May 21, 1999, Paladin Press settled the case, giving the families of those killed by the hit man several million dollars, agreeing to destroy the remaining 700 copies of the book in their possession, and surrendering any rights they have to publish and reproduce the work. While the families were successful in profiting from their loved one's death, they have not been successful in stifling the book. With the surrender of the publishing rights by Paladin Press, the book has entered the public domain, and is being published on the Internet here at Overthrow.com in its entirety this weekend, May 22-23, 1999.
The book was initially published in 1983. 13,000 copies of the book are now in existence. There has only ever been one case where the book was associated with a crime, in that case the criminal had recently finished a lengthy prison sentence and had a history of prior violent crime. It is our opinion this book has never incited a murder, that the settlement of the Paladin Press case was wrong and forced by the insurance company, and that this book, and no book, should be banned. We invite the public to judge for themselves.
That said, here is Hit Man ...
To Those Who Think,
To Those Who Dare,
To Those Who Do,
To Those
Who Succeed.
Success is nothing more than taking advantage of an opportunity.
Anonymous
IT IS AGAINST THE LAW TO manufacture a silencer without an appropriate license from the federal government. There are state and local laws prohibiting the possession of weapons and their accessories in many areas. Severe penalties are prescribed for violations of these laws. Neither the author nor the publisher assumes responsibility for the use or misuse of information contained in this book. For informational purposes only!
A WOMAN RECENTLY ASKED HOW I could, in good conscience, write an instruction book on murder.
"How can you live with yourself if someone uses what you write to go out and take a human life?" she whined.
I am afraid she was quite offended by my answer.
It is my opinion that the professional hit man fills a need in society and is, at times, the only alternative for "personal" justice. Moreover, if my advice and the proven methods in this book are followed, certainly no one will ever know.
Some people would argue that in taking the life of another after premeditation, you act as God -- judging and issuing a death sentence. But it is the employer, the man who pays for the service, whatever his reason might be, who acts as judge. The hit man is merely the executioner, an enforcer who carries out the sentence.
There are many, many instances when atrocities are committed that the law cannot or will not pursue. and other times when the law does its part but the American legal system is so poor that real justice is not served. In those cases, as in cases of personal revenge and retribution, a man must step outside the law and take matters into his own hands.
Since most men are capable of carrying out their threats and wishes only in their heads, it becomes necessary for a man of action to step in and do what is required: a special man for whom life holds no real meaning and death holds no fear ... A man who faces death as a challenge and feels the victory every time he walks away the winner.
Some men could not kill under any circumstances. Other could kill only in self-defense or to protect what they hold dear. One man learns to kill in times of war and spends the rest of his lie trying to forget the horror, while his brother may consider all his wartime efforts a justifiable part of his past having no effect on his present.
How many times have you shared a few beers with a group of macho buddies who eventually turned the subject of conversation form women and sports to that of guns, ammunition, wars, and the killing?
It seems that almost every man harbors a fantasy of living the life of Mack Bolan or some other fictional hero who kills for fun and profit. They dream of living by their reflexes, of doing whatever is necessary without regard to moral or legal restrictions. But few have the courage or knowledge to make that dream a reality.
When the bragging and boasting starts, I just sit back and smile as one after the other talks of what he would do, and how he would be., if it weren't for family obligations, mortgages and corporate jobs.
You might be like my friends -- interested but unsure, standing on the sidelines afraid to play the game because you don't know the rules. Within the pages of this book you will learn one of the most successful methods of operation used by an independent contractor. You will follow the procedures of a man who works alone, without backing of organized crime or on a personal vendetta. Step by step you will be taken from research to equipment selection to job preparation to successful job completion. You will learn where to find employment, how much to charge, and what you can, and cannot, do with the money you earn.
But deny your urge to skip about, looking for the "good" parts. Start where any amateur who is serious about turning profession will start -- at the beginning.
HE SLEEPS WHILE THE PLANE IS in flight, having learned long ago that few people will try to make conversation with a sleeping man. At 1:35 PM the stewardess awakens him. They are about to land.
He enters the terminal and casually strolls past the embracing couples and reunited families, heading directly for the men's room. He is just another of the hundreds of businessmen who arrive at and depart from a major city airport on any given day.
Safe inside the toilet stall, he locks the doors and slips out of the business suit he chose to wear on the trip. From his duffel bag he pulls faded jeans, sweatshirt and tennis shoes. Hurriedly, he pulls on the clothing. Then, balancing a small mirror on the back of the toilet, he slips a stocking cap over his hair to flatten and hide it before pulling on a shoulder length wig. His neatly folded suit, shirt and tie fir snugly on top. From a zippered side pocket he takes a pair of tinted, wire-rimmed glasses and a nondescript hat. In less than ten minutes, he leaves the men's room a different man.
At the row of car rental booths in the airport lobby, a tall hippie in a sweatshirt waits in line to rent a car. He does not seem to be inconvenienced by the long lines that are so irritating to the other customers. When the girl behind the counter finally gets around to him, he responds affirmatively to her offer to help.
"Yeah, I wanna rent a small car for a few days."
She take sin his appearance. She has seen his type many times before and immediately interprets his use of the word small to mean cheap. She suggests an economy car that is terrific on gas and comes with unlimited mileage.
He explains that he intends to pay cash for the use of the car. She tells him that he may do so when he brings the car back, but a valid driver's license and major credit card are required identification for security purposes. From an ordinary looking wallet, he pulls the necessary identification: a valid North Carolina driver's license and a major credit card, both in the name of Alfred Johnson.
With key in hand, he leaves the car rental booth and goes to claim his baggage. Then he wanders to the airport news stand to purchase a city map and some reading materials.
Seated in the lobby, he checks the map for an address he memorized weeks earlier. Folding the map so he can follow it while driving, he exits to pick up his waiting car.
Afternoon traffic is moderately heavy on the interstate. Exits, side streets and intersections are unfamiliar. He drives carefully and obeys all traffic rules. He does not want to become involved in any accidents or pick up any traffic tickets.
Finally, he arrives in the section of town where he will find the memorized address. he drives slowly down the street until he has located the apartment complex, then drives on past so his interest will not be observed.
He continues to scout the neighborhood, checking streets and consulting the city map he carries for possible escape routes. He notes that the neighborhood is upper middle class; neatly kept lawns and sidewalks, with a population consisting of mostly singles and young families.
Three blocks west of the apartment complex there is a park which has a small pond. One block east he finds a large shopping center which has a movie theater and an adult book store that is open all night.
About a mile away, at the point where he exited the interstate highway, there are several chain motels and fast food restaurants. he heads back in that direction and pulls into a motel parking lot. He jots down the California license tag number of a car parked near the restaurant entrance. It is 4:15 PM.
The motel clerk is disinterested and mechanical in registering him. He fills out the required form in the name of Sam Wilcox, gives a fictitious address in Los Angeles and uses the California tag number from the car parked at the restaurant. The clerk does not ask for further identification.
"I'm a late sleeper. I'd like a room on the back side -- away from the pool, if you have it," he requests.
"Will that be cash or charge?" the clerk asks without looking up.
He lays down enough small bills on the counter to cover two days lodging, "Cash," he answers.
He drives the car around back, locates his room and takes in his baggage. By 4:45 he is seated on the bed studying the contents of a large manila envelope taken from his locked suitcase. Using the information from the envelope and the telephone directory, he begins to chart routes on the city map. Afterwards, he carefully studies an assortment of photographs taken from the envelope. Satisfied, he returns everything to the envelope and locks it away in the suitcase again.
Wearing a jogging outfit and still in his hippie disguise, he drives to the shopping center and locks his car. On foot, he begins a slow jog through the neighborhood. He circles the block and carefully scrutinizes the area before cutting into the apartment complex parking lot. The sun is just beginning to set.
The apartments are all identical. Patios on the rear are enclosed with privacy walls. On the front, each apartment is separated from the other by an ornamental cedar fence. Two parking spaces are reserved at the front of each apartment for the residents' use. Guest parking is clearly marked in the center of the parking lot, surrounding a small island landscaped with a few scrawny trees and thick bushes.
He jogs over to the guest parking island and sits down on the curb. Removing his shoes and socks, he begins to rub his tired feet. It is 6:47. If his information is correct, the mark should be arriving home from work any time now.
At 6:53 a green Mustang pulls into the parking space in front of the apartment he has under surveillance. The car matches the description of the vehicle belonging to the mark. A heavyset man emerges slowly from the small car. He is puffing on a large cigar. Judging by his physical characteristics and the cigar, this man appears to be the mark. He glances up uninterested, as a jogger trots out of the parking lot.
He jogs back to the motel, stopping at the fast food restaurant for dinner. The clerk shortchanges him by five dollars and the hamburger he orders is not prepared to his liking but he does not complain. without drawing any attention, he heads back to his motel where he reads and watches television until 11:00.
It is after 11:30 when he swings his car into the apartment complex parking lot. The mark's lights are on and his car is still parked in its allotted space. The mark is said to spend most of his free time alone at home, staying up late watching television and sleeping in until an hour or so before his scheduled time to report for work at a used car lot; it appears that this information is correct.
He circles the guest parking island and drives back to the motel.
Early the next morning he is waiting in his parked car with a pair of binoculars and a newspaper when the mark leaves the apartment. In the bright morning sunlight he clearly makes positive identification. This is his man!
Using his premarked map, he spends the early part of the day checking out the places the mark is known to frequent. Around noon, he drives to the main post office to pick up a parcel he mailed to himself the day before. as he drives, he contemplates the various places he has checked out. Because of the layout of the apartment complex in relation to the private patios and sectioned courtyards, he decides that the best place to make the hit is in the mark's own home.
Back at the motel, he opens the heavily taped parcel which was addressed to Mark Donaldson. There had been no problem in picking up the package, stamped "Fragile -- Precision Machined Parts." Today the postal clerk had not even asked for identification.
Inside the first box is a second box. And inside the second box is a special set of clothing, several pairs of rubber gloves, a clean pair of tennis shoes, a new disguise, ammunition, a disassembled weapon and a disposable silencer.
Lovingly he begins to assemble his weapon. With gloved hands, he wipes every part, inside and out, for fingerprints. As he loads the clip, he wipes down each of the bullets. he is a man with a job to do. He has the tools, he has done his homework, he knows he has the right target and he has determined how he will accomplish the job.
After putting the tools away, he leaves the motel to fill the gas tank on the car. While he is out, he steals and out-of-state tag from a parked automobile and replaces the rental tag on his car with a stolen tag.
Back in his room, he dials the airport and gets flight information. Space is available on a flight departing at 11:55 PM.
At 7:00 PM the alarm sounds, waking him from a four hour nap. It is time to get ready for work.
He dresses in the clothing that came in his parcel. He puts on the clean tennis shoes and a new disguise. He puts the hippie disguise, clothing and shows into the duffel bag, along with the tools he will be using. When he is all dressed and packed to go, he has a very few important details to complete.
First, he removes the manila envelope from the suitcase and goes over to the bathroom to burn all the items it contains over the toilet. One by one, he burns the information sheets, photographs, maps and other physical evidence that may prove conspiracy to commit a crime and flushes away the incriminating remains.
