CASE FILE DOC. NO. 26-0001 STATUS: RELEASED 2026
FIRST EDITION
A First-Person Federal Survival Guide

You've been indicted.Or you're about to be.

And nothing online tells you what really happens next. Kent Douglas served seventeen months in a federal prison camp in Texas. The White Collar Playbook is the honest, first-person guide he could not find when federal agents came for him.

206 PAGES 30 CHAPTERS RELEASED JUNE 2026
The White Collar Playbook by Kent Douglas — book cover
Where to Begin

Three readers. One playbook.

This book was written for three audiences who almost never get the same information at the same time. Find your starting point.

DOC. 26-0001/A

For the Defendant

You learned the government is serious. Your lawyer is talking about a plea. You are searching at 2 a.m. for a clear answer about what is actually about to happen. Start here.

Open File
DOC. 26-0001/B

For the Family

The case is happening to a marriage, to children, to a household. The defendant is paralyzed. You are the one on the laptop trying to understand what comes next. This is for you.

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DOC. 26-0001/C

For the Attorney

A resource you can hand to a client at the first meeting. It does the emotional and procedural prep work that you do not have hours to do. Bulk-order pricing for your firm.

Open File
"I did not write this to sound tough or to relive something I would rather forget. I wrote it because, when my life started coming apart, I could not find one practical guide that said plainly what was about to happen."
— Kent Douglas, Introduction
Inside the Book

What the Playbook covers.

No jargon. No folklore. No false comfort. Thirty chapters covering the full arc, from investigation to release.

01

How a federal investigation actually unfolds

From the first indication the government is serious through indictment.

02

Choosing a defense attorney worth the price

What separates good representation from excellent representation.

03

Surviving the financial shock

Frozen accounts, legal fees, lost income, and household survival.

04

The PSR interview and sentencing

Why the presentence report shapes everything that comes after.

05

What self-surrender day is really like

What to bring, what not to bring, and how to walk through the gate.

06

Keeping marriage and family intact

The relationships that survive a federal sentence, and the ones that do not.

07

Halfway house and home confinement

How the final months of a federal sentence actually work.

08

The spouse's perspective

An entire chapter written for the person waiting on the outside.

Read the Playbook

Available June 19, 2026 in paperback and Kindle on Amazon.

What this book is

The White Collar Playbook is a first-person federal prison survival guide for white collar defendants and their families. It is written by a man who served seventeen months in a federal prison camp in Texas and completed home confinement in February 2026. It covers the full arc of a federal case: from the first indication the government is serious, through indictment, attorney selection, the financial shock, the PSR interview, sentencing, self-surrender, the first night, the first thirty days, prison jobs, family visits, halfway house, home confinement, and reentry.

It is not legal advice. It is not memoir. It is not a thriller. It is the practical, measured, honest account that the author searched for and could not find when federal agents came for him.

Who it is for

This book is for a specific kind of reader. If you are a white collar defendant — fraud, financial crimes, tax issues, similar conduct — and you have no significant criminal history, this is written directly for you. It is also written for the spouse, parent, child, or business partner who is trying to hold things together while the case unfolds. And it is written for the federal criminal defense attorney who wants a single resource they can hand to a client at the first meeting.

What's inside

Thirty chapters. 206 pages. Plus a glossary of federal criminal and prison terms. The complete table of contents:

