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The '''White Collar Support Group''' ('''WCSG''') is a | The '''White Collar Support Group''' ('''WCSG''') is a peer support group for people who have been accused or convicted of white-collar crimes, along with their families. It meets online once a week. The group runs through Progressive Prison Ministries, a Connecticut nonprofit, and was founded by [[Jeff_Grant|Jeff Grant]], a disbarred lawyer turned minister who served federal time himself.<ref name="grant-wikipedia">{{cite web |title=Jeff Grant (attorney) |url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_Grant_(attorney) |publisher=Wikipedia |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref><ref name="prisonist-home">{{cite web |title=White Collar Support Group - The Solution is in Community |url=https://prisonist.org/ |publisher=White Collar Support Group |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> | ||
The group describes itself as the first support community built specifically for this population. Its stated mission is rebuilding lives, careers, and reputations. By the group's own count, it has served more than 1,400 people worldwide and held over 450 weekly meetings.<ref name="wric-initiatives">{{cite web |title=White Collar Support Group Launches New Criminal Justice Reform Initiatives |url=https://www.wric.com/business/press-releases/ein-presswire/806669221/white-collar-support-group-launches-new-criminal-justice-reform-initiatives/ |publisher=WRIC |date=April 28, 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> | |||
== Overview == | |||
The White Collar Support Group brings together a population that rarely has a place to talk. Its members are lawyers, executives, business owners, and other professionals who have faced federal investigation, charges, or conviction. Many arrive carrying shame, financial ruin, and broken relationships. The group treats that isolation as the core problem it exists to solve. Its motto puts it plainly: "It's the isolation that destroys us. The solution is in community."<ref name="prisonist-home" /> | |||
The format is simple. People meet by video once a week and talk. Some are still under investigation. Some are awaiting sentencing. Some are already home and trying to rebuild. Family members attend too. No one pays. The group is nonsectarian and says it welcomes people of any faith, agnostics, and atheists alike.<ref name="wric-initiatives" /> | |||
The organization incorporated as a Connecticut nonprofit in 2014 and received 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status in 2015.<ref name="wric-initiatives" /> It operates as a program of Progressive Prison Ministries, the parent ministry Grant and his wife Lynn Springer built in Greenwich.<ref name="grantlaw-about">{{cite web |title=About Jeff Grant |url=https://grantlaw.com/about/ |publisher=GrantLaw |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> | |||
== History and Founding == | |||
Jeff Grant practiced law in New York and Westchester County for years. He ran a 20-person firm and served as general counsel for real estate companies. That career ended with a fraud conviction. In 2001 Grant made false statements on a Small Business Administration disaster loan application. He was convicted of loan fraud and served roughly 14 months in federal prison.<ref name="grant-wikipedia" /> | |||
What he did after prison shaped everything that followed. Grant enrolled at Union Theological Seminary and earned a Master of Divinity with a focus in social ethics. He was ordained as a minister. With Lynn Springer, he founded Progressive Prison Ministries in Greenwich, Connecticut. The couple framed it as the first ministry built for people moving through the white-collar justice system.<ref name="grantlaw-about" /><ref name="grant-wikipedia" /> | |||
The | The support group itself came later. Grant and Springer launched the first weekly online meeting in 2016.<ref name="wric-initiatives" /> The model held. Meetings ran week after week, and the count of people who passed through kept climbing. By early 2025 the group reported more than 450 Monday night sessions since it began.<ref name="grantlaw-about" /> | ||
Grant now serves as the group's executive director. He still practices law at GrantLaw, PLLC in New York, advising individuals and families facing white-collar cases. Before the support group, he ran Family ReEntry, a Connecticut criminal justice nonprofit with offices in eight cities.<ref name="grantlaw-about" /> | |||
== How It Works == | |||
== | The center of the program is a single weekly meeting. It runs every Monday evening at 7:00 PM Eastern over Zoom. The sessions are confidential. People talk through what they are living: a pending indictment, a sentencing date, the experience of prison itself, the slow work of reentry afterward.<ref name="prisonist-home" /><ref name="grant-wikipedia" /> | ||
