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Hitman Page 4


  "beeping" device.

  The vast array of available surveillance equipment and the rapid advances in technology in this field are mind-boggling. The old microphones and reel-to-reel tape recorders that had to be stored nearby are a thing of the past. Now you can plant a bug less than the size of a quarter and sit in you car two miles away while you listen to the action on your car radio. If you are interested in these James Bond tactics, start collecting catalogs and prices now for future use.

  One fellow gave a girl who lived with his mark a pretty barrette he found on the floor in a bar. The girl took the barrette home and left it on the dresser. Unfortunately for the mark, which eventually met his demise, the "found" barrette concealed a micro-transmitter. The hit man was able to collect enough information on their activities to plan a successful hit.

  Bugs offer some fascinating alternatives to the old standby method of sit-and-watch. Check into them as well as the electronic bug detectors, which are now easily accessible. Think of the kinds of information you could assemble with just a micro-bug and a voice-activated micro-cassette recorder, and think how hard it would be for someone without proper detection equipment to discover.

  Of course, no surveillance equipment would be complete with a good pair of binoculars. The best have a rating of 10 x 50 or higher for night vision, range and clarity.

  Even a small micro-cassette recorder can come in handy while you are doing your pre-job research and will take the place of pen, paper, and fumbling in the dark.

  MISCELLANEOUS

  An air gun (one with pump, not spring, action) will come in handy on a number of occasions. You can use pellets to knock out lights or to create diversions. Or, you can make your own darts to carry a fast-acting poison to the mark or to his noisy watchdog.

  From time to time you may need a method for climbing to or from high places. Twenty feet of knotted rope (measure after knots are tied) can come in handy for climbing to second floor balconies or coming down from a roof. Tie one end in a high branch of a large tree and practice until you can scale it easily.

  Of course, the tools you use will vary from job to job. Some you will find yourself using again and again, while other suggested items will never be called for. Stock your inventory according to personal preference and need.

  LUXURY ITEMS

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  Hit Man: A Technical Manual For Independent Contractors As you move up the ladder of professionalism and become accustomed to success, you may want to increase you inventory with several toys that will make James Bond envious. Among these may be cleverly designed attaché cases with concealed weapons activated by a button on the handle, fancy cameras, Star-Light scopes, Laser bugging equipment, electronic gadgets and the like.

  Of course, your selection of weapons will grow and you may even have a secret vault in your home to conceal your collection of fully automatic toys like the Mac-11, M-16, tranquilizer guns, hand grenades and sophisticated exploding devices.

  You will be able to afford the best in false identifications and obtain real uniforms and badges for various state and federal law enforcement agencies to aid in the performance of your contracts.

  Throwaway cars and boats may even become common and you even own your very own plane, through legal methods explained later.

  Money talks, and for every need you have, there is a man out there who is willing to fill it for you for a price. That's how you got started, remember? But money buys a lot more than material things. Money can buy smart attorneys, judges, alibis, and even time, if necessary. The possibilities are endless for the smart man who plans his moves carefully, is mentally and physically prepared and doesn't leave any trails as he performs his highly paid services.

  3.

  The Disposable Silencer

  IN THE COURSE OF PUTTING this book together, while disguising myself as a writer I chanced to interview a former law enforcement officer with twenty-seven years experience for his opinion of how a perfect hit would go down. It was the opinion of this officer of the peace that the perfect hit would start with the purchase of a nondescript automobile, then driving, with tools in tow, to the jobsite.

  Once there, he would follow the mark until a routine was established and probably waste the man in a public place with a blast from a double barreled sawed-off shotgun. Then he would throw the gun down and drive away while the bystanders were in a state of mass hysteria.

  Even if he got caught with the shotgun in his hands, he argued, they would not be able to prove that the blast from that shotgun was the murder weapon since shotguns are untraceable. Obviously he has not kept in touch with new investigative procedures and techniques, for it is now known that each shotgun makes an individual and distinct spread pattern and the gun most certainly can be matched as the murder weapon.

  "Why not hit the mark in his own home?" I inquired innocently.

  "Oh, I'd never hit a guy in his own house," he answered, "Too many witnesses ... you know, family ... nosy neighbors and the like."

  "What about a small caliber handgun with an attached silencer?" I asked.

  "Well," he answered, "You would have to carry the handgun concealed, and that's against the law.

  But the shotgun, if it were a legal sized shotgun, you could carry that right in the window of your pickup truck on your gun rack. And I'd never touch a silencer. Boy! They'd burn you if you got caught with a thing like that!"

  I concluded the interview pretending to be in awe of his wisdom, while inside I was amazed by the ignorance behind his reasoning. Why on earth, I thought, would a man worry about breaking gun restrictions when he was en route to commit a murder?

  Yet, I felt comforted by his viewpoint. For his opinion probably represents the way a goodly portion of law enforcement officers think.

  There have been many times when an amateur has just walked up to his mark on the street, blown him away in the midst of a crowd, ditched the gun in a garbage can and gotten away with it. But the whole procedure lacks professionalism and the risks are much too high.