  • Introduction — Why I Wrote This
  • Chapter 1 — The Day You Realize the Government Is Serious
  • Chapter 2 — Indictment, Arraignment, and the Illusion of Innocent Until Proven Guilty
  • Chapter 3 — The Reality of the Federal System: What the Numbers Actually Show
  • Chapter 4 — The Financial Shock After Indictment
  • Chapter 5 — Living With the Case and Working With Defense Counsel
  • Chapter 6 — The PSR, Character Letters, and Sentencing Day
  • Chapter 7 — The Weeks Before Surrender
  • Chapter 8 — Camps, Classification, and Why Placement Is Not Guaranteed
  • Chapter 9 — The Drive to Prison and the Intake Process
  • Chapter 10 — The First Night: Counts, Noise, and the Reality of Where You Are
  • Chapter 11 — What to Bring, What Not to Bring, and Reporting the Right Way
  • Chapter 12 — The First Morning, the First Meal, and the First Thirty Days
  • Chapter 13 — Staying Connected: Phone System, Email, and Weekend Visits
  • Chapter 14 — Prison Jobs, Exercise, and the Value of Staying Busy
  • Chapter 15 — Commissary, Coffee, and the Economy of Small Comforts
  • Chapter 16 — Dorm Life, Hygiene, Showers, and Bathroom Etiquette
  • Chapter 17 — Race, Politics, the TV Room, and the Unwritten Rules of Camp
  • Chapter 18 — Phones, the SHU, and Other Ways New Guys Create Problems
  • Chapter 19 — Medical Care, Medications, and Your Health Inside
  • Chapter 20 — Mental Health, Identity, and Staying Psychologically Intact
  • Chapter 21 — Watching Men Go Home and Believing Your Own End Will Come
  • Chapter 22 — The Reentry Job Market: Finding Work With a Federal Conviction
  • Chapter 23 — Marriage, Intimacy, and the Relationship After Prison
  • Chapter 24 — Money and Banking After a Federal Conviction
  • Chapter 25 — What Families Need to Know While You Are Inside
  • Chapter 26 — Things I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before I Went In
  • Chapter 27 — A Practical Survival List for the Person About to Surrender
  • Chapter 28 — Checklist for Each Stage of a Federal Case
  • Chapter 29 — Dos and Don'ts of Federal Prison Camp
  • Chapter 30 — The Spouse's Perspective
  • Closing Reflection — The Sentence Ends, but the Memory Stays
  • Glossary of Federal Criminal and Prison Terms

Read a sample

"I was sentenced to thirty-six months in federal prison. Because of good time credit and First Step Act earned time credits, I ultimately served about twenty-one months total. Seventeen of those months were spent in a federal prison camp in Texas from April 2024 through October 2025. I did not write this to sound tough or to relive something I would rather forget. I wrote it because, when my life started coming apart, I could not find one practical guide that said plainly what was about to happen, what it would feel like, and what my family needed to do before I surrendered."

— From the Introduction

"Most material about the federal system is written from one of two perspectives. It is either written by lawyers, who understand procedure but usually have never slept in a dorm with a hundred other men, or it is written like prison folklore, full of exaggeration and stories meant to shock people. Neither approach was useful to me when I was trying to prepare my wife, protect my family, and figure out how to walk into prison without completely falling apart."

— From the Introduction

Get the book

The White Collar Playbook is available June 19, 2026, in paperback and Kindle editions on Amazon. Pre-orders open six weeks before launch.

You probably learned within the last few days, or the last few weeks, that the government is serious. A target letter arrived. Your attorney called. Agents showed up at your office. Your wife or husband is asking you questions you do not know how to answer. You are searching online late at night because you cannot bring yourself to call anyone you know.

That is exactly the moment this book was written for. The author was in your position in 2017. He searched for a clear, honest, first-person account of what was actually about to happen — investigation, indictment, attorney selection, the financial shock, the PSR, sentencing, surrender, prison camp, halfway house, reentry — and he could not find one. So he wrote it.

What you need to understand right now

"When you first learn the government is looking at you seriously, a wall goes up between you and almost everyone in your life. Some people step back because they are afraid of what your case might mean for them. Others step back because they simply do not know what to say. A few disappear entirely. You sit in meetings and at dinner tables still performing the part of a normal person while something seismic is happening underneath."

— Chapter 1, The Day You Realize the Government Is Serious

The first thing the book does is name what is happening to you. The isolation. The performance. The financial pressure that has not hit yet but will. The unfamiliar legal vocabulary your attorney is using. The question of whether to tell your employer, your business partners, your in-laws. None of it is in any handbook. All of it is in this one.

What the first ninety days actually look like

The book walks through the federal process in the order it actually happens — not the order the law school casebooks describe. Most defendants discover, too late, that the moves that matter most are the ones made in the first ninety days: how you choose your attorney, what you do with your bank accounts, who you tell and what you say to them, how you prepare for the PSR interview, and what your spouse needs to be doing in parallel.

"The selection of your criminal defense attorney may be the most important professional decision of your life. The difference between good representation and excellent representation in a federal case can mean months of additional time served, a better or worse facility placement, a heavier or lighter financial penalty, and the difference between a sentence that is merely survivable and one that you actually emerge from in reasonable shape."

