Sunday, November 30, 2025

The Ex-President Whom Trump Plans to Pardon Flooded America With Cocaine - The New York Times

The Ex-President Whom Trump Plans to Pardon Flooded America With Cocaine - The New York Times


The Ex-President Whom Trump Plans to Pardon Flooded America With Cocaine

Juan Orlando Hernández, whom Mr. Trump called a victim of persecution, helped orchestrate a decades-long trafficking conspiracy. It ravaged his Central American country.

When Juan Orlando Hernández was extradited to the United States, his own country erupted in celebration.Credit...Jorge Cabrera/Getty Images


By Santul NerkarAnnie Correal and Colin Moynihan
Nov. 29, 2025
Leer en español



He once boasted that he would “stuff the drugs up the gringos’ noses.” He accepted a $1 million bribe from El Chapo to allow cocaine shipments to pass through Honduras. A man was killed in prison to protect him.

At the federal trial of Juan Orlando Hernández in New York, testimony and evidence showed how the former president maintained Honduras as a bastion of the global drug trade. He orchestrated a vast trafficking conspiracy that prosecutors said raked in millions for cartels while keeping Honduras one of Central America’s poorest, most violent and most corrupt countries.

Last year, Mr. Hernández was convicted on drug trafficking and weapons charges and sentenced to 45 years in prison. It was one of the most sweeping drug-trafficking cases to come before a U.S. court since the trial of the Panamanian strongman Gen. Manuel Noriega three decades before.


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But on Friday, President Trump announced that he would pardon Mr. Hernandez, 57, who he said was a victim of political persecution, though Mr. Trump offered no evidence to support that claim. It would be a head-spinning resolution to a case that for prosecutors was a pinnacle, striking at the heart of a narcostate.

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Outside Manhattan’s federal courthouse, Hondurans celebrated the conviction of the former president.Credit...Eduardo Munoz/Reuters


The president’s two-week trial in Manhattan, and those of his associates before it, offered a glimpse into a world of corruption and drug running spanning several countries. Bags of cash, a machine gun with Mr. Hernández’s name emblazoned on it, and bribes from the drug lord Joaquín Guzmán, the Mexican kingpin known as El Chapo, featured heavily.

Prosecutors said Mr. Hernández was key to a scheme that lasted more than 20 years and brought more than 500 tons of cocaine into the United States.

“The people of Honduras and the United States bore the consequences,” Merrick Garland, then the attorney general, said in 2024, after Mr. Hernández was sentenced.

Honduras, a country of around 10 million people, has long been linked to the United States — first as the home of sprawling banana plantations owned by the United Fruit Company, then as the location of a key base used for U.S.-backed counterinsurgency efforts and later as a military post for counternarcotics.


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When drug-trafficking routes began shifting toward Central America in the 2000s, Honduras came to play a role in transshipment, moving cocaine from South America toward Mexico and the U.S. border. Over that decade, trafficking rose, along with the murder rate, and drug planes arrived with regularity. The June 2009 coup that ousted Manuel Zelaya, the country’s left-wing president, ushered in a golden age of drug corruption.

Mr. Hernández, unlike many Latin American politicians, rose from humble roots. One of more than a dozen siblings raised in a rural, coffee-growing region, he became a lawyer and entered congress. As president, Mr. Hernández told U.S. officials that he was doing his utmost to stamp out drug trafficking.

But prosecutors said his political career had been fueled by drug money as early as 2009, when he was still a lawmaker and vying to lead the Honduran legislature. At the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, Mr. Hernández was photographed smiling and giving a thumbs up alongside a known Honduran cartel chief.

Mr. Hernández ran for president on the ticket of the conservative National Party and was elected in 2013. Prosecutors said Mr. Hernández relied on his connections to the world’s most powerful cartels to fund his campaign, including a $1 million bribe from El Chapo.

