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Book details
  • Genre:FICTION
  • SubGenre:Legal
  • Language:English
  • Pages:182
  • Hardcover ISBN:9781098338428

The Paralegal

by David Clurman Clurman and Matthieu Clurman

Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Overview
The Paralegal is a story about one of the most dangerous type of spies who sourced from well-meaning scientists, research librarians, politicians and government stenographers for the purpose of nuclear proliferation. Unknown to the spy is a Paralegal, who works in the New York State Attorney General's office securities division and who was previously his former clerical employee at a Wall Street firm, that has him in her gaze. Overladen with detail work, the checklist reviewer and the least praised workhorse for the lawyer group, this Paralegal emerges as the forefront of responsibility for protecting the public against the demons of subversion and their political allies. Her suspicions and those of her lover surround and affect critical events of evasions and successes that make up the story. Mysteriously emerging from Eastern Europe, with millions in old Mexican bonds apparently obtained by a Soviet Arab officer from Holocaust victims, the espionage agent enters the United States under the fraudulent cover as a Polish refugee. The story pursues this espionage agent from obscure beginnings, to friendships with U.S. Senators, top IRS officials, all in the way of his spying mission that takes him abroad. In the course of his work, he is constantly in fear of unknown principals who seek his elimination and in fear of his disclosure. The Paralegal is based on true events which occurred in my Father's life soon after World War II and involves the spread of technical nuclear information that he was closely associated with. All names, dates and events have been altered for the safety and privacy of those involved.
Description
The Paralegal is a story about one of the most dangerous type of spies who sourced from well-meaning scientists, research librarians, politicians and government stenographers for the purpose of nuclear proliferation. Unknown to the spy is a Paralegal, who works in the New York State Attorney General's office securities division and who was previously his former clerical employee at a Wall Street firm, that has him in her gaze. Overladen with detail work, the checklist reviewer and the least praised workhorse for the lawyer group, this Paralegal emerges as the forefront of responsibility for protecting the public against the demons of subversion and their political allies. Her suspicions and those of her lover surround and affect critical events of evasions and successes that make up the story. Mysteriously emerging from Eastern Europe, with millions in old Mexican bonds apparently obtained by a Soviet Arab officer from Holocaust victims, the espionage agent enters the United States under the fraudulent cover as a Polish refugee. The story pursues this espionage agent from obscure beginnings, to friendships with U.S. Senators, top IRS officials, all in the way of his spying mission that takes him abroad. In the course of his work, he is constantly in fear of unknown principals who seek his elimination and in fear of his disclosure. The Paralegal is based on true events which occurred in my Father's life soon after World War II and involves the spread of technical nuclear information that he was closely associated with. All names, dates and events have been altered for the safety and privacy of those involved.
About the author
David Clurman has led three careers: Government, Author, and Private Attorney. As an Assistant Attorney General of New York State, he was principle author of the modern versions of New York Securities Regulation. In that role as Bureau Head, he directed major prosecutions and broad inquiries into fraudulent conduct, one leading to his authorship of laws governing offerings and accountings of Broadway shows that led to his profile in the New York Times as "Man in the News." His most widely sold text was Condominiums and Cooperatives for John Wiley and Sons, the first general book on the subject, that resulted in sales of 25,000 copies and selection by The Fortune Book Club. A later book, The Business Condominium also a first, was a main selection of the Investors Book Club. David Clurman also served as a series editor for John Wiley for several years.