Win a FREE Personalized Autographed Copy of ‘Prisoner of War: The Story of White Boy Rick and the War on Drugs’!

Win a FREE Personalized Autographed Copy of ‘Prisoner of War: The Story of White Boy Rick and the War on Drugs’!

White Boy Rick

 

*3 winners will be selected at random. Enter now for your chance to win!*

https://detroitbookfest.com/prizes-give-aways/

The raffle will run from Monday, June 18 to Sunday, June 24.

 

We are raffling off 3 personalized autographed copies of Vince Wade’s new book ‘Prisoner of War: The Story of White Boy Rick and the War on Drugs‘!

 

Vince Wade

 

Vince Wade is an investigative reporter in Los Angeles.

“My first national crime story was in July 1975, when I broke the news that former Teamsters President Jimmy Hoffa had disappeared,” says Vince.

However, back in the 1980’s, Vince worked the crime beat in Detroit.

Vince started covering the White Boy Rick story but was reassigned elsewhere and Chris Hansen took over for him.

White Boy Rick has been incarcerated since he was 17 years old in 1988. He spent the bulk of that time in Michigan prisons and was recently transferred to a prison in Florida. He is scheduled to be released from prison on April 20th, 2021.

 

*3 winners will be selected at random. Enter now for your chance to win!*

https://detroitbookfest.com/prizes-give-aways/

The raffle will run from Monday, June 18 to Sunday, June 24.

 

White Boy Rick (Richard Wershe Jr.)

 

 

In 2014, Vince decided to write a book about the case, especially looking at Rick in the context of the War on Drugs.

Vince says:

“The astonishing but true story of White Boy Rick Wershe is a vivid example of why the War on Drugs has been a trillion-dollar policy failure for nearly half a century.”

The book falls into 3 Categories:

True Crime, Politics & Government, Social Policy

 

There has been a tremendous amount of interest in White Boy Rick lately. Seth Ferranti co-wrote and produced an incredible documentary about him entitled ‘White Boy‘.

 

White Boy Documentary Trailer 

 

 

Later this year, in September 2018, Sony Pictures is releasing a Hollywood movie about White Boy Rick, entitled ‘White Boy Rick‘.

 

White Boy Rick (Hollywood movie trailer) 

 

The below information is an extract from Vince Wade’s personal website and is written by Vince:

http://vincewade.net/ 

Prisoner of War: The Story of White Boy Rick and the War on Drugs began with one of those out-of-the-blue phone calls.

It was a late afternoon in 2014 when spring was giving way to summer. I live in balmy, sunny Southern California where the seasons are often difficult to discern.

I had not spoken to Gregg in a long time. After the usual, ‘Hey. How ya been?’ exchange, Schwarz stated the reason for his call.Before I could place the voice, my caller identified himself. Gregg Schwarz, retired FBI agent who had worked narcotics in Detroit when I was a crime beat reporter there.

“Do you remember White Boy Rick Wershe? He asked. “Well, yeah, vaguely,” I replied. He was a drug figure from the late 1980s. “Why?”

Schwarz wanted to know if I had a DVD copy of a series of TV investigative reports I did in 1989 called “Who Killed Damion Lucas?”

Schwarz explained Wershe was still in prison after being sentenced in 1988 at the age of 18. Schwarz said White Boy Rick Wershe had been a helpful and important confidential informant for the FBI and he, Schwarz, was on a mission to get him out of prison. I did not know about Wershe’s role as an FBI snitch. Most people didn’t.

In the Detroit media, he was routinely—and falsely—described over the years as a drug kingpin or dope lord. The journalistic smear went on for years, as explained in the book.

A TV Report on a Killing White Boy Rick Knew About

My series showed how the FBI tried to point the Detroit Police investigation in the right direction based on secret wiretap information they had gathered, but the cops were determined to avoid questioning or charging the Curry gang because Johnny Curry, the leader, was married to the niece of Detroit’s powerful mayor, Coleman Young.

It was a series that exposed police corruption in the handling of the murder of a 13-year old Detroit boy. Damion Lucas had been killed inadvertently by members of the Johnny Curry drug gang. They shot up the boy’s uncle’s house in an attempt to frighten the uncle in to paying money he owed in a drug dispute. The uncle wasn’t home at the time of the shooting, but his nephews were there, alone as bullets from automatic weapons tore through the front of the house. Damion died on the

Unknown to me at the time of the series, White Boy Rick had provided vital intelligence to the FBI about the gang’s involvement in the killing.

That initial phone call piqued my reporter’s curiosity. Schwarz and I spoke again. And again.

Before long, I was hooked. I had to know more about this sad, bizarre story I had worked on for months in 1988. And I had to know more about White Boy Rick.

I reached out to Rick Wershe in prison. In response to a letter, he said he would be willing to help me by telling me the details of his story.

Soon we were corresponding regularly and talking by phone and I was reaching out to key people who knew things about the War on Drugs in Detroit in the 1980s and White Boy Rick’s part in it.

Blogging to Help Rick Win His Freedom

By the spring of 2015 I was writing regular columns for Informant America, a blog I developed about the travails of White Boy Rick Wershe. About that same time, I realized this crazy story ought to be told in a book.

Prisoner of War: The Story of White Boy Rick and the War on Drugs is the result of several years of extensive research. I did interviews with Rick Wershe and others. I traveled to Detroit several times and spent days researching and copying court records, trial transcripts and police investigative files. I filed numerous Freedom of Information Act requests with federal and state law enforcement for documents related to Richard J. Wershe, Jr.

The history of the War on Drugs is recounted and decades of failed policy initiatives, such as First Lady Nancy Reagan’s ludicrous Just Say No campaign, are noted. I also realized his story was part of the bigger story of the colossal policy failure we call the War on Drugs; a trillion-dollar struggle that’s lasted nearly half a century.

I decided Rick Wershe Jr. would be the central figure in a book about a war this country hasn’t won and has no hope of winning.

 

*3 winners will be selected at random. Enter now for your chance to win!*

https://detroitbookfest.com/prizes-give-aways/

The raffle will run from Monday, June 18 to Sunday, June 24.