkies to Combat Zone prostitutes, this undercover operative with the federal Drug Enforcement Administration met every type of unsavory character in town in his fight to bust violent rings of dope, coke, and smack dealers during a turbulent era in the city's history. Now Special Agent Doyle bluntly chronicles the riveting, true stories from his years on the inside. Known on the street by his alias, Paulie Sullivan, he recalls his rookie days, trying to infiltrate the criminal drug world under the tutelage of his veteran partner, through his coming of age as an experienced narc - sharing his keen observations on ruined lives, personal peril, and government red tape along the way. A former prizefighter not at all shy about punching his way out of trouble, the author divulges a candid, worm's-eye-view of the drug war with all its blemishes and glories. With abiding humanity and graphic detail, the memoir richly describes exploits with junkie stool pigeons and hooker informants, college burnouts and Chinatown mobsters, ghetto pimps and violent thugs, bureaucratic obstacles and uncooperative foreign governments, successful busts and brushes with death. Marijuana, cocaine, heroin, amphetamines, LSD - no illegal substance failed to tempt those seeking the ultimate high, resulting in the long nights, sudden danger, and uncertain outcomes. that faced Sully and his partners. Combining gripping action with perceptive commentary, this unvarnished snapshot of one agent's experiences undercover adeptly captures the violence, futility, and endless frustration of the war on drugs. As engrossing as a fiction thriller, Hot Shots and Heavy Hits provides a rare glimpse into a harsh world unknown to most of us.

Full Product Details

Author:   Paul E. Doyle ,  Peter Kirby Manning
Publisher:   University Press of New England
Imprint:   Northeastern University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.10cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.00cm
Weight:   0.508kg
ISBN:  

9781555536039


ISBN 10:   1555536034
Pages:   224
Publication Date:   30 June 2004
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

[A] great read. The story is full of cinematic action, but is also filled with the heart and soul that most action movies can't come close to capturing on celluloid. And for a guy who never thought of himself as a writer, Doyle has a style that is clear and concise--and as honestly lyrical--as Hemingway's best prose. --The Boston Irish Emigrant


Stiffly composed, unpersuasive account of the author's drug-enforcement work in Boston. Doyle asserts that the story of his years as an undercover agent needs to be told. . . . The myth that experimental use of illegal drugs is a harmless rite of passage should not go unchallenged. Perhaps, but such sanctimoniousness, which pervades the text, ultimately limits his tale's effectiveness. Following a stint in the army, Doyle was recruited by the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (the DEA's precursor) in 1971, when the BNDD was seeking experienced soldiers to serve as undercover street agents. He divides his memoir into six long chapters, each delving into a different facet of the nefarious urban drug scene in a time and place Doyle recalls as swarming with thugs, bikers, mobsters, naive swingers, and the tattered remnants of the counterculture. Chinatown details Doyle's infiltration of that neighborhood's heroin scene; an addicted prostitute eventually introduced him to a local kingpin. Informant describes the role of snitches in undercover drug work: I came to despise most of them. . . . Nobody likes a rat. In Bad Acid, the agent cozies up to a hippie ( I have connections all the way to Amsterdam, Hong Kong, San Francisco ) who steers him to the so-called Acid King, resulting in the takedown of a major LSD manufacturing operation. Throughout, Doyle finds himself increasingly appalled by the undercover milieu, meeting sweet young college students who soon overdose on heroin and brutish drug dealers whose attempts to dupe him are met with fisticuffs. The square-jawed tone, reminiscent of Dragnet, is often unintentionally humorous: ethnic and cultural stereotypes abound, and the agents spend their downtime getting hammered in bars. Doyle's overwritten prose is strewn with adverbs, and his dialogue is stiff. Furthermore, the simplistic narrative fails to convey these operations' complexity, portraying unbelievably dumb criminals who literally throw themselves at the G-men. Doubtless there is an exciting, informative tale to tell about drug crime in the '70s-but this isn't it. (Kirkus Reviews)


Author Information

Paul E. Doyle served as Special Agent in the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs and the Drug Enforcement Administration, and is currently Chairman of the New England chapter of the Association of Former Federal Narcotics Agents. He lives in the Boston area. Peter Kirby Manning is the Elmer V. H. and Eileen M. Brooks Professor of Criminal Justice at Northeastern University, and the author of Narcs' Game and Policing Contingencies.

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