He pulls out a fresh pair of rubber gloves and begins tot wipe down the room for fingerprints. He knows the room will probably be rented against by tomorrow, but he takes the precaution anyway. he puts all the trash, newspapers and magazines accumulated during his stay into a plastic garbage bag, along with the room's telephone directory and places it beside his luggage. He will dispose of these items on the way to the jobsite. Still wearing the rubber gloves, he loads his luggage and equipment into the car, locking it in the trunk, and heads for the mark's neighborhood. He will not be returning to the motel again.
At the shopping center one block from where the mark lives, he parks the car in the crowded theatre parking lot and gets out to continue on foot.
No one is out and about as he walks into the apartment complex parking lot. Protected by the cedar privacy fence, he peeks through a crack in the drapes and sees the mark puffing on a cigar while he watches TV from a recliner chair. The volume is so loud that he can hear the program plainly from his position outside.
He goes to the front door where he quietly and efficiently picks the lock. The mark is startled by the intrusion of his entry but is unable to respond quickly enough. he is helpless against the professional.
The muffled sound of three shots fired in rapid succession goes undetected by the neighborhood. The professional has neatly carried out his assignment. Quickly but carefully, he checks the body to make sure there is no pulse and drags the body to a place in the apartment where it will not be easily detected. At the scene of the shooting, he drops a newspaper over the blood that has seeped into the carpet. He pockets the three empty cartridges that were ejected from the gun. Then, after a quick check of the apartment to make sure he leaves behind no incriminating evidence, he exits, locking the front door behind him.
Resisting the urge to run, he strolls nonchalantly back to the theater parking lot and his waiting car. Safe inside, he immediately runs a rat-tail file down the barrel of the gun to change the ballistic markings. Then he changes back into his hippie clothing and disguise, unobserved while the other car owners are inside viewing the movie.
he checks the work clothes carefully for bloodstains. Finding none, he drops them into the charity collection box at the shopping center entrance, keeping the shoes he wore for disposal later.
He drives cautiously and carefully to another shopping center several blocks away. He feels no panic. It will be days before the crime is detected, days before anyone investigates the mark's failure to report for work or answer his door. In the crowded parking lot, he disassembles the weapon and removes the stolen tag. Now his only remaining task is to dispose of the weapon.
He gets back onto the interstate highway and heads out of town. Traffic becomes sparse as the city is left behind; now he begins to toss out the small gun parts at irregular intervals, aiming for water filled and overgrown drainage ditches. He also tosses out the tennis shoes.
At a rest area, he walks through the woods and buries the barrel of the gun. He crushes the plastic silencer and disposes of the bits and pieces as he drives back to town.
Just before he reaches the airport, he pulls over to the side of the road and wipes the car for fingerprints. He removes and discards the stolen tag, replacing it with the rental tag. He disposes of the rubber work gloves and replaces them with a pair of leather driving gloves. Then he returns the "clean" rental car to the agency and heads directly for the airport men's room.
A short time later, a businessman emerges from the men's room and approaches the ticket counter for information. His flight leaves in forty five minutes.
he checks his baggage, a suitcase and small duffel bag, and goes to the coffee shop to wait for the flight to be called.
On the plane he dozes, having learned long ago that few people will try to make conversation with a sleeping man. Too all appearances, he is just another businessman suffering from an exhausting schedule; no one interrupts his rest.
AS A FIRST CLASS MECHANIC, you will become and expert at your profession. Becoming an expert entails research -- reading, observing, and asking questions -- as well as development of a wide range of physical abilities and weapons expertise.
The preparations outlined in this chapter should be considered essential prior to any acceptance of actual employment. Your keen mental and physical fitness will serve as your edge between life and death.
Read and reread pertinent articles relating to weapons and techniques that interest you in magazines such as Soldier of Fortune, New Breed and Gung-Ho. Stay abreast of new trends and developments as well as new gadgets and inventions as they become available. As well as the valuable articles, study advertisements and classified sections for a wealth of information and sources for supplies and books.
Check our military newsletters like Military Exchange. Your local library can inform you of what is available in this category.
Books on subjects related to the professional hit man are hard to find. But there are a few publishers out there who have the backbone to provide those of us who take life seriously with the necessary educational materials. Paladin Press advertises in almost every issue of Soldier of Fortune and other publishers offer relevant reading material, available by mail order. Check advertisements and classified sections.
And let's not forget reading for entertainment. With the right attitude and an open mind, almost any good mystery or murder story can provide some ingenious new methods of terrorizing, victimizing, or exterminating. Sometimes a new poison will be introduced, or perhaps a new method for induction. Sometimes the warped imagination of a fiction writer will point out an obvious but somehow never before realized method of pacification or body disposal. So don't bypass these fictional characters. Chuckle through the trenchcoats and warped personalities but test out any new theories you come across.
A subscription to your local newspaper may be the wisest investment, with the highest return, that you will ever make. Each morning as you sip your coffee and scan the local section, you will be met with a variety of up-to-date employment opportunities. So study your local paper carefully to see who in your area might be your next employer ... or victim.
Headlines -- Follow closely any news stories about people who have been apprehended for contract hits. These stories sell papers, and readers thrive on the sensationalism they create. Study details made available for law enforcement techniques, mistakes that led to the arrest, and methods the law used to obtain incriminating information. Learn from the other man's mistakes. And if he is lucky enough to be acquitted, make a note of the attorney's name in case you ever find yourself in the position of needing a good one.
Drug Arrests -- If the reported suspect posts a heavy bond, he is probably dealing in a big way. As soon as he gets back on the streets, chances are he will be dealing again to raise money for his defense. His name and address are right there in the paper. Is he worth a drug rip-off, or would it be more profitable to contact him discreetly about eliminating that certain witness.
Political Corruption -- Keep up with gossip. All politicians are expected to be corrupt, but who among them is desperate or despicable enough to be willing to pay to eliminate the competition? Tried and true methods are accidental death, assassination, or worse yet, political death brought on by scandal.
Divorce -- Follow closely news or rumors of particularly nasty divorce proceedings involving any wealthy or socially prominent couple. Chances are, one could use your discreet professional services. Or perhaps some not so wealthy acquaintance who prefers not to become entangled in messy divorce proceedings may find it a proper time to collect on that old life insurance policy.
Adjustments -- Thefts, cases reported where the law did not render justice, bogus operations that swindle ordinary people out of their hard earned money -- all these are potential opportunities for employment. Work for a flat rate or for a percentage of recovery, plus expenses.
Classified Sections -- You can place an ad under the guise of collector and solicit any particular weapons you might want. Or scan these ads when you are in the market for new toys and pick them up from private owners to avoid registering your weapons.
Classified sections also announce gun shows, which are an ideal source for all types of equipment at competitive prices.
Local City Directory -- If at all possible, get one of these to keep at home. Otherwise, they are available in the reference of information section of the public library.
If you have partial information on a mark, you can usually gather the rest without leaving the comfort of your easy chair.. These directories are broken down into three categories:
Alphabetical by Name: Lists name, wife's name, occupation and employers, street address, telephone number and other living in the home.
Street Address: Lists alphabetically by street and then numerically by house number. If you know the mark's address you can also know who lives next door, the type of neighborhood, vacant lots, business and so on, all according to the information that was available when the directory was compiled.
Phone Numbers: If all you have is a phone number, look it up in the numerical listing. Then go to the Alphabetical listing and Address sections to gather the rest of the information.
Auto Tag Department, County Courthouse -- Often the books are left out for public use. Look up the mark by last name or tag number for address.
Telephone Directories -- For obvious reasons, it will sometimes be to your advantage to know the mark's telephone number.
But don't overlook the wealth of supply sources available in the Yellow Pages and become familiar with suppliers and readily available merchandise. If you live in a small town, get directories for any large cities in a 200-mile radius. Their Yellow Pages will be extremely valuable if you don't want to obtain supplies locally.
Maps -- A local city map is a must for planning routes if you are not familiar with the road systems. And of course a city map for any out-of-town job is in order.
A large atlas showing the national road system network is handy not only for planning travel, but also for finding nearby large cities and alternative routs to the job.
Just remember that once you use a map, if you have marked it in any way, it should be destroyed immediately.
Travel Arrangements -- Start inquiring now about the various modes of transportation available for out of town jobs. Find out necessary identifications, advance scheduling requirements, and time factors involved. File this information away for future use.
Stop by and ask what your local travel agent can do for you. You will be surprised at the variety of services they offer. When you are ready, call and make the necessary arrangements by telephone, using a fictitious name. They do all the work in making the arrangements to your specifications, and the airline pays their fee.
Shipping and Routing -- You can take a plane under an assumed identity and arrive at your destination in a matter of a few short hours. But how will you get your weapons to the jobsite? better start now checking into alternative methods for shipping your tools separately.
The US Postal Service offers Express Mail to most major cities, and the main post office is generally located very near the airport. By disassembling your weapons and double packing as a precautionary measure, you can send your tools to yourself under an assumed name (post office to post office) and have them waiting for pick up the next morning. Airport mail is not x-rayed.
If time is not a factor, check into bus line, common carrier or UPS rates and delivery schedules.
Locating the mark -- An obliging postal clerk will inform you of the several ways of tracking down the last known address of anyone you choose to locate as a function of the Freedom of Information Act.
One way is to send one dollar and a written request addressed to the postmaster of the mark's last known location. A Freedom of Information Act form will be returned to you within a matter of days giving the Postal Service's most recent update.
Or, you can address an empty envelope to the mark's last known address with your return address in the upper left hand corner. Under your address should appear this notation in bold letters:
DO NOT FORWARD
ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED
Within a few days your envelope will be returned with the updated information. The fee is twenty five cents.
The Law Enforcement Handbook for your state should be available through any college bookstore where law enforcement classes are taught. If not, STEAL ONE! If such courses are available in your area, you may want to audit a few.
How can you successfully evade the law if you have no knowledge of how it operates? By all means, learn everything you can about the law and how it works and how it applies to you. Learn what constitutes a good arrest and what abuses or mistakes can make an otherwise good arrest null and void.
I hope you will never have to fall back on the information and knowledge you acquire, but it will be worth its weight in gold if you ever have to rely on it. And you will have the added advantage of using you knowledge of how your opponents think and operate as you plan successful jobs.
Check every source available to you for potential information. Even those cheap tabloid newspapers sold at the grocery store counter have classifieds that offer fake ID's, interesting gadgets, nontraceable mailing addresses, and so on.
Your public library more than likely has the local newspaper on microfilm, and the information section has employees eager to help you find books and materials on the subjects you are researching.
Chambers of commerce will mail out information and maps of their cities upon request.
And bookstores and libraries have reference books that show all the books still in print and available on any given subject.
Keep an open mind, and sources of information will open up to you, sometimes in the least likely places and when you least expect it!
Your body should be as fit as your mind. You should be capable of running, jumping, climbing, swimming, pushing, pulling or meeting the demands of any other physical requirement encountered in your job. This means not only careful attention to exercise and diet, but moderation if you are going to partake of tobacco products and alcohol, and complete abstinence from any involvement with drugs.