He used the weapons and power of the state for his own ends, according to prosecutors, jurors and the Hondurans who came to despise him. The threat of being extradited to the United States made drug traffickers eager to bribe anyone who could protect them, prosecutors said, and they came to know they could rely on Mr. Hernández.


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Mr. Hernández directed the police and military to protect smugglers who paid him off, and he promised to shield them from extradition to the United States. Mr. Hernández once reassured a Honduran cocaine trafficker that “by the time the gringos find out, we will have eliminated extradition,” according to prosecutors.


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Mr. Hernández even boasted, “We are going to stuff the drugs up the gringos’ noses, and they’re never even going to know it,” according to a witness who testified at the 2021 trial of a drug trafficker.

Investigators said that Mr. Hernández went to pitiless lengths to cover his tracks. One accused co-conspirator was killed in a Honduran prison to protect the president, according to court documents. He used drug money to manipulate the vote in two elections, the documents said.

In 2017, Mr. Hernández again became president after an election so laced with allegations of fraud that days of violence ensued and about two dozen people were killed as the military cracked down.

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In 2017, protests against Mr. Hernández’s disputed re-election turned deadly.Credit...Orlando Sierra/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images


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Hondurans, long divided on political lines, united in disgust. The chant “Fuera J.O.H.” — “Out with J.O.H.” — could be heard not just at protests, but among huge migrant caravans marching north, filled with people fed up with poverty and rampant corruption.

Publicly, Mr. Hernández denied any involvement in drug trafficking. And his connections to the U.S. remained strong.

President Barack Obama called him one of the “excellent partners” helping to discourage children from coming to the United States. Mr. Trump recognized him as the winner of the disputed 2017 vote, counting on him to help curb the flow of people and drugs. The Biden administration regarded him as a key ally in Central America as it sought to control migration.

But the rot became evident when Mr. Hernández’s brother, Tony, was arrested in Miami in 2018 after being linked to a trafficking organization.

During the younger brother’s trial in 2019, a former Honduran mayor and major drug trafficker described how an associate of El Chapo had delivered the $1 million bribe — cash wrapped in plastic bundles of $50,000 and $100,000.


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Prosecutors displayed the machine gun with Mr. Hernández’s name engraved on it.

In February 2022, weeks after he left office, Mr. Hernández was detained at the request of the United States; he was escorted onto a plane in handcuffs and extradited two months later.

Fireworks erupted in celebration in the country he once ruled.

His own trial showed in grisly detail how Mr. Hernández had promised to crack down on drug gangs, all the while partnering with them instead, according to statements by prosecutors and witnesses.

Devis Leonel Rivera Maradiaga, a former leader of a gang called Los Cachiros, who admitted to being involved in the deaths of 78 people, testified that he had bribed Mr. Hernández with $250,000 delivered to the president’s sister, Hilda, in exchange for protection.

Another trafficker testified that he had personally delivered a payoff, saying: “I paid $250,000 as a bribe to Juan Orlando Hernández.”

Mr. Hernández was convicted of drug trafficking and weapons conspiracy in a room packed with Hondurans eager to see his downfall.


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When he was sentenced in 2024, Mr. Hernández spoke for almost an hour in court, airing conspiracy theories and grievances as he portrayed himself as the victim of “political persecution.” In a lengthy letter, Mr. Hernández quoted Edmund Burke, Martin Luther King Jr. and the Bible.

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Mr. Hernández was hailed as an ally by a succession of U.S. presidents.Credit...Reuters


“The investigation and trial against me is full of mistakes, of injustices that have become a lynching through the U.S. judicial system,” Mr. Hernández wrote. “The prosecutors and agents did not do the due diligence in the investigation to know the whole TRUTH.”

For many Hondurans, his conviction was a rare taste of justice. A woman in a crowd outside the courthouse celebrating his punishment had held a sign that read “No clemency for narcopolitics.”

But on Saturday, Mr. Trump said in a statement to The New York Times that “many friends” had asked him to pardon Mr. Hernández: “They gave him 45 years because he was the President of the Country — you could do this to any President.”