  The professional is on call to kill. He not only provides the employer with his gun, but with his expert knowledge, discretion and ability to carry the assignment off without needlessly endangering anyone but the mark.

  The silencer is one of the most important tools a professional will ever have. The silenced weapon, when fired, will not draw attention. Lack of attention means more time. Time means getting the job done 22

  Hit Man: A Technical Manual For Independent Contractors right. The panic, the pressure, is absent. There are many books available on the subject of making your own silencers. Most of the methods used require machine shop tools and the ability to use them with precision accuracy. This fact alone has put a lot of would-be professionals out of the game, or at least back into the ranks of amateurs.

  On the following pages, you will learn how to make, without the need of special engineering ability or expensive machine shop tools, a silencer of the highest quality and effectiveness. The finished product attached to your 22 will be no louder than the noise made by a pellet gun. Because it is so inexpensive (mine cost less than 20 dollars to make), you can easily dispose of it after job use without any great loss. Future silencers will cost even less to make, since many of the materials will not be used up in the first application.

  Your first silencer will require possibly two days total to assemble (including drying time) as you carefully follow the directions step by step. After you make a couple, it will become so easy, so routine, that you can whip one up in just a few hours.

  When it's done, no need to take it out in the woods to try it out. Just stack some magazines or newspapers in a box and shoot to your hearts content in the garage. Believe me, it's that good.

  Just remember, as I mentioned before, to re-sight your gun after the silencer is in place. And when you do go out in the woods, experiment to test how your range is affected. You will lose some distance, and this must be taken into consideration later, when planning a hit.<
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  DISPOSABLE SILENCER DIRECTIONS

  The directions and photographs that follow show in explicit detail how to construct a silencer for a Ruger 10/22 rifle. The same directions can be followed successfully to construct a silencer for any weapon, with only the size of the drill rod used for alignment changed to fit inside the dimension of the barrel.

  The following items should be assembled before you begin:

  •

  Drill rod, 7/32 inch (order from a machine shop if not obtained locally)

  •

  One foot of 1/4 inch brake line from auto parts

  •

  One quart of fiberglass resin with hardener

  •

  One foot of 1-1/2 inch (inside diameter) PVC piping and two end caps

  •

  One yard thin fiberglass mat

  •

  One roll of masking tape

  •

  One 1/8 inch drill bit

  •

  One 3/16 inch drill bit

  •

  Handful of rubber bands

  •

  Three or four single inch razor blades

  •

  One sheet 80 grit sandpaper

  •

  Six small wood screws

  •

  One box steel wool

  Cut a 10-inch section from the brake line. See figure 1. Drill a set of 1/8-inch holes down the length of the tube going in one side and out the other. The holes go all the way through. Notice in the photograph that the holes begin 1-1/2 inches from the end of the tube that fill on the gun.

  Figure 1. A ten-inch section fashioned from a brake line.

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  Hit Man: A Technical Manual For Independent Contractors Next, take a 3/16 inch drill bit and enlarge the holes. See figure 2.

  Figure 2. Enlarge the holes.

  Using masking tape and keeping the tape as free of wrinkles as possible, mask off about six inches of the gun barrel and the end of the barrel. Use only masking tape. Duct tape is too thick and would make for an improper fit. See figure 3.

  Figure 3. Six inches of the barrel end are masked off.

  Then place the drill rod down the barrel to keep the brake tube aligned. This perfect alignment is extremely important.

  If the drill rod you purchase is a little too large, as sometimes happens, put it in a drill and using a file and sandpaper (80 grit), turn down the first six inches until it will fit inside the gun barrel. I operate the drill from the floor with my foot, letting the rod spin between my knees as I reduce the size. Check regularly until you achieve a perfect fit. If you grind the rod too small, cut it off and start over. Fit must be tight with no play. See figure 4.

  Figure 4. Place the drill rod in the barrel; making sure the fit is perfect.

  Wrap glass mat around the gun and tube three times. Secure it with string or rubber bands every half-inch to keep it tight and in place. The glass should be wrapped about two inches behind the sight and up to the first hold on the tube. See figure 5.

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  Hit Man: A Technical Manual For Independent Contractors Figure 5. Wrap the gun-tube connection with glass mat three times.

  Now mix the resin. About a shot glassful will do. Mix it two or three times hotter than the package directions.

  Brace the gun in an upright position and dab the resin into the glass cloth with a stubby brush.

  Keep dabbling until the cloth is no longer white but has become transparent from absorption of the resin.

  See figure 6.

  Figure 6. Then coat with resin.

  As soon as the glass is tacky to touch without sticking (times differs according to weather conditions and humidity), it is time to remove the piece from the barrel. Move fast!

  First, take a razor blade and cut a notch behind the sight so the piece can be removed. Then push on the glass to slide it off. Do not pull on the tube. See figure 7.

  Figure 7. Tube, coated with glass mat and resin, removed from the gun.

  After removing the gun barrel, peel out the tape and allow it to finish hardening. You must work quickly. If you let the glass harden too much on the gun, you will have to cut it off and begin again.

  Use a grinder and 80-grit sandpaper to smooth the hardening rough surface.

