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Joseph Paul Franklin

Joseph Paul Franklin

Joseph Paul Franklin and I went way back together, to the fall of 1980 when FBI Civil Rights Section chief Dave Kohl, one of my close friends in the Bureau, asked me to do a fugitive assessment on the serial killer of African Americans, interracial couples and Jews. He had been arrested and interrogated, but managed to slip out a police station window. I thought he’d be difficult to catch because he was extremely sophisticated about police procedures and techniques, but I felt he would come back to somewhere along the Gulf Coast where he felt comfortable and our best shot at getting him would be when he needed money. He was spotted and identified from his tattoos by nurses at a Lakeland, Florida blood bank, where he’d gone to sell his plasma. FBI agents arrested him at a nearby store where he’d gone to cash the check.

Franklin died early yesterday morning by lethal injection at the Missouri Eastern Correctional Center in Bonne Terre for the 1977 sniper style killing of Gerald Gordon outside a suburban St. Louis synagogue. That he was executed for this particular crime was almost arbitrary, though. In total, Franklin killed at least 22 and is most famous for two he only managed to wound: civil rights leader Vernon Jordan and Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt, whom he left permanently paralyzed.

Despite the fact that I conducted a long interview with Franklin about 20 years ago, corresponded with him, taught his case and wrote about him, I’m in no way sorry to see him go.

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Aaron Alexis

Aaron Alexis

Since the FBI released its opinion that Washington Navy Yard mass murderer Aaron Alexis was delusional, many have been asking how this was possible. They see the evidence of his careful planning, as well as the clips from surveillance videos showing him moving and reacting in decidedly tactical ways.

The fact of the matter, though, is that it is quite possible, and not unusual with mass killers we and the FBI have studied, going back many decades. The way we would attempt to define Mr. Alexis is to place him somewhere along what we call the “paranoid continuum.”

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James “Whitey” Bulger

The Boston trial of 83-year-old alleged underworld kingpin James “Whitey” Bulger has provided some interesting insights into the way organizations involved with crime operate, regardless of on which side of the law they fall.

Yesterday, 72-year-old convicted hit man John Martorano, who hardly batted an eyelash while establishing his creds by recounting all of his murders, spoke of how “It broke my heart” when he learned that Mr. Bulger had turned FBI informant. Defendant Bulger, for his part, apparently wants to “clear his name” by refuting changes that he ever betrayed his friends and business associates in this way.

And at the center of the controversy is a former FBI special agent named John Connolly who is currently serving time on both federal and state charges of racketeering and obstruction of justice.

Trust can be a funny thing.

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What would Benjamin Franklin say?

What would Benjamin Franklin say?

With the admission by Edward Snowden that he is the source of leaks about top-secret government surveillance programs, the ongoing debate over security-based government snooping versus individual rights has gotten even more complicated.

We all want our safety secured, and we all want our liberty preserved, and common sense tells us we can’t have the absolute of each simultaneously.

Here’s what worries me:

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Special Agents Christopher Lorek & Stephen Shaw

Special Agents Christopher Lorek & Stephen Shaw

In February of this year, The FBI’s Hostage Rescue Team (HRT) celebrated its 30th Anniversary. On May 17th HRT suffered two fatalities during a training exercise off the coast of Virginia Beach, Virginia.  Agents Christopher Lorek, 41, and Stephen Shaw, 40, were part of a small, highly skilled and elite FBI tactical support team.

As a former hostage negotiator for the FBI and then during joint operations with them as chief of the Investigative Support Unit, I had the opportunity to know many of the HRT’s members on both a professional and personal level, at the FBI Academy and at various scenes of action. It is tough enough to qualify as an FBI special agent. And thousands of superior agents have applied for positions with the team since its inception, but very few meet the high standards set by this elite group. In fact, since, 1983 fewer than 300 agents have been elected to HRT.

HRT consists of some of the finest people I have ever known. They are all dedicated and brave agents who define what a real hero is, and should be, in our daily lives.

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