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The '''White Collar Conference''' is an annual virtual conference organized by the [[White_Collar_Support_Group|White Collar Support Group]], a nonprofit peer support organization serving individuals prosecuted for white-collar crimes and their families.
The '''White Collar Conference''' is an annual online event for people who have been prosecuted for white-collar crimes, their families, and the professionals who work with them. It is organized by the [[White_Collar_Support_Group|White Collar Support Group]], a peer support nonprofit founded in 2016. The first conference was held in October 2024. It runs once a year on a Saturday morning in October over Zoom.<ref name="ccr2025">{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference Set for October 11 Featuring Jeffrey Toobin and Joe Bankman |url=https://www.corporatecrimereporter.com/news/200/white-collar-conference-set-for-october-11-featuring-jeffrey-toobin-and-joe-bankman/ |publisher=Corporate Crime Reporter |date=September 24, 2025 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref>


Launched in 2024, the conference represents the first event of its kind specifically designed by and for people affected by white-collar prosecution.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference 2024 |url=https://whitecollarconference.com/ |publisher=White Collar Support Group |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref> The conference addresses challenges faced by justice-impacted individuals, including social isolation, employment barriers, mental health concerns, and pathways to personal and professional restoration.
The conference is built around a single idea. People who go through a white-collar case often lose their jobs, their professional standing, and many of their relationships, sometimes before they are ever sentenced. The program treats that isolation as the central problem and uses the event to connect people who have lived through it. Most of the speakers and panelists have been prosecuted or incarcerated themselves.<ref name="wfxr2024">{{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=EIN Presswire |date=August 6, 2024 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref>


==Background==
==Overview==


The White Collar Conference emerged from the work of the White Collar Support Group, founded in 2016 by [[Jeff_Grant|Jeff Grant]], a white-collar attorney who served fourteen months in federal prison for SBA loan fraud committed in 2001.<ref>{{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=EIN Presswire |date=August 6, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref> Unlike traditional legal conferences focusing on practice of law or corporate governance, the White Collar Conference centers on personal and professional rehabilitation of those convicted, as well as their families and support networks.<ref>{{cite web |title=New Conference Seeks Better Outcomes for White Collar Offenders |url=https://dailycaller.com/2024/10/15/new-conference-seeks-better-outcomes-for-white-collar-offenders/ |publisher=The Daily Caller |date=October 15, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
The White Collar Conference grew out of the weekly meetings run by the White Collar Support Group. The support group was founded in 2016 by [[Jeff_Grant|Jeff Grant]], a lawyer who served federal time for an SBA loan fraud connected to the 2001 period.<ref name="wfxr2024" /> After his release he was ordained and began running a peer group for others facing similar cases. The group meets every week by video and has held hundreds of meetings since it started.<ref name="prweb500">{{cite web |title=White Collar Support Group to Hold Historic 500th Weekly Meeting, Mon., Jan. 19, 2026 |url=https://www.prweb.com/releases/white-collar-support-group-to-hold-historic-500th-weekly-meeting-mon-jan-19-2026-302658094.html |publisher=PRWeb |date=January 2026 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref>


The conference was developed in response to statistics showing that approximately 49 percent of federal offenders are rearrested within eight years of release, with high recidivism rates attributed partly to difficulties reintegrating into society, including unemployment, social stigma, mental health concerns, and ongoing legal and financial issues.<ref>{{cite web |title=New Conference Seeks Better Outcomes for White Collar Offenders |url=https://dailycaller.com/2024/10/15/new-conference-seeks-better-outcomes-for-white-collar-offenders/ |publisher=The Daily Caller |date=October 15, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
The conference is the group's main public event. A regular legal conference covers the practice of law or corporate compliance. This one does not. It covers what happens to a person after the case is over. Sessions deal with employment, professional licensing, banking access, mental health, family strain, and the paths back to ordinary life.<ref name="dailycaller2024">{{cite web |title=New Conference Seeks Better Outcomes for White Collar Offenders |url=https://dailycaller.com/2024/10/15/new-conference-seeks-better-outcomes-for-white-collar-offenders/ |publisher=The Daily Caller |date=October 15, 2024 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref>


