User:Kkincd/Andrew Kreig

Andrew Kreig Andrew Kreig is an author, legal reformer, public affairs commentator, international business consultant and attorney. He is a prominent advocate/ nonprofit founder of a cutting-edge approach to legal reform called The Justice Integrity Project. The non-partisan Project empowers those being crushed by political prosecutions and media indifference. Also, Kreig for many years has authored news reports, commentary and books on public affairs. Separately, he provides Washington, DC-based consulting and attorney services, most recently through the consultancy Eagle View Capital Strategies, which specializes in helping worthy organizations.

As a commentator on business, politics and the media, Andrew Kreig has lectured on five continents before all kinds of audiences. Kreig was co-keynote speaker opening the prestigious Futures Summit organized by the National Association of Broadcasters for its invitation-only audience of senior executives. Kreig has been listed in the most prominent Who’s Who directories (Who’s Who in America, Who’s Who in the World, etc.) continuously since the mid-1990s, and delivers a forceful and compelling presentation on how aggrieved members of the public can fight injustice, whether in their own lives or society-wide.

Author of 'Spiked: How Chain Management Corrupted America's Oldest Newspaper' an important book revealing a lack of accountability in news reporting at the Hartford Current post-purchase by the Times Mirror Co. of Los Angeles. [1]

Furthermore, Kreig has appeared as a commentator on more than 100 radio and TV shows, including nationally on ABC-TV, CNN and C-SPAN. Topics include national politics, the news media, the high-tech sector and corruption. He has lectured on five continents. In addition, Kreig has co-hosted a public affairs program “Washington Update” for five years distributed worldwide on the My Technology Lawyer radio network. The show ranges widely on politics, business, consumer and entertainment news.


[1 1] == References ==

  1. ^ Kreig, Andrew. "Spiked". 1987

1.[1]

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1.http://www.justice-integrity.org

2.http://www.eagleviewdc.org

3.http://www.amazon.com/Spiked-Management-Corrupted-Americas-Newspaper/dp/0933614276/ref=cm_cr_pr_product_top




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