  Next, grind the sides down about halfway, but do not grind past the point where the front of the sight makes contact. See figure 8. Cut it down until the barrel fits easily and snugly.

  25

  Hit Man: A Technical Manual For Independent Contractors Figure 8. Grind down the resin-coated portion.

  Stand the glassed inner tube upright in a vise.

  Mix a small amount of resin and use an eyedropper to fill in any interior holes or air bubbles until the solid fiberglass is level with the steel tube end. This will give the junction of the steel inner tube and glass coupling added strength. See figure 9.

  Figure 9. Fill any interior holes with fiberglass, drop by drop.

  Clean the eyedropper with acetone.

  Cut the PVC tube to desired length. This one is eight inches. See figure 10.

  26

  Hit Man: A Technical Manual For Independent Contractors Figure 10. An eight-inch piece of PVC. Figure 11. (Insert) Drill small holes in one cap.

  Drill a large hole in the center of one cap, making it large enough to fit on the glass end to the point where the sight makes contact.

  Then drill small holes all around the cap at the bottom, as shown, with a 3/16 bit. See figure 11.

  Wrap masking tape around the cap to cover the holes. See figure 12.

  27

  Hit Man: A Technical Manual For Independent Contractors Figure 12. Then cover those with masking tape. Figure 13. (Insert) Making the cap.

  Stand the cap with the inside tube inserted into a vise. Get the cap level and straight with the tube.

  Cut a lot of 1/2 inch square pieces of fiberglass matting and fill the cap with it up past the level of the small holes.

  Mix resin and pour it over the cut glass to a point about 1/4 inch above the holes and allow it to dry before removing the cap from the vise. Don't worry about any resin that leaks out around the base hole.

  Resin fills the small holes, making the tube strong enough to take the blast when you fire the gun.

  When the inside is hardened, turn the assembly over and add glass around the backside of the cap for added strength as shown. Avoid getting resin in the opening where the barrel fits. See figure 13.

  Place the finished cap and inner tube on one end of the PVC tubing that has already been cut to size. Center the inner tube as you look in the open end of the PVC.

  Now drill a 1/8 inch hole in three places around the tube about 1/4 inch from the lip of the cap.

  Take the inner tube out and enlarge the holes in the cap to 3/16 inch. See figure 14.

  28

  Hit Man: A Technical Manual For Independent Contractors Figure 14. Fit the cap to the tube to make the necessary holes.

  Replace the inner tube and tighten it down with three small wood screws.

  Trim the inside tube down until it extends about 1/2 inch beyond the outside PVC tube.

  Sharpen one end of the drill rod to a point and use as a punch. Stand the tube up with the solid cap down. Then drop the drill rod down the inner tube to get a true center mark. See figure 15.

  Figure 15. Find true center and drill the cap.

  29

  Hit Man: A Technical Manual For Independent Contractors Find a drill bit a little larger than the outside diameter of the inner tube. Remove the cap and drill the hole.

  Replace the cap on the open end of the PVC and drill three 1/8-inch holes around the cap as before for wood screw.

  Grind off any inner tube that sticks out. Make it flush with the face of the cap. See figure 16.

  Figure 16. Place the cap on the tube.

  Unfold the sections of steel wool and roll between palms to make strands as shown.

  Feed the strands into the silencer
tube in a circular motion, packing the wool tight with a stick. Do this until the tube is completely full. See figure 17.

  30

  Hit Man: A Technical Manual For Independent Contractors Figure 17. Pack the tube with steel wool until it’s full.

  Replace the end cap with the three screws. See figure 18.

  Figure 18. Replace cap and screw in securely.

  31

  Hit Man: A Technical Manual For Independent Contractors Paint the finished silencer black and attach it to your weapons. You may want to ensure proper alignment by wrapping tape or placing a hose clamp around the extension behind the sight. See figure 19.

  Figure 19. Your finished product is useful, durable, inexpensive, and easily disposed of.

  THE FINISHED PRODUCT

  Your finished product is whisper-quiet, the way a silencer is supposed to be! It is inexpensive, effective and reusable for over four hundred rounds before you will need to repack.

  This little tool is so easy to make that you will feel no pain when you crush it to bits and throw it away.

  4.

  More Than One Way to Kill a Rabbit

  IT WOULD TAKE VOLUMES and volumes to list the many ways men have devised to exterminate one another, and I am sure you have already started to accumulate quite an extensive list of your own personal favorites.

  Some very good books are available on this subject and even television, movies and fictional stories are out to teach you a new trick or two! But be careful. Some of the methods depicted are only theories of an imaginative writer and do not work in reality. So be sure that any method you choose is a proven effective one.

  In Chapter 2, much detail was given concerning the effective use of the pistol and the rifle in making a kill. Although several shots fired in succession offer a quick and relatively humane death to the victim, there are instances when other methods of extermination are called for. The employer may want you to gather certain information from the mark before you do away with him. At other times, the assignment may call for torture or disfigurement as a "lesson" for the survivors. Your assignment could call for suicide or accidental death may be the order. It may, or may not, be important that the body disappear.