Jeff Ernst contributed reporting from Tegucigalpa and David C. Adams contributed reporting from Miami.


Santul Nerkar is a Times reporter covering federal courts in Brooklyn.


Annie Correal is a Times reporter covering Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean.
A version of this article appears in print on Dec. 1, 2025, Section A, Page 10 of the New York edition with the

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Saturday, November 29, 2025

Australia: A history: by Tony Abbott

 Amazon.com.au:Customer reviews: Australia: A history: by the former Prime Minister Tony Abbott with a foreword by Geoffrey Blainey; from convict colony to great democracy: A history ... now a major documentary on Sky News Australia



Australia: A history: by the former Prime Minister Tony Abbott with a foreword by Geoffrey Blainey; from convict colony to great democracy: A history ... now a major documentary on Sky News Australia

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4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
66 global ratings





Australia: A history: by the former Prime Minister Tony Abbott with a foreword by Geoffrey Blainey; from convict colony to great democracy: A history ... now a major documentary on Sky News Australia
byTony Abbott
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23 customer reviews

From AustraliaAbbott is very broad and generous in his use of the historical literature he must draw on in this project, citing widely and fairly from scholars of many different perspectives and backgrounds, whether in the ideological current in which he was perceived to be swimming during his political days or from very different streams. The moderation, liberality, and modernity which Abbott seeks to reveal in the Australian story should also make us aware of how misleading the old hostile caricatures of him as the "mad monk" or whatever of the Australian political scene. To spell that out: absolutely no Jesuit ideologue would use the words "modern" and "liberal" as the words of praise they are for Abbott. He did join the Liberal Party and his book presents Australia as firmly within an evolving liberal tradition, one which Abbott thinks worth the effort of recounting, preserving, and upholding into the future. What was particularly fascinating for me is that by the time his own political career arrives in the text, he has provided the deepest possible context for understanding his actions and achievements (which were quite significant given the short span of his premiership: Sydney waited how many decades for that second airport decision? ... Labour maintains his border policy at the time of writing... etc) - so this book is also a political autobiography, but a very humble and deeply situated one.


Dennis O'Brien


5.0 out of 5 stars Should be mandatory study material in all Australian schools - its that good !Reviewed in Australia on 28 November 2025
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
This book should be mandatory study for every Australian student doing secondary school.
The author had so much to cram in that at times, it was simply fact after fact with no trivial stories that I read in the historian Professor Blamey's much more extensive account on the same subject.

But it's all true with no apparent bias.

Worthwhile valuable reading and knowledge.



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CP


4.0 out of 5 stars Australia: A history: by the former Prime Minister Tony AbbottReviewed in Australia on 22 November 2025
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
Arrived on time and as described, although I was a bit disappointed as the cover got damaged during transportation. Book moved around in the box with no padding to hold it in place.



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Peter Scope


5.0 out of 5 stars Very well written and answers a lot of misinformation about our history.Reviewed in Australia on 29 November 2025
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
What a great read. I was very impressed with Tony Abbot's research and its apolitical nature. I hope it answers a lot of misinformation about Australia's history. This should be part of the education system.



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Bernard O'Brien


5.0 out of 5 stars Simply a great book about our early history by a great Australian. Buy it.Reviewed in Australia on 29 October 2025
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
Thank you Tony Abbott for your marvellous book on Australia's History. I am addicted to our country's early history and your book will be a fine addition to my large collection. I was pleased to see in very early pages (chapter 2) mention of a distant relative of mine; Robert Lock who married Maria, the daughter of Yarramundi. In fact Maria's marriage to Robert was the first officially sanctioned marriage in the colony between an Aboriginal and a non-aboriginal. Robert was transported here with his father Jonathan for the crime of 'pig stealing', arriving here in 1821 aboard the vessel Granada. Robert was one of 12 children of Jonathan and his wife Sarah who was left to fend for herself and her children when her husband and one of her sons was transported to Australia. Another of Jonathan and Sarah's children was John who was also transported to Australia for horse theft arriving in 1826. Jonathan and John are direct ancestors of mine. In fact, I have 7 transported convicts in my direct ancestry and proud of it. Thank you again for the great book Mr Abbott.