A man who smokes two packs of cigarettes a day will certainly not be capable of running long and hard for any length of time. And his endurance in hand to hand combat situations will be severely limited. By the same token, a man who overindulges in alcohol may be taking his own life in his hands. The use of cigarettes and alcohol in moderation is acceptable, although undesirable, but use of any kinds of drugs is suicide.
Drugs dull the senses and the reflexes, yet the user feels sharp and alert. His confidence in his abilities swells out of proportion. His ego takes over. He sees himself as indestructible, incomparable. That image of himself may be the last thing he ever sees.
I, as a professional, never use drugs, although I will steal them for financial gain, or to use as bait or even as an induction agent for some chemical that I know will do an effective job. I don't need an unreal "high" that can mar my judgement. There is no margin for error in this business. A single mistake can cost you your life, either literally or by providing the evidence to take away your freedom. Either way you are just as dead. A professional needs a clear head and unhampered reflexes to be able to react properly in any situation. This is equally true whether he is performing the job itself or conducting prejob research. If you have to depend on an artificial sense of courage in order to carry out your assignment, then this job is not for you.
If you are afraid of taking a punch, again, this job is not right for you. No matter how careful you are, no matter how thorough your research, at some time you will probably have to prove or defend yourself physically. Any skills you can acquire are to your advantage.
You can get expert training in hand to hand combat is you can find someone qualified to teach you. Preferably, this will be someone with Special Forces training or the equivalent.
You will need to know kill techniques as well as survival self-defense, and you won't learn these skills at the corner karate school that includes women and children in its classes. Sport karate can get you killed in the street.
You should become so familiar with skills like breaking holds, throws, effective punches to vital areas and crippling moves that will come when needed as a reflex action. You should be aware of the best barroom fighting techniques. You should be able to fight two men at the same time. You should know the best way to disarm an opponent. And more.
But such skills require real practice with a sparring partner who cant take, as well as give, a good punch. In order to teach these methods in the proper way, your instructor will have to take his fighting as seriously as you do.
Veterans with wartime experience and the ability to kill are first choice instructors. Their contact with real life and death situations has made them a bit unconventional. Some never again conform to the rules of society, and quite a few rigorously keep in top physical shape while stockpiling M-60s and hand grenades under the bed in preparation for the next war.
The same man who can train you in the very best methods of self-defense and combat fighting might also be one of your best sources for accessory merchandise. his contact with other veterans will give you access to a chain able to locate almost any weapon you might request.
The veteran with guerilla warfare training will be a walking textbook on silent movement, torture, revenge, ammunitions, escape, silent weapons, and a host of ways to kill. And if, by chance, you accept a contract where a partner is in order, he may the first man you'd choose to cover your back.
The time needed to acquire the skills of this degree will vary, depending on your physical condition at the time you begin training, your aptitude for following directions and your eagerness to learn. I have seen an eager student, one who is willing to put in the hard hours of practice and full contact sparing sessions, progress very rapidly to the point of capability in less than six months.
Once your fighting ability has been established, you may want to test your news skills at one of the mercenary of survival school advertised in the various military magazines. Look for a school that can teach you more than you already know, and be prepared for one hell of a workout while you build your endurance and skills. An added benefit in attending one of these schools is that the people you meet there, like you, take the game of life seriously. Be prepared to meet people who have the same interests in weapons, explosives and effective kill techniques as you do. Some of them may prove to be very good resources or even future employers.
It is estimated that if ten people witnessed the same crime and then were separated before they could compare what had taken place, ten different descriptions would be given. People rarely pay attention to what is going on around them unless, or until, it becomes of importance to them personally. This book stresses the importance of using disguise and false identification to foil positive identification. But just as important to your success are your own observation skills.
Start now developing and exercising your observation powers. Make a habit of studying your surroundings. listen when others talk. A man can reveal a great deal about himself through his conversation and opinions. make a note of features or habits that make one man different from another. Think of the people you know intimately. Can you tell whether they are right or left handed? What color are their eyes?
Sharpen your observation skills.
FIRST CLASS MECHANIC REQUIREMENTS
A HIT MAN WITHOUT A GUN is like a carpenter without a hammer. Not very effective. What kinds of gun does he use and where does he obtain them? Unless he has a proper false identification, he certainly cannot make his purchase from the local gun shop and fill out the federal registration forms linking the weapon to himself.
What other basic equipment will the beginner need as essential tools of the trade. What equipment should be added to his inventory later?
The AR-7 Rifle is recommended because it is both inexpensive and accurate. The barrel breaks down for storage inside the stick with the clip. It is lightweight and easy to carry or conceal when disassembled.
The rifle has a ridge on top that will easily accept a scope, even though it is not cut for one. Put the scope in place, tighten it down, then sight it in. After sighting it in, scratch a mark behind each scope clamp to allow remounting of the scope without resighting each time.
A three to six powered scope is recommended to insure accuracy at up to sixty-five yards. When braced, right to fifteen shots should cover a four inch pattern area with no difficulty.
Get two extra fifteen or thirty shot clips from your local gun dealer or order through one of the gun magazines. But never load these clips to full capacity, as they tend to jam when fully loaded. When loading the clip before job assignment, be sure to wipe each bullet to remove fingerprints, or spray with WD-40 or some other oil.
The AR=7 has a serial number stamped on the case, just above the clip port. This number should be completely drilled out. The hole left will be unsightly but will not interfere with the working mechanism of the gun or the clip feed. The serial number can remain on the gun until you prepare it for use on the job. After the job assignment is completed, you will be disposing of the gun; therefore you do not want any serial number available if, perhaps, some of the discarded gun parts are discovered.
If the serial number is on the barrel of the gun, grinding deeply enough to remove it may weaken the barrel to the point that the gun could explode in your face when fired. To make these numbers untraceable, use a hammer and chisel or a numbering set purchased from the hardware store to stamp them out or make them illegible. make sure your blows go as deep as or a little deeper than the existing numbers. Then grind the serial number off slightly. This method will keep the true serial number from being raised in any acid tests if the part is found.
The recommended handgun is the fixed barrel Ruger Mark I or Mark II, again because it is inexpensive and reliable. This gun has a ten shot clip that seldom jams if kept clean. The gun can be easily broken down in the field, which helps when disposing of it after use.
Extra clips are a must for both the rifle and pistol and should be carried as a precautionary measure. Hollow-point bullets are recommended because they deform on impact, making them nontraceable. As an added precaution, you can fill the hollows with liquid poison to insure the success of your operation.
Using a handheld one eighth inch drill, enlarge the hollow point openings. Fill the hollows with the liquid poison of your choice, then seal with a drop of melted wax.
TO test your guns and ammunition, set up a sheet of quarter inch plywood at distances of two to seven years maximum for your pistol, and twenty to sixty yards maximum for your rifle. Check for penetration of bullets at each range. Quarter inch plywood is only a little stronger than the human skull. Find the maximum range for both your rifle and your pistol. Also, test your weapons under various weather conditions and determine how wind, rain and snow affect your range and accuracy.
Close kills are by far preferred to shots fired over a long distance. You will need to know beyond any doubt that the desired result has been achieved.
When using a small caliber weapon like the 22, it is best to shoot from a distance of three to six feet. You will not want to be at point blank range to avoid having the victim's blood splatter you or your clothing. At least three shots should be fired to ensure quick and sure death.
You can judge when death has occurred by observing the wound. When blood ceases to flow, the heart has stopped working. Check for pulse at both the wrist and throat as an added precaution.
If you must do your shooting from a distance, use a rifle with a good scope and silencer and aim for the head -- preferably the eye sockets if you are a sharpshooter. Many people have been shot repeatedly, even in the head, and survived to tell about it. Close kills enable you to determine right away if you have successfully fulfilled your part of the contract; distance shots may mean waiting around to read the morning papers.
In either case, as soon as possible, run a rat-tail file or wire cleaning brush down the ore of the gun to change the ballistic markings. Do this even though you intend to discard the crime weapon, And make sure you carry away and discard all shells that were ejected as the shots were fired.
If, for some reason, you just can't bear to part with your weapons, there are five parts that will require immediate alteration, and this alteration can only be made once in the life of the gun:
Using a rat tailfile, alter the gun barrel, the shell chamber, the loading ramp, the firing pin and the ejector pin.
Each one of these items leaves its own definite mark and impression on the shell casing which, if any shells happened to be left behind, can be matched up to the gun under a microscope in the police laboratory.
When using the file, make sure that you scrape the part on each listed item where it makes contact with the shell.
Personally, I feel that any weapon used to commit a crime is disposable. If you consider the value of a gun to be higher than that of your personal freedom, you'd better leave that gun at home.
A subject of primary importance is where to purchase the weapons you use on job assignments. As suggested in Chapter 1, you can often pick up throwaways from people who advertise in the classified section of the newspaper. Just be sure that any weapon you use on a job cannot be traced back to you by the person you purchase it from. Gun shows offer a wide variety of tools and weapons useful in this line of work. Usually no registration is required. At most, they may ask to see your driver's license. And with so many dealers present vying for your business, prices may be competitive. Flea Markets, private gun collectors, veterans who hoard and stash a variety of interesting toys, and bargain hunter magazines are other possible sources.
If you must obtain a weapon through legal channels (signing registration and the like), it might be wise to pay some beggar or wino ten or twenty dollars to present his driver's license and do the signing before you disappear with the gun.
AN IMPORTANT WORD ABOUT REVOLVERS
Although revolvers are often depicted as being a favorite tool among hit men, they are not recommended by this pro. Revolvers cannot be effectively silenced. The open cylinder allows gases to escape, thus making some noise. When fired, gas is forced around the cylinder in a 360 degree circle, thereby throwing powder all over the person who fired the gun.
An automatic, on the other hand, is tightly sealed so that when it is fired almost all the powder residue is forced into the silencer, where it is trapped. This prevents the powder from escaping and covering the person who fired the shot. Some residue will come out from the automatic's ejection port, but only a very small amount. If a shell catcher is used, the powder residue will become trapped inside the catch bag.
Remember that a silencer will affect the range and accuracy of your gun. Once the silencer is in place you will have to resight to maintain accuracy.
A duffel bag or some other method of inconspicuously transporting your tools to the jobsite will be needed. Preferably, it will have a lock. It should be large enough to hold your pistol, disassembled rifle and several small accessory items. These items should be kept assembled in the bad in a safe hiding place, wiped clean of fingerprints and ready for use.
Inside the bag should be several (at least dour or five pairs) of flesh-tone, tight-fitting surgical gloves. If these are not available, rubber gloves can be purchased at a reasonable price in the prescription department of most drug stores in boxes of 100. You will wear the gloves when you assemble and disassemble your weapons as well as on the actual job. Because the metal gun parts cause the rubber to wear so quickly, it is a good practice to change and dispose of worn gloves several times during each operation. A small tear in the thin, worn rubber can lead to a hole, leaving behind a partial, identifiable fingerprint at the most inopportune time. Never dispose of the gloves worn on an assignment in the vicinity of the job. Although your fingerprints may have been covered while you worked, they are clearly and distinctly obtainable by turning the found gloves inside out. I know a fellow or two who learned this lesson the hard way.
