White Collar Advice Blog
Try THIS in Federal Prison
Part of our mission at White Collar Advice and Prison Professors is to help people overcome the lifelong challenges of a felony
David: Beverly Hills Consigliere (Chapter 8)
David: Beverly Hills Consigliere In the spring of 2010, nearly one year after I left the boundaries of Taftβs minimum-security prison camp,
White Collar Crime: Dr. Garyβs Seven Patient Files (Chapter 7)
Dr. Garyβs Seven Patient Files In the fall of 2009 I participated in a radio interview with Frank Mottek on KNX 1070
Scam Sends Steve To Pensacola Federal Prison Camp (Chapter 6)
Chapter 6 Tax Scam Sends Steve To Pensacola Federal Prison Camp My past experiences of growing up as a privileged Jewish kid
Willful Blindness Sends Executive To Federal Prison (Chapter 5)
In the fall of 2009 I accepted an invitation to speak at DePaul University from Dr. Kelly Pope, professor of accounting. During
Whistle-blowers: The New Corporate Watchdog (Chapter 4)
Whistle-blowers: The New Corporate Watchdog In February of 2010, at the invitation of Professor Mark Mallinger, I addressed an audience at Pepperdine
The White Collar Advice blog helps people under investigation or facing federal sentencing understand the system, avoid mistakes that lead to longer sentences or tougher prison placements, and prepare for prison and reentry.
People under federal investigation, facing sentencing, or preparing for prison who want to build a documented record that shows they are different from the governmentβs one-sided version of events. Family members who want to understand the process and help a loved one prepare should read it too.
Yes. The blog is based on the combined experience of our team at White Collar Advice, including my time in the system, Michael Santosβs 26 years in federal prison, and the work we’ve done with thousands of people going through investigations, sentencing, and reentry. Everything comes from what weβve seen and documented over many years.
These blogs teach you how to create assets that do not currently exist to influence cynical stakeholders, like a Federal Judge or Probation Officer.