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What does 'Three Felonies a Day' mean?

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The Trust Gap

 

As part of a Forbes.com Special Report on lost faith in our institutions, Harvey analyzes the corrosive effect of coerced testimony and justice denied.

Trust Me: Justice is My Last Name (July 21)


NEW BOOK EXCERPT: Alfred Zehe and "spy" swapping

 

July 15: "Subversive Suburbanites," Forbes.com, by Harvey Silverglate  

 


Recent reviews of Three Felonies a Day

August 14: White Collar Warrior: Silverglate and Three Felonies a Day by Norm Pattis

Silverglate radicalized me. There is no mob quite so dangerous as a self-righteous mob, and populism is the rage of the day. White collar defense is less the work of those who don't want to get blood on their lapels than it is a world in which spreadsheets and ledgers become the new Molotov cocktail. Reading Silverglate made me eager to get into the front lines and trade blows with a government all too ready to take without restraint.

June 28: Book Review, by Elizabeth Kelley, The Federal Lawyer

June 17: "America's Injustice System" by George Leef, Freedom Daily

June 12: ""Innocent until proven guilty" anything but absolute in federal courts" by Gerald N. Unger, Massachusetts Lawyers Journal

 

 


June 3: Nat Hentoff on the case of Bruce Shore, a Philadelphia man charged with a federal crime for sending "harassing email" to a senator:

 

"Indicting the First Amendment," Arizona Daily Sun

 

Further coverage, May 25: "Bruce Shore, Unemployed Philadelphia Man, Indicted For 'Harassing Email' To Jim Bunning," Huffington Post

 

 

In the News Minimize

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♦ Forbes "Booked" series (July 16)

 

 

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