Synopses & Reviews
It’s a true story that reads like gripping fiction: in June 1942, eight German terrorists landed by submarine on the shores of Long Island and Florida with a mission to blow up major buildings and railroad hubs throughout the United States. In Time of War tells the dramatic story of how they were ultimately betrayed by one of their own, tried by a special military tribunal appointed by FDR, and zealously defended by an army colonel. Six of the eight were executed. The U.S. Supreme Court subsequently upheld the president’s power to order the military trial that passed the death sentences.
More than sixty years later, President George W. Bush, in the wake of the deadly 9/11 terrorist attacks, cited Roosevelt’s act as precedent for imprisoning over six hundred suspected “enemy combatants” in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and indefinitely detaining U.S. citizens suspected of terrorist activities. In a riveting account of this remarkable episode in America’s history (much of it based on documents never before available), O’Donnell, one of the country’s leading trial lawyers, illustrates the parallels between then and now, offering a cautionary tale of the danger of unchecked executive power in a time of crisis.
Review
"The Nazi saboteur case is a blot on our law, and is being used by the Bush administration now to defend its attacks on civil liberties." —Anthony Lewis
"O’Donnell is a master storyteller who vividly brings to life the trying times of World War II and a nation gripped by fear. " —Johnnie Cochran
"Reads like a spy novel, only it’s all true." —David Cole, author of Enemy Aliens
About the Author
Pierce O’Donnell has been named one of the “100 Most Influential Lawyers in America” by the
National Law Journal. He is the author of
In Time of War: Hitler’s Terrorist Attack on America (The New Press) and a co-author, with Dennis McDougal, of the bestselling
Fatal Subtraction. He lives in Montecito, California.