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Three Felonies A Day

How the Feds Target the Innocent

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Three Felonies A Day

By: Harvey Silverglate, Alan M. Dershowitz - foreword
Narrated by: Chris Sorensen
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About this listen

The average professional in this country wakes up in the morning, goes to work, comes home, eats dinner, and then goes to sleep, unaware that he or she has likely committed several federal crimes that day. Why? The answer lies in the very nature of modern federal criminal laws, which have exploded in number but also become impossibly broad and vague.

In Three Felonies a Day, Harvey A. Silverglate reveals how federal criminal laws have become dangerously disconnected from the English common law tradition and how prosecutors can pin arguable federal crimes on any one of us, for even the most seemingly innocuous behavior. The volume of federal crimes in recent decades has increased well beyond the statute books and into the morass of the Code of Federal Regulations, handing federal prosecutors an additional trove of vague and exceedingly complex and technical prohibitions to stick on their hapless targets. The dangers spelled out in Three Felonies a Day do not apply solely to "white collar criminals," state and local politicians, and professionals. No social class or profession is safe from this troubling form of social control by the executive branch, and nothing less than the integrity of our constitutional democracy hangs in the balance.

©2011 Harvey A. Silverglate (P)2018 Tantor
Crime Freedom & Security Law Political Science Politics & Government Social Sciences
All stars
Most relevant
Could have been so interesting but the narrator has zero emotion in his voice, similar to listening to white noise.

Boring

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Written 2018, the scribe must have crystal ball.
Having not heard of the author, I read it as Alan M. Dershowitz wrote the forward.
It does what it says on the tin.
A phrase i picked up from a paint advertisement.

Prophetic

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