About the Book
This book consists of articles from Wikia. Pages: 69. Chapters: Images, Redemption characters, Abu Dhabi, D.C. Times, Damn it, Don't Let Them Take My Kids, English language, Eritrea, French language, General, Interrogation, Jack and Benton, New President In A Troubled World, Okavango School, Open The Gate, People's Freedom Army, Presidential pardon, President of the United States, Russian language, Sangala, Silent clock, United Nations, United States of America, United States Secret Service, Washington, D.C., Weapons, Allison Taylor, Benjamin Juma, Carl Benton, Charles Solenz, Chris Whitley, Desmond, Edward Vossler, Edwin Ross, Ethan Kanin, Frank Tramell, Halcott, Henry Taylor, Ike Dubaku, Jack Bauer, James, John, John Quinn, Jonas Hodges, Kabila, Kintu, Nichols, Noah Daniels, Redemption antagonists, Roger Taylor, Russell, Samantha Roth, Samuel, Seville, Thomas, Tom Lennox, Udo, Ule Matobo, Willie, Youssou Dubaku. Excerpt: Abu Dhabi is a city in the United Arab Emirates, in the Middle East. Before Redemption, Nichols and his company laundered money from there and Eritrea for Jonas Hodges, which was partly used to fund General Juma and his army to stage a coup d'etat against the government of Sangala, Africa. Nichols ordered Chris Whitley, who helped launder the money, to delete all evidence concering Abu Dhabi and Eritrea, but chose not to. When Hodges found out, he hired two men, who most likely deleted it for Whitley, before killing him. The D.C. Times was a print periodical published in Washington, D.C., founded nearly 120 years ago. On the day of Allison Taylor's inauguration as President, the Times published Issue 35 of its 125th volume. The front page was devoted primarily to an article on the capital's preparations for Inauguration Day, written by staff writer Terri Neish. Neish also described the planned schedule of events, including the parade down Pennsylvania Avenue, the oaths of office for both Taylor and her running mate Mitchell Hayworth, and the ...