Leather gloves are not to be considered as a job tool. The leather has the same, individual, distinct characteristics of the human fingerprint. If you have to use leather gloves, destroy them immediately after the job. If found in your possession, they can convict you as quickly as a set of your own fingerprints.
Your bag should contain a few pairs of cheap handcuffs, usually available at pawn shops or army surplus stores. These, two, are throwaways, and may be needed to restrain the mark while you gather information that has been requested by the employer before you pull the trigger.
The knife you carry should have a six inch blade with a serrated section for making efficient, quiet kills. Your physical training and combat techniques, outlines in Chapter 1, should have taught you where to strike.
The knife should have a double edged blade. This double edge, combined with the serrated section and six-inch length, will insure a deep, ragged tear, and the wound will be difficult, if not impossible, to close without prompt medical attention.
Make the thrusts to a vital organ and twist the knife before you withdraw it. If you hit bone, you will have to file the blade to remove the marks left on the metal when it struck the victim's bone.
A rolled up ski-mask can be worn inconspicuously as a knit cap until the time to intrude on your victim. Then, pull it down to cover your features. A stocking mask may also be used, but may prove a bit awkward. And the distorted features created tend to shock people, whereas the ski mask is not so monstrous.
You will want to complete your bag with a few minor accessories like an inexpensive pen-light from the drug store flashlight department. This will be of extreme value as you pick locks or search darkened rooms. Remember to hold your hand over the beam of light as you direct it.
Throw in an ice pick, a large screwdriver and a flat-bladed knife like a putty or hook knife for gaining entry through locked doors, windows, or sliding glass doors.
You may not need all these items on any one job, but it will be to your advantage to have them in case they are called for.
After the basic equipment has been assembled, the following items can be added to your inventory as they are called for or as you can afford them.
If you are seen by some observant witness, it will be to your advantage if the description he gives the authorities is completely inaccurate. Using your imagination, you can totally change your appearance by using wigs, false beards, wash-in hair color and other disguises. Get books on theatrical make-up from magic shops or then public library and start to experiment with the many ways professionals completely change their looks. Learn to use wigs, false tattoos, scars, black eyes and the like to fool your observers. If a man has an unsightly wart on the end of his nose, that is what everyone will remember about him, not the color of his eyes.
A mark in hiding who expects to become a target may not open his door to you, but he very likely would respond to a request for help from a woman or old person who came calling. Along the same lines, props like repairman, medic and police officer uniforms may get deadbolts unbolted and guards let down.
Some people will argue that a professional will not stoop so low as to play games with disguises. It may be great fun to fool people about who you really are, but it is certainly no game. By using disguises and changing them regularly, a professional has added freedom of movement. If the disguise is easily changeable -- that is if he can get out of it and into another quickly -- then he is time and money ahead.
A man who calls himself a professional and would walk up barefaced and blow someone away with witnesses lurking about is only fooling himself. If you are going to take such great care in the selection and preparation of your tools, why risk being clearly identifiable? Indeed, the use of disguise and props while you carry out your assignment is highly advisable.
Dress, as well as disguises, should be coordinated according to the job setting. A hippie would be totally out of place in an office complex among men in three piece suits. A clean-shaven, well dressed young man would be out of his natural element among a group of bikers. A feeble old man with a walking cane and a bag of groceries, on the other hand, might fit in almost anywhere. Dress to blend inconspicuously with your surroundings.
You might start with a basic pair of dark coveralls. Except in certain circumstances, camouflage is out. Black, dark brown or olive green clothes do not stand out and will probably appear at first glance to be a mechanic or delivery driver's uniform. The many large pockets provided will enable you to easily conceal rubber gloves, extra clips and other tools. The bulkiness will even allow for concealment of your weapon. And underneath, you can wear your street clothes for a quick change after the job is completed.
Recon of night work, where you do not intend to have your movements detected, call for camouflage or night suits. Be sure to fit this apparel to terrain and weather conditions. You wouldn't dress in black like a ninja to move about on a moonlit night or on a snowy white background. Neither would you wear light clothes to move about in dark alleys or against dark backgrounds. and if you are the only one running around in camouflage garb, you are more than likely to draw attention to yourself.
Following is a template for lock picks which will allow you to make a completely adequate set of picks out of ordinary hacksaw blades ground to shape on your workshop grinder:
Notice that one has slightly less angle at the tip. These two are the most commonly used.
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Notice the small site-down at the tip to allow for different sized key slots. A large, thick hair pin makes a good torsion bar.
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1. Insert the pick all the way into the lock, facing up.
2. Place the torsion bar in the bottom of the lock, facing down. Exert a slight amount of pressure on the torsion bar in the direction the knob turns to open the door. (on the doors, if the knob is on the right, it turns to the right. If one the left, it turns to the left.)
3. Use only one finger to exert pressure on the torsion bar while you jiggle pick up and down (no more than an eighth of an inch at the most) and work the pick all the way back out of the lock. If you exert too much pressure or try to force the lock, you may freeze it or break the pick. The tumblers inside the lock must be bounced into place.
4. Each time you remove the pick, you must release the pressure on the torsion bar and begin again.
In a short time you should become an expert at opening common door locks. Padlocks will hardly take any time at all to master. Deadbolts may take a little longer, but they are well worth the time and effort.
You can also use ordinary channel lock pliers to open most deadbolts. By twisting the lock and breaking the retaining bolts, you can use a knife point or pick to turn the bolt and gain entry.
Auto part stores also carry a handy little gadget called the Slim Jim that will enable you to get into almost any locked automobile in a manner of seconds. These are inexpensive and come with an instruction booklet depicting the methods for entering different makes and models.
The walkie-talkie, or two way radio, if it is a really good one, can be an indispensable tool when working with a partner. A good set is expensive, but has the range and ability for communicating through walls and over long distances -- up to two miles at least. It will also have a volume control as well as a code "beeping" device.
The vast array of available surveillance equipment and the rapid advances in technology in this field are mind boggling. The old microphones and reel-to-reel tape recorders that had to be stored nearby are a thing of the past. Now you can plant a bug less than the size of a quarter and sit in you car two miles away while you listen to the action on your car radio. If you are interested in these James Bond tactics, start collecting catalogs and prices now for future use.
One fellow gave a girl who lived with his mark a pretty barrette he found on the floor in a bar. The girl took the barrette home and left it on the dresser. Unfortunately for the mark, who eventually met his demise, the "found" barrette concealed a micro-transmitter. The hit man was able to collect enough information on their activities to plan a successful hit.
Bugs offer some fascinating alternatives to the old standby method of sit-and-watch. Check into them as well as the electronic bug detectors, which are now easily accessible. Think of the kinds of information you could assemble with just a micro-bug and a voice-activated micro-cassette recorder, and think how hard it would be for someone without proper detection equipment to discover.
Of course, no surveillance equipment would be complete with a good pair of binoculars. The best have a rating of 10 x 50 or higher for night vision, range and clarity.
Even a small micro-cassette recorder can come in handy while you are doing your prejob research and will take the place of pen, paper, and fumbling in the dark.
An air gun (one with pump, not spring, action), will come in handy on a number of occasions. You can use pellets to knock out lights or to create diversions. Or, you can make your own darts to carry a fast-acting poison to the mark or to his noisy watchdog.
From time to time you may need a method for climbing to or from high places. Twenty feet of knotted rope (measure after knots are tied) can come in handy for climbing to second floor balconies or coming down from a roof. Tie one end in a high branch of a large tree and practice until you can scale it easily.
Of course, the tools you use will vary from job to job. Some you will find yourself using again and again, while other suggested items will never be called for. Stock your inventory according to personal preference and need.
As you move up the ladder of professionalism and become accustomed to success, you may want to increase you inventory with several toys that will make James Bond envious. Among these may be cleverly designed attaché cases with concealed weapons activated by a button on the handle, fancy cameras, Star-Light scopes, Laser bugging equipment, electronic gadgets and the like.
Of course, your selection of weapons will grow and you may even have a secret vault in your home to conceal your collection of fully automatic toys like the Mac-11, M-16, tranquilizer guns, hand grenades and sophisticated exploding devices.
You will be able to afford the best in false identifications and obtain real uniforms and badges for various state and federal law enforcement agencies to aid in the performance of your contracts.
Throwaway cars and boats may even become common and you even own your very own plane, through legal methods explained later.
Money talks, and for every need you have, there is a man out there who is willing to fill it for you for a price. That's how you got started, remember? But money buys a lot more than material things. Money can buy smart attorneys, judges, alibis, and even time, if necessary. The possibilities are endless for the smart man who plans his moves carefully, is mentally and physically prepared and doesn't leave any trails as he performs his highly paid services.
IN THE COURSE OF PUTTING this book together, while disguising myself as a writer I chanced to interview a former law enforcement officer with twenty seven years experience for his opinion of how a perfect hit would go down. It was the opinion of this officer of the peace that the perfect hit would start with the purchase of a nondescript automobile, then driving, with tools in tow, to the jobsite.
Once there, he would follow the mark until a routine was established and probably waste the man in a public place with a blast from a double barreled sawed-off shotgun. Then he would throw the gun down and drive away while the bystanders were in a state of mass hysteria.
Even if he got caught with the shotgun in his hands, he argued, they would not be able to prove that the blast from that shotgun was the murder weapon since shotguns are untraceable. Obviously he has not kept in touch with new investigative procedures and techniques, for it is now known that each shotgun makes an individual and distinct spread pattern and the gun most certainly can be matched as the murder weapon.
"Why not hit the mark in his own home?" I inquired innocently.
"Oh, I'd never hit a guy in his own house," he answered, "Too many witnesses .. you know, family ... nosy neighbors and the like."
What about a small caliber handgun with an attached silencer?" I asked.
"Well," he answered, "You would have to carry the handgun concealed, and that's against the law. But the shotgun, if it were a legal sized shotgun, you could carry that right in the window of your pickup truck on your gun rack. And I'd never touch a silencer. Boy! They'd burn you if you got caught with a thing like that!"
I concluded the interview pretending to be in awe of his wisdom, while inside I was amazed by the ignorance behind his reasoning. Why on earth, I thought, would a man worry about breaking gun restrictions when he was en route to commit a murder.?
Yet, I felt comforted by his viewpoint. For his opinion probably represents the way a goodly portion of law enforcement officers think.
There have been many times when an amateur has just walked up to his mark on the street, blown him away in the midst of a crowd, ditched the gun in a garbage can and gotten away with it. But the whole procedure lacks professionalism and the risks are much too high.
The professional is on call to kill. He not only provides the employer with his gun, but with his expert knowledge, discretion and ability to carry the assignment off without needlessly endangering anyone but the mark.
The silencer is one of the most important tools a professional will ever have. The silenced weapon, when fired, will not draw attention. Lack of attention means more time. Time means getting the job done right. The panic, the pressure, is absent. There are many books available on the subject of making your own silencers. Most of the methods used require machine shop tools and the ability to use them with precision accuracy. This fact alone has put a lot of would-be professionals out of the game, or at least back into the ranks of amateurs.
