Earl Edwin Pitts Essays

  • Earl Edwin Pitts

    2670 Words  | 6 Pages

    Born on September 23, 1953, Earl Edwin Pitts was a all-American, clean-cut citizen of the United States. Earl Edwin Pitts is a native of Urbana, Missouri, he has a Bachelors in Science Degree from Central Missouri State University, a Master's Degree from Webster College, and a law degree from the University of Missouri, Kansas City. He served in the Army from 1975 to 1980. As a law school graduate and retired Army Captain (1), Earl Edwin Pitts had dreamed of working for the Federal Bureau of Investigations

  • The Failure Of Earl Edwin Pitts Spying

    754 Words  | 2 Pages

    Introduction Earl Edwin Pitts, a former United States Army service member, a certified attorney and FBI special Agent was sentenced to 27 years in federal prison in 1996 for spying against his own country, the United States, for Russia and the former Soviet Union. Pitts’ spying activities from 1987 to 1992 provided top-secret classified information to KGB and later on Sluzhba Vneshney Rasvedi Rossii (SVRR) Russian intelligence officers in exchange for monetary compensation (FBI Special Agent…, 1996)

  • Analysis of William Pitt

    516 Words  | 2 Pages

    history might say that James Wolfe could have had the best way of being in the military field, but really William Pitt did. William Pitt was usually involved with the parliament or the government. When he was not working on government issues he was figuring out new military strategies. William Pitt was known for leading the British to victory in the Seven Years War. Another way to tell that Pitt was better in the military field is that he also helped with the war of Austrian. The last reason would be that

  • George III of Britain: Popular with the People, but not with Parliament

    2136 Words  | 5 Pages

    George III of Britain: Popular with the People, but not with Parliament Although history has labeled King George III of Britain primarily as the “mad” king responsible for the loss of America, a closer look at the 1780s, the heart of his reign, proves George III to be a particularly effective monarch rather than the bungling idiot some scholars have dubbed him. George III’s effectiveness, during the 1780s, stemmed from his immense popularity with the common people, which lay in direct contrast