Richard Foschino was born in New York City in 1947 and grew up in the Catskill Mountains of New York State. In 1979, he moved his family from New York State to East Tennessee, settling in a small town about twenty-five miles north of Knoxville
After serving three years as Chief of Public Safety for the City of Norris, Tennessee he joined the Anderson County Sheriff's Department, became Chief of Detectives, and rose to the rank of Chief Deputy. The greatest challenge of his law enforcement career was the assignment of a series of unsolved murders that occurred in remote areas of the county years ago. His books, Mountain Revenge and Mother’s Blood detail those investigations and are available via Mountain Top Publishing
Gregory D. Lee, M.P.A., is a retired Supervisory Special Agent for the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), and a former instructor at the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Academy. Currently, he provides a wide range of consulting and expert witness services for the legal community and law enforcement agencies. Mr. Lee's expertise covers the entire spectrum of drug law enforcement. He is a qualified expert witness who thoroughly reviews both criminal and civil discovery material and provides a written case analysis based on his 30 years of law enforcement experience. His specific areas of expertise include the management of informants, deadly force, use of force, arrest procedures, drug raid planning and execution, undercover operations, surveillance, money laundering, drug identification, clandestine laboratories, terrorism, and police investigative procedures.
Cheryl Hill is a published author, antique dealer, bookstore owner, musician, artist, property manager, real estate student, psychic investigator, tarot reader and entrepreneur.
Cheryl owned and operated one of the world’s largest psychic phone lines in the world. Cheryl also worked as an academy instructor and correctional officer for Corrections Corporation of American working in the Florence, Arizona facility. Her latest book, “Reverse Time” is about a female correctional officer’s first year in a federal detention center.
Police-Writers.com now lists 138 police officers and their 418 books in six categories.