5 people found this helpful


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Narelle Auld


5.0 out of 5 stars Recommend.Reviewed in Australia on 18 November 2025
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
Beautifully presented book by someone with the historical knowledge, love and appreciation of the democracy of Australia. Recommend.

One person found this helpful


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Callapeerney


4.0 out of 5 stars Good readReviewed in Australia on 5 November 2025
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
Interesting slant on Australian history.

2 people found this helpful


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M


5.0 out of 5 stars Australian HistoryReviewed in Australia on 9 November 2025
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
Husband is currently reading it. Excellent writing by a Rhodes Scholar.

2 people found this helpful


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colin b.


5.0 out of 5 stars The truth told as it happened.Reviewed in Australia on 5 November 2025
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
A must read

4 people found this helpful


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John C


5.0 out of 5 stars Put in all SchoolsReviewed in Australia on 19 October 2025
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
Brillant book should be in all Australian schools.

7 people found this helpful


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The Australian Wars Gapps, Stephen,

The Australian Wars: The truth about the bloody battles fought to establish the nation : Gapps, Stephen, Murray, Mina, Perkins, Rachel, Reynolds, Henry: Amazon.com.au: Books


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The Australian Wars: The truth about the bloody battles fought to establish the nation Hardcover – 4 November 2025
by Stephen Gapps (Editor), Mina Murray (Editor), & 2 more


Product description
About the Author
Rachel Perkins is a filmmaker with a career spanning documentaries, television drama and movies. Her Australian Aboriginal heritage (Arrernte/Kalkadoon) has inspired much of her work including The Australian Wars documentary series, which she wrote and directed and which was commissioned by SBS and produced by Blackfella Films. Other notable documentary work includes First Australians and Blood Brothers. Her fiction work includes the TV dramas Total Control, Mystery Road and Redfern Now and the movies Jasper Jones, Mabo, Bran Nue Dae, One Night the Moon and Radiance. She spends her time between her traditional country of Mparntwe/ Alice Springs and Sydney.

Stephen Gapps is a historian working to bring the Australian Frontier Wars into broader public recognition. In 2011 Stephen won a NSW Premier's History Award for his book Cabrogal to Fairfield City: A history of a multicultural community. His 2018 title The Sydney Wars: Conflict in the early colony, 1788-1817 won the 2019 Les Carlyon Literary Prize. In 2021 Stephen published Gudyarra: The First Wiradyuri War of Resistance-the Bathurst War 1822- 1824 and in 2025, Uprising: War in the Colony of New South Wales 1838-1844. Stephen is a Senior Associate at Artefact Heritage and Environment and Adjunct Lecturer at Charles Sturt University.

Mina Murray is a Wiradyuri scholar, educator and historian. Her research focuses on reclaiming the history of armed Indigenous resistance by synthesising archival research and conventional, historical practice with the knowledge and philosophy of her people. Mina has worked with the ABC, SBS, AFL, the Australian War Memorial and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities across the continent. For Dhuluny, the 200th anniversary of the declaration of martial law in Bathurst, Mina collaborated with Wiradyuri Elders, local Aboriginal organisations and AIATSIS to produce a suite of curriculum materials and teachers' resources for the commemoration.

Henry Reynolds is a historian who wrote an MA thesis on nineteenth- century colonial politics. He taught in Tasmania and the UK before accepting a lecturing position in Townsville University College (now James Cook University). He lived in North Queensland for over 30 years, teaching Australian history and politics, where he became deeply involved in race politics with local Aboriginal people and Torres Strait Islanders, which greatly influenced his teaching and research. Henry has written over 20 books-many of them prize winners including: The Other Side of the Frontier, The Law of the Land, Forgotten War and Truth-Telling.