On the following pages, you will learn how to make, without the need of special engineering ability or expensive machine shop tools, a silencer of the highest quality and effectiveness. The finished product attached to your 22 will be no louder than the noise made by a pellet gun. Because it is so inexpensive (mine cost less than 20 dollars to make), you can easily dispose of it after job use without any great loss. Future silencers will cost even less to make, since many of the materials will not be used up in the first application.
Your first silencer will require possibly two days total to assemble (including drying time) as you carefully follow the directions step by step. After you make a couple, it will become so easy, so routine, that you can whip one up in just a few hours.
When it's done, no need to take it out in the woods to try it out. Just stack some magazines or newspapers in a box and shoot to your hearts content in the garage. Believe me, it's that good.
Just remember, as I mentioned before, to resight your gun after the silencer is in place. And when you do go out in the woods, experiment to test how your range is affected. You will lose some distance, and this must be taken into consideration later, when planning a hit.
DISPOSABLE SILENCER DIRECTIONS
The directions and photographs that follow show in explicit detail how to construct a silencer for a Ruger 10/22 rifle. The same directions can be followed successfully to construct a silencer for any weapon, with only the size of the drill rod used for alignment changed to fit inside the dimension of the barrel.
The following items should be assembled before you begin:
Cut a 10-inch section from the brake line. See figure 1. Drill a set of 1/8 inch holes down the length of the tube going in one side and out the other. The holes go all the way through. Notice in the photograph that the holes begin 1-1/2 inches from the end of the tube that fill on the gun.
Next, take a 3/16 inch drill bit and enlarge the holes. See figure 2.
Using masking tape and keeping the tape as free of wrinkles as possible, mask off about six inches of the gun barrel and the end of the barrel. Use only masking tape. Duct tape is too thick and would make for an improper fit. See figure 3.
Then place the drill rod down the barrel to keep the brake tube aligned. This perfect alignment is extremely important.
If the drill rod you purchase is a little too large, as sometimes happens, put it in a drill and using a file and sandpaper (80 grit), turn down the first six inches until it will fit inside the gun barrel. I operate the drill from the floor with my foot, letting the rod spin between my knees as I reduce the size. Check regularly until you achieve a perfect fit. If you grind the rod too small, cut it off and start over. Fit must be tight with no play. See figure 4.
Wrap glass mat around the gun and tube three times. Secure it with string or rubber bands every half inch to keep it tight and in place. The glass should be wrapped about two inches behind the sight and up to the first hold on the tube. See figure 5.
Now mix the resin. About a shot glassful will do. Mix it two or three times hotter than the package directions.
Brace the gun in an upright position and dab the resin into the glass cloth with a stubby brush. Keep dabbling until the cloth is no longer white but has become transparent from absorption of the resin. See figure 6.
As soon as the glass is tacky to touch without sticking (times differs according to weather conditions and humidity), it is time to remove the piece from the barrel. Move fast!
First, take a razor blade and cut a notch behind the sight so the piece can be removed. Then push on the glass to slide it off. Do not pull on the tube. See figure 7.
After removing the gun barrel, peel out the tape and allow it to finish hardening. You must work quickly. If you let the glass harden too much on the gun, you will have to cut it off and begin again.
Use a grinder and 80 grit sandpaper to smooth the hardening rough surface.
Next, grind the sides down about halfway, but do not grind past the point where the front of the sight makes contact. See figure 8. Cut it down until the barrel fits easily and snugly.
Stand the glassed inner tube upright in a vise.
Mix a small amount of resin and use an eyedropper to fill in any interior holes or air bubbles until the solid fiberglass is level with the steel tube end. This will give the junction of the steel inner tube and glass coupling added strength. See figure 9.
Clean the eyedropper with acetone.
Cut the PVC tube to desired length. This one is eight inches. See figure 10.
Drill a large hole in the center of one cap, making it large enough to fit on the glass end to the point where the sight makes contact.
Then drill small holes all around the cap at the bottom, as shown, with a 3/16 bit. See figure 11.
Wrap masking tape around the cap to cover the holes. See figure 12.
Stand the cap with the inside tube inserted into a vise. Get the cap level and straight with the tube.
Cut a lot of 1/2 inch square pieces of fiberglass matting and fill the cap with it up past the level of the small holes.
Mix resin and pour it over the cut glass to a point about 1/4 inch above the holes and allow it to dry before removing the cap from the vise. Don't worry about any resin that leaks out around the base hole. Resin fills the small holes, making the tube strong enough to take the blast when you fire the gun.
When the inside is hardened, turn the assembly over and add glass around the backside of the cap for added strength as shown. Avoid getting resin in the opening where the barrel fits. See figure 13.
Place the finished cap and inner tube on one end of the PVC tubing that has already been cut to size. Center the inner tube as you look in the open end of the PVC.
Now drill a 1/8 inch hole in three place around the tube about 1/4 inch from the lip of the cap.
Take the inner tube out and enlarge the holes in the cap to 3/16 inch. See figure 14.
Replace the inner tube and tighten it down with three small wood screws.
Trim the inside tube down until it extends about 1/2 inch beyond the outside PVC tube.
Sharpen one end of the drill rod to a point and use as a punch. Stand the tube up with the solid cap down. Then drop the drill rod down the inner tube to get a true center mark. See figure 15.
Find a drill bit a little larger than the outside diameter of the inner tube. Remove the cap and drill the hole.
Replace the cap on the open end of the PVC and drill three 1/8 inch holes around the cap as before for wood screw.
Grind off any inner tube that sticks out. make it flush with the face of the cap. See figure 16.
Unfold the sections of steel wool and roll between palms to make strands as shown.
Feed the strands into the silencer tube in a circular motion, packing the wool tight with a stick. Do this until the tube is completely full. See figure 17.
Replace the end cap with the three screws. See figure 18.
Paint the finished silencer black and attach it to your weapons. You may want to ensure proper alignment by wrapping tape or placing a hose clamp around the extension behind the sight. See figure 19.
Your finished product is whisper-quiet, the way a silencer is supposed to be! It is inexpensive, effective and reusable for over four hundred rounds before you will need to repack.
This little tool is so easy to make that you will feel no pain when you crush it to bits and throw it away.
IT WOULD TAKE VOLUMES and volumes to list the many ways men have devised to exterminate one another, and I am sure you have already started to accumulate quite an extensive list of your own personal favorites.
Some very good books are available on this subject and even television, movies and fictional stories are out to teach you a new trick or two! but be careful. Some of the methods depicted are only theories of an imaginative writer and do not work in reality. so be sure that any method you choose is a proven effective one.
In Chapter 2, much detail was given concerning the effective use of the pistol and the rifle in making a kill. Although several shots fired in succession offer a quick and relatively humane death to the victim, there are instances when other methods of extermination are called for. The employer may want you to gather certain information from the mark before you do away with him. At other times, the assignment may call for torture or disfigurement as a "lesson" for the survivors. Your assignment could call for suicide or accidental death may be the order. It may, or may not, be important that the body disappear. There are ways to put off discovery of the body and ways to make it disappear completely.
Books that deal with these subjects are available for your information, but the following techniques are personal favorites.
I will be rare to get a request for someone to be taken out with a bigger boom than that created by your 22. If you get such a request and don't know how to handle explosives properly, you'd be better off passing up the job.
Here, again, much data is available on making homemade explosives, but these directions should be pretested before actual use. Quite of the few directions I have found product nothing but an unsatisfactory fizzle.
Also, beware of the ability of the authorities to trace explosives. Sources for these supplies are limited, so make sure the components you have are untraceable.
The only time I can think of that explosives might be in order is when several marks will be together in one place at one time, and you might be able to get them all with one shot. Notice that I stress the word might. Shrapnel doesn't always kill. So in the aftermath, it will be your responsibility to enter the area and make sure that the desired result was accomplished. Survivors are not good for business. And since explosives tend to attract immediate attention, you will have to work fast and take extreme added risk.
Personally, I prefer discreet one-one-one contact and tend to avoid anything that draws attention. If explosives are the only alternative I military C-4 plastics or a military issue hand grenade (baseballs; the pineapple kind is obsolete). A hand grenade, properly placed, can give the desired results in a one-on-one situation. For instance, a grenade placed beneath the mark's car directly under the driver's seat with a wire leading from the pin to the drive shaft will work wonderfully. Just make sue the mark is the only one who drives the car or you may blow up some innocent victim. Messy mistakes of this type are not only a professional embarrassment to you and your employer but they tend to alert the mark of your intentions and bring the authorities out in full force.
I once witnessed the destruction of a small stone house by means of a simple fertilizer bomb. The readily available components of it make it untraceable and it worked so well that all that was left was part of the foundation and a large, gaping hole where the bomb had been.
To make a fertilizer bomb, purchase a fifty pound bag of fertilizer from your garden center. Get the kind with the highest nitrate content you can find. Next, buy one pound of black powder from a gun shop that sells reload supplies. Then, get 10-20 feet of waterproof fuse from a hobby shop that sells model rockets.
Place the gunpowder inside a jar which comes with a screw-on lid. Drill a hole in the lid and slip one end of the fuse through tying a knot in the fuse to keep it from slipping out of the jar. Screw the lid on the powder filled jar.
Under the bag of fertilizer place the powder filled jar cap side down. Extend the fuse and light or use a cigarette as a delayed igniter. RUN LIKE HELL~
Dynamite is nice and can be picked up from many building sites or roads under construction. But during storage the sticks have to be turned over regularly to prevent settling of the nitro. And the blasting caps necessary to make it go off are so tricky that just by walking across the carpet enough static electricity could be created to blow you away.
As I said in the beginning, unless you know what you are doing, stay away from requests for this kind of extermination, or the life you take may be your own.
Arson is a good method for covering a kill or creating an "accident." When properly set, the fire will appear to have started from natural causes and arson will not be suspected.
Fire investigation has become a science in recent years, and authorities and professional fire fighters can learn a great deal about the fire and its origin by a study of the scene.
Before you try to fake a fire, know how to do it properly. For instance, lots of the new carpeting on the market is now fire retardant, as there are many other sympathetic materials. So rather than start a fire in the middle of the room, start it under an electrical appliance or from a stove burner that has "carelessly" been left on, or some other likely spot.
Don't ever use gasoline or other traceable materials to start your fire. Woodgrain alcohol is you best starter because it burns away all traces.
One good fire in an area that will create a lot of smoke from burning materials is preferred. Fire investigators can trace the origin of the fire, and two flames started simultaneously will immediately arouse suspicion.
It is not the flame that kills most victims of a fire, but the inhalation of smoke. A fire victim will have smoke present in his lungs. Therefore, if this is your choice of extermination, your mark should be unconscious, but breathing, when the fire is set. Make sure that no scratches or bruises point to foul play. And remove the batteries from all smoke detectors with gloved hands before you set the fire.
Never hang around to watch the fire you set. Police have been known to photograph the crowd; that's how a lot of pyromaniacs get caught. Don't let your curiosity get the better of you!
BARE HAND KILLS, KNIVES, AND SILENT WEAPONS
All of these are primarily self defense methods or tools. Who wants to take a chance with his bare hands or a knife in a one-on-one confrontation when a gun is so much quicker, cleaner and more effective and gives you so much more leverage? A mark may risk a chance at defending himself against your personal onslaught, but that cold steel with the silencer attached shows right away that you mean business and gets instant respect.