— Chapter 1A, Choosing the Right Criminal Defense Attorney

Free download: The First 14 Days

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The First 14 Days: A Checklist for the Newly Indicted

The exact moves the author wishes he had made in his first two weeks. Built from Chapters 1, 4, and 5 of the book. Sent immediately to your inbox.

Where to go from here

If you are reading this, the person you love is the one facing a federal case. You're most likely up late at night trying to figure out what to tell the children, your friends, your in-laws, and the people in your circle who are starting to ask questions. You're trying to understand whether the joint accounts are safe, what your husband or wife will need on the day they surrender, and whether the marriage will survive any of it.

This book has an entire chapter — Chapter 30 — written specifically for you. It is written from the author's perspective and from his wife's, looking back on what they wish someone had told her before he was indicted, before sentencing, and before he walked through the prison gate.

"My wife deserved better information than she had. She deserved to know what the phone system would look like, what visiting rules would feel like, what the financial pressures of an extended legal case actually mean for a household, and what to expect when the person she loved walked through a prison gate and did not come home that day. No one prepared her for any of that."

— From the Introduction

What this book gives you that nothing else does

Most resources for families of the incarcerated are written for state prison. Federal is different — different system, different facilities, different rules, different visiting policies, different timelines. And almost nothing is written for the white collar family in particular: the spouse who has never been near anything criminal, who is suddenly handling household finances alone, fielding awkward conversations with neighbors, and visiting a federal prison camp once a week.

The book covers, plainly, what to expect:

  • How the BOP phone system works, what calls cost, and how to set them up
  • What weekend visits are actually like — what you can wear, what you can bring, what your children will see
  • How the email system works (it is not real email)
  • What the financial reality of a long case is, and how to plan around it
  • How marriages typically fracture during incarceration, and the patterns of the ones that survive
  • What to expect on the day your spouse comes home — which is harder than most families expect

The spouse's perspective, unfiltered

"Whatever I survived inside, you survived something parallel and in some ways harder on the outside. This book, and everything that comes after it, belongs as much to you as it does to me."

— From the Acknowledgements

Free download: For Families

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What Families Need to Know in the First 30 Days

A focused guide for spouses and family members in the early weeks of a federal case. Built from Chapters 25, 30, and 4. Sent immediately to your inbox.

You know the conversation. The client sits across from you, half in shock, asking the questions that you have answered a thousand times. What is a PSR. What does self-surrender mean. What is the difference between a low-security prison and a camp. How do I tell my wife. What about the kids. What about the business. You can answer them — but it costs you billable hours that the client cannot really afford and that you, frankly, cannot really spare.

The White Collar Playbook is written for that exact gap. It is the book the client should read between the first meeting and the second meeting. It is calibrated to the white collar defendant — fraud, financial crimes, tax — with no significant criminal history, and it is written in plain, measured prose by an author who served seventeen months in a federal prison camp in Texas.

What it is not

It is not legal advice. It is not a substitute for counsel. It does not give the client tactical guidance on their own case. It is explicit on every one of these points. What it does is the emotional and informational prep work — what indictment feels like, what to expect at sentencing, what the camp looks like at intake, what visiting will be like for the spouse — that frees you to do the legal work.

How attorneys are using it

  • As a hand-out at the first or second client meeting
  • As a recommended read for the spouse, who is often the more active researcher
  • As a CLE companion for younger associates new to white collar defense
  • As a reentry resource at the post-sentencing or pre-surrender stage

Bulk order pricing

Volume pricing is available for firms ordering for client use. Indicative ranges below; final pricing confirmed in writing.

QUANTITY PER UNIT USE CASE
10 copies $22.45 Solo practitioner, occasional white collar
25 copies $19.95 Small firm, regular white collar caseload
50+ copies $16.95 Mid-size firm, dedicated white collar group

Pricing excludes shipping. Custom orders, firm-branded inserts, and CLE arrangements available on request.

Free attorney resource

FREE DOWNLOAD · PDF · 6 PAGES

A Resource for Your Federal Defendant Client

A one-page client handout for the first meeting, plus a four-page excerpt from Chapter 1A on attorney selection — useful for showing prospective clients the framing the book provides.

Bulk inquiries

For bulk orders, CLE arrangements, or custom firm orders, contact us here.