The conference addresses several recurring themes in white-collar criminal justice:
Organizers have pointed to federal recidivism data as part of the reason the event exists. Studies have found that roughly half of released federal offenders are rearrested within eight years. The conference treats reentry barriers, unemployment, stigma, and untreated mental health as factors behind those numbers.<ref name="dailycaller2024" />
 
'''Isolation and Community''': A central focus of the conference is combating the isolation that accompanies white-collar prosecution. Conference founder Jeff Grant has stated that isolation often begins before incarceration, as individuals lose professional relationships, social connections, and sometimes family support upon arrest or indictment.<ref>{{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=EIN Presswire |date=August 6, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
 
'''Employment and Professional Restoration''': The conference has featured multiple sessions addressing the barriers to employment faced by individuals with criminal records, including exclusion from professional licensing, difficulty obtaining banking services, and employer reluctance to hire formerly incarcerated individuals.<ref>{{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, 2025}}</ref>
 
'''Legal Reform''': The conference has promoted discussion of federal expungement legislation and other policy reforms that could provide pathways to record relief for individuals who have completed their sentences.<ref>{{cite web |title=Federal Expungement Initiative |url=https://federalexpungement.org/ |publisher=Federal Expungement Initiative |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
 
'''Personal Responsibility and Accountability''': The conference philosophy emphasizes taking responsibility for past actions while working toward personal transformation. The White Collar Support Group describes its mission as helping individuals "take responsibility, make amends, and move forward in a new way of life centered on hope, care, compassion, tolerance and empathy."<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference |url=https://prisonist.org/white-collar-conference |publisher=White Collar Support Group |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>


==Format==
==Format==


The White Collar Conference is held virtually via Zoom, typically on a Saturday morning in October, running from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Eastern Time.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference 2025 Tickets |url=https://www.eventbrite.com/e/white-collar-conference-2025-tickets-1533170577469 |publisher=Eventbrite |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref> The three-hour program features keynote addresses, fireside chat interviews, panel discussions, and video presentations. Most speakers and panelists have personal experience with prosecution or incarceration for white-collar offenses.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Support Group to Host White Collar Conference 2024 |url=https://www.wate.com/business/press-releases/ein-presswire/751749268/white-collar-support-group-to-host-white-collar-conference-2024/ |publisher=EIN Presswire |date=October 15, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
The conference is free to attend and held over Zoom. It runs on a Saturday morning in October, from 9:00 a.m. to noon Eastern Time.<ref name="eventbrite2025">{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference 2025 |url=https://www.eventbrite.com/e/white-collar-conference-2025-tickets-1533170577469 |publisher=Eventbrite |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> The three-hour program mixes a keynote, a fireside chat, panel discussions, and short video segments. Audience members include people with their own cases, family members, defense attorneys, academics, policymakers, and members of the public.<ref name="ccr2025" />


The conference is open to justice-impacted individuals, family members, friends, legal practitioners, policymakers, academics, and members of the general public.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference 2025 Announced |url=https://patch.com/new-york/new-york-city/calendar/event/20251011/fe834032-0214-461e-b33e-938d4bd4d32c/join-us-for-white-collar-conference-2025 |publisher=Patch |date=August 22, 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
==Focus==


==White Collar Conference 2024==
A few themes come up at the conference every year.


The inaugural White Collar Conference was held on October 19, 2024, with the theme "Starting Over: Out of Isolation and Into Community."<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Support Group to Host White Collar Conference 2024 |url=https://www.wate.com/business/press-releases/ein-presswire/751749268/white-collar-support-group-to-host-white-collar-conference-2024/ |publisher=EIN Presswire |date=October 15, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref> The conference drew hundreds of attendees from around the justice-impacted community.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference |url=https://prisonist.org/white-collar-conference |publisher=White Collar Support Group |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
'''Isolation and community.''' The program returns again and again to the loneliness that follows an indictment. Jeff Grant has said the isolation often starts well before any prison time, when people lose work, friends, and sometimes family after an arrest.<ref name="wfxr2024" />


===Opening and Keynote===
'''Employment and professional restoration.''' Sessions cover the practical wall that people hit when they look for work with a record. That includes losing professional licenses, getting cut off from banking services, and employers who will not hire someone with a conviction.<ref name="wric2025">{{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=EIN Presswire |date=April 28, 2025 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref>


Author and coach Craig Stanland served as conference emcee, with opening remarks from Jeff Grant.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference 2024 Video Available on YouTube |url=https://grantlaw.com/white-collar-conference-2024-video-available/ |publisher=GrantLaw |date=November 2, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref> The keynote fireside chat featured entrepreneur David Israel, founder and CEO of GOOD PLANeT Foods, interviewed by Brent Cassity, host of the ''Nightmare Success'' podcast. Israel discussed his journey from incarceration to building one of the fastest-growing plant-based cheese companies in the United States.<ref>{{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=EIN Presswire |date=August 6, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
'''Legal reform.''' The conference promotes the idea of a federal expungement law. There is no statutory way to clear a federal conviction at present, and the event has hosted scholars working on legislation to change that.<ref name="ccr2025" />


===Panels===
'''Accountability.''' The support group asks members to take responsibility for what they did. Its stated mission is to help people make amends and move forward.<ref name="prisonist">{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference |url=https://prisonist.org/white-collar-conference/ |publisher=White Collar Support Group |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref>


The conference featured three panel discussions addressing different aspects of navigating the white-collar criminal justice system.
==White Collar Conference 2024==
 
====Out of Isolation====
 
The first panel, moderated by Bill Baroni, former New Jersey State Senator whose conviction in the "Bridgegate" scandal was unanimously overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2020, examined how individuals can move from isolation into community support.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Criminals Gather to Offer Hope and Support |url=https://www.sfexaminer.com/marketplace/white-collar-criminals-gather-to-offer-hope-and-support/article_34dc93d2-84d1-11ef-9c2e-e330dcb373f5.html |publisher=San Francisco Examiner |date=October 7, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref> Panelists included Erika Cheung, Theranos whistleblower and executive director of Ethics in Entrepreneurship; Elizabeth Kelley, criminal defense attorney; and Seth Williams, former Philadelphia District Attorney who served time in federal prison for bribery.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Support Group to Host White Collar Conference 2024 |url=https://www.wate.com/business/press-releases/ein-presswire/751749268/white-collar-support-group-to-host-white-collar-conference-2024/ |publisher=EIN Presswire |date=October 15, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
 
====Healing Through a Supportive Community====
 
The second panel, moderated by author and licensed professional counselor William Sansing, focused on emotional and psychological recovery.<ref>{{cite web |title=Bill Livolsi and William Sansing to Speak at White Collar Conference 2024 |url=https://revjeffgrant.medium.com/bill-livolsi-and-william-sansing-to-speak-at-white-collar-conference-2024-2ebc648fb65c |publisher=Medium |date=September 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref> Panelists included Fr. Joseph Ciccone, a Franciscan priest and graduate of Union Theological Seminary; Naia Wilson, an educator who received the 2017 Title One Distinguished School Award and the 2012 EdVestors School on the Move Prize for her work dismantling the school-to-prison pipeline; and Portia Louder, author and TEDx speaker who wrote about her prison experience in ''Living Louder: A Compassionate Journey Through Federal Prison''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Naia Wilson & Portia Louder to Speak at White Collar Conference 2024 |url=https://jeffgrantesq.medium.com/naia-wilson-portia-louder-to-speak-at-white-collar-conference-2024-747584dc735f |publisher=Medium |date=September 10, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>


====Careers and Reintegrating into Society====
The first conference took place on October 19, 2024. Its theme was "Starting Over: Out of Isolation and Into Community." Hundreds of people attended.<ref name="prisonist" />


The third panel, moderated by Jeff Grant, addressed employment and professional restoration after conviction.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Support Group to Host White Collar Conference 2024 |url=https://www.wate.com/business/press-releases/ein-presswire/751749268/white-collar-support-group-to-host-white-collar-conference-2024/ |publisher=EIN Presswire |date=October 15, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref> Panelists included Kaysia Earley, criminal defense attorney; Jeffrey Abramowitz, nonprofit CEO; and Jeff Wertkin, former government lawyer turned nonprofit executive.<ref>{{cite web |title=Fr. Joseph Ciccone & Jeff Wertkin to Speak at White Collar Conference 2024 |url=https://jeffgrantesq.medium.com/fr-joseph-ciccone-jeff-wertkin-to-speak-at-white-collar-conference-2024-984617c80a0d |publisher=Medium |date=September 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
Author and coach Craig Stanland hosted the event as emcee, with opening remarks from Jeff Grant.<ref name="wate2024">{{cite web |title=White Collar Support Group to Host White Collar Conference 2024 |url=https://www.wate.com/business/press-releases/ein-presswire/751749268/white-collar-support-group-to-host-white-collar-conference-2024/ |publisher=EIN Presswire |date=October 15, 2024 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> The keynote was a fireside chat with [[David Israel]], founder and CEO of GOOD PLANeT Foods, interviewed by Brent Cassity of the ''Nightmare Success'' podcast. Israel talked about going from incarceration to running a fast-growing plant-based cheese company.<ref name="wfxr2024" />


===Video Presentations===
Three panels filled out the rest of the program. The first, "Out of Isolation," was moderated by Bill Baroni, the former New Jersey state senator whose "Bridgegate" conviction was overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2020. Its panelists included Theranos whistleblower Erika Cheung, defense attorney Elizabeth Kelley, and Seth Williams, the former Philadelphia district attorney who served federal time for bribery.<ref name="wate2024" /> The second panel, "Healing Through a Supportive Community," was led by counselor William Sansing and focused on emotional recovery.<ref name="wate2024" /> The third, "Careers and Reintegrating into Society," was moderated by Grant and dealt with finding work after a conviction.<ref name="wate2024" />


The conference premiered video segments including a presentation on reputation management by Drew Chapin of The Discoverability Company and a video on entrepreneurship after prison.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Support Group to Host White Collar Conference 2024 |url=https://www.wate.com/business/press-releases/ein-presswire/751749268/white-collar-support-group-to-host-white-collar-conference-2024/ |publisher=EIN Presswire |date=October 15, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
The conference also premiered short video segments, including one on reputation management and another on starting a business after prison.<ref name="wate2024" /> The law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP sponsored the event.<ref name="dailycaller2024" />
 
===Sponsorship===
 
The 2024 conference was sponsored by Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, named the ''New York Law Journal'' 2024 Law Firm of the Year.<ref>{{cite web |title=New Conference Seeks Better Outcomes for White Collar Offenders |url=https://dailycaller.com/2024/10/15/new-conference-seeks-better-outcomes-for-white-collar-offenders/ |publisher=The Daily Caller |date=October 15, 2024 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>


==White Collar Conference 2025==
==White Collar Conference 2025==


The second annual White Collar Conference was held on October 11, 2025.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference Set for October 11 Featuring Jeffrey Toobin and Joe Bankman |url=https://www.corporatecrimereporter.com/news/200/white-collar-conference-set-for-october-11-featuring-jeffrey-toobin-and-joe-bankman/ |publisher=Corporate Crime Reporter |date=September 24, 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref> Building on the inaugural event's focus on personal restoration, reputation rebuilding, legal reform, and faith-based healing, the 2025 conference expanded its programming to include discussions of federal expungement policy and presidential clemency.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference 2025 Tickets |url=https://www.eventbrite.com/e/white-collar-conference-2025-tickets-1533170577469 |publisher=Eventbrite |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
The second conference was held on October 11, 2025. It kept the focus on personal restoration and added more sessions on federal expungement and presidential clemency.<ref name="ccr2025" />


===Keynote Address===
CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin gave the keynote. He spoke about his book ''The Pardon: The Politics of Presidential Mercy'' (Simon & Schuster, 2025), which looks at the history of the presidential clemency power.<ref name="ccr2025" /> Brent Cassity then interviewed Joe Bankman, a Stanford Law School professor and the father of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried. Bankman spoke about what his son's prosecution did to their family.<ref name="ccr2025" />


CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin delivered the keynote address, discussing his book ''The Pardon: The Politics of Presidential Mercy'' (Simon & Schuster, 2025), which examines the history and controversies surrounding presidential clemency power.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference Set for October 11 Featuring Jeffrey Toobin and Joe Bankman |url=https://www.corporatecrimereporter.com/news/200/white-collar-conference-set-for-october-11-featuring-jeffrey-toobin-and-joe-bankman/ |publisher=Corporate Crime Reporter |date=September 24, 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
One panel, moderated by Grant, brought together scholars from the [[Federal_Expungement_Initiative|Federal Expungement Initiative]], a coalition pushing Congress for a federal expungement statute. Its members included Mark Osler of the University of St. Thomas, Doug Berman of Ohio State, and Todd Haugh of Indiana University.<ref name="eventbrite2025" /> The discussion drew a line between a pardon, which forgives but leaves the record in place, and [[Expungement|expungement]], which would remove the record. Federal law currently offers no expungement path.<ref name="ccr2025" />


===Fireside Chat: Joe Bankman===
A second panel, "Restoring Our Dignity," featured support group members talking about rebuilding their lives. Its panelists included Pamela Winn, Michael Gaines, and Gina Pendergraph.<ref name="ccr2025" /> Erin Frey of the Yale School of Management also presented early results from a study on how people recover personally and professionally after a justice-related setback, conducted with the support group.<ref name="wric2025" />


Brent Cassity conducted a fireside chat with Joe Bankman, Stanford Law School professor and father of Sam Bankman-Fried, founder of the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange FTX. Bankman discussed the impact of his son's high-profile prosecution on his family.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference Set for October 11 Featuring Jeffrey Toobin and Joe Bankman |url=https://www.corporatecrimereporter.com/news/200/white-collar-conference-set-for-october-11-featuring-jeffrey-toobin-and-joe-bankman/ |publisher=Corporate Crime Reporter |date=September 24, 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
Paul, Weiss returned as lead sponsor. The American Bar Association Criminal Justice Section, the Women's White Collar Defense Association, the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners, and the Legal Action Center also signed on.<ref name="ccr2025" />


===Panels===
==White Collar Conference 2026==


====Pardons and Expungement====
In late 2025 the White Collar Support Group announced that the third conference would be held on October 10, 2026. Speakers and panels had not been named at the time of the announcement.<ref name="prisonist" />


A panel moderated by Jeff Grant brought together leading scholars involved in the [[Federal_Expungement_Initiative|Federal Expungement Initiative]], a coalition advocating for congressional legislation to create a federal expungement process.<ref>{{cite web |title=Federal Expungement Initiative |url=https://federalexpungement.org/ |publisher=Federal Expungement Initiative |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref> Panelists included Professor Mark Osler of the University of St. Thomas School of Law (Minnesota), a former federal prosecutor and co-founder of the Clemency Resource Center; Professor Doug Berman of The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law; and Professor Todd Haugh of the Indiana University Kelley School of Business, who serves as Director of the Institute for Corporate Governance and Ethics.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference 2025 Tickets |url=https://www.eventbrite.com/e/white-collar-conference-2025-tickets-1533170577469 |publisher=Eventbrite |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
==Who attends==


The panel addressed the distinction between presidential pardons, which provide forgiveness but leave criminal records intact, and [[Expungement|expungement]], which would seal or remove records entirely. Unlike many state systems, federal law currently offers no statutory path to expungement.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference Set for October 11 Featuring Jeffrey Toobin and Joe Bankman |url=https://www.corporatecrimereporter.com/news/200/white-collar-conference-set-for-october-11-featuring-jeffrey-toobin-and-joe-bankman/ |publisher=Corporate Crime Reporter |date=September 24, 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
The conference is open to anyone, and it draws a mix of people. Some are facing charges or have already served time. Others are family members trying to understand a relative's case. The rest are professionals with a stake in the field, including defense lawyers, prison consultants, academics, and reform advocates. Because the speakers tend to have personal experience with prosecution, the program functions partly as a public-facing extension of the support group's weekly meetings.<ref name="ccr2025" /><ref name="prweb500" />


