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INTRODUCTION

IntroductionMeet Dr. Joseph F. O'Brien
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FBI JOE MAKES NEWS

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JULY 02 2024 | THE BALTIMORE POST EXAMINER: BREAKS THE STORY!

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ATTEMPTING TO SURRENDER AN
FBI MOST WANTED CYBER CRIMINAL

Dr Joseph F. O'Brien has been attempting to surrender a cyber criminal wanted by the FBI and on their Most Wanted List since 2019.​ The Cyber Terrorist has been under duress from Iranian Government since 2019, forced at gunpoint to hack into the U.S financial sector and spread mis-information across social media to prevent Donald J. Trump from being re-elected.

Oliver E. Rich, Jr. Assistant Director of the FBI's International Operations Division, HOLDS UP MOST WANTED SURRENDER

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Why I'm Involved In Counterterrorism Now

Dr Joseph O'Brien, highly decorated Special Agent, formerly of the FBI, New York Times, Best Selling Author of Boss of Bosses, the man that took down the mob, the New York Mafia in the 1980s, a PhD in criminal justice, dissertation in Islamic terrorism, the guy you don't want f*** with.

 

Let me to introduce myself. My name is Joe O'Brien. I'm a native New Yorker currently living in South Florida. I spent nearly 20 years as an FBI agent, mainly working spy cases, foreign counterintelligence cases, working alongside with the CIA, and also during that time, I worked mafia cases with a colleague and mentor by name of agent Robert Levinson.

Dr Joseph O'Brien, highly decorated Special Agent, formerly of the FBI, New York Times, Best Selling Author of Boss of Bosses, the man that took down the mob, the New York Mafia in the 1980s, a PhD in criminal justice, dissertation in Islamic terrorism, the guy you don't want f*** with.

Let me to introduce myself. My name is Joe O'Brien. I'm a native New Yorker currently living in South Florida. I spent nearly 20 years as an FBI agent, mainly working spy cases, foreign counterintelligence cases, working alongside with the CIA, and also during that time, I worked mafia cases with a colleague and mentor by name of agent Robert Levinson.

 

Levinson and I shared awards for having successfully developed made members of the nova costa commonly known as the American mob. Together, Bob and I locked up a lot of wise guys over the years. In 1987 I was honored as the recipient of the United States Attorney General's Distinguished Service Award, the highest honor bestowed upon a law enforcement officer in the nation, in 1991 I wrote a book about it, New York Times bestselling book entitled “Boss of Bosses, the father of the Godfather the FBI, and Paul Castellano”.

 

After leaving the FBI, Bob and I stayed in touch and became private investigators. I was in New York City, and Bob was in Florida. We had a couple of clients in common. Then in 2007 we met for lunch at a Manhattan restaurant. He told me he was going on a mission. I instinctively knew that the mission was for the CIA. I asked him if he needed any backup, he could have used it, but quote, It wasn't in the budget. Bob was being sent to Iran to recruit an American assassin who had been Wanted by the FBI for murder for over three decades. I never saw Bob Livingston again, except in hostage videos on TV wearing an orange style prison jumpsuit and begging for the United States government to help him.

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PRESS RELEASES AND UPDATES ON FBI JOE

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KEYNOTE SPEAKING

Book Joe Now!

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THE MOB

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In 1981 Paul Castellano, head of New York City's Gambino crime family, was at the height of his power. At age 66 he controlled an empire that dictated to much of the construction and meat businesses, had a major say in the operation of two supermarket chains and was involved in such standard mob enterprises as prostitution, loan sharking, etc. Then FBI agents O'Brien and Kurins set out to stop him. Planting a listening device in Castellano's Staten Island home, they were able to secure enough information to send many of the area's top mafiosi to prison. Castellano, however, was fatally shot, gangland style, on a Manhattan street in 1985, while he was being tried for conspiracy to commit murder and for operating a stolen car ring. Exemplary sleuths, competent writers, the authors recreate a tense, lively tale redolent of high living and lawlessness, full of shrewd observations that break the code of crime-speak, to which these long-suffering snoops were subjected during their electronic surveillance of the mob. First serial to New York magazine; film rights to Warner Brothers. 

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Full Episode 1: 

Mob Rule

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Full Episode 2: 

The Godfather Tapes

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Full Episode 3: 

Judgement Day

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IN THE
HEADLINES

BALTIMORE POST EXAMINER

03/06/2024

BALTIMORE POST EXAMINER

07/02/2024

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Two F.B.I. agents who expect to share $1 million in royalties from their book about a former New York Mafia boss have resigned amid a furor over whether they improperly published secret information on the sex life of the mobster and on bureau surveillance tactics.

The book, "Boss of Bosses," about the late Paul Castellano by Joseph F. O'Brien and Andris Kurins, purports to give an inside look at the life of a mob leader. Not only does it describe the intrigues of the Gambino crime family, but it also gives details of Mr. Castellano's personal life -- including his affair with his maid and the surgery he had to restore his sexual potency.

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John Gotti now sits in a top-security federal prison, locked into his cell 23 hours a day, allowed to shower once a week. How the Mafia's capo di tutti capi reached that sorry fate is the subject of Blum's intensively researched, hypnotically absorbing true-crime report. There have been other excellent books on Gotti (e.g., John Cummings and Ernest Volkman's Goombata, 1990), but none written with Blum's flair for drama (Out There, 1990, etc.). What the former New York Times reporter does here is give Gotti a worthy opponent: FBI agent Bruce Mouw, hero to Gotti's villain, Eliot Ness to his Al Capone. To trace Mouw's pursuit of Gotti—which Blum dates back to the June 1980 day when the ``gangly, rather scholarly-looking'' Iowa-born agent was named to head the Bureau's Gambino Family squad—the author conducted 108 interviews and ``made [his] way through a wall-high pile of transcripts.'' As Blum intercuts between Mouw's squad (which included Joseph F. O'Brien and Andris Kurins, whose surveillance of Gotti's predecessor, Paul Castellano, they detailed in Boss of Bosses, 1991) and Gotti's ``crew'' as it rises to power, this diligent research reveals itself in unusual details about Gotti's character (his affair with another mobster's wife; his courtroom reading of Thus Spake Zarathustra); in suspenseful re-creations of the bugging of Gotti's various headquarters; in inside information on how Mouw suborned Gotti's underboss. Blum tends to overmelodramatize—highlighting faint rumor (e.g., that Gotti chain-sawed the man who accidentally killed his young son); overplaying certain themes, like Mouw's hunt for a cop-mole, or the Dapper Don's smirk—but there's no denying the fire-breathing power of his Gotti or the cinematic slickness of his account of Mouw's dogged, righteous manhunt. FBI knight slays Mafia dragon—and Blum milks this latter-day fairy tale for all it's worth. (First serial to New York Magazine; film rights sold to Columbia Pictures)

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