FN.001

The First 72 Hours After You Learn the Government Is Serious

For Defendants
FN.002

How to Choose a Federal Criminal Defense Attorney Without Getting Fleeced

For Defendants & Attorneys
FN.003

The Spouse's Perspective: What No One Prepares You For

For Families
FN.004

The Financial Shock: What to Do Before Your Accounts Get Frozen

Coming Soon
FN.005

The PSR Interview: Why It Matters More Than You Think

Coming Soon
FN.006

What to Bring (and What Not to Bring) on Self-Surrender Day

Coming Soon
FN.007

Your First Night in a Federal Prison Camp

Coming Soon
FN.008

What I Wish I Had Known the Day I Was Indicted

Coming Soon

The First 72 Hours After You Learn the Government Is Serious

A target letter, a knock at the door, a phone call from your attorney saying the U.S. Attorney's office wants a meeting. The first three days set the tone for everything that follows. Here is what to do, and what to avoid.

There is a moment — usually a phone call, sometimes a target letter, occasionally a pair of agents at your office — when the abstract becomes specific. Until that moment, you may have suspected the government was looking at you. You may have heard your name come up in someone else's case. You may have spent six months telling yourself it was nothing. The moment it becomes specific, it stops being nothing. The next seventy-two hours are when most defendants make the mistakes that haunt them later.

I made several of those mistakes. The book covers them in detail. This article is the compressed version — the one I would have wanted in my hand the night the call came.

1. Stop talking immediately

Your instinct, if you are like most white collar defendants, is to explain. You have spent your career being articulate. You believe that if you can simply walk people through the facts, the misunderstanding will resolve itself. That instinct is wrong, and it is the most expensive instinct you have right now. Stop talking to anyone — agents, employees, business partners, accountants, friends — about the substance of anything that might be relevant to the case. Not a hint. Not a heads-up. Not a "here's what really happened." Every word you say can become evidence, and almost none of it can help you.

The single sentence you need is: "I would like to speak to my attorney before answering any questions." Memorize it. Use it. Use it again if asked the same question a different way.

2. Find a federal criminal defense attorney within 48 hours

Not your business attorney. Not your divorce attorney. Not the lawyer who handled your mother's estate. A federal criminal defense attorney with current experience in your district and your category of case. If your matter involves fraud, you want a fraud-experienced federal defender. If it is tax, you want tax. The book has an entire chapter on attorney selection — the short version is that you want someone who is a known quantity to the U.S. Attorney's office in your district, who has tried federal cases, and who will tell you hard things directly rather than soothe you.

Get three consultations within the first week if you can. Pay for them if necessary. The first one almost never feels right because you are still in shock. The third one is when you can actually evaluate.

3. Tell your spouse, fully, that night

If you are married, tell your spouse the entire truth on the first day. Not the sanitized version. Not the version you wish were true. The actual version, including what you fear is coming. The single most consistent regret I heard from men inside was that they had managed information to their spouse during the early case, hoping to protect them, and the eventual unraveling did far more damage than the initial truth would have done. Your spouse is going to carry an enormous amount of what is coming. They cannot carry it on incomplete information.

4. Do nothing with documents, accounts, or devices

Do not move money. Do not delete emails. Do not "organize" files. Do not take a thumb drive home. Do not send any document to anyone "just in case." Do not text a colleague to "make sure we are on the same page." Anything you do in the next seventy-two hours that touches the evidence universe is going to be reconstructed by federal investigators with full subpoena power, and any movement looks like obstruction whether you intended it that way or not. Sit on your hands. Talk to your attorney first.

5. Write down what you know, but only for your attorney

Once you have an attorney, the single most useful thing you can do is start a privileged document — written for your attorney, on your attorney's instruction, marked accordingly — that captures the timeline as you remember it. Names, dates, conversations, documents. This is the only writing exercise you should be doing. It will save your attorney dozens of hours and it will save you the cost of those hours.

6. Do not tell your employer or business partners yet

This is harder than it sounds, especially if you run a business. The instinct to "get out in front of it" with partners or board members is strong. Resist it for at least a week, until you have an attorney and a strategy. There is no upside to disclosing on day one and there are several specific downsides — including triggering employment provisions, partnership clauses, and disclosure obligations that you do not yet understand the consequences of.

