[1] The book detailed the use of spies by mining and ore milling companies during the period of the Colorado Labor Wars.
It described the recruiting, utilization, and management of agents who infiltrated the Western Federation of Miners and the United Mine Workers unions for the purposes of disruption, sabotage, and gathering information.
Charlie Siringo, another former employee of the agency, had no sympathy for labor, yet wrote books about his experiences as a Pinkerton Detective that were so objectionable to the company, they were repeatedly suppressed.
In 1936, the La Follette Committee of the United States Senate investigated and publicized abuses of detective agencies, including Pinkerton.
The Pinkerton Agency eventually shifted from detective work to security services, at least in part due to such criticism.