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Reviews for Introduction to Private Security

 Introduction to Private Security magazine reviews

The average rating for Introduction to Private Security based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2017-10-05 00:00:00
1996was given a rating of 5 stars Mateo Garcia
In April 1895, two young women followed a man they trusted into the Emmanuel Baptist Church in San Francisco's Mission District and did not emerge alive. The bloody, disfigured corpse of 21-year-old Minnie Williams was found in the library the day before Easter Sunday, and soon afterward searchers discovered the naked body of Blanche Lamont, who had been missing since April 3, in the belfry. Clues and witness statements directed the police to Theo Durrant, a young medical student who also happened to be assistant Sunday School superintendent for the church. Durrant's murder trial was attended by such eminent spectators as Presidential hopeful William Jennings Bryan and Gold Rush millionaire John Mackay. The evidence against him was so overwhelming that the jury brought in a guilty verdict in less than half an hour. While his January 1898 execution brought closure to the families of Minnie Williams and Blanche Lamont, it also left a lot of unanswered questions. Why did he kill two young women whom he'd known well and never born any malice against? And what motivated a man who had been devoted to his parents and sister and active in church affairs to commit murder in the first place? The press hinted that he was a depraved monster disguised as a pious youth, and referred to him as 'the Demon in the Belfry'. In Sympathy for the Devil, Virginia McConnell questions the justice of these assumptions. I'll admit that when I began reading the book, I had doubts about McConnell's impartiality: in the introduction, she wrote, "His two tragic deeds aside, I would have been proud to call him 'brother' or 'friend'." But unlike the mindless, adoring women who simpered over Theo Durrant during his courtroom appearances, McConnell has credible reasons for her partiality. Reviewing his family and medical history, she points out that his father was manic-depressive and prone to impulsive actions, and Durrant himself nearly died from meningitis, or 'brain fever', a condition that often left survivors with brain damage. She suggests that he may have been in a manic phase when he killed the two women, and the behaviour he exhibited at that time corresponds to the profile: loquaciousness, impulsivity, and unnatural energy levels. When not in the throes of the disorder, Durrant was apparently a mild-mannered, caring individual who placed women on a pedestal. Sympathy for the Devil is a sympathetic, but not sentimental, treatment of the Emmanuel Baptist murders. It includes rare and unsettling photos, such as a vibrant young Blanche Lamont, the belfry landing where her nude body was found, and the blood-spattered walls of the room where Minnie Williams met her death. Any future books about the case have a very high bar to leap over.
Review # 2 was written on 2014-11-12 00:00:00
1996was given a rating of 3 stars Luca Corai Montico
In the first 12 days of february I have read a lot but apparently I forgot to review the books I read not did I add them to the having read shelf. This was one I bought secondhand of which I received a hardback copy and I am glad I did. Thought it a well written book. I liked that it had quite a few photos. Not sure if I agreed with the analysis of the murdered at the end of the book but a very interesting read. This is the area where newspapers were very competitive and combative, where it all started. Newspapers hired their own people who basically did the same as cops did only they did not have to hold themselves to facts only, so there were many stories in the papers that consisted of untruth. Well it is the case now as well although I remember when i was younger news was still that news. Unbiased, or maybe I thought it was and I grew up. ;)


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