Medlin Law Firm - December 2025

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Criminal Defense | State and Federal Law | Immigration Law | Se Habla Español

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INSIDE THIS ISSUE 1. My Favorite Christmas Memories

2. Create Holiday Magic Without Spending Big

Immigration Travel Risk You Need to Know

3. The Truth About Texas Criminal Records

Crispy Prosciutto and Cheese Sliders

4. Disguised Devices of WWII

Freedom in a Deck of Cards The Secret Tools of War A few companies, including the U.S. Playing Card Company, also did their part. Soldiers could peel away the top layer of a card to uncover silk escape maps. Cigarette packs from the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company carried radio parts. Gillette even made razor blades that acted like a compass if you balanced them on a stick. What’s remarkable is that the companies involved never asked for recognition or payment. Gillette, R.J. Reynolds, and the Playing Card Company volunteered and helped. And the gadgets kept coming. Radios hidden in suitcases. Hollow heels in boots with maps tucked inside. Even Ping-Pong paddles had secret compartments. Guards saw these items and didn’t give them a second thought. That was the point. Most of the devices were destroyed when the war ended. But enough stories survived to give us a glimpse. Clever doesn’t even begin to cover it. For many prisoners, a deck of cards or a shaving kit wasn’t just a distraction. It was a shot at freedom.

James Bond gets the movie credit, but real spies in World War II were pulling tricks long before 007 hit the

screen. Their work wasn’t flashy; it was desperate. The British intelligence agency MI9 and later the American MIS-X program were tasked with helping Allied soldiers escape Nazi prisons or avoid capture.

That meant turning everyday objects into tools.

Take the button compass. It looked like part of a soldier’s uniform, nothing more. But inside sat a tiny magnetic needle. Line it up on a string, and suddenly you knew which way was north. Hairbrushes carried folded maps or money. Monopoly boards weren’t just for killing time; they came with real bills mixed in, and if you saw a red dot on “Free Parking,” chances were good there was more than a game in the box.

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