====Restoring Our Dignity====
==Frequently Asked Questions==
 
{{FAQSection/Start}}
The final panel, titled "Restoring Our Dignity" and moderated by Drew Chapin, featured White Collar Support Group members sharing their personal experiences with restoration through community support.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference 2025 Tickets |url=https://www.eventbrite.com/e/white-collar-conference-2025-tickets-1533170577469 |publisher=Eventbrite |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref> Panelists included Pamela Winn, Michael Gaines, and Gina Pendergraph.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference Set for October 11 Featuring Jeffrey Toobin and Joe Bankman |url=https://www.corporatecrimereporter.com/news/200/white-collar-conference-set-for-october-11-featuring-jeffrey-toobin-and-joe-bankman/ |publisher=Corporate Crime Reporter |date=September 24, 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
{{FAQ|question=What is the White Collar Conference?|answer=The White Collar Conference is an annual online event for people prosecuted for white-collar crimes, their families, and the professionals who work with them. It is run by the White Collar Support Group and is held each October over Zoom. The first conference took place in 2024.}}
 
{{FAQ|question=Who organizes the White Collar Conference?|answer=The conference is organized by the White Collar Support Group, a peer support nonprofit founded in 2016 by Jeff Grant, a lawyer who served federal prison time for loan fraud. The group runs weekly video meetings and uses the conference as its main public event.}}
===Research Presentation===
{{FAQ|question=When is the White Collar Conference held?|answer=The conference runs on a Saturday morning in October, from 9:00 a.m. to noon Eastern Time. The 2024 event was held on October 19, the 2025 event on October 11, and the 2026 event is set for October 10.}}
 
{{FAQ|question=How much does it cost to attend?|answer=The conference is free and held over Zoom. It is open to people with their own cases, family members, attorneys, academics, policymakers, and the general public.}}
Professor Erin Frey of the Yale School of Management presented early findings from the Professional and Personal Restoration Study, research examining how individuals who have experienced justice-related setbacks rebuild their lives personally and professionally. The study is being conducted in partnership with the White Collar Support Group.<ref>{{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, 2025}}</ref>
{{FAQ|question=Who has spoken at the White Collar Conference?|answer=Past speakers include GOOD PLANeT Foods CEO David Israel, former New Jersey senator Bill Baroni, Theranos whistleblower Erika Cheung, CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin, and Stanford Law professor Joe Bankman, the father of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried.}}
 
{{FAQ|question=What topics does the conference cover?|answer=The program focuses on what happens after a white-collar case ends. Sessions cover employment barriers, professional licensing, banking access, mental health, family strain, federal expungement, and presidential clemency.}}
===Conference Leadership===
{{FAQSection/End}}
 
Jeff Grant served as conference host, with Drew Chapin as co-host and Craig Stanland returning as emcee.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference 2025 Announcement |url=https://prwireindia.com/press-release/white-collar-support-group-announces-white-collar-conference-2025-sat-oct-11th-world-renowned-speakers-panelists |publisher=PR Wire India |date=July 31, 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
 
===Sponsorship===
 
Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP returned as lead sponsor for the 2025 conference. Additional sponsors included the American Bar Association Criminal Justice Section, the Women's White Collar Defense Association, the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners, and the Legal Action Center.<ref>{{cite web |title=White Collar Conference Set for October 11 Featuring Jeffrey Toobin and Joe Bankman |url=https://www.corporatecrimereporter.com/news/200/white-collar-conference-set-for-october-11-featuring-jeffrey-toobin-and-joe-bankman/ |publisher=Corporate Crime Reporter |date=September 24, 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
 
==White Collar Conference 2026==
 
In November 2025, the White Collar Support Group announced that the third annual White Collar Conference would take place on October 10, 2026. Speakers and panel topics had not been announced at the time of the announcement.


==See also==
==See also==
Line 102: Line 72:
* [[Federal_Expungement_Initiative|Federal Expungement Initiative]]
* [[Federal_Expungement_Initiative|Federal Expungement Initiative]]
* [[Expungement]]
* [[Expungement]]
* [[Category:White_Collar_Crime|White-collar crime]]
* [[Reentry_(criminal_justice)|Reentry (criminal justice)]]
* [[Reentry_(criminal_justice)|Reentry (criminal justice)]]
==Nightmare Success Guides==
* [https://nightmaresuccess.com/guides/white-collar-cases-common-triggers-and-early-mistakes/ White-Collar Cases: Common Triggers and Early Mistakes] — Common escalation patterns and the early-stage discipline that limits damage.


