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Hardcover Inside Job: Deep Undercover as a Corporate Spy Book

ISBN: 1883955289

ISBN13: 9781883955281

Inside Job: Deep Undercover as a Corporate Spy

After the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War, there was a sudden void in intelligence and covert operations, and companies began hiring spies to protect their secrets, gain an... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Realistic and

The next day on the job was always full of surprises. I could not put it down. A great and realistic read about the sweat and toil of the paper/lumber trade in Oregon. Bucchi goes undercover and you feel almost like you working next to him as he attempts to find the good and the bad within the organization's entry level employees; all the while trying to fit in and not stand out. Very ture and realistic in how the soical structures of the blue collar workforce operate within a given organization. You never know what your neighbor is doing or what they are involved in. A good read...

Fascinating!

For someone who reads mostly romance novels, I was a bit skeptical about reading a book on undercover investigations. I had heard Mr. Bucchi on several radio interviews and his story sounded so fascinating that I decided it was time to read the book. I was hooked the moment I read the first page. Most books take a chapter or two before you really get into it but not this one, from the moment I opened the book to the time I had to force myself to put it down, I was totally caught up in the story. Mr. Bucchi does an excellent job of making you feel like you are right there with him the entire time. I strongly recommend this book to everyone, it is a fascinating story and I can't wait to read more from Mr. Bucchi!

Member National Council of Investigation & Security Services

As a seasoned corporate investigator for Kroll Investigations,the world's premier investigative Agency, I have to say that KennethBucchi has done what no one else has ever seen fit to do with regardto this mysterious subject matter: he has written a case profile of an undercover corporate investigation that is neither didactic nor instructional in nature. Rather, he has written a story that feels like you're smack-dab in the middle of a corporate investigation. After my wife read this book, she gave it to me and told me that it was the first time ever that she truly understood what my job was like, and for that I am very thankful. I believe Bucchi wrote "Inside Job" the way he did because, unlike all other authors on the subject, he was never a case manager nor an investigative executive; he writes from the perspective of the investigator and he has no allegiances to either his former employer or occupation. If I were to write a book such as this, it best be a doozy because I would no longer be able to make a living as an investigator, that's for sure. Although I have never encountered a case fraught with as much danger and as many hazards as this one, (which leads me to believe there was a smidgen of literary license involved), I have encountered all of the same ethical and moral dilemmas Mr. Bucchi struggled with during my career as an investigator. Who knows, maybe if I took as many brazen chances as Mr. Bucchi, my cases would be as wild as this one. Something tells me, though, that I'll never find out. In fact, that something just elbowed me and told me to turn out the light.

A knock down, drag out, gritty crime story

If you think you've read or heard everything there is to hear or read about crime and criminals alike, think again. If you feel safe in your workplace, don't! If you feel you know your co-workers...not hardly. This book tells us that Orwell was an optimist. You are not safe in your workplace and if you don't believe me, ask the company that is spying on you or your co-worker who doubles as a corporate spy or a drug trafficker. If you want the same protection we afford our police or soldiers--yes, it's that serious--you should arm yourself with this book and a whole lot of mistrust.

If Mr. Bucchi says it, you can take it to the bank!

I was given a tape yesterday of a Howard Stern segment which featured Mr. Bucchi and I was not surprised to hear a lot of wannabe Green Berets touting their expertise in a field they know absolutely nothing about. Personal experience tells me that Ken Bucchi does know of what he speaks. I was puzzled to hear General Antonio Manuel Noriega's name used in vein, as well. Mr. Bucchi did have contact with Mr. Noriega back in the mid-eighties and our government refused to release those files to Noriega's attorney, Frank Rubino. Regardless, the book he has written here--I have not yet finished reading it--is the only book I know of that has broached the subject of Undercover Corporate Investigations and, I must say, he has done a bang-up job. If you're involved in any type of criminal or otherwise inappropriate activity at work, I recommend you read this book before you commit another offence or something that might be misconstrued as an offence. If you don't, the next thing on your reading list could very well be a Miranda card.
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