This does occur. "The Man Who Never Was" (great book) allowed the Allies to get beachhead on Normandy. Without that, the D-day invasion would have taken many more lives, or would have been elsewhere. The only problem in this scenario is that Durham is all over court docs. Can a federal prosecutor use an alias? I don't know.
This does occur. "The Man Who Never Was" (great book) allowed the Allies to get beachhead on Normandy. Without that, the D-day invasion would have taken many more lives, or would have been elsewhere. The only problem in this scenario is that Durham is all over court docs. Can a federal prosecutor use an alias? I don't know.
This discussion reminded me of https://patelpatriot.substack.com/p/devolution-addendum-series-part-3?s=r
If Durham is working for the military in a devolved government, their "alias" can do probably whatever it need to. Lots of "ifs", though.