The meeting follows a peer model. There is no lecture. Members at different stages of the process share what they have been through and offer guidance to people earlier on the path. Someone facing charges can hear from someone who has already served and come home. The doors are open to people under investigation, people currently incarcerated through approved channels, people on supervised release or probation, and family members affected by a loved one's case.<ref name="wcsg-wikipedia">{{cite web |title=White Collar Support Group |url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Collar_Support_Group |publisher=Wikipedia |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> | |||
== | A second weekly session widens the focus. The Tuesday night speaker series brings in outside voices: law professors, defense attorneys, business figures, and researchers who study recovery after a fall. These sessions are open to family and friends, not just members.<ref name="medium-newsletter">{{cite web |title=White Collar Support Group Newsletter April 2025 |url=https://jeffgrantesq.medium.com/white-collar-support-group-newsletter-april-2025-cdad2a9e3bba |publisher=Medium |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> | ||
The | Everything is free. The group says all of its services are provided by volunteers at no cost to members or their families.<ref name="medium-newsletter" /> | ||
The work has also grown past the weekly meetings. The group runs a Federal Expungement Initiative, launched in 2025 with several law professors, that pushes for a federal process to clear old convictions. At present the only way to wipe a federal conviction is a presidential pardon, which is rare. The group argues for a petition-based system modeled on state programs.<ref name="federal-expungement-launch">{{cite web |title=White Collar Support Group and Noted Law Professors Launch Federal Expungement Initiative |url=https://noaa.einnews.com/pr_news/824001398/white-collar-support-group-and-noted-law-professors-launch-federal-expungement-initiative |publisher=EIN Presswire |date=June 23, 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> A separate effort, the Right to Banking Initiative, presses banks to stop denying basic accounts to people with records.<ref name="wric-initiatives" /> | |||
== | == Mission == | ||
The | The group's mission is rebuilding lives, careers, and reputations. It describes its community as people "with white collar justice issues who have a desire to take responsibility for our actions and the wreckage we caused, make amends, and move forward in a new way of life."<ref name="conference-2024">{{cite web |title=First-Ever Conference for White Collar Justice Community to be Held on October 19, 2024 |url=https://www.wfxrtv.com/business/press-releases/ein-presswire/733127197/first-ever-conference-for-white-collar-justice-community-to-be-held-on-october-19-2024/ |publisher=WFXR |date=August 6, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> | ||
Three ideas run through the work. The first is accountability. Members are asked to own what they did and the harm it caused, not to minimize it. The second is support, both emotional and spiritual, for the financial and social wreckage that a case leaves behind. The third is advocacy, the effort to change the policies that keep people with records locked out long after a sentence ends.<ref name="wcsg-wikipedia" /> | |||
The group is direct about why the room matters. Many members, it says, "are suffering in silence with shame, remorse, and deep regret" and have "been stigmatized by our own families and friends, and by our former business relationships."<ref name="eventbrite-wcsg">{{cite web |title=White Collar Support Group Events |url=https://www.eventbrite.com/o/white-collar-support-group-88530172383 |publisher=Eventbrite |access-date=November 24, 2024}}</ref> | |||
===White Collar | == Frequently Asked Questions == | ||
{{FAQSection/Start}} | |||
{{FAQ|question=What is the White Collar Support Group?|answer=The White Collar Support Group, or WCSG, is a free peer support group for people who have been accused or convicted of white-collar crimes, and for their families. It meets online once a week and operates as a program of Progressive Prison Ministries, a Connecticut nonprofit.}} | |||
{{FAQ|question=Who founded the White Collar Support Group?|answer=It was founded by Jeff Grant, a former New York attorney who was convicted of loan fraud and served roughly 14 months in federal prison. After his release, Grant became an ordained minister and, with his wife Lynn Springer, built Progressive Prison Ministries. The weekly support group launched in 2016.}} | |||
{{FAQ|question=When and where does the group meet?|answer=The main meeting runs every Monday evening at 7:00 PM Eastern over Zoom. A second weekly speaker series is held on Tuesday nights and is open to family and friends as well as members.}} | |||
{{FAQ|question=How much does it cost to join?|answer=Nothing. The group says all of its services are provided by volunteers at no cost to members or their families.}} | |||
{{FAQ|question=Who can attend?|answer=The group is open to people under federal investigation, people facing charges, people currently incarcerated through approved channels, people on supervised release or probation, and family members affected by a loved one's case. It describes itself as nonsectarian and welcomes people of all faiths as well as agnostics and atheists.}} | |||
