Cut-Throat

The Vicious World of Rod McLean - Mercenary, Gun-Runner and International Drug Baron

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Crimes & Criminals, Criminology, True Crime, Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Cut-Throat by Wayne Thallon, Mainstream Publishing
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Wayne Thallon ISBN: 9781780574875
Publisher: Mainstream Publishing Publication: June 22, 2012
Imprint: Mainstream Digital Language: English
Author: Wayne Thallon
ISBN: 9781780574875
Publisher: Mainstream Publishing
Publication: June 22, 2012
Imprint: Mainstream Digital
Language: English

Fact is often stranger than fiction, and when Rod McLean, an escaped drug baron and alleged MI6 agent, was mysteriously found dead in a London flat after two months on the run, even Hollywood couldn't have scripted it better.

McLean had only served seven years of his twenty-eight-year sentence he received following a 1996 sting operation off the Caithness coast in which a Customs officer lost his life. Despite being described as one of the most ruthless and important figures on the country's drug scene, McLean had found his security status downgraded from Category A to D and had been transferred to HMP Leyhill, an open prison which had seen 82 prisoners escape in 2002 alone.

Shortly after the media had accused the security services of helping him to escape, McLean was found – dead. But not only did it take the Metropolitan Police 29 days to make the news public, it also took them that long to inform Avon and Somerset - the very police force who were still trying to recapture him. Why? Who was McLean and what made him so important? So important, in fact, that the Home Secretary, David Blunkett, had been compelled to order a report into his disappearance, much of which remains secret to this day.

Cut-Throat is a truly unique account of Rod McLean's life and death, told in the first person using material from McLean's own hand. Whether as a mercenary in the Congo, an armed robber in Newcastle or as an international drug-smuggler and gun-runner who operated where few others have dared, McLean will take you through his life as he struggles against the darkest realms of humanity and himself until the very end, an end which overshadows the greatest secret of all – not of how he died, but of how he lived.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Fact is often stranger than fiction, and when Rod McLean, an escaped drug baron and alleged MI6 agent, was mysteriously found dead in a London flat after two months on the run, even Hollywood couldn't have scripted it better.

McLean had only served seven years of his twenty-eight-year sentence he received following a 1996 sting operation off the Caithness coast in which a Customs officer lost his life. Despite being described as one of the most ruthless and important figures on the country's drug scene, McLean had found his security status downgraded from Category A to D and had been transferred to HMP Leyhill, an open prison which had seen 82 prisoners escape in 2002 alone.

Shortly after the media had accused the security services of helping him to escape, McLean was found – dead. But not only did it take the Metropolitan Police 29 days to make the news public, it also took them that long to inform Avon and Somerset - the very police force who were still trying to recapture him. Why? Who was McLean and what made him so important? So important, in fact, that the Home Secretary, David Blunkett, had been compelled to order a report into his disappearance, much of which remains secret to this day.

Cut-Throat is a truly unique account of Rod McLean's life and death, told in the first person using material from McLean's own hand. Whether as a mercenary in the Congo, an armed robber in Newcastle or as an international drug-smuggler and gun-runner who operated where few others have dared, McLean will take you through his life as he struggles against the darkest realms of humanity and himself until the very end, an end which overshadows the greatest secret of all – not of how he died, but of how he lived.

More books from Mainstream Publishing

Cover of the book Jim Telfer by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book Stephen Jones by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book Wide-Eyed and Legless by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book Skin Diseases by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book Totally Frank by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book Oh, Hampden in the Sun . . . by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book Deadly Beat by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book Stress and Nervous Disorders by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book The Lone Brit on 13 by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book Man, Interrupted by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book Newcastle United by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book Final Whistle by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book Manchester United in Europe by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book '66 by Wayne Thallon
Cover of the book Every Chart Topper Tells a Story by Wayne Thallon
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy