This eye-opening and heartrending memoir prepares families for dealing with settlements and caregiving after difficult accidents. On January 9, 2002, an 80,000-pound tanker truck crashed into the back of Marcia Rhodes’s stopped Toyota... Read More
The victories and frustrations Inserra recounts are timeless—nothing is more eternal than the battle between good and evil. "C-1 and the Chicago Mob" by Vincent L. Inserra gives an insider’s look at two very intriguing institutions... Read More
This detailed, sometimes shocking memoir of an LA cop pulls no punches on crime and punishment. Retired officer Lawrence J Rupp writes about his years in law enforcement, withholding no gritty details. "The Duck Theory" is a frank,... Read More
After facing near death on the job, a rookie policeman changes tactics and goes on to a distinguished career in law enforcement. From a young age, Robert T. Christensen planned for a long career as a police officer, but those plans were... Read More
This vital resource for every self-publisher clearly outlines the legal issues authors need to know. When attorney Helen Sedwick self-published her historical novel, she found that no legal guide for self-publishing writers existed. She... Read More
Grant’s experience tells the story of how Canada entered the age of modern media. In Changing Channels: Confessions of a Canadian Communications Lawyer, Peter S. Grant takes readers through his life story with a mix of personal... Read More
Ex-agent says the FBI went astray when it began chasing terrorists rather than criminals. Author Frederic Donner, an FBI veteran who was forced to accept a medical disability leave when he was diagnosed with brain cancer, is a remarkable... Read More
The Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy Studies was founded in the early 1980s by politically conservative law students who considered mainstream legal thought in America too liberal. Though it started as a student organization... Read More