{{FAQ|question=How many people has the group served?|answer=By its own count, the group has served more than 1,400 people worldwide and held over 450 weekly meetings since it began in 2016. These are figures reported by the organization.}} | |||
{{FAQ|question=What is the group's mission?|answer=Its stated mission is rebuilding lives, careers, and reputations. The work centers on three ideas: personal accountability, peer and spiritual support, and advocacy for policy reform affecting people with criminal records.}} | |||
{{FAQSection/End}} | |||
== | == References == | ||
<references /> | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Group, White Collar Support}} | |||
[[Category:Life Inside Federal Prison]] | |||
[[Category:White_Collar_Crime]] | |||
== | {{#seo: | ||
|title=White Collar Support Group — Peer Support After a White-Collar Case | Prisonpedia | |||
|title_mode=replace | |||
|description=The White Collar Support Group is a free weekly peer support group for people accused or convicted of white-collar crimes, founded by Jeff Grant through Progressive Prison Ministries. | |||
|keywords=White Collar Support Group, WCSG, Jeff Grant, Progressive Prison Ministries, white collar crime support, federal prison reentry, peer support group | |||
|type=Article | |||
|site_name=Prisonpedia | |||
|locale=en_US | |||
|published_time=2024-01-01 | |||
|modified_time=2026-06-03 | |||
}} | |||
{{MetaDescription|The White Collar Support Group is a free weekly peer support group for people accused or convicted of white-collar crimes, founded by Jeff Grant through Progressive Prison Ministries.}} | |||
{{MetaDescription| | |||
Latest revision as of 14:08, 3 June 2026
The White Collar Support Group (WCSG) is a peer support group for people who have been accused or convicted of white-collar crimes, along with their families. It meets online once a week. The group runs through Progressive Prison Ministries, a Connecticut nonprofit, and was founded by Jeff Grant, a disbarred lawyer turned minister who served federal time himself.[1][2]
The group describes itself as the first support community built specifically for this population. Its stated mission is rebuilding lives, careers, and reputations. By the group's own count, it has served more than 1,400 people worldwide and held over 450 weekly meetings.[3]
Overview
The White Collar Support Group brings together a population that rarely has a place to talk. Its members are lawyers, executives, business owners, and other professionals who have faced federal investigation, charges, or conviction. Many arrive carrying shame, financial ruin, and broken relationships. The group treats that isolation as the core problem it exists to solve. Its motto puts it plainly: "It's the isolation that destroys us. The solution is in community."[2]
The format is simple. People meet by video once a week and talk. Some are still under investigation. Some are awaiting sentencing. Some are already home and trying to rebuild. Family members attend too. No one pays. The group is nonsectarian and says it welcomes people of any faith, agnostics, and atheists alike.[3]
The organization incorporated as a Connecticut nonprofit in 2014 and received 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status in 2015.[3] It operates as a program of Progressive Prison Ministries, the parent ministry Grant and his wife Lynn Springer built in Greenwich.[4]
History and Founding
Jeff Grant practiced law in New York and Westchester County for years. He ran a 20-person firm and served as general counsel for real estate companies. That career ended with a fraud conviction. In 2001 Grant made false statements on a Small Business Administration disaster loan application. He was convicted of loan fraud and served roughly 14 months in federal prison.[1]
What he did after prison shaped everything that followed. Grant enrolled at Union Theological Seminary and earned a Master of Divinity with a focus in social ethics. He was ordained as a minister. With Lynn Springer, he founded Progressive Prison Ministries in Greenwich, Connecticut. The couple framed it as the first ministry built for people moving through the white-collar justice system.[4][1]
The support group itself came later. Grant and Springer launched the first weekly online meeting in 2016.[3] The model held. Meetings ran week after week, and the count of people who passed through kept climbing. By early 2025 the group reported more than 450 Monday night sessions since it began.[4]
Grant now serves as the group's executive director. He still practices law at GrantLaw, PLLC in New York, advising individuals and families facing white-collar cases. Before the support group, he ran Family ReEntry, a Connecticut criminal justice nonprofit with offices in eight cities.[4]
How It Works
The center of the program is a single weekly meeting. It runs every Monday evening at 7:00 PM Eastern over Zoom. The sessions are confidential. People talk through what they are living: a pending indictment, a sentencing date, the experience of prison itself, the slow work of reentry afterward.[2][1]