==External links==
==External links==
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==References==
==References==
<references />
<references />
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{{MetaDescription|The White Collar Conference is an annual online event run by the White Collar Support Group for people prosecuted for white-collar crimes, their families, and legal professionals.}}

Latest revision as of 14:08, 3 June 2026

The White Collar Conference is an annual online event for people who have been prosecuted for white-collar crimes, their families, and the professionals who work with them. It is organized by the White Collar Support Group, a peer support nonprofit founded in 2016. The first conference was held in October 2024. It runs once a year on a Saturday morning in October over Zoom.[1]

The conference is built around a single idea. People who go through a white-collar case often lose their jobs, their professional standing, and many of their relationships, sometimes before they are ever sentenced. The program treats that isolation as the central problem and uses the event to connect people who have lived through it. Most of the speakers and panelists have been prosecuted or incarcerated themselves.[2]

Overview

The White Collar Conference grew out of the weekly meetings run by the White Collar Support Group. The support group was founded in 2016 by Jeff Grant, a lawyer who served federal time for an SBA loan fraud connected to the 2001 period.[2] After his release he was ordained and began running a peer group for others facing similar cases. The group meets every week by video and has held hundreds of meetings since it started.[3]

The conference is the group's main public event. A regular legal conference covers the practice of law or corporate compliance. This one does not. It covers what happens to a person after the case is over. Sessions deal with employment, professional licensing, banking access, mental health, family strain, and the paths back to ordinary life.[4]

Organizers have pointed to federal recidivism data as part of the reason the event exists. Studies have found that roughly half of released federal offenders are rearrested within eight years. The conference treats reentry barriers, unemployment, stigma, and untreated mental health as factors behind those numbers.[4]

Format

The conference is free to attend and held over Zoom. It runs on a Saturday morning in October, from 9:00 a.m. to noon Eastern Time.[5] The three-hour program mixes a keynote, a fireside chat, panel discussions, and short video segments. Audience members include people with their own cases, family members, defense attorneys, academics, policymakers, and members of the public.[1]

Focus

A few themes come up at the conference every year.

Isolation and community. The program returns again and again to the loneliness that follows an indictment. Jeff Grant has said the isolation often starts well before any prison time, when people lose work, friends, and sometimes family after an arrest.[2]

Employment and professional restoration. Sessions cover the practical wall that people hit when they look for work with a record. That includes losing professional licenses, getting cut off from banking services, and employers who will not hire someone with a conviction.[6]

Legal reform. The conference promotes the idea of a federal expungement law. There is no statutory way to clear a federal conviction at present, and the event has hosted scholars working on legislation to change that.[1]

Accountability. The support group asks members to take responsibility for what they did. Its stated mission is to help people make amends and move forward.[7]

White Collar Conference 2024

The first conference took place on October 19, 2024. Its theme was "Starting Over: Out of Isolation and Into Community." Hundreds of people attended.[7]

Author and coach Craig Stanland hosted the event as emcee, with opening remarks from Jeff Grant.[8] The keynote was a fireside chat with David Israel, founder and CEO of GOOD PLANeT Foods, interviewed by Brent Cassity of the Nightmare Success podcast. Israel talked about going from incarceration to running a fast-growing plant-based cheese company.[2]

Three panels filled out the rest of the program. The first, "Out of Isolation," was moderated by Bill Baroni, the former New Jersey state senator whose "Bridgegate" conviction was overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2020. Its panelists included Theranos whistleblower Erika Cheung, defense attorney Elizabeth Kelley, and Seth Williams, the former Philadelphia district attorney who served federal time for bribery.[8] The second panel, "Healing Through a Supportive Community," was led by counselor William Sansing and focused on emotional recovery.[8] The third, "Careers and Reintegrating into Society," was moderated by Grant and dealt with finding work after a conviction.[8]

