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Diana Henriques Chat

$200 current bid
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FMV: $250

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Diana Henriques & White Collar Crime Chat

Still wondering how Bernie Madoff hid his deception for decades? Learn the ins and outs of his Ponzi scheme from the author who interviewed him, wrote all about it in the bestselling The Wizard of Lies: Bernie Madoff and the Death of Trust, and even played herself in the HBO film opposite Robert De Niro.

Allow Diana Henriques, renowned financial journalist, former New York Times reporter and author, to take you on a journey into American greed and corruption with Wall Street as the backdrop. White-collar crime is her specialty, financial history her passion - and she's eager to share her stories and insights with you and a group of your friends and/or family.

Along the way she'll impart a unique perspective that comes from years of extensive investigative reporting on white-collar crime, market regulation, and corporate governance.

The date and hour of the meeting must be mutually agreed upon and will expire by September 30, 2021. An in-person meeting may be possible depending on timing and location.

Bio:
An amateur financial historian and a former senior writer at The NY Times, Diana is the author of A First-Class Catastrophe: The Road to Black Monday, The Worst Day in Wall Street History and the NY Times bestseller The Wizard of Lies: Bernie Madoff and the Death of Trust. In May 2017, HBO released its film-length adaptation of The Wizard of Lies, with Robert De Niro starring in the title role and Diana in her "dream role" -- playing herself in the film's recreation of her real-life prison interviews with Madoff. Diana also is the author of three previous books of financial history, including Fidelity's World, a history of the American mutual fund industry. She is currently at work on a new work for Random House that will focus on the New Deal's dramatic and unprecedented fight to regulate Wall Street. In 2005, Diana was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize and won a George Polk Award, the Worth Bingham Prize, and Harvard's Goldsmith Prize for her 2004 series exposing financial rip-offs of young military consumers - work she still ranks as the proudest and most satisfying achievement of her journalism career.
http://dianabhenriques.com/

Donated By Diana Henriques