The meeting follows a peer model. There is no lecture. Members at different stages of the process share what they have been through and offer guidance to people earlier on the path. Someone facing charges can hear from someone who has already served and come home. The doors are open to people under investigation, people currently incarcerated through approved channels, people on supervised release or probation, and family members affected by a loved one's case.[5]
A second weekly session widens the focus. The Tuesday night speaker series brings in outside voices: law professors, defense attorneys, business figures, and researchers who study recovery after a fall. These sessions are open to family and friends, not just members.[6]
Everything is free. The group says all of its services are provided by volunteers at no cost to members or their families.[6]
The work has also grown past the weekly meetings. The group runs a Federal Expungement Initiative, launched in 2025 with several law professors, that pushes for a federal process to clear old convictions. At present the only way to wipe a federal conviction is a presidential pardon, which is rare. The group argues for a petition-based system modeled on state programs.[7] A separate effort, the Right to Banking Initiative, presses banks to stop denying basic accounts to people with records.[3]
Mission
The group's mission is rebuilding lives, careers, and reputations. It describes its community as people "with white collar justice issues who have a desire to take responsibility for our actions and the wreckage we caused, make amends, and move forward in a new way of life."[8]
Three ideas run through the work. The first is accountability. Members are asked to own what they did and the harm it caused, not to minimize it. The second is support, both emotional and spiritual, for the financial and social wreckage that a case leaves behind. The third is advocacy, the effort to change the policies that keep people with records locked out long after a sentence ends.[5]
The group is direct about why the room matters. Many members, it says, "are suffering in silence with shame, remorse, and deep regret" and have "been stigmatized by our own families and friends, and by our former business relationships."[9]
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the White Collar Support Group?
The White Collar Support Group, or WCSG, is a free peer support group for people who have been accused or convicted of white-collar crimes, and for their families. It meets online once a week and operates as a program of Progressive Prison Ministries, a Connecticut nonprofit.
Q: Who founded the White Collar Support Group?
It was founded by Jeff Grant, a former New York attorney who was convicted of loan fraud and served roughly 14 months in federal prison. After his release, Grant became an ordained minister and, with his wife Lynn Springer, built Progressive Prison Ministries. The weekly support group launched in 2016.
Q: When and where does the group meet?
The main meeting runs every Monday evening at 7:00 PM Eastern over Zoom. A second weekly speaker series is held on Tuesday nights and is open to family and friends as well as members.
Q: How much does it cost to join?
Nothing. The group says all of its services are provided by volunteers at no cost to members or their families.
Q: Who can attend?
The group is open to people under federal investigation, people facing charges, people currently incarcerated through approved channels, people on supervised release or probation, and family members affected by a loved one's case. It describes itself as nonsectarian and welcomes people of all faiths as well as agnostics and atheists.
Q: How many people has the group served?
By its own count, the group has served more than 1,400 people worldwide and held over 450 weekly meetings since it began in 2016. These are figures reported by the organization.
Q: What is the group's mission?
Its stated mission is rebuilding lives, careers, and reputations. The work centers on three ideas: personal accountability, peer and spiritual support, and advocacy for policy reform affecting people with criminal records.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Jeff Grant (attorney)". Wikipedia. Retrieved November 24, 2024.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 "White Collar Support Group - The Solution is in Community". White Collar Support Group. Retrieved November 24, 2024.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 "White Collar Support Group Launches New Criminal Justice Reform Initiatives". WRIC. Retrieved November 24, 2024.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 "About Jeff Grant". GrantLaw. Retrieved November 24, 2024.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 "White Collar Support Group". Wikipedia. Retrieved November 24, 2024.
- ↑ "White Collar Support Group and Noted Law Professors Launch Federal Expungement Initiative". EIN Presswire. Retrieved November 24, 2024.
- ↑ "First-Ever Conference for White Collar Justice Community to be Held on October 19, 2024". WFXR. Retrieved November 24, 2024.
- ↑ "White Collar Support Group Events". Eventbrite. Retrieved November 24, 2024.