In 2001, he infiltrates the most famous American motorcycle clubs, Hells Angels, in order damasser evidence enough to convict organized crime in the Prosecution.
Jay Dobyns will thus become "Bird", a member of the Solo Angels biker club that he runs with different undercover agents and habitual criminals who have become "informers" over the years. With his bodybuilder physique, his harley, tattoos, and outspoken, Bird was soon noticed and appreciate. Quickly and almost too easy, he notes. One of its strongest members, Bad Bob, took him under his protection, and advise him to leave Solo Angels to become a prospect in the Hells Angels, this is to say an applicant to the status of official member.
Bird snorkeling begins. He supports his new identity as a mercenary dhuissier it sinvente a past drug addict forbidden to retouch anything (an undercover agent can not even use marijuana or risk his record laudience the day!), he has a girlfriend (also an undercover agent), he loves weapons and is a sacred bagarreur.Bref, it has it all. But his rashness that is not feigned. Ambitious, demanding, impatient, it will exceed the limits of its hierarchy to simulate murder dun dun rival gang member in order to win its faster gallons.
Devoured by ambition, moral and integrity waver. Find the limits of his role seems to him more and more confusing.
Jay took the HA high. Debuting his dagent undercover career, he found himself rubbing shoulders with bandits in three-piece suit, the most beautiful women attend and investigate the purest drugs and the most dangerous weapons. It appears to associate only with meth offenders, battered women, prostitutes on the sly and children without futures.
The ease with which he creates links exceeds itself, it is the first to see the flaws in his plan; their jackets are any new evidence and have never been worn, it sinvente a history of cameo to touch nothing and does not take the same risks motorbike. Pourtant.Bird and takes the game.
Jay sets early in the book his family as his "postcard". His wife love her, and soccupe many children. His son played sports, his daughter plays guitar. When he has some days of rest it comes soccuper the garden.
But gradually it more narrive to leave Bird in the door. He returned dirty and dressed in biker, he seems to lose his time WHEN IT is at home, so much so that his family avoids find sy same time.
To hold on, Jay abuse of all kinds of drugs and begins to lose between two characters. He who saw things so if Manichean between his family and his postcard low floor bandits beginning not to know if he is more himself in the garments of Bird or those of Jay
Something fascinates in HA. Yet this is not even the bike, that he hobby naffectionne even specifically. Something in their brotherhood, in the mad end their relationship would give him almost want to entrust his life to his "brothers." The kind of camaraderie that creates lon the front or in situations of unusual intensity of existence.
But the experience has to end well, and the trap shut.
Maybe do the rest dune some guilt if that part of the case is less detailed (the book is yet more than 500 pages.).
This end a little faster somewhat spoils the formal style of the narrative. Sil only comes by no means great literature, the subject remains exciting and well done. Dobyns clearly confronts the destruction of his Manichean world, and its American morality. The simplistic tone of the first pages gives way to a deeper introspection of a man more complex that it appears ny on a less opaque and less simple filing system dEpinal lon knows that. [....]