True story told with extraordinary novel quality
'Storming Las Vegas' reads like a finely-imagined novel, populated by rich characters, a fast-moving plot, unbelieveable events and complete resolution. Yet this work is far better than fiction. Detailed, meticulously researched, and mesmerizing, author John Huddy has found a way to capture the mentality of a frightening criminal, and temper it with a clear understanding of the events that created him. So-called 'coincidences' are not lost on this author, who is a former network news producer. He uncovers an amazing story of not just the crime spree of Vegas casinos and armored cars beginning in 2000, but the secret dealings behind the capture of Jose Vigoa. Huddy explains better than any political scientist how U.S. policy in small foreign countries helped to create a criminal like Vigoa, a Cuban refugee who came over in the Mariel boatlift. No other person could have gained this information and written this story in such an electrifying way. Few books will make you as angry as this one, an as thankful that writers such as John Huddy exist.
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Overview
Immediately gripping and thoroughly harrowing, Storming Las Vegas is the story of a remarkable crime spree.
In the ultimate proof of "what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas," Veteran journalist and producer, John Huddy tells a story of a spectacular true-life crime spree, a story that was previously squashed so as not to disturb tourism.
On September 20, 1998, a Cuban-born, Soviet-trained former Red Army lieutenant named Jose Vigoa launched a series of raids on the Las Vegas Strip. During a 16-month spree, Vigoa hit five world-class hotels, three armored car, and one department store. The casinos were the MGM, The Desert ...