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ISBNX17E-0057 | | In Stock | | Availability:
Usually ships in 1-2 business days | | Only 1 left in stock, order soon! | | | | | | "The Cyanide Canary" is the riveting true story of a horrific crime -- of a brave young man left for dead, an unscrupulous business mogul, and the relentless EPA investigator who fought to overcome injustice.On a crisp summer morning in Soda Springs, Idaho, twenty-year-old Scott Dominguez kissed his fiance e goodbye and went to work for Allan Elias, the owner of Evergreen Resources, an enterprise Dominguez thought was in the business of producing fertilizer from mining waste. A former high school wrestler blessed with Tom Cruise-like good looks, Dominguez seemed to have unlimited potential, but by eleven o'clock that morning he was fighting for his life, pulled unconscious from a cyanide-laced storage tank and not expected to live through the night. In Seattle, Special Agent Joseph Hilldorfer of the Environmental Protection Agency was given the job of finding out what happened to Dominguez and why. Initially Hilldorfer did not want the case, still frustrated by an intense two-year investigation that concluded with corporate polluters walking out of a federal courthouse free. But as he learned more, Hilldorfer, the son of a Pittsburgh cop with a blue-collar work ethic, was touched by Scott's suffering and outraged at Elias's callous disregard for his employees' well-being. Hilldorfer and his partner, Special Agent Bob Wojnicz, joined forces with seasoned Boise Assistant U.S. Attorney George Breitsameter and an indefatigable, brilliant young attorney from the Department of Justice's Environmental Crimes Section named David Uhlmann. Together they would uncover the horrifying truths and build the criminal case against Elias. A former New York whiz kid and Arizona realestateand business mogul, Elias owned businesses that had polluted Idaho with hazardous waste for nearly a decade. Yet Elias never spent a single day in jail, openly boasted of beating the environmental quality regulations, and avoided any significant fines. Would this case be any different? Hilldorfer, Uhlmann, and the government trial team embarked on an epic courtroom battle that would stretch them to the limits. What began as a struggle for justice for one young man became a fight by the EPA for its very ability to enforce the nation's environmental laws and to bring environmental polluters to justice. In the balance was whether Allan Elias would ever spend a day in jail. Gripping, powerful, and compulsively readable, "The Cyanide Canary" is a major achievement in the classic tradition of "A Civil Action," a book that unfolds like fiction yet is alarmingly true. | | | |
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| | Product Details | | Author: | Joseph Hilldorfer | | Hardcover: | 352 pages | | Publisher: | Free Press | | Publication Date: | September 14, 2004 | | Language: | English | | ISBN: | 0743246527 | | Package Length: | 9.1 inches | | Package Width: | 6.1 inches | | Package Height: | 1.2 inches | | Package Weight: | 1.35 pounds | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 11 reviews |
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: ( 11 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 13 found the following review helpful:
Great Book-Tragic Story Sep 22, 2004
By J. D. Cox This is an excellent book. The fact that it is a true story makes it even better. The investigators and lawyers truely poured their hearts into this case. It is written in a way that constantly make you want to find out what's going to happen next. You feel as if you are in the court room during the trial. It is such a sad story and your heart goes out to the injured person. I would highly recommend this book.
8 of 8 found the following review helpful:
Tragic book provides factually detailed and great read! Dec 17, 2004
By Theresa Goetz I bought this book for a friend for Christmas and found I had to go back and buy two more copies (one for myself and as another gift), because I started reading it before wrapping it and couldn't put it down. I won't call this tragic "story"--because the word story implies it is a work of fiction. However, the detailed endnotes based on sworn affidavit, deposition and trial testimony, as well as numerous citations to witness interviews show it is well researched recital of shockingly true facts. Written in the third person, it reads as easily as a fiction novel (including simplified medical, chemical and legal jargon), but it clearly is not. Given the monstrosity of the events, it is easy to understand how witnesses involved in the investigation and trial would easily remembered what they said and saw at the time the events occurred. This is a definite read for anyone interested in a well written and researched compelling story of finding justice in a small Idaho-company based town. The only people who might not want to read it now would be those who don't want to have their holiday preparations waylaid (because it will pull you into the story), or those who are still denying the facts of what happened.