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For the first time, The Australian Wars brings what for too long has been considered the historical past into connection with its reverberations in the present.

It is estimated up to 100,000 people died in the frontier wars that raged across Australia for more than 150 years. This is equivalent to the combined total of all Australians killed in foreign battles to date. But there are few memorials marking these first, domestic wars.

The Australian Wars was conceived by Rachel Perkins following her award-winning documentary series produced by Blackfella Films for SBS and edited along with Stephen Gapps, Mina Murray and Henry Reynolds. This is the first book to tell the story of the continental sweep of massacres, guerilla warfare, resistance and the contests of firearms and traditional Aboriginal weaponry as Indigenous nations resisted colonial occupation of their lands, territory by territory. At stake was the sovereignty of an entire country.

Black and white writers tell the stories of these battles across three crucial time periods, and all the states and territories. It notes the lands that were unconquered, as well as the role of disease, weapons and tactics, and the story of women on the frontier.

This history is still alive in those descendants who carry the stories of their ancestors. The Australian Wars brings what for too long has been considered the historical past into the present so that we might know the truth of the origins of this nation.

'As it peels back the enduring veils of silence and denial about our shared past, The Australian Wars exposes a complex legacy of shame, pride, crime and valour. It offers us an opportunity to ask ourselves, in a spirit of humility and honesty, what it truly means to be an Australian patriot. The authors of this work have delivered a huge favour wrapped in a hard lesson.' TIM WINTON

'An inspiring, game-changing work of collective truth-telling about our shared history.' KATE GRENVILLE

'This book provides the most comprehensive account available of the continental violence against Aboriginal people during the colonial settlement and some of its consequences today. Rachel Perkins and her fellow editors have done us all a great service in bringing this history together. Some opinions will be disputed and there will be debate about how these conflicts will be characterised and memorialised, but it is for all Australians, whether descended from the pioneer generations or not, to respond to this history by ensuring that every person in today's Australia is treated with equal respect and dignity, and provided with the opportunities that all people deserve' DAVID KEMP AC

'Together with the TV series The Australian Wars puts down a marker: no more denial, no more cant. These wars happened and we cannot blink them away. The Australian frontier was a battlefield, and we should recognise this as we recognise those other battlefields in Turkey, France and New Guinea. We should remember the dead, honour the brave. It will give us a firmer basis for thinking clearly about who we are and what to do.' DON WATSON

'There was a fight for this country and in many places an intense one where the colonials were held at bay. This book has the best of contemporary research. It will ensure that the original people of this nation are not denied the dignity of their resistance and the truth telling has the edge it should.' KIM BEAZLEY

'The Australian Wars is a compelling call to truth-telling and national reckoning. It exposes the historical amnesia surrounding Australia's foundation, comparing the silencing of the Frontier Wars to that of the Stolen Generations. Through sharp critique of national institutions like the Australian War Memorial and a demand for the inclusion of Indigenous histories, the authors urge Australians to confront the realities of colonial violence. This is more than a chronicle of the past-it is a challenge to reshape national memory, honour Indigenous resistance as patriotic, and build a future rooted in justice and shared truth. The Australian Wars is a powerful, meticulously researched, and deeply moving account that redefines Australia's colonial history through the lens of Indigenous resistance and truth-telling. Edited by Rachel Perkins, Stephen Gapps, Mina Murray, and Henry Reynolds, the book confronts the long-denied reality of the Frontier Wars, offering a compelling blend of personal testimony, historical analysis, and cultural insight. It challenges the myths of peaceful settlement, honours the courage of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, and calls for national reckoning and remembrance. Essential reading for all Australians, this book is a landmark contribution to our understanding of the violent foundations of modern Australia.' THE HON KEN WYATT AC
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David A. Vise - Wikipedia

David A. Vise - Wikipedia

David A. Vise

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David A. Vise
Born
David A. Vise

June 16, 1960 (age 65)
Alma materWharton School of the University of Pennsylvania
OccupationJournalist
AwardsPulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting

