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About Face: The Betrayal by Saints, Syndicates, and Self
Coles
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About Face: The Betrayal by Saints, Syndicates, and Self in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $49.99

Coles
About Face: The Betrayal by Saints, Syndicates, and Self in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $49.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Paperback
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
About Face: The Betrayal by Saints, Syndicates, and Self is Rob Sidhu’s brutal confession — once a highly skilled RCMP officer and undercover operator, later a man entrenched in the shadows of organized crime. Betrayed by institutions, by syndicates, and by his own hand, Sidhu’s rise was intoxicating, built on deception and power. But his fall was ruthless — grinding him into chains, steel, and concrete. Inside a prison cell, stripped of every illusion, he was forced to confront the only choice that ever mattered: stay broken, or begin again. But this isn’t just his story. It’s a true crime journey — part confession, part judgment — and a mirror. In his failures, betrayals, and fleeting moments of grace, we see our own reflection: the stories we tell to survive, the power that blinds us, and the wreckage we leave behind. Because the greatest betrayal isn't what others do to us, it's the lies we tell ourselves. And no matter how far we fall, we still hold the power to rise again.
About Face: The Betrayal by Saints, Syndicates, and Self is Rob Sidhu’s brutal confession — once a highly skilled RCMP officer and undercover operator, later a man entrenched in the shadows of organized crime. Betrayed by institutions, by syndicates, and by his own hand, Sidhu’s rise was intoxicating, built on deception and power. But his fall was ruthless — grinding him into chains, steel, and concrete. Inside a prison cell, stripped of every illusion, he was forced to confront the only choice that ever mattered: stay broken, or begin again. But this isn’t just his story. It’s a true crime journey — part confession, part judgment — and a mirror. In his failures, betrayals, and fleeting moments of grace, we see our own reflection: the stories we tell to survive, the power that blinds us, and the wreckage we leave behind. Because the greatest betrayal isn't what others do to us, it's the lies we tell ourselves. And no matter how far we fall, we still hold the power to rise again.


