7. Begin gathering financial documents privately

Not for the government. For yourself, your spouse, and your attorney. Three to five years of tax returns, bank statements, retirement accounts, credit card statements, and insurance policies. Your attorney is going to ask for this, and the financial pressure of a long case is going to become a defining variable. Get organized while you still have the time and bandwidth to do it calmly.

What comes next

The first seventy-two hours are about not making things worse. The next ninety days are about building a strategy. The book — and the rest of these articles — covers what to do once you are out of the immediate shock and into the long stretch of the case. The most important thing to understand on day one is that this is not a sprint. Federal cases unfold over eighteen to thirty-six months. The decisions you make now will compound, in either direction, for the entire arc.

"The first thing the federal system takes from you is the illusion that you can fix this quickly. The sooner you give that up, the better every subsequent decision you make will be."

Stop talking. Find counsel. Tell your spouse. Touch nothing. Document privately. Wait on disclosures. Get organized. That is the seventy-two hour playbook. Everything else flows from it.

This article is drawn from Chapters 1, 4, and 5 of The White Collar Playbook. The book is available June 19, 2026.

How to Choose a Federal Criminal Defense Attorney Without Getting Fleeced

The selection of your defense attorney may be the most consequential professional decision of your life. Most defendants make it badly, and they make it badly because they do not know what to look for. Here is what actually matters.

When you are first looking for a federal criminal defense attorney, almost every signal you have been trained your whole life to trust is misleading. Reputation is misleading. Office size is misleading. Marketing is misleading. The famous name on the door is, more often than not, misleading. The attorney who is right for your case is not necessarily the one with the largest profile in the city. The attorney who is right for your case is the one who has tried federal matters in your district, who is a known quantity to the U.S. Attorney's office, who will tell you difficult things directly, and who has the bandwidth and inclination to manage your case personally rather than delegate it to a junior.

Here is how to evaluate that, in roughly the order you should think about it.

1. Federal criminal experience, specifically

"Criminal defense" covers a huge range of practice. State criminal practice, however accomplished, is not federal practice. The procedures are different. The sentencing framework is different. The plea negotiation dynamics are different. The relationships with prosecutors are different. You want an attorney whose practice is substantially federal, in the type of case you have. Ask directly: "In the last three years, how many federal cases have you handled in this district, and how many of them involved facts similar to mine?" If the answer is fewer than five, keep looking.

2. Trial experience, even if you will not go to trial

More than 97 percent of federal cases end in a plea. You will probably not go to trial. That does not mean trial experience is irrelevant. The plea negotiation leverage your attorney has is substantially derived from the U.S. Attorney's belief that they can and will go to trial if pushed. An attorney who has not tried a federal case in five years has less leverage than one who has tried three. Ask: "When was your last federal trial?" The answer matters.

3. Fit with the U.S. Attorney's office in your district

Federal practice is local. The Assistant U.S. Attorneys assigned to your case have a small set of defense attorneys they have worked with repeatedly. They know who is reasonable, who is theatrical, who delivers what they promise, who does not. Your attorney's reputation in that small community shapes every conversation about your case. A senior local federal defender with thirty years in the district, even one without a national profile, is often more effective than a famous national name flying in for the case.

4. Direct, even uncomfortable communication style

You want an attorney who will tell you, in the first meeting, things you do not want to hear. If you are likely to be convicted, they should say so. If you are likely to do significant time, they should say so. If your sentencing exposure is in a particular range, they should give you that range honestly. The attorney who tells you in the first meeting that "we'll fight this and you'll be fine" is selling you the meeting. Walk out.

5. Personal attention, in writing

Large firms work because senior partners bring in cases and junior associates do the work. That model can work for federal criminal defense, but you have to know what you are buying. If the senior partner whose name is on the door is not personally reading your discovery, attending your meetings with the U.S. Attorney's office, and managing your strategy, you are paying senior-partner rates for junior-associate attention. Get the staffing model in writing. Specifically, ask: "Who, by name, will be at every meeting with the prosecutors? Who will draft the sentencing memorandum? Who will personally argue at sentencing?"

