All Freebies found in the past 30 days

Show Filter List Show Filter Buttons
Select Which Genres You Would Like Included in Your Results

Select which genres you would like to view, then click "Apply Selected Genres". You can exclude specific genres by clicking the [x] icons within the book listings. Genres listed in red have already been excluded from the results and can be viewed again by by selecting them below and clicking "Apply Selected Genres".

Mixed
Fiction
Nonfiction
Reset GenresReset & Hide ThisHide This
Showing Results 1 - 3
Sort By:
View As: Grid List Detailed Minimal Images Adult Content: Hidden (change) 

Senior Living Investing Made Easy: Earn Excellent Returns While Providing a Better Life for Seniors by Vinney Chopra 5.0 Stars (3 Reviews)    Price verified 3 hours ago

According to Statista.com, it is estimated that over a fifth (20 percent) of the population in the United States will be 65 years or older by 2050 (compared to only 15.6% today). If we consider the quality of living conditions that our seniors call "home," we will undoubtedly find them lacking -- and given how many seniors will be and are currently among us, this is certainly cause for alarm. With a rapidly aging population, we must start planning how we will house and care for the senior population in the future. In 2019, the not-for-profit Senior Living organization, National Senior Campuses, reported only 21,000 Senior Living units across the United States. Other than housing, personal and medical care for seniors is another pressing issue with massive potential for growth in the coming years. Among the population of older adults in the United States, almost seven percent require personal care from other persons, often in the form of meal preparation, transportation, and help with personal grooming. Our elderly are the people who connect us to our past. They are also, however, among our most vulnerable citizens. Safe and adequate housing accommodations should be an essential requirement for the well-being of all people. Yet, there needs to be more consideration given to accommodating the aging population or improving their quality of life. What will we do as we move toward the last stages of life and end up in the same types of facilities that we are currently subjecting our senior citizens to? How will we cope? Should we wait until it is too late to make preparations for tomorrow? We all know that the aging population deserves better treatment and that investing in Senior Living is the right path for future generations. Hi, this is Vinney Chopra, the author. You may be asking, why this book? I have been investing in Commercial and Residential real estate for over 40 years. I wrote a best-selling book, "Apartment Syndication Made Easy," that got rave ...

Genre: Law [x]
Length: 241 Pages (15,941 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Jun 4th, 2024

Geofence Search Warrants & Tower Dumps: How Law Enforcement Gets Them, Trial Techniques For Fighting Them (Law Guru) by Morley Swingle (Morley Swingle Books) 5.0 Stars (7 Reviews)    Price verified 3 hours ago

January 6, 2021 crashed into the Fourth Amendment's right to privacy as investigators used the events of that day to get a geofence search warrant identifying 1,498 people who overran the Capitol building. This massive geofence warrant tested the restrictions of the Fourth Amendment on the ability of law enforcement to force Google to reveal a person's location at a specific time and place. The first geofence search warrant was issued in 2016. By 2021, Google was responding to 11,000 geofence warrant requests per year from law enforcement officers wanting a list of cell phones at a crime scene at the time a crime was being committed. This new aspect of Fourth Amendment constitutional law is exciting and complex. If you are a law enforcement officer, prosecutor, criminal defense lawyer, judge, or citizen who cares about the constitutional right to privacy under the Fourth Amendment, you need to read this book. In Geofence Search Warrants & Tower Dumps, veteran prosecutor and award-winning author, Morley Swingle provides a groundbreaking look at this emerging and controversial development in Fourth Amendment constitutional law. Armed with 30 years of experience litigating criminal cases (including 178 jury trials and 111 homicides), Swingle applied for and secured both geofence and tower dump search warrants. He not only explains the constitutional issues presented, but also provides sample forms for law enforcement officers, and a sample motion to suppress for defense lawyers. This authoritative book speeds up the learning curve for any prosecutor, criminal defense lawyer, police officer or judge faced with the challenge of a geofence or tower dump search warrant. "Morley Swingle's Geofence Search Warrants & Tower Dumps is the best book I've seen for police officers who want to understand geofence and tower dump search warrants. He tells you everything you need to know on the hot topics of cell tower dumps and geofence warrants. He writes in a style that is ...

Genre: Law [x]
Length: 214 Pages (3,038 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Jun 2nd, 2024

Sentencing in Time by Linda Ross Meyer 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 4 hours ago

Exactly how is it we think the ends of justice are accomplished by sentencing someone to a term in prison? How do we relate a quantitative measure of time -- months and years -- to the objectives of deterring crime, punishing wrongdoers, and accomplishing justice for those touched by a criminal act? Linda Ross Meyer investigates these questions, examining the disconnect between our two basic modes of thinking about time -- chronologically (seconds, minutes, hours), or phenomenologically (observing, taking note of, or being aware of the passing of time). In Sentencing in Time, Meyer asks whether -- in overlooking the irreconcilability of these two modes of thinking about time -- we are failing to accomplish the ends we believe the criminal justice system is designed to serve. Drawing on work in philosophy, legal theory, jurisprudence, and the history of penology, Meyer explores how, rather than condemning prisoners to an experience of time bereft of meaning, we might instead make the experience of incarceration constructively meaningful -- and thus better aligned with social objectives of deterring crime, reforming offenders, and restoring justice.

Genre: Law [x]
Length: 122 Pages (2,084 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: May 13th, 2024
Page 1