White Collar Advice
Walking the track at a minimum-security camp isn’t what defines your future. What comes after release does. People who assume prison is the finish line usually struggle most when the structure disappears. Perspective That Changes Outcomes Literature matters in prison because it puts suffering in context. Reading about people who endured war, poverty, or decades of confinement—and still rebuilt—changes how you see your own situation. Justin’s example is blunt: compared to people with no family support or education, many white-collar defendants start with advantages they ignore. Prison...
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Small choices carry consequences inside federal prison. Gambling tied to recreational sports leads to injuries, debts, and disciplinary shots. Gossip and constant complaining create enemies fast. One common mistake is venting about a short sentence—off-putting when bunkmates may be serving ten years or more. How to Stay Out of Trouble Time alone matters. It reduces exposure to conflict and bad decisions. Keep distance from staff. They aren’t confidants, and casual comments can become reports. In federal prisons, many incident reports start with unnecessary conversation, not violence. Keep...
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When people panic, they talk. They explain inconsistencies, justify decisions, and try to “clear things up.” That usually backfires. In one real case, a defendant already under indictment took a call from a former colleague—unaware that the caller was cooperating with the government. How Superseding Indictments Happen The cooperator was coached to call, ask questions, and even lie if needed. The defendant opened up. Weeks later, prosecutors filed a superseding indictment. That single call made his situation worse. What to Do Instead Assume everyone has an agenda. Silence protects you....
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Preparing for Minimum Security Federal Prison Most White Collar Advice clients serve time in minimum-security camps, often with sentences under five years. That matters. You’re entering a place where others have lived for decades. The smart move is humility—lay low, don’t manipulate, and drop the TV-driven myths about prison life. Avoiding Trouble Inside Real problems often start at night in TV rooms—gambling, noise, and tension. One practical fix: remove yourself. Waking up before the dorm creates a quiet two-to-three-hour window for thinking, planning, and staying out of trouble....
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After a talk in Los Angeles last week, I realized how much people still misunderstand about prison. The questions I got weren’t academic—they were based on assumptions that can actually hurt someone once they’re inside. That’s why I recorded this episode. I walk through five prison myths I hear all the time. One is that minimum-security prison is just boring. Boredom is real, but that’s also the danger. Idle time is where people waste years. If you use it right, prison can be a reset, not a holding pattern. Another myth is thinking you “have time.” With good time, earned time...
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This episode comes from a rough week—the kind where you know exactly what to do and still don’t do it. I record this after getting a call no one wants. Months earlier, someone in the community said he was cooperating and his lawyer told him that was enough. Probation. No prison. I pushed back and pointed him to an interview with Paul Bertrand, the FBI agent who arrested me. Bertrand said something that stuck: in his entire career, only one person avoided prison because of cooperation alone. I urged this person to prepare anyway. Build a record. Make amends. Don’t treat cooperation...
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This episode starts mid-run, right after I get a text that simply says, “You were right.” I explain what led up to it. Two weeks earlier, a member of the community read his sentencing statement out loud during a webinar. I had already reviewed the letter I planned to give the judge and told him plainly: if you want less time, you need to rewrite this. The judge he was facing wouldn’t give credit for paying restitution, even if the amount was large. Paying taxes and making victims whole is expected, not rewarded. I warned him to remove that argument. He didn’t. At sentencing, the judge...
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This episode was recorded on the way into sentencing, after a long night and with real life still moving in the background. The government is asking for three years in prison. There’s no dramatic speech here and no last-minute plea for mercy. I talk through what actually matters at this stage. Not promises. Not saying you’ll never do it again. Judges hear that every day. What stands out is a record. I reflect on someone in the community who didn’t ask for forgiveness. I just did the work. Daily meetings. Volunteering hundreds of hours and documenting it. Working, saving, and paying money...
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In today’s episode, I share some personal thoughts on the news that Tai Lopez has been charged by the SEC with running a $112 million Ponzi scheme through his company, Retail Ecommerce Ventures. I’ve followed Tai’s work over the years—not as an investor in his 67 Steps or any of his programs, but as a marketer interested in how he built an empire around books, Lamborghinis, and lifestyle branding. Millions admired him, millions hated him, but nobody ignored him. Now he’s facing something I know all too well: an SEC case that could be referred to the DOJ and turn criminal. My own case...
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In this episode I go back to April 28th, 2008, the surrender drive my mom and older brother made with me, the gas station in Bakersfield, the very bad Carl’s Jr. meal, and the fact that I walked in without a plan until I met Michael inside, I explain how that mentorship led to my first asset, a daily writing commitment that started on October 12, 2008, I sent pages to my mom, she put them on the internet, I got praise and criticism and kept going, I lay out why I tell people to write something today—even a napkin note—and why to build a profile on prison org with a biography, daily...
info_outlineWalking the track at a minimum-security camp isn’t what defines your future. What comes after release does. People who assume prison is the finish line usually struggle most when the structure disappears.
Perspective That Changes Outcomes
Literature matters in prison because it puts suffering in context. Reading about people who endured war, poverty, or decades of confinement—and still rebuilt—changes how you see your own situation. Justin’s example is blunt: compared to people with no family support or education, many white-collar defendants start with advantages they ignore.
Prison doesn’t have to define you. What you do with perspective does.
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