6. A clean fee structure

Federal cases unfold over eighteen to thirty-six months. The financial pressure on you is going to be extreme, and an attorney who has structured a vague hourly arrangement is one who can quietly run up bills no one can later defend. You want, at minimum, a clear retainer with stages — pre-indictment, indictment through plea, sentencing — and a written estimate of total exposure for each stage. Some attorneys offer flat-fee structures for portions of the case. These can be excellent. Whatever the structure, it should be specific and on paper before you sign.

7. The questions to ask in the first meeting

Walk into the first consultation with these questions written down. The attorney's reaction to them tells you almost as much as the answers.

  • How many cases like mine have you handled in this district in the last three years?
  • What is your honest assessment of where this case is likely to end up?
  • What is your sentencing-exposure range, in months, given what I have told you?
  • Who, by name, will personally be working on my case?
  • What is your fee structure, in writing, by stage?
  • What do you need from me in the next thirty days?
  • Who else should I be talking to before I make a decision?

The last question is the test. An attorney who is comfortable with their value will tell you exactly who else to interview. An attorney who is uncomfortable with the question is selling you something other than their value.

8. Three consultations, not one

Get three consultations. Pay for them if you have to. The first one will not feel right because you are still in shock. The second will give you a basis for comparison. The third will be the one where you can actually evaluate. The cost of three consultations is small. The cost of choosing the wrong attorney is enormous and irreversible.

"The selection of your criminal defense attorney may be the most important professional decision of your life. Take the time to evaluate it with the same care you would bring to any decision of comparable consequence."

The hardest part

The hardest part of this process is that you are making the most important professional decision of your life at the moment when your judgment is the most compromised it has ever been. You are frightened. You are sleep-deprived. You are surrounded by people who suddenly seem to be telling you very different things. The attorney who feels the most reassuring in the first meeting is, statistically, the wrong choice. The attorney who tells you the truth, even when the truth is hard, is almost always the right one.

Take the seven days. Pay for the consultations. Ask the questions. Choose the person who tells you the truth.

This article is drawn from Chapter 1A of The White Collar Playbook. The book is available June 19, 2026.

The Spouse's Perspective: What No One Prepares You For

The defendant is the one in the courtroom. But the spouse is the one carrying the household, the children, the in-laws, the finances, and the long stretch of months when the only person who shared the load is gone. This is the part of the story that is almost never told.

The first thing to understand about being the spouse of someone in a federal case is that almost nothing in your life until now has prepared you for it. You did not go to law school. You probably do not know what a PSR is, or a self-surrender date, or a halfway house, or what BOP visiting hours look like. You have probably never been inside a federal prison. The lawyers your husband or wife is meeting with are speaking a vocabulary you are picking up word by word in the worst possible setting. And almost no one in your social circle has been through anything like this, which means almost no one can give you useful advice.

What I want to do in this article — and what the book does at length, in Chapter 30 — is describe the parts of this experience that almost no one warns you about. Not the legal parts. The human parts.

1. The disappearance of friends

Some of the people you considered close friends will simply stop calling. Not because they are cruel. Because they do not know what to say. They are afraid of saying the wrong thing, so they say nothing, and the silence becomes a habit, and the habit becomes a distance, and within a few months you realize that an entire layer of your social life has quietly evaporated. This is one of the most consistently reported experiences in white collar families, and it is one of the most painful, because it happens at the exact moment you most need people.

The flip side is also true: the friends who do show up, who keep calling, who sit with you in the awkwardness, become some of the most important relationships of your life. You will know who they are within the first six months. Hold on to them.

2. The financial reality

Federal cases are expensive, and the expense compounds. Legal fees are the obvious cost, but they are far from the only one. Your spouse's income may stop or be sharply reduced. Health insurance may need to be restructured. Tax positions become more complicated. Joint accounts may need to be reorganized for legal reasons. And household expenses — mortgage, kids, school, food — continue without pause.

The single most consistent regret I heard from spouses was that they had not gotten a clear picture of the household finances early enough. By the time they realized they needed to plan, they were already months into the case and decisions had been made, often by the defendant alone, that were difficult to reverse. If you are early in this, sit down — within the first thirty days — with the actual numbers. All of them. Make a 24-month projection. Adjust as you go. The clarity is worth whatever discomfort it costs.

