Foreword

The ability to exercise power because of position does not necessarily prepare a man mentally or morally to exercise power rightly. This is a major problem in all of the uniformed services-policemen can be crooks and rapists and have the same low morals of the common gutter rat. And the individual can't know this until it is too late.

Policemen have the same sexual drives of other men. In fact, from the nature of an officer's job, it may be expected that he will be even more virile than the average man. He is conditioned to violence and action. And it would not be untoward to expect his approach to sex to reflect his approach to the rest of his activities.

So it is, as the main character of this novel discovers. Only she learns in a most unhappy way. When a cop goes bad, thinking himself above the laws he enforces, his evilness is many times that of the average citizen who always must fear retribution from the police.

In this book, Policewoman Carol Davis discovers that it is not the crook on the street she must fear the most, but the seed of lust in her too-male fellow officers who see a blue skirt as just another female vagina to rape and abuse.

THE PUBLISHER