| Legal Talk Show, Law Firm Websites - Entwistle & Cappucci LLP | |
|
Entwistle & Cappucci's tradition of creativity and success in serving its clients around the world traces its history to firms established more than 30 years ago. Today, we extend our commitment to meet changing client needs by combining this tradition with the most advanced computer and communications technology. The firm defines themselves and our practice by the strength of our relationships. At the heart of these relationships is our understanding of the needs and goals of our clients. An experienced team of lawyers brings depth, expertise and common sense to the search for practical solutions to business and legal problems. Every person working in our firm is dedicated to developing long-lasting relationships, rich with the goals we help our clients achieve. Some of the principal areas of their practice are: T. J. English comes from a large Irish Catholic family of ten brothers and sisters. Early in his writing career, he worked as a freelance journalist in New York City during the day and drove a taxi at night. He often refers to cab driving as a metaphor for what he does as a writer – cruising the streets, interviewing strangers, exploring the unknown, reporting on what he sees and hears from his sojourns in and around the underworld. T. J. has also published full-length interviews with Chicago mayor Richard J. Daley, actor Bill Murray, director Martin Scorsese, and comedy legend George Carlin, to name a few. In addition, English is a screenwriter and has penned episodes for the television crime dramas "NYPD Blue" and "Homicide," for which he was awarded the prestigious Humanitas Prize. In Havana Nocturne, T. J. presents an empire-building saga in which the "Havana Mob" of American gangsters, led by visionary financier Meyer Lansky, controlled Cuba. Empowered by permissive gambling laws and payoffs to dictator Fulgencio Batista, the Mafia poured millions into posh hotels, casinos and nightclubs, skimmed huge profits and sought to make Havana its financial headquarters. The results: exuberant nightlife, a giddy Afro-Cuban jazz scene, sordid backroom sex shows and the occasional grisly gangland hit. |