3. The children

What you tell the children depends on their ages, the public visibility of the case, and your own values. There is no universal right answer. But there are a few things almost every family I observed agreed on, after the fact:

  • Tell them age-appropriate truth, on a deliberate timeline, before they hear it from someone else.
  • Do not let the case become the only thing they associate with this period of their lives. Keep birthdays, sports, ordinary routines. Children survive on continuity.
  • Visiting their parent in prison, for most children, is far less traumatic than the parent's absence with no visit. Federal prison camp visiting rooms are, by design, more humane than people imagine.
  • Talk to a family therapist before sentencing if you possibly can. Not in crisis. In preparation.

4. The day they surrender

The day your spouse self-surrenders is, for many spouses, the hardest single day of the entire process. Harder than indictment. Harder than sentencing. Because it is the day the abstraction becomes physical. You drive them to the gate, or to the airport. You hug them. They walk into the building. You drive home alone. The house is exactly as you left it that morning, except that one person is missing from it, and will be missing from it for a long time.

Plan that day in advance. Where you will be. Who you will be with. What you will do that night. Do not try to be brave alone.

"You drove me to the gate. You drove home alone. You visited every weekend. You held our life together while I was gone and you did it without complaint and without ever letting me see the weight of what you were carrying."

— From the Acknowledgements

5. The visiting routine

Federal prison camps have generous visiting policies compared with higher-security facilities. Weekend visits are typically four to six hours, in a room with vending machines and tables, with reasonable physical contact allowed at the start and end. The first visit is the hardest one — you do not know the rules, the dress code, the ID procedure. By the third visit, it becomes routine.

The book covers this in detail, but the short version: dress code is conservative; bring quarters or a vending card; arrive thirty minutes before visiting hours start because the line forms early; bring nothing in except your ID, your car key, and a clear ziplock with quarters or a card; do not bring food or drink; do not bring paperwork; do not bring books or magazines; do not bring anything that could be construed as contraband.

6. The version of you that emerges

The hardest and most surprising thing many spouses report is that, after the first six months, they are surprised by their own resilience. The version of you that emerges from this is, in almost every case, more capable, more direct, more honest, and less interested in things that used to feel important. That is not a consolation. It is an observation. Many marriages survive a federal sentence not in spite of it but in part because of the depth of partnership that gets forged in the harder version of the relationship.

Many marriages do not survive. The book is honest about this too. The variables that predict survival are surprisingly consistent: financial transparency, emotional honesty, the presence of a small core of friends who stay, professional support, and the willingness of the incarcerated spouse to come home and not be the same person who left. Each of these is a choice. Some of them are choices you can make now.

What I would tell my wife if I could go back

I would tell her, on day one, exactly how scared I was. I would tell her the full financial picture without softening any of it. I would tell her that the friends who disappeared were not her fault and were not a referendum on her. I would tell her that the part she was about to do was harder than the part I was about to do, and that the marriage we ended up with afterward was going to be more honest than the one we had before. And I would tell her that I knew, even on the worst days, that I was the lucky one because she was on the other side of the gate waiting.

If you are the spouse, this book is for you as much as it is for your husband or wife. Maybe more.

This article is drawn from Chapters 25 and 30 of The White Collar Playbook. The book is available June 19, 2026.

Why this book exists

When the author first learned he was under federal investigation, he did exactly what you are probably doing right now. He searched online. He bought books. He called people who claimed to know what was coming. None of it told him the truth.

The lawyers he spoke with knew the law cold. They had never been on the receiving end of an indictment. They had never sat across from a probation officer for a PSR interview as the subject. They had never sat in a car next to a wife who was trying not to cry as she drove them toward a federal facility on a Monday morning to self-surrender. They had never spent seventeen months living among the men they spent their careers prosecuting or defending. They knew the procedure. They did not know the experience. There is a substantial difference between the two, and that difference is exactly what defendants and their families need explained to them.

The White Collar Playbook was written to fill that gap.