However, skillful knowledge and use of these abilities is desirable and recommend. There may come a time when you need a silent method for eliminating a mark in a crowded area, or a way to quiet a bodyguard as noiselessly as possible in order to get the mark.
As in all kill methods, be sure of your proficiency before your life depend son it. Stay in top physical condition, practice regularly until the moves become automatic and study pressure points so you will know where to strike and how much force to use for desired results.
an ice pick hidden against your arm as you casually stroll past an unsuspecting victim in a crowded place can e used to strike him a powerful kidney blow without interrupting the natural swing of your arms as you pass.
Movies and fictitious stories like to show the cutting of the victim's throat as a slice from ear to ear. However, this is not the best, or preferred, method.
Using your six-inch, serrated blade knife, stab deeply into the side of the victim's neck and push the knife forward in a forceful movement. This method will half decapitate the victim, cutting both his main arteries and wind pipe, ensuring immediate death.
As described earlier, the proper way to make a kill with the recommended knife is to twist the blade before withdrawing it from a vital area. The serrated edge will make an open, gaping wound that cannot be closed to stop the bleeding.
You combat instructor should be able to teach you a wide variety of skills with silent weapons, when to use them and where to strike. You will develop your own personal preferences and style.
There will hardly be a time when you will kill with your bare hands unless you use your ability for self-defense. A knife may be called for on occasion, and should be carried with you on all your assignments in case it is required. Silent weapons are specialty measures which require skill an talent for effective use.
In any case, the object is to get to the mark, complete your assignment, and get out, as cleanly and as quickly as possible without drawing any unnecessary attention.
Poisons are sweet, silent and effective, and some leave no traces. Poison is one of the hit man's best friends.
If you know your mark's habits well enough, the desired result can be achieved while you are sitting miles away. If you make personal contact for their introduction, poisons will give prompt, guaranteed results.
Because there is so much government regulation, effective poisons are getting harder and harder to come by. The recent Extra Strength Tylenol scare didn't help matters. Yet, there are sources still available for your use.
At the local library, a very helpful assistant led me to a reference section, where I copied down the name and addresses of several large chemical suppliers (You don't want "industrial" chemicals: they are janitorial supplies.) I obtained phone numbers from information and called the numbers systematically until I found the one that carried the products I wanted. Under the guide of HM Research and Development, I ordered the minimum amounts required and sent along a money order for faster processing.
Later, I went so far as to have a company letterhead made and sent inquires on certain chemicals, minimum ordering requirements and costs to the suppliers on my list. The letter went something like this:
Dear Sirs:
Our firm is interested in obtaining small quantities of the
following chemicals for research purposes only. Please send a quote on minimum
purchase requirements, costs and delivery.
Sincerely,
Jow Blough Newspapers and magazines often feature articles on newly discovered toxic
substances and as warnings about misuse of everyday toxic chemicals.
Recently there has been quite a stink about dioxin, a chemical waste material
who's disposal the Environmental protection Agency has not handled
satisfactorily. it is claimed that two ounces of this pure waste in powder form,
if set off by a small blast into the air we breathe, could wipe pout the entire
population of a large city. Poison for thought, isn't it?
One of the luckiest sources for poisons that I ever stumbled across was an
air-head who worked in the laboratory at a local hospital. This fellow would
steal, smuggle out and deliver almost anything I could request in exchange for a
bag of dope.
You might often find such a source for yourself, but don't use him too often.
His chances of becoming careless in his efforts to satisfy his habit are great.
You don't need someone of this character telling anyone who he steals the stuff
for.
A chance visit to the local garden supply turned up a wealth of unexpected
information. The first surprise was a booklet covering the poisonous plants,
insects and reptiles of my state. The book went into amazing detail about the
potency of each poison, the lethal amount, and the resulting effects. I spent
days scouting the woods and garden centers, picking up plants to break down for
my stash. I smashed seeds, dried leaves and ground berries until the wee hours
of morning, placing each small bottle with a tight cap and label.
Carolina or yellow jessamine, for instance, is in the same plant family that
produces strychnine and curare. All parts are toxic. Aside from a variety of
side effects, death is brought about due to stoppage of breathing.
The flowering oleander is another good one. All parts are very poisonous.
Final effect is unconsciousness, respiratory paralysis and death. People have
been poisoned by using the branches of this plant to skewer meat or stir food.
Even the smoke of burning oleander is poisonous.
Pokeweed, or inkberry, is entirely poisonous, but especially the root. About
two hours after eating, vomiting and purging begins. Death is said to be caused
by respiratory failure.
One thoroughly chewed castor bean seed will cause death within two weeks from
uremia, with symptoms beginning up to three days after ingestion.
The fruit pulp of the chinaberry tree is especially poisonous. Toxic
alkaloids attack the nervous system and cause death by paralysis.
The list goes on and on ...
At the same garden center, I chanced to survey the wide assortment of
chemicals available for the do-it-yourselfer. my favorite (and one that is
highly recommended by several other connoisseurs) is nicotine. A product called
black leaf 40 contains 40 percent nicotine. Nicotine is on the restricted drug
list and cannot be legally purchased in pure form. Boil this liquid until all
the water evaporates and you will be left with a thick, lethal syrup. I prefer
injection into the bloodstream via dart or poison-filled bullet. Placing it
directly on the skin has never gotten any results.
If you live in a coastal area, you might have read recent newspaper warnings
against eating the common blowfish (also known as puffer). It seems that the
bladder of this saltwater fish contains tetrodotoxin, a poison which is 150
thousand times more potent than curare. If the bladder is accidentally broken
during cleaning and the meat contaminated by its contents, eating the fish will
bring about blocked nerves, causing all muscles to stop working. The victim
stops breathing and dies within minutes. There is no known antidote, and the
victims of such poisonings are often diagnosed as having died from food
poisoning.
If you don't live in a coastal area where you can easily obtain one of these
wonderful sources of deadly poison, why not ask you local pet shop owner to
order one especially for your salt water aquarium.
Of course, all your poisons should be tested prior to actual use. Because
their metabolisms most resemble that of man, try small amounts of the poisons
you collect on mice and rats. Dogs and cats can withstand much greater dosages
than humans and are not a good choice for valid testing. After you have tested
your poisons for effectiveness and established your favorites you are ready to
go to work.
The Mafia is said to have coated assassins' bullets with garlic juice,
supposedly fatal if it enters the bloodstream, though safe to ingest. If this is
true, then how much more effective will it be to fill your hollow point bullets
with the liquid poison of your choice to ensure a job well done?
Dip your knife in the lethal drug. Star tips, darts and ice picks become
doubly effective when used in combination with poison. Soak the mark's tea bags
in the potent additive. Empty his medication and refill all capsules with
milk-sugar except for one loaded dose. Let your imagination soar!
The Poor Man's James Bond sold by Paladin Press, give recipes for potassium
cyanide and sodium cyanide, both lethal granules. Effects of these poisons were
tested for us by a few previous users of Extra Strength Tylenol.
Poisons offer a quiet alternative to things that go boom in the night and are
well worth the effort it takes to accumulate and test them.
Rumor has it that Jake T was causing friction for some boys who brought in
illegal substances on the West Coast of Florida. Old Jake wanted a big piece of
the action and started throwing his weight around. Something had to be done
before Jake upset the apple cart.
A professional was brought in.
"I don't care how you do it," said the big boss, "But it has to look natural.
We don't want the heat on our backs because some asshole with an overgrown ego
doesn't know how to mind his own business."
The professional followed old Jake discreetly for a few days, checking for
clues, habits and behaviors that would help hymn make a decision on how to
accomplish the extermination.
He had watched Jake travel about town in his four-by-four pickup with the
shotguns hanging in the rear window on the gun rack. He had picked up Jake's
rather loose routine. The only thing he knew for sure was that wherever Jake
went, he was always chewing on the end of a toothpick.
With that clue, he carefully soaked a toothpick in the contents of the
bladder of a blowfish he picked up at the beach. After it dried, he placed the
toothpick in a conspicuous place on the dash of Jake's truck, within reach of
the steering wheel, and removed the other toothpicks that were lying about.
About two days later, as Jake was getting out of his truck, he dropped dead.
Cause of death was determined to be food poisoning.
It takes a lot of knowledge and common sense to efficiently fulfill a request
for an apparent accidental death or suicide. An autopsy and police investigation
can reveal a great deal about the accident and/or how the victim really met his
death.
For instance, a body found lying at the bottom of a flight of stairs will
have bruises, broken bones, and marks. Unless you know how to fake these results
or bring about certain death from a real fall, you had better not get involved.
If the employer is requesting accidental death to collect double indemnity on
an insurance policy, have him read the fine print again. many times these
policies also pay double for violent deaths, so a foiled robbery or a burglary
may be more in line with your abilities.
Faked suicides are very tricky too. A left-handed man will not shoot himself
with his right hand. A man who jumps off a building to his death will not hit
the pavement twenty feet from that building. Distance alone will indicate
whether he jumped or was thrown. A person with a phobia for heights would choose
a suicide method other than jumping from a building., And many a hanging has
been discovered to be a result of foul play because the knot was tied in the
wrong direction, or because there was no evidence of a ladder or other way for
the victim to get his head into the noose.
Contrary to popular belief, most suicides do not leave notes. Usually these
people are so depressed that all they want is out. So if your mark is not
visibly depressed and all seems to be going right with him in the world,
immediate suspicion may result from his death.
If you are qualified to fulfill a suicide or accidental death request, you
should charge more for the hit based on your superior knowledge and abilities.
MAKING A RELUCTANT VICTIM TALK
At times it will be an imperative part of your job assignment hat you extract
certain information from the mark before he meets his fate. Most people will
tell you anything you want to know, even when they are sure they are about to
die, just to buy a few extra seconds or minutes of life. But there are a
stubborn few who will take their secrets to their graves rather than break, even
in the face of death. Sometimes you can pretend to bargain with these obstinate
martyrs, even though you fully intend to carry out your contract once you
receive the desired information.
I had the opportunity to accompany a master of persuasion on an assignment a
few years ago. Although small in stature, this full-blooded Indian was ruthless
in obtaining the information he came for. The mark was a much larger man,
outweighing the Indian by more than eighty pounds. With my help, we subdued the
giant, stripped him to the waist and tied him into a wooden arm chair.
"Talk," ordered the Indian.
Silence.
The Indian pulled an ice pick from his pocket.
The giant looked from the point of the pike to the Indian and then to me, as
if begging for my intervention. I shrugged my shoulders in a helpless gesture.
The Indian circled the giant slowly. Suddenly he stopped and inserted the tip
of the pick into the giant's upper arm about a quarter of an inch. When he
withdrew his pick, there was a sickening little popping sound as blood spurted
from the wound for a second, then stopped.
"Talk," repeated the Indian.
More silence.
Several stabs later, the giant was quivering like a jellyfish, his body like
a pincushion, while the Indian was getting more and more into his work.