6 of 6 found the following review helpful:
Like a good Law & Order episode Apr 02, 2006
By Glen Engel Cox We lived and worked in eastern Washington State during the mid-1990s for environmental companies and both had to take safety classes where they explained the dangers of confined space entries and the precautions you have to take for working in those environments, not to mention all the other regulatory and safety requirements needed for working with hazardous chemicals. We were lucky: we were educated, well-paid, working for environmental clean-up companies with lucrative government contracts where safety was good business practice.
The circumstances detailed in The Cyanide Canary are 180 degrees different. Allen Elias, the owner of the Evergreen facility, was not engaged in environmental cleanup, but working on the cheap trying to develop a commercial means of reprocessing waste. His employees were high-school graduates desperate for a job, with no safety training or understanding of the requirements for confined space work, nor any clue, really, about the hazards of certain chemicals--things Elias did know. Which is why Elias was charged with criminal conduct after one of his workers was injured during a tank cleanout. The story of the accident, along with the resulting investigation, and trial, makes up this book, which reads like a long Law & Order episode, almost complete with the "Ka-Chung" sound at the end of each chapter. As such, it should appeal to L&O fans, or anyone with an interest in how environmental law is being developed.
The weakest part of the book is the beginning chapter, where the authors attempt to portray the events of the accident in an almost novelistic method, including trying for some suspense about whether the victim, Scott Dominguez, would survive or not. After they get that out of the way (more than likely, a suggestion from some bone-headed editor who felt the beginning needed some punch or a grab for the reader), the book settles down into its portrayal of Hilldorfer's investigation, bolstered by all the interviews and transcripts that were eventually used to indict Elias and bring the case to trial. The truly riveting part of the book is not the opening, but the trial, the question of whether Elias will be found guilty, and whether or not he will attempt to flee justice.
I enjoyed the book quite a bit, reading it in two sessions during a train ride to and from NYC. It's a revealing look into the legal world, and also an interesting case study between the kinds of murder cases usually seen on Law & Order and the "white collar" crime that usually does not end up in jail sentences for the convicted.
7 of 8 found the following review helpful:
Libertarian Weighs In Dec 16, 2004
By Mehri Kaufman
"Mimish"
I'm a long time Idaho resident and libertarian. I am pretty cynical about help from the Federal government, but...
In Idaho, someone tried to get ahead by cutting corners in ways that impacted others. We have a perfect role for government to step in. This is a true tragedy. The story is almost over and then takes another twist that really had me sprinting to the end of the book.
As I promote free markets, people always ask what will keep big business from destroying the world. This is a great story about the difficulties, and ultimate triumph of the government's effort to make one citizen accountable for his actions.
11 of 14 found the following review helpful:
Tragic Story, Excellent Writing. Oct 15, 2004
By John Matlock
"Gunny"
In the coal mines of yesterday the miners took a canary with them into the mine. If the canary fell off of its perch the miners knew they were in trouble. In this true story, twenty year old Scott Dominguez didn't have a canary when he went into a 25,000 gallen storage tank that turned out to be filled with poisonous gasses. Shortly thereafter he was pulled from the tank unconscious. He was not managed to live through the night but was severly brain damaged. In effect Scott acted as the canary himself.
The tank had been used to store cyanide and phosphoric acid. When combined, these chemicals produce hydrogen cyanide, the gas used by the various states to execute 945 men and seven women in gas chambers. It has since been determined that the 7 to 15 minutes that it takes to kill a criminal is cruel and unsual punishment because the victuum suffers horrible pain for up to several minutes. Gas chambers have has been ruled unconstitutional.
This is a tragic story of a horrible environmental crime. The investigators took years to bring an uncaring business owner to justice finally gaining a 17 year sentence for the owner of the company.
See all 11 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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