
Confessions of a Cartel Hit Man
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

June 1, 2017
Account of a reformed gangster's employment with the Arrelano-Felix Brothers drug cartel.A foreword by California Justice Department Special Agent Steve Duncan sets up Corona's unusual confessional. He explains, "Corona [was] a member of the 'Death Squad, ' a special group of cartel enforcers with tactical ability." In the aftermath of the brothers' notorious 1993 airport murder of a Mexican cardinal, American law enforcement successfully indicted Corona's generation of cartel killers. Corona made a deal with prosecutors; Duncan notes, he "testified to each murder in Federal Grand Jury often times crying as he recounted the details to jurors." This book supposedly stems from the same redemptive impulse. Corona writes of his California childhood, where, despite a strict but stable upbringing in a military family, he was attracted to gang life from an early age, dealing drugs on the beach at age 13: "Even though I was technically a Posole home boy, I made it a point not to dress like a gangster." He was soon sent to the California Youth Authority, which is "basically the farm team for the Mexican Mafia." As Corona was reincarcerated between criminal schemes, his involvement deepened in the harsh, regimented subculture of Mexican gangs, revolving around bloody conflict between northerners and southerners. In 1992, one such prison connection led him to employment with David Barron, an infamous cartel enforcer. The author takes readers on a violent ride, but many characters are only identified with street names, blurring the narrative. Although he writes of his regret, Corona's storytelling still glamorizes gang life, with its focus on honor and loyalty expressed through violence. His memoir has a seedy authenticity regarding the nitty-gritty of how gangsters thrive in prison, prepare and transport weapons, stalk targets, and so forth. But Corona's prose relies on cliches and pulpy digressions. An unusual, self-aggrandizing, ground-level look at the dangerous milieu of Mexican cartels.
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August 1, 2017
Cartel hit man-turned-government informant Corona, with writer Rafael (coauthor, The Mexican Mafia), tells of how he got involved in a life of drugs and crime at an early age. From a military family, Corona grew up playing Little League and fishing but somehow he felt he didn't belong. He was more at home on the street than anywhere else and spent most of his childhood and teenage years in corrections programs. Through the connections he made in prison and in gangs, he eventually went to work for the founders of the Tijuana drug cartel that dominated the Southern California drug trade for decades. Corona often ended up in situations where he would need to kill members of warring gangs. Life was luxurious but so violent that eventually he wanted out. In this highly detailed, tell-all work, readers can follow the author on his real-life journey from military brat to gang leader to informant. VERDICT Corona's engaging story offers an insider's peek into gang and prison life, providing insight into how a seemingly average boy can become a drug kingpin and a murderer. Recommended for true crime lovers.--Kristen Calvert, Marion Cty. P.L. Syst., Ocala, FL
Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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