Nine years of direct, first-person experience

The author has lived through every phase of a federal white collar case, in sequence, beginning to end. Not as an observer. As the defendant. The book is drawn from approximately nine years of direct experience that began the day federal agents first made contact and did not end until home confinement was completed in February 2026. Specifically, the author personally went through:

  • Receiving notification that he was the subject of a federal investigation
  • The long pre-indictment phase — interviews, document requests, watching the case build
  • Hiring federal criminal defense counsel and learning, the hard way, what separates good representation from excellent representation
  • Indictment, arraignment, and the financial shock that follows them
  • Plea negotiations and the decision-making process that surrounds a federal plea
  • The presentence investigation interview with a federal probation officer
  • Sentencing day in federal court
  • The weeks between sentencing and self-surrender
  • The drive to the gate on surrender day — sitting in the passenger seat as his wife drove him in, getting out of the car, and walking into the prison while she stayed in the parking lot crying and watching him disappear inside
  • Strip-search intake and processing into a federal prison camp
  • Seventeen months of daily life in a federal prison camp in Texas — counts, jobs, dorm life, commissary, the phone system, weekend visits, medical, mental health, the unwritten rules
  • Watching dozens of men go home before he did
  • Halfway house placement and the rules that govern it
  • Home confinement and the slow process of reentry into normal life
  • Final completion of his sentence in February 2026

There is no chapter in this book describing something the author has not personally lived. There is no scene in this book that was researched secondhand. There is no advice in this book that came from someone other than the author or the men he served alongside.

What that means for you

If you are facing a federal case, you are about to be surrounded by professionals who all know parts of what is coming. Your attorney knows the law. Your accountant knows the numbers. Your therapist knows the emotional terrain. Each of them is essential, and none of them is sufficient. None of them can tell you what your first morning at a federal prison camp will feel like, because none of them has had a first morning at a federal prison camp. None of them can prepare your spouse for what visiting will be like, because none of them has been on the inside of that visiting room. None of them can tell you which of the things you are reading online are accurate and which are folklore, because none of them has lived inside the system long enough to know the difference.

This book can. The author has slept in the dorm. He has stood at count. He has worked the prison job. He has used the BOP phone system to call his wife. He has met other men's families in the visiting room. He has watched marriages end and watched marriages survive. He has done the halfway house intake. He has worn the home confinement monitor. He has finished the sentence.

Why this matters now

The federal system changes. Sentencing guidelines shift. The First Step Act is reshaping how good time and earned time credits work. Halfway house placement rules are different in 2026 than they were in 2018. The medical and mental health environment inside federal facilities is different than it was even three years ago. The author's experience is recent — his sentence ended in February 2026 — which means the operational details in this book reflect how the system actually works today, not how it worked when older books were written.

This is the most current first-person account of the federal white collar process available. That is not marketing language. It is a function of when the author finished his sentence and how quickly he wrote.

The men who appear in these pages

The author was one of approximately one hundred men in his unit at the camp. Many of them appear in this book under changed names. They are the friends who taught him how the place worked when he was new, the men who made him laugh on the days when laughter was scarce, the ones who shared a meal or a phone call or a piece of advice that mattered. Their identities are protected because most of them are still finishing their own sentences, and because the friendships forged in that environment are owed a particular kind of loyalty that does not include putting their real names on a published page. Their experiences, however, are part of why this book is as honest as it is.

A note on the pen name

Kent Douglas is a pen name. A federal conviction follows a person for life — it follows their spouse, their children, and their professional reentry. The decision to publish under a pen name protects the author's family from being pulled back into a chapter they have already lived through once, and protects the men still inside who appear in this book under changed names. Every detail in this book is true. Every chapter is drawn from the author's personal experience or his direct observation of the men he served alongside. The author's name on the cover is not the story. The information is.

Press and interview policy

Kent Douglas writes under a pen name and does not give voice or video interviews. He is available for written interviews conducted by email and for written contributions, op-eds, and guest essays. Specific questions or commission requests can be sent via the Contact page.

Speaking and CLE

The author does not appear in person. For CLE programs, defense bar associations, and reentry organizations, written keynotes and recorded slide content are available on request.

Reader correspondence

If you are a defendant or family member and you have a question about the book, write directly. Every email is read. Replies are not always possible but every message is taken seriously.

Attorneys and firms

For bulk orders, CLE arrangements, written keynote requests, or guest essay commissions, use the form. Indicate your firm and the nature of the request in the message.

Press

Written interviews only. Please include the publication, the proposed angle, and your deadline. Pre-written, ready-to-send questions move significantly faster than open-ended requests.

What we cannot do

The author cannot give legal advice, comment on individual cases, recommend specific attorneys, or discuss the details of his own case. Please do not send case documents or details about pending matters.