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{{Infobox Person
{{Infobox Person
|name = Craig Stanland
|name = Craig Stanland
|image = craig-stanland.png
|birth_date = 1974
|birth_date = 1974
|birth_place = New York
|birth_place = New York
|charges = Wire fraud
|charges = Wire fraud
|sentence = 2 years
|sentence = 2 years federal prison, 3 years supervised release
|facility = Federal prison
|status = Released
|status = Released
}}
}}
'''Craig Stanland''' (born 1974) is a former sales executive who was convicted of wire fraud for embezzling from his employer and has since become an author, speaker, and advocate focused on reinvention after incarceration.<ref name="stanland-book">Craig Stanland, "Blank Canvas: How I Reinvented My Life After Prison," 2023.</ref> Stanland's crime involved stealing from a medical device company to fund a lifestyle he could not afford, leading to federal prosecution and imprisonment. After serving his sentence, Stanland rebuilt his life and has spoken extensively about his experience, the psychological factors that led to his crime, and the challenges of creating a new identity after incarceration.<ref name="interview">Medium, "Craig Stanland on Reinvention After Prison," 2023.</ref>
'''Craig Stanland''' (born circa 1974) is an American author, TEDx speaker, and reinvention coach who served two years in federal prison after pleading guilty to wire fraud for a service contract fraud scheme against Cisco Systems that resulted in $834,307 in losses.<ref name="stanland-site">Craig Stanland, "My Story," craigstanland.com.</ref> He had built a career in corporate sales before exploiting Cisco's warranty replacement program by filing hundreds of false claims for defective computer networking equipment, then selling the replacement parts for personal profit. The FBI arrested him on October 1, 2013. After his conviction and two-year federal prison sentence, Stanland lost his career, marriage, home, and sense of identity. He contemplated suicide during incarceration, and writing became a therapeutic outlet that helped him survive. Since his release, he has rebuilt his life as a self-described "Reinvention Architect," helping others who have experienced catastrophic life changes to find purpose and meaning.<ref name="ips-story">Inner Path Seekers, "Craig Stanland - Reinvention Architect," theipsproject.com.</ref> He has also emerged as a speaker in cybersecurity and insider threat contexts, drawing on his own case to explain how ethical failures develop inside organizations.<ref name="secureworld-stanland">Craig Stanland, author page, ''SecureWorld News'', secureworld.io.</ref>
 
His 2021 book ''Blank Canvas: How I Reinvented My Life after Prison'' documents his journey from federal inmate to speaker and coach.<ref name="amazon-book">''Blank Canvas: How I Reinvented My Life after Prison'', Lioncrest Publishing, ISBN 1544519478.</ref>


== Summary ==
== Summary ==


Craig Stanland's story represents a common but less publicized category of white-collar crime, one involving an individual who committed fraud not through elaborate schemes or corporate corruption but through personal dishonesty driven by psychological factors including shame, fear, and the desire to maintain appearances. Stanland has been candid about the internal processes that led him from successful sales career to federal inmate, using his experience to help others understand how ordinary people rationalize criminal behavior.<ref name="stanland-book" />
For years, Stanland lived what appeared to be an enviable life: a well-paying corporate job, a comfortable home, and a marriage, all built on his career in technology sales. Behind that facade, he was engaged in a fraud scheme that would ultimately destroy everything he had built.<ref name="stanland-site" />


Since his release, Stanland has positioned himself as an advocate for personal reinvention, speaking to corporate and academic audiences about integrity, the consequences of ethical failures, and the possibility of meaningful change. His work represents the growing field of formerly incarcerated individuals who use their experiences for educational and advocacy purposes.<ref name="interview" />
The mechanics of the fraud were straightforward. Stanland exploited Cisco Systems' warranty program by filing false claims for defective networking equipment. When Cisco shipped replacement parts, he sold them to third parties instead of using them to replace genuinely defective equipment. Over time, these fraudulent transactions accumulated into hundreds of thousands of dollars in illegal gains and losses to Cisco.<ref name="ttst-interview">Time to Shine Today, "267-Reinventing His Life After Prison - TTST Interview with Reinvention Architect, Author and Coach Craig Stanland," timetoshinetoday.com.</ref>
 
What is instructive about Stanland's case is his willingness to examine and discuss the psychological factors that led him to commit fraud. He has written and spoken extensively about the rationalizations he used to justify his conduct, how small ethical compromises grew into larger ones, and the identity crisis he experienced when his criminal behavior was exposed. His work now focuses on helping others avoid similar pitfalls and, for those who have already experienced serious failure, helping them rebuild their lives with greater authenticity and purpose.<ref name="scribe-author">Scribe Media, "Meet Our Authors: Craig Stanland," scribemedia.com.</ref>


== Background ==
== Background ==


Craig Stanland built a successful career in sales, eventually reaching an executive position at a medical device company. He cultivated an image of success and prosperity, maintaining a lifestyle that included expensive possessions and social status markers. However, his income did not support his lifestyle, and rather than adjusting his spending or being honest about his financial situation, Stanland began embezzling from his employer.<ref name="stanland-book" />
=== Early Life and Career ===
 
Craig Stanland was born in 1974 and grew up in New York. He built a career in corporate sales, eventually working in the technology sector. By outward appearances, his life was successful: good income, professional respect, and material comfort. Stanland has described feeling disconnected from his work and uncertain about his identity beyond his professional achievements, a theme that runs throughout his later writing and speaking.<ref name="stanland-site" />
 
=== The Fraud Scheme ===


Stanland has described the psychological progression that led to his crime, explaining that he felt trapped by expectations and shame, unable to admit that he could not afford the life he was projecting. The fraud grew over time as he rationalized each successive theft, telling himself he would pay the money back while knowing he could not.<ref name="interview" />
Starting in 2012, Stanland began exploiting the warranty policy of Cisco Systems, one of the world's largest technology companies. Cisco's warranty program allowed customers with service contracts to receive replacement parts for defective networking equipment. Stanland controlled or had access to approximately 18 service contracts for Cisco networking parts.<ref name="ips-losing">Inner Path Seekers, "Life After Prison - Craig Stanland: Losing Everything You Have," theipsproject.com, June 2021.</ref>
 
He filed hundreds of false service requests claiming equipment was defective when it was not. Cisco, believing the claims were legitimate, shipped replacement parts to addresses he controlled. Rather than using these parts to replace genuinely defective equipment, Stanland sold them to third parties and pocketed the proceeds. The scheme continued until federal investigators identified the pattern of fraudulent claims. The total loss to Cisco was ultimately calculated at $834,307.<ref name="stanland-site" />
 
In his later speaking work, Stanland has pointed to this scheme as a case study in how insider threats develop. Not through a single dramatic decision, but through incremental rationalizations. He argues that the warning signs were present long before the fraud reached its full scale, a point he now makes directly to cybersecurity and corporate audiences.<ref name="secureworld-stanland" />


== Indictment, Prosecution, and Sentencing ==
== Indictment, Prosecution, and Sentencing ==


=== The Crime ===
=== FBI Arrest ===


Stanland embezzled approximately $750,000 from his employer over several years through various fraudulent schemes related to his sales position. The fraud was discovered through internal audit processes, and Stanland was confronted by his employer before law enforcement became involved. The case was referred to federal prosecutors, who charged him with wire fraud for using electronic communications in connection with the scheme.<ref name="stanland-book" />
On October 1, 2013, FBI agents arrested Craig Stanland at his home on federal wire fraud charges. The arrest marked the end of his former life. Within a relatively short period, he would lose his career, his marriage, his home, and his sense of identity.<ref name="stanland-site" />


=== Guilty Plea and Sentencing ===
=== Conviction and Sentencing ===


Stanland pleaded guilty to wire fraud charges and cooperated with prosecutors. He was sentenced to two years in federal prison and ordered to pay restitution. The sentence reflected his acceptance of responsibility and the nonviolent nature of the offense, though prosecutors emphasized that the amount stolen was substantial and represented a serious breach of trust.<ref name="interview" />
Stanland pleaded guilty to wire fraud charges related to the Cisco warranty scheme. He was sentenced to two years in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release. He was also ordered to pay $834,307 in restitution to Cisco Systems for the losses caused by his fraud.<ref name="groco-bio">Family Office Advisors/GROCO, "Craig Stanland - Reinvention Architect and Mindset Coach," groco.com.</ref>
 
The sentence reflected both the nature of the fraud and Stanland's acceptance of responsibility. Unlike some white-collar defendants who contest charges or minimize their conduct, Stanland acknowledged what he had done and has since made a public practice of examining the factors that led him to do it. That willingness to speak openly about his own case is a key part of what distinguishes him in the reinvention and insider threat speaking spaces.<ref name="scribe-author" />


== Prison Experience ==
== Prison Experience ==


Stanland served his sentence at a federal prison camp and has written and spoken extensively about the experience. He has described the psychological impact of incarceration, the loss of identity that accompanies conviction, and the process of coming to terms with what he had done. Stanland used his time in prison to begin the process of self-examination that would later become central to his post-release work.<ref name="stanland-book" />
=== Incarceration and Crisis ===
 
Stanland served his two-year sentence in conditions that forced him to confront questions about his identity. Stripped of all external markers of achievement, he found himself alone with who he actually was. The experience was a complete dismantling of everything he had built around his career and material success.<ref name="stanland-site" />
 
The psychological toll was severe. Stanland has spoken openly about contemplating suicide during his incarceration, consumed by shame and guilt over what he had done and uncertain whether he could ever rebuild a meaningful life. There was a practical dimension to this silence: if guards learned he was having suicidal thoughts, he risked being placed in solitary confinement for his own protection, a prospect that would have made his situation considerably worse.<ref name="ips-losing" />
 
=== Writing as Therapy ===
 
Unable to speak openly about his darkest thoughts, Stanland turned to writing. Three days. One hundred eighty-six pages. The result was a raw, unfiltered exploration of his life, his crime, his imprisonment, and his hopes for the future. This writing became the therapy that helped him survive the remainder of his sentence and planted the seeds for what he would later describe as his reinvention.<ref name="ips-losing" />
 
The experience gave Stanland a direct understanding of the power of self-reflection and honