A License to Steal

Summary
Walter T. Shaw's Autobiography - As early as the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, Walter L. Shaw was thinking of speaker phones, conference calls and call forwarding. Of the thirty-nine patents to his credit, those three telephonic breakthroughs were his biggest inventions, yet nobody knows his name. Ahead of the world by decades, Shaw was leading us into a high-tech future as part of the intellectual elite, but he was repeatedly cheated by shrewd businessmen and big corporations. His son, Walter T. Shaw, was enraged by the ill treatment of his father and embraced a personal mission to even the score. Shaw Jr. would become one of the most prolific jewel thieves in U.S. history. Shaw Sr. spent a lifetime inventing and patenting the many means of communication we take for granted today, but it was all for nothing.Tragically, only the Mafia rewarded him. Just to make ends meet for his family, he was persuaded to put his brilliance to work for the mob.
Similar Books
-
The Dancer Upstairs
by Nicholas Shakespeare
-
The Walrus Was Paul: The Great Beatle Death Clues
by R. Gary Patterson
-
The Fugitive Game: Online with Kevin Mitnick
by Jonathan Littman
-
Cobra Trap
by Peter O'Donnell
-
Got Your Back: Protecting Tupac in the World of Gangsta Rap
by Frank Alexander
-
Marilyn's Last Words: Her Secret Tapes and Mysterious Death
by Matthew Smith
-
Shapeshifter
by J.F. Gonzalez
-
A Mind for Murder: the Real-Life Files of a Psychic Investigator
by Noreen Renier
-
All the Centurions
by Robert Leuci
-
Dream of Shadows
by Seressia Glass
-
Detectives Psiquicos
by Peter A. Hough
-
The DD Group: An Online Investigation Into the Death of Marilyn Monroe
by David Marshall
-
10-8: A Cop's Honest Look at Life on the Street
by Officer X
-
-
Murder - A Multidisciplinary Anthology of Readings
by Joseph G. Weis
-
The Heinous Truth! about Utah!
by C.L. Crosby
-
-
Man Hunt - The Eric Rudolph Story
by Kathleen Walls
-
The Life of Stuff
by Simon Donald
-
If Tomorrow Never Comes: Poetic Justice The Unsung Story
by Robert Cota