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Project Main Details
There are 20 to 30 recordings we need to have read/recorded quickly for a rather somber project, a multimedia program associated with a memorial to Drug Enforcement Administration's fallen agents. Each individual lost their life in the line of duty. The video clips (set to scrolling text) will be accessible by a user through an interactive kiosk. The segments, ranging in length from about approximately 2-4 minutes, are of a biographical nature, often describing the person's accomplishments in life as well as the circumstances surrounding their death. The mood should be respectful, journalistic, somber, objective and reserved, like a documentary. We hope to receive individual quicktime movie files as the final product, labeled by numerical code. The audio will be sent to the media producers via FTP or disc. We estimate that the budget should not exceed $1,000.00 considering the length of the spots.
Thank you!
Sep 30, 2005 13:56:03 (GMT -05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada) Oct 03, 2005 00:00:00 (GMT -05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada) No (click here to learn more about
Project Parameters
Script Details
Thirty-six at the time of his death, Narcotic Inspector Spencer Stafford of the Bureau of Narcotics, U.S. Department of Treasury, was shot and killed on February 7, 1935, in Post, Texas. Inspector Stafford was fatally wounded when Sheriff W. F. Cato fired at him with a machine gun as he exited a veterinary hospital. Charged with the murder were the Sheriff; his Deputy, Tom Morgan; and two local doctors, L. W. Kitchen, a veterinarian and V. A. Hartman, a physician. In addition, both doctors were charged with Federal narcotics violations.
Inspector Stafford, originally from Hudson, New York, joined the Internal Revenue Service's Narcotics Bureau after graduating from pharmacy school. At the time of his death, he had been assigned to the Fort Worth, Texas, office for three years. His previous assignments included tours in offices in New York, Georgia, and Florida. Inspector Stafford was described by the Dallas District Attorney, Clyde O. Eastus as, "one of the best officers I ever knew." Inspector Stafford's killers were charged under a statute enacted in May 1934, making it a Federal offense to kill a Federal officer in the line of duty. This was believed to be the first time this statute was invoked. Inspector Stafford was survived by his wife, C. M. Stafford, who was described as his high school sweetheart; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Stafford; and a brother, Leveret Stafford.
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