![]() Neil Livingstone, a Georgetown University professor who wrote “The War Against Terrorism,” called Saxon’s book “an atrocious piece of literature that serves no public interest.” He wants it banned. It also raised concerns that texts such as Saxon’s could prove dangerous in the hands of violent, mentally unstable individuals, and it sparked debate about censorship versus freedom of the press. Nonetheless, the revelation of death by poisoning sent coroners, prosecutors and police investigators scurrying to learn more about the 12 or so known cases of oleander poisoning and to obtain copies of “The Poor Man’s James Bond,” which is not widely available in Los Angeles area libraries or bookstores but is stocked in some survivalist shops. ![]() ![]() The Sconces have denied all the charges against them. David Sconce also faces charges of soliciting the murders of his grandparents and of a deputy district attorney who was the prosecutor in the preliminary hearing. The charges range from mutilating corpses to selling body parts. ![]()
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