Suddenly he grew tired of the ice pick game. With a malicious grin, he pulled
a pair of pliers from his other hip pocket and gave me a sly wink. Pointedly,
methodically, he began with the giant's little finger on his left hand and
crunched each knuckle slowly with the pliers. It seemed to no effort at all on
his part as the soft bone gave way under the force of the simple tool. he ha
only gotten to the third finger when the giant began to cry like a baby and
spill his guts. The Indian listened, asked a few questions, then unstrapped the
trembling giant and set him free. The big man raced for the door and into the
night.
I'm not sure, but I think the Indian was a bit disappointed that it all ended
so quickly. But the stain on the front of his pants showed that he had enjoyed
himself tremendously!
There is no end to the various ways of torturing a mark until he would tell
you what you want to know, and die just to get over it. Sometimes all it takes
is putting a knife to his throat. not from behind with the blade across the
throat the way they do in the movies, but from the front where the tip of the
blade creasing the soft hollow of the throat, where the victim can see the
gleaming steel and realizes what damage it would do if it fully penetrated.
Most people would much prefer the compassionate quick release of a bullet to
the slow torturous death of being cut and watching their own lifeblood seep from
their body. And even facing death, they tend to want to leave the body behind to
be whole and dignified instead of a mutilated, unrecognizable corpse.
You may threaten, bargain, torture or mutilate to get the information you
want, and you must be prepared to use whatever method works.
HOW TO GET RID OF THE CORPUS DELICTI
If disposing of the body becomes part of your job assignment, you should
charge a hefty additional sum. The risks you take in carrying out the request
and the extra time you spend with the corpse are certainly deserving of higher
compensation. There are many options, and the one you choose will depend on the
circumstances of your particular job and location.
If you have a really strong stomach, you can always cut the body into
sections and pack it into an ice chest for transportation and disposal at
various spots across the countryside.
Or, you can simply cut off the head after burying the body. Take the head
into some deserted location, place a stick of dynamite into the mouth, and blow
the telltale dentition to smithereens! After this, authorities can't use the
victims' dental records to identify his remains. As the body decomposes,
fingerprints will disappear and no real evidence will be left from which to make
positive identification. You can even clip off the fingertips and bury them
separately.
Of course, there are many easier and less gruesome methods for disposing of
the corpse. We all know the story of how the mob buries the body in the still of
the night in some footer for a multistory building where cement is to be poured
the next day.
Or the one about tying cement blocks to the body and dumping it into the
river. But there's a lot more to it than that. If you choose to sink the corpse,
you must first make several deep stabs into the body's lungs (from just under
the rib cage) and belly. This is necessary because gases released during
decomposition will bloat these organs, causing the body to rise to the surface
of the water.
The corpse should be weighted with the standard concrete blocks, but it must
be wrapped from head to toe with heavy chain as well, to keep the body from
departing and floating in chunks to the surface. After the fishes and natural
elements have done their works, the chain will drag the bones into the muddy
sentiment.
If you bury the body, again deep stab wounds should be made to allow gases to
escape. A bloating corpse will push the earth up as it swells. Pour in lime to
prevent the horrible odor of decomposition, and lye to make that decomposition
more rapid.
Quicksand, the open sea, caves in isolated areas and abandoned wells are all
potential places to get rid of the body.
Preplan your actions. Know what you're going to do with the corpse before you
pull that trigger. be flexible enough to make sudden changes in your plan should
some unexpected predicament arise.
DEALING WITH MAN'S BEST FRIEND
You've probably heard the saying, "There are many ways to kill a rabbit." A
greater problem for the hit man is finding a way to silence a barking dog. An
overzealous dog in the neighborhood, and more particularly, the mark's own
canine, presents a problem that must be dealt with. If you can get to the dog
without too much risk to yourself, you can feed it ground glass in raw hamburger
a few days before the hit; the animal will die a slow and miserable death.
Unfortunately, the ultimate demise of his best friend and protector may put the
mark on guard for your impending arrival.
As I stated before, dogs can take much larger amounts of poison than a man's
fragile system can handle. You will have to experiment to come up with the best
available poison and the proper dosage, which may mean a definite decrease in
the canine population of your own neighborhood.
Poison placed inside a capsule and buried in a ball of meat is one method to
use. However, this means waiting whatever time it takes for the poison to get
into the dog's system to do its work. I have found that if the dog gets a taste
of the poison, he may spit the meat out or that some poisons will cause him to
throw up his stomach contents in a very short time. And some pets are so finicky
that they will eat carefully around any pill or capsule, leaving it as evidence
in the bottom of the dog dish.
Shooting a dog will create a loud and continuous string of yelps and howls
that may alert the countryside, unless you are an expert marksman and can shoot
to kill with one shot. The best spot to go for is right behind and under the ear
where the brain is located. Even then, be prepared for that one long yelp before
death occurs. In fact, almost anything you do to a dog will bring out that
resounding, attention drawing yelp.
A house dog and family pet will normally keep a distance between you and him
while he barks his head off to alert his family that danger is present. An
attack dog, on the other hand, should charge ferociously. The only advantage of
coming face to face with an attack dog is that once he sinks his teeth into
something, the barking will stop. If you know an attack dog is on the scene,
bring material to wrap your arm to prevent his breaking the skin when he makes
his attack. As he charges, offer the wrapped arm and let him sink his teeth into
the material. Once he has a good, tight hold, place your free forearm on the
back of his neck as a brace. Then jerk the arm he is biting up and back quickly
to break his neck. Or, you can just as easily cut his throat while you have him
in that position.
a hypodermic needle filled with poison or a poison tipped dart shot through a
blow gun seems to give the best results.
THE ABSOLUTELY MOST ESSENTIAL part of any successful operation is accurate
information. Even with the finest weapon and the most sophisticated equipment
available, without accurate information you'll be all dressed up with nowhere to
go. Or, worse yet, you may crash the wrong party.
Only a fool will rush right into a job without doing his homework. You have
to know your target, whether it's a job for hire or a personal endeavor. Every
scrap of up-to-date information you can gather inconspicuously should be
assembled and studied to guarantee the success of you operation. Information
requirements will vary, depending on the type and difficulty of the job. Even
the most minute, seemingly unimportant detail can be just the very item you
need. Everything your employer knows, you should know.
The best way to gather the necessary facts to plan your job is to use an
information sheet as a guideline so nothing will be left out. You can have your
employer fill it out himself, but you will get better information (once you have
a bond of mutual trust and price has been agreed upon) if you ask the questions
and fill it our as he supplies the information.
Until you actually do the job, the information sheet is just harmless data.
However, if it falls into the wrong hands and you go ahead with the job, it
could very well prove conspiracy. So keep it in a safe place away from prying
eyes and nosy snoopers. After you do the job, the information sheet, along with
any photos, maps, diagrams, house keys and other paraphernalia will become
incriminating evidence linking you to the crime. So memorize and get rid of all
your information before you leave to do the job.
The best way to rid yourself of this evidence is to burn it all, crumble the
cooled residue, and scatter it in the wind. If you burn it indoors, flush it
down the toilet. But make sure you are not near any smoke detectors or you may
have company at the most inopportune time. Just see that all this information is
done away with in some manner that will inhibit its reconstruction.
On the following pages is a sample information sheet to show the depth of the
information required to plan an efficient, successful job. Each job will be
different, so the categories will carry in their importance. For instance, if a
man lives alone, it may become important to know is he has a dog who will bark,
warning the owner of your impending intrusion or alerting the neighborhood that
something is amiss. If a man lives with several other people, however, it may
become important to know his regular routine and where he hands out when he is
not at work or at home.
Your thinking, pattern and technique should be flexible and imaginative. You
may want to develop your own information-gathering system based on your personal
needs and preferences.
Using this information complete on the sample form;, we come to the following
conclusions:
Items 1,2,3,5 and 24 supply physical information to enable
positive identification of the mark. Edward Nathan Jones (AKA Eddie or Fat Boy)
can be mentally pictures as a middle-aged, overweight man who is more than
likely too out of shape to make any positive effort to defend himself against
our onslaught. The photograph supplied will help greatly in making a positive
identification. However, if the photo were not available, the indicated mole,
scar and habitual cigar would be of great benefit, along with the detailed
physical description.
Items 9 through 20 and 23 give clues to his emotional makeup.
Our mark is basically a loner. He lives alone, has few friends or outside
interests, preferring to remain within the confines of his apartment watching TV
during his free time. He is a heavy drinker, although he does not abuse any type
of drug. The that he is a homosexual will preclude the sudden appearance of a
girlfriend. It was stated in item 23 that he is afraid of sexual contact of any
kind since his brush with the law eight years ago. He may be jut a bit paranoid,
since he does keep a loaded weapon close at hand in the apartment. His
previous fighting ability will more than likely pose no threat, since his excess
weight will slow him down considerably and make him short-winded.
Items 4, 6, 7, 9, 10, 15, 16, 21, 22, 25,and 26 indicate again that
his lifestyle precludes heavy traffic flow at the place where he lives.
Although his job is an unimportant one and he drives to and from work alone, a
study of the drawings in items 25 and 26 as well as the photos provided make the
apartment the initial choice for making the hit. The fact that he does not deal
of partake of illegal drugs and that he has no known sexual pastimes shows that
he will usually be found alone. The absence of burglar alarms or watchdogs would
indicate that he feels relatively safe within the confines of his apartment,
relying only on his own abilities and the loaded .38 for self-protection. Since
his own car is the only one usually present in the reserved parking area, a
quick check of the tag numbers should be enough to verify he is alone before you
make your move.
Items 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 and 20 offer potential methods
for making the hit.
Items 7 shows that he travels to and from work alone. A well-planned "traffic
accident" or "hit and run" might be in order. Or even a well-placed rifle shot
from a distance.
Item 11 might inspire some other type of accident in the home while the mark
is under the influence of the alcohol he is known to drink heavily. Or, some
really good poison, like cyanide, might be added to a bottle of wine he has
chilling in the refrigerator.
The negative responses to items 12, 13, 14 and 15 rule out "Accidental" death
due to drug overdose. IF he were a drug dealer, a fake rip-off might have been
used as the cover. Or perhaps he would have indulged in a bad bag of dope.
Since he has no dealings with women, item 16 is of little help. A woman would
be no use in keeping him occupied or luring him to the spot of your choice.
Item 20 might be a good alternative. If the mark has a bad heart, the mere
presence of a venomous snake in his bed or mailbox might bring about an
immediate heart attack.
Based on the overall picture, however, quick, silent entry and the muffled
blast of your .22 is the preferred route. The mark's physical attributes, his
emotional makeup and his lifestyle would indicate that it might be days before
any foul play is detected. The layout of the apartment complex and the position
of his apartment make it an ideal place to make a hit.
The decision has been made.
You may have noticed no personal information was requested from the employer
as to why he wanted the hit performed. neither was their any reference to
the employer, his name or location. It is not necessary for you to know why the
employer wants the mark taken out. If he tells you, fine. Otherwise, don't ask.
The employer is the judge. You are merely the executioner. Your job, once the
information is provided, is to study it to arrive at your own conclusions as to
how the job will be accomplished or whether additional information will have to
be obtained on your own.
Give the employer what he has paid for: the cleanest, most efficient and
professional services possible.
