
Walder spent 15 months with the FBI and notes that 'currently, there are a dozen women who have filed a complaint against the with the Equal Employment Commission.' In one incident, she was disciplined for wearing a suit that was deemed 'distracting.' 'I was The Girl,' she wrote, saying that she experienced bullying and hazing from sexist training officers. While Walder excelled at her work, her time at the FBI proved to be a bad fit and described the agency as a boys' club. Within the Mak's trash, Walder, with the help of a Chinese translator, would find an eye-opening piece of information.īetween the greasy pages of discarded newspaper, they found a 'tasking list clearly identified classified materials that Mak was supposed to supply the Chinese government.'Ĭhi had been stealing U.S.

It was Walder's job to sift through their garbage for clues. The couple usually kept to themselves and ate their meals on newspapers. Navy, while Walder conducted her investigation. 'The Unexpected Spy: From CIA to The FBI, My Secret Life Taking Down Some of the World's Most Notorious Terrorists' will be released on February 25Ĭhi worked for Power Paragon, a company that developed products for the U.S.

In time, Walder become an expert on al Qaeda, interviewed terrorist associates in the Middle East and was well-versed in chemical weapons. The agency also interviewed four of her sorority sisters, before they ultimately welcomed her into the ranks of the agency's elite.Īt just 21-years-old, she began her career with the CIA in 2000.
SORORITY SPY 2 SERIES
She goes on to detail how CIA would put her through series of intense interviews, including two lie-detector tests. Walder recalls the surprising moment in the upcoming memoir, which is co-authored by Jessive Anya Blau.

'Do you want to be in the CIA?' he asked, after Walder handed him a résumé. Tracy Walder (pictured) temporarily left behind her dreams of becoming a teacher to join the CIA - and later the FBI - where she would become an expert in Al Qaeda and confronting captured terrorist associates in the Middle EastĪt the time, Walder was dressed in a pink top, flip flops and was pushing along a Huffy bike when the recruiter asked her the life-changing question, New York Post reports. Walder later transferred to the FBI and has written a new book about her experience working against al-Qaeda.She traveled across the globe foiling terrorism plots, but faced challenges like exhaustion and sexism.After the September 11 attacks, Walder was assigned to a counterterrorism unit that was tasked with stopping al-Qaeda.She joined the CIA in 2000, eventually become versed in al-Qaeda, interviewing terrorist associates in the Middle East and chemical weapons.Walder initially had plans to become a teacher while at the University of Southern California, but that changed when she met a CIA agent at a job fair.

SORORITY SPY 2 FULL
The first official trailer for Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising is here, and it is full of parties and shenanigans.
