Friendly Fire: The Illusion of Justice

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Friendly_Fire:_The_Illusion_of_Justice an entity of type: Thing

Friendly Fire: The Illusion of Justice, published in 2010, is memoir written by Adam Bereki. The book tells a harrowing story where "truth is stranger than fiction." The story is of an aspiring, young police officer who enters the Huntington Beach police force, but finds himself caught in a disastrous cycle when his colleagues catch wind of his sexual orientation. The situation rapidly unwinds as harassment and threats escalate to a breaking point and the young officer presses a lawsuit against the department. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Friendly Fire: The Illusion of Justice
rdf:langString Friendly Fire: The Illusion of Justice
rdf:langString Friendly Fire: The Illusion of Justice
xsd:string The Spartan Associates
xsd:integer 30338255
xsd:integer 1116411528
rdf:langString Paperback cover
rdf:langString United States
xsd:integer 200
xsd:integer 978
rdf:langString
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Print
xsd:integer 159
xsd:date 2010-03-08
rdf:langString Discrimination in law enforcement, Gay rights
rdf:langString Friendly Fire: The Illusion of Justice, published in 2010, is memoir written by Adam Bereki. The book tells a harrowing story where "truth is stranger than fiction." The story is of an aspiring, young police officer who enters the Huntington Beach police force, but finds himself caught in a disastrous cycle when his colleagues catch wind of his sexual orientation. The situation rapidly unwinds as harassment and threats escalate to a breaking point and the young officer presses a lawsuit against the department. The case resulted in an internal affairs investigation. None of the officers, including defendants, were placed on administrative leave. The city acknowledged no inappropriate conduct or wrongdoing in this incident however settled with the plaintiff before the court date. The book is not just a story of work place discrimination or even a story regarding a man's struggle with homophobia. Bereki details the personal and psychological struggles of gay men and women who serve in a compelling manner that includes exploration of self through travel and religion to illustrate his reconciliation with his own identity. The Surf City Voice summarized the book as a tale of a "brave gay man who survived harassment on the job from macho police officers to ultimately overcome victimhood and find peace with himself."
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3801
xsd:string 978-0-9844531-0-8
xsd:positiveInteger 159
xsd:date 2010-03-08

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