The conference also premiered short video segments, including one on reputation management and another on starting a business after prison.[8] The law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP sponsored the event.[4]

White Collar Conference 2025

The second conference was held on October 11, 2025. It kept the focus on personal restoration and added more sessions on federal expungement and presidential clemency.[1]

CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin gave the keynote. He spoke about his book The Pardon: The Politics of Presidential Mercy (Simon & Schuster, 2025), which looks at the history of the presidential clemency power.[1] Brent Cassity then interviewed Joe Bankman, a Stanford Law School professor and the father of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried. Bankman spoke about what his son's prosecution did to their family.[1]

One panel, moderated by Grant, brought together scholars from the Federal Expungement Initiative, a coalition pushing Congress for a federal expungement statute. Its members included Mark Osler of the University of St. Thomas, Doug Berman of Ohio State, and Todd Haugh of Indiana University.[5] The discussion drew a line between a pardon, which forgives but leaves the record in place, and expungement, which would remove the record. Federal law currently offers no expungement path.[1]

A second panel, "Restoring Our Dignity," featured support group members talking about rebuilding their lives. Its panelists included Pamela Winn, Michael Gaines, and Gina Pendergraph.[1] Erin Frey of the Yale School of Management also presented early results from a study on how people recover personally and professionally after a justice-related setback, conducted with the support group.[6]

Paul, Weiss returned as lead sponsor. The American Bar Association Criminal Justice Section, the Women's White Collar Defense Association, the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners, and the Legal Action Center also signed on.[1]

White Collar Conference 2026

In late 2025 the White Collar Support Group announced that the third conference would be held on October 10, 2026. Speakers and panels had not been named at the time of the announcement.[7]

Who attends

The conference is open to anyone, and it draws a mix of people. Some are facing charges or have already served time. Others are family members trying to understand a relative's case. The rest are professionals with a stake in the field, including defense lawyers, prison consultants, academics, and reform advocates. Because the speakers tend to have personal experience with prosecution, the program functions partly as a public-facing extension of the support group's weekly meetings.[1][3]

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the White Collar Conference?

The White Collar Conference is an annual online event for people prosecuted for white-collar crimes, their families, and the professionals who work with them. It is run by the White Collar Support Group and is held each October over Zoom. The first conference took place in 2024.


Q: Who organizes the White Collar Conference?

The conference is organized by the White Collar Support Group, a peer support nonprofit founded in 2016 by Jeff Grant, a lawyer who served federal prison time for loan fraud. The group runs weekly video meetings and uses the conference as its main public event.


Q: When is the White Collar Conference held?

The conference runs on a Saturday morning in October, from 9:00 a.m. to noon Eastern Time. The 2024 event was held on October 19, the 2025 event on October 11, and the 2026 event is set for October 10.


Q: How much does it cost to attend?

The conference is free and held over Zoom. It is open to people with their own cases, family members, attorneys, academics, policymakers, and the general public.


Q: Who has spoken at the White Collar Conference?

Past speakers include GOOD PLANeT Foods CEO David Israel, former New Jersey senator Bill Baroni, Theranos whistleblower Erika Cheung, CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin, and Stanford Law professor Joe Bankman, the father of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried.


Q: What topics does the conference cover?

The program focuses on what happens after a white-collar case ends. Sessions cover employment barriers, professional licensing, banking access, mental health, family strain, federal expungement, and presidential clemency.


See also

Nightmare Success Guides

References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 "White Collar Conference Set for October 11 Featuring Jeffrey Toobin and Joe Bankman". Corporate Crime Reporter. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "First-Ever Conference for White Collar Justice Community to be Held on October 19, 2024". EIN Presswire. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "White Collar Support Group to Hold Historic 500th Weekly Meeting, Mon., Jan. 19, 2026". PRWeb. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 "New Conference Seeks Better Outcomes for White Collar Offenders". The Daily Caller. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "White Collar Conference 2025". Eventbrite. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "White Collar Support Group Launches New Criminal Justice Reform Initiatives". EIN Presswire. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 "White Collar Conference". White Collar Support Group. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 "White Collar Support Group to Host White Collar Conference 2024". EIN Presswire. Retrieved June 3, 2026.