Covert by Bob Delaney: Book Cover

    Covert: My Years Infiltrating the Mob by Bob Delaney, Dave Scheiber, Bill Walton (Foreword by)

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    (Paperback)

    • Pub. Date: June 2009
    • 296pp
    • Sales Rank: 78,493

      Reader Rating: (18 ratings)

      Detailed Rating: "Touching" See All

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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: June 2009
      • Publisher: Union Square Press
      • Format: Paperback, 296pp
      • Sales Rank: 78,493

      The Barnes & Noble Review

      It was easy enough to turn off the TV after an hour of watching restaurateur Artie Bucco get pushed around by beefy fellas back when The Sopranos was on, but it's a little more uncomfortable to read about the same kinds of goings-on in Bob Delaney's fascinating chronicle of his life undercover as a mobster back in the mid-'70s. Even with all the dated James Bond hidden-microphone tricks, the constant bullying of various hoods, and the endless array of Mob names (Pappy, Lucky, Fat Anthony, Johnny Dee, Charlie Cup of Coffee, et al.), what may be the most fascinating section of the book is Delaney's re-entry into the real world after three years of living as a mobster. The massive arrests have been made, the court gavels have been pounded, but the still-young Delaney feels guilt for turning in friends and a resultant psychich tumult: "The granite foundation of my self-image preceding my undercover assignment had given way to shifting sands of doubt and worry," he writes. It's enough to finally send him back onto the basketball courts that he loved as a kid, back where he can lose himself fully in a different set of rules that take him to the top of that field as an NBA ref, where he finds a way to live with the conundrum of being a man with a price on his head who travels from one massive arena to the next each night. Be glad he's chosen to take that risk as well as tell his tale. --Mark J. Miller

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      Synopsis

      Featured on ESPN, NPR and CNN

      In a riveting page-turner, NBA referee Bob Delaney reveals the clandestine life he led before becoming one of professional basketball’s most respected officials.

      Soon after joining the New Jersey State Troopers in 1973, Delaney was offered a tantalizing undercover assignment: to infiltrate the Mob. And so he became Bobby Covert, the president of Alamo Trucking, a fully-operational business used by law enforcement as flypaper for snagging wise guys. While wearing a wire, Delaney dealt daily with mobsters who modeled themselves after their on-screen counterparts (at  the height of The Godfather’s popularity), and even crossed paths with Joe Pistone, the real-life Donnie Brasco. After three tense years playing a role in which a single slip could cost him his life, Delaney had gathered enough evidence to convict more than 30 members of the Genovese and Bruno crime families. 

      Struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder from the strain of his undercover life, Delaney began officiating high school and intramural basketball games as a way to rebuild his life, eventually working his way up to the NBA, where he has been a referee for over two decades. This is his amazing true story.

      Publishers Weekly

      NBA referee Delaney's fascinating account of his prior life as a New Jersey state trooper who infiltrated organized crime will be a must-read for those drawn to Joe Pistone's similar account in Donnie Brasco(or the movie adaptation starring Johnny Depp). In 1975, Delaney was a relative novice in law enforcement when he was tapped by a superior to help build cases against major Mafia families by creating and running a fake business, Alamo Trucking. With the aid of St. Petersburg (Fla.) Timessportswriter Scheiber, Delaney captures perfectly the daily routine and perils of undercover work, and describes the psychological challenges he faced during the three years of Project Alpha: "The granite foundation of my self-image... had given way to shifting sands of doubt and worry." While less heralded than Pistone's work, Delaney's achievements-which yielded multiple convictions of members of the Bruno and Genovese families-were significant precursors to the Feds' massive 1980s assault on La Cosa Nostra. Becoming a basketball referee after these proceedings was a return to an early passion of the high school all-state forward and captain of his college team-but the fear, he says, still comes back sometimes. 8 pages of b&w photos. (Feb. 5)

      Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

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      Customer Reviews

      Great storyby KWICK

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      June 21, 2009: Very simply. BUY THE BOOK. Someday soon, you'll be going to the movie. It's THAT good.

      AWESOME READ!!!!!by Anonymous

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      October 06, 2008: Great book!!!!


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