Surveillance can be a tedious and sometimes boring part of your job. It can
mean sitting in sweltering heat or freezing cold for hours on end while you try
not to look conspicuously out of place or draw attention to yourself. It means
hoping to gather enough information to put together some ideas of how the mark
thinks and acts so you can plan when and how to make your move.
When a complete packet of information is supplied by the employer at the time
you make the contract, surveillance can be cut down to a few routine checks of
places the mark is known to frequent and a couple of runs to establish positive
identification and correct addresses. If for some reason the employer cannot
provide the information required for advance planning, of course the fee he pays
and the expense money advanced will Ben higher to cover the extra risks and time
involved in assuring success of the job.
The key here, as always, is discretion. The use of disguises will enable you
to move about more freely. It is much to your advantage that no one recognize
your true identity or remember your actual description.
Surveillance techniques vary from job to job, depending on the area where the
mark lives and his personal and social habits. A man in a large city will be
much easier to watch or tag that a man in a small town or rural community. In
the city, you blend with the crowd and the crowd tends to mind its own business.
In a small area, an outsider will immediately inspire curiosity.
In some places, an unusual car parked on the roadside with a lone man seated
behind the wheel for an extended period of time may have terrified mothers
reporting its presence to the authorities. In other places, the same man could
sit in the same car all day and no one would give him a second glance.
The object is to check the conditions that exist on each particular job
before you formulate your plan. No matter how high your IQ, or how sharp your
weapon skills, if you lack basic common sense, you won't make it as a
professional in this field.
One fellow I know accepted a contract on an old country boy who has known to
be a big drug dealer. The mark was always on the go and never in one place at
the same time twice. And traffic at the mark's home was heavy, moving in and out
in a steady stream. The hit man followed the mark for several days and never
could establish the proper time or place to make a quiet hit. Finally, in
frustration, he got into his "good OLE country boy" outfit and knocked on the
mark's front door.
"Charlie 'round?" the hit man drawled as he spat a mouth of chew on the
ground.
"Naw, he ain't here," came the reply.
"Reckon I could catch him over at Pete's Bar4?" our friend inquired as he
bent to wipe the dust from his cowboy boots.
"Maybe later. He's out at the packing house right now," the young man
informed him. "I 'spect him to come back by here 'bout five or six o'clock."
"Thank you much, "our friend said, tipping his hat politely. "Just tell him
Clyde stopped by and I'll be seeing him later."
Back in his pickup truck, "Clyde" drove to the packing house he had surveyed
earlier. he knew it was a cover for transporting the drugs cross-country. The
decision now was whether to hit the mark here, or wait until later when he was
known to be visiting Pete's Bar.
Luckily there was a vacant parking spot to the left of the mark's car. he
turned the radio on and country music filled the air. Leaning his head back
against the seat, he pulled hi hat down to cover his eyes as though he were
napping. He was still in that position when the unsuspecting mark bent to unlock
his car forty-five minutes later.
The muffled sound of three shots to mark's head went unnoticed by the workers
in the packing house. The body was not discovered until several hours later when
the shift ended. By then, our friends was safely miles away. A difficult hit had
been successfully completed!
If you expect your surveillance to entail tedious hours of watching and
waiting, there are some things you can do to make yourself more comfortable
during that time. If it's cold out, dress warmly and carry a blanket to cover
yourself so you won't have to run the car to keep the heater going. Pack a
thermos of coffee or cold drinks and some food so you won't have to leave your
position when you get hungry. Bring a portable radio of cassette player so you
won't drain your car battery. Don't bring any reading material. You can't watch
and read, although a book or newspaper may be used as a prop. To fill the time,
you make check out books on cassette from the library and listen while you
watch.
Fill your tank before you start out. You never know when the mark may be on
the move, and many a tail has been lost because the tank ran out before the mark
did.
If you can afford them and are able to get inside to plant them, quarter
sized bugging devices are not available that will pick up conversation up to two
miles away on an unused radio frequency. The bugs can be planted in the house,
inside a frequently worn jacket, inside the car, and so on, giving you the
leverage of knowing what is going on from a perfectly legitimate spot within a
two-mile radius.
Binoculars, infra-red photography, Star-light scopes and bugging devices all
have their time and place. Unfortunately, nothing will ever replace the basic
sit and watch technique.
At night, perhaps circumstances will allow you to approach a little closer to
take a peek, or even go inside for a preliminary investigation. But don't ever
take risks gathering information that may not be necessary. Use common
sense!
Remember these important rules: If, for any reason, you can be placed at the
jobsite by witnesses, scratch that job for a later time or eliminate it
altogether.
If you are working out of town and get a traffic ticket, Call the job
off.
If you are doing surveillance and the cops come to check out your reason for
loitering in the area, call the job off.
If you run into a neighbor or repairman while you are snooping around the
mark's house, Call the job off.
Don't let any little detail link you to the victim.
YOU'VE READ ALL THE suggested reading material, you've honed your mind, body
and reflexes into a precision piece of professional machinery. You've assembled
the necessary tools and learned to use them efficiently. Your knowledge of
dealing death has increased to the point where you have a choice of methods.
Finally, you are confident and competent enough to accept employment. Where do
you start?
Placing advertisements in military and gun magazines may get results .. but
not the type you are after. The only response one fellow I know got was a
personal visit from the FBI -- which certainly is not conducive to the preferred
low profile. Even though he used a post office box, Big brother was able to
track him down with little effort. I do not recommend that you use this method
of solicitation, or that you respond to these ads.
Your best bet as a beginner is to of through a personal acquaintance whom you
trust and who is capable of paying for your services. This person will be aware
of your interest in weapons, your combat training and your unconventional
attitude. If he has a problem that needs solving, approach him gently to see how
serious he is about getting it taken care of. You may start out as a bodyguard,
courier, or messenger. DO whatever it takes to build your credibility. Based on
his opinion of your trustworthiness and abilities he may recommend to you
someone who can take advantage of the services you offer, even though he may not
have an immediate need. You will find that most of your jobs will come as a
direct result of personal recommendations from previously satisfied customers.
Use the reference materials suggested in Chapter 1. Your local newspaper will
offer a host of potential employment opportunities. Even a local gossip source.
How many times have you heard about someone who has been burned and is eager of
revenge?
In most cases, it would be very unwise and unhealthy to use the direct
approach on your first contract, especially if the prospective employer is
someone you don't know on a personal basis. Neither are telephone contacts or
written communications advisable.
Be suspicious of anyone who approaches you directly about any illegal
activity, unless, of course, that person has alre3ady established a bond of
trust. And remember that moving too fast can scare away a potential employer
with ready cash in his pocket.
If you've heard or read of someone capable of paying for your services and
with a definite need you can fill, but you don't personally know that person,
there are a few ways to make yourself available inconspicuously. If possible,
have a mutual acquaintance introduce you to him or her. The mutual acquaintance
should be someone who has already established a bond of trust with the
prospective employer so that his acceptance of you will be as good as a personal
recommendation. If no mutual acquaintance is available, study the potential
employer's habits and find a way to make yourself known to him. If he often
visits the same bar, for instance, you can make it a point to become a familiar
face in the crowd. Whenever possible, make it a point to introduce yourself,
gain his confidence (don't be pushy) and tactfully bring the subject of
conversation around to his problems and needs. Using common sense and food
intuition, you will know when the time is right to offer your discreet services,
and he will recognize your professionalism.
The most important thing to keep in mind is the financial capability of the
prospective employer. Your very first question in considering any employment
opportunity is: Can this man pay for my professional services?
If you are in this line of work because of the power you feel when you make a
kill or because you have a reckless, daring nature and get a thrill from
flirting with death, keep these personal reasons to yourself. As far as the
employer is concerned, you are only in it for the money.
When the subject is finally broached and the conversation gets down to the
nitty gritty, listen to the man as he talks. Check him out to see if you really
want to become involved in his personal affairs.
Is he full of hot air -- just a big talker -- or is her serious about
eliminating his problem?
Does he have the personal courage to carry out, or have you carry out, the
solution he is after?
Will he be overburdened by guilt and remorse afterwards?
Is he cautious in his conversation? Is he appraising you just as hard as you
are appraising him?
How tough is he? Will he break under pressure and point a finger at you?
Does he brag or tell stories "Out of school"? If he tells you about other
hits he's fronted or starts to name names, he talks too much. Forget him.
Does he come right down and ask you to make a hit for him before he has
determined your qualifications? If so, he may be asking people all over town.
you don't need that type of conversation following a prospective mark around.
During that initial conversation, you both should be mentally asking
these questions of each other. but no actual conversation about a contract or
the identity of the mark should be discussed unless unusual circumstances make
it proper.
Let a short period of time go by, if possible, before your second meeting.
Use this time to analyze your potential employer and decide whether you are
willing to risk offering your services.
Follow your gut feelings. If the man acts earnest and sincere, if he meets
all the questions you have posed in your mind while you talked, if he seems on
the up and up and yet you still have a gut feeling that something is just no
right, follow your intuition and back off.
The employer should have a healthy respect for your ability and be aware of
the consequences should he decide to cross you. At the same time, a man with
that kind of money to spend can pay someone to waste you/ If he's too
condescending, your intuition should tell you to pass.
At the second meeting, gently maneuver the conversation to the real purpose
of your visit. You may want to initially operate under the guise of knowing
someone else who may be willing to fulfill his needs. If he tactfully asks if
your services are available, you can just as tactfully request information about
what he wants done. He should be willing and able to provide you with all the
information you need to do a clean and efficient job, and a price should be
agreed on.
Prices vary according to risk involved, social or political prominence of the
victim, difficulty of the assignment, and other factors. A federal judge
recently brought a price of $250,000, for example. A county sheriff might bring
$75,000 to $100,000.
In some cases, your employer may expect to receive hefty benefits from double
indemnity life insurance clauses. If so, you should be notified in advance that
this is an "insurance job."
Is the intended victim close enough to the employer that his being the
beneficiary will arouse any suspicion? Is the policy an old one, or one he
recently purchased and wants to collect on? Is the amount to be collected way
out of proportion to the victim's lifestyle and means?
Consider these question before you accept the job and get your money up
front! Otherwise, you may be standing in the bread lines while you wait for
the money to come through. Or your employer may have long since become a prime
suspect in someone's investigation.
Depending on the benefits of the insurance policy, it is not uncommon to
collect one-fourth to one-half of the expected monies for your services.
The risk is all on your shoulders until the job is complete. Your contract
amount should be at least enough to hire the services of a good attorney if
anything should go wrong. It is not recommended that you take any contract that
pays less than $30,000, and that is working mighty cheap. To work for any amount
less would be amateurish, There are guys all over town who will kill a man for
$50 to $5000. And the people who hire these thugs usually get exactly
what they pay for.
There are two good reasons for setting a $30,000 minimum for your services.
First, the risks involved are high. You could become injured or lose your life
while attempting to carry out your assignment. But worse yet, you might make
some mistakes that will cost your freedom or bring capital punishment as the
penalty. A fee of $5,000 or even $10,000 will be of little consolation as you
wait helplessly behind bars.
Second, because the risks are so high and employment opportunities are
limited, the money you earn should be sufficient to carry you over until your
next job comes along. Unless you live in a very large city like New York or
Chicago, you will want to limit the number of jobs you do
President