Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Timothy Oliver Stoen (born January 16, 1938) is an American attorney best known for his central role as a member of the Peoples Temple, and as an opponent of the group during a multi-year custody battle over his six-year-old son, John. The custody battle triggered a chain of events which led to U.S. Representative Leo Ryan 's ...

  2. 16. Jan. 2019 · He was nominated in 2010 to the California District Attorneys Association as Prosecutor of the Year, and in 2014 was honored as one of the five top wildlife prosecutors in the state. Stoen tells his remarkable story in Marked for Death: My War with Jim Jones the Devil of Jonestown (2015).

  3. 24. Apr. 2024 · Tim Stoen’s defection also had repercussions beyond this custody case. Once Jim Jones’ closest aide, Stoen became his chief antagonist, and many of the fantasies that Jonestown residents were encouraged, if not required, to write involved humiliation, mutilation and finally, the death of Tim Stoen. The former Temple lawyer became ...

  4. 17. Dez. 2015 · by Timothy Oliver Stoen (Author) 3.9 44 ratings. See all formats and editions. Marked for Death is a memoir of my becoming involved with a devil, being marked for death by that devil, being at war with that devil, and surviving that devil upon his unleashing--in the name of "love"--terror and death.

    • (44)
    • Timothy Oliver Stoen
  5. 16. Dez. 2015 · “Marked for Death” is the title of the new book out this week by Tim Stoen, Jones’ former attorney, right hand man and People’s Temple chairman of the board.

  6. Timothy Oliver Stoen, 2015 Summary : Emerging from Black Panther headquarters on August 17, 1969, to drive away in his Porsche, Timothy Oliver Stoen became angry over racism and turned radical. On January 1, 1970, Stoen self-recruited into a utopian movement, Peoples Temple, to pursue a Biblical ethic: “And sold their possessions and goods ...

  7. 5. Jan. 2016 · Timothy Oliver Stoen, author On November 18, 1978, Jim Jones, in Jonestown, Guyana, killed 907 people by cyanide and 5 other innocents, including a US congressman, by gunfire. Among those poisoned was a 6-year-old child, John Victor Stoen, the son of the author.