David A. Vise (born June 16, 1960), is a journalist and author. He is a Senior Advisor to New Mountain Capital, a New York–based investment firm, and Executive Director of Modern States “Freshman Year for Free,” a philanthropy whose goal is to make college more accessible and affordable.[1][2][3]

He won a Pulitzer Prize and the Gerald Loeb Award for Large Newspapers in 1990 while working as a business reporter for The Washington Post.[4][5][6]

He has authored or co-authored four books, including The Bureau and the Mole (2002), about FBI agent and convicted spy Robert Hanssen, and The Google Story (2005), a national bestseller published in more than two dozen languages.[7][8][9]

Vise received an MBA from Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He holds an honorary Doctorate of Literary Letters from Cumberland University and studied at the London School of Economics.[10] Wharton named him to a list of 125 influential alumni on its 125th anniversary.[11] In 2009, Vise received The Joseph Wharton Award for career achievement and community service.[12]

A past president of Washington Hebrew Congregation, Vise is a board member of the World Union for Progressive Judaism, where he focuses on interfaith relations.[13] Vise was a member of the first WUPJ delegation to meet with the Vatican.[citation needed]

Personal life

Vise, a first-generation American whose parents Harry and Doris Vise escaped Nazi Germany, is married to Lori Vise, a consultant with The College Consulting Collaborative who focuses on college planning for students with learning differences.[14][15]

Bibliography of publications

  • Vise, David A., and Mark Malseed. The Google Story: Inside the Hottest Business, Media and Technology Success of Our Time. Paperback ed. Dell Pub., 2005. ISBN 9780553804577
  • Vise, David A. The Bureau and the Mole: the Unmasking of Robert Philip Hanssen, the Most Dangerous Double Agent in FBI History. 1st ed. Grove/Atlantic, Inc., 2002. ISBN 9780871138347
  • Vise, David A., and Gary Williams. Sweet Redemption: How Gary Williams and Maryland Beat Death and Despair to Win the NCAA Basketball Championship. Hardcover ed. Sports Pub., L.L.C., 2002.
  • Vise, David A., and Steve Coll. Eagle on the Street: Based on the Pulitzer-Prize Winning Account of the SEC's battle with Wall Street. Paperback ed. Scribner, 1998.

References

  1.  Singletary, Michelle. "Perspective | Making a dent in student debt with 'Freshman Year for Free'"Washington PostISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  2.  "Vise – New Mountain Capital". Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  3.  "Who We Are"Modern States. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  4.  "Historical Winners List"UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved January 31, 2019.
  5.  "Two Times business section reporters win Loeb Award"Los Angeles Times. May 22, 1990. p. D2. ISSN 0458-3035.
  6.  "1990 Pulizer Prizes, Journalism".
  7.  The Bureau and the Mole. "Washingtonpost.com: Live Online"www.washingtonpost.com. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  8.  shapiroconsult. "The Google Story, THE NATIONAL BESTSELLER — in a Newly Updated Edition for Google's 20th Anniversary!"The Google Story. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  9.  OpenLibrary.org. "David A. Vise"Open Library. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  10.  "David A. Vise | Speakers Bureau and Booking Agent Info"www.allamericanspeakers.com. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  11.  "Wharton Alumni Magazine: 125 Influential People and Ideas: David A. Vise". 2008-02-05. Archived from the original on 2008-02-05. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  12.  "40th Annual Wharton Award Dinner Honors Susan Small Savitsky, David Vise, Pradeep Wahi 10/29"www.whartondc.com. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  13.  "David Vise"The Montgomery Fellows. 2016-12-29. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  14.  Tamburin, Adam. "Harry Vise, TN businessman and Holocaust survivor, dies at 94"The Tennessean. Retrieved 2022-01-22.
  15.  Alund, Natalie Neysa. "Doris Vise, wife of local business leader the late Harry Vise, dies at 90"The Tennessean. Retrieved 2022-01-22.
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