Margaret Truman's Experiment In Murder - Plot & Excerpts
Those in whom he confided were impressed with his sense of honor and his unwillingness to participate in some of the agency’s more controversial medical and scientific endeavors. But he was never specific about the work he’d done for the CIA. He kept it vague, including just enough specificity to come off as credible. What they didn’t know was that Considine did so with the spy agency’s blessing. Leaving the CIA and the nation’s other intelligence agencies was not easily accomplished, any more than walking away from the Mafia was. Certain conditions had to be met, among them an agreement to keep one’s eyes and ears open for any sign of activity that might be considered potentially injurious to the agency and its goals. Countless former employees were kept on a sub rosa payroll in return for feeding damaging information back to their handlers. Some former employees were even encouraged to write books about their agency experiences, to adopt the public stance of being anti-CIA, and to include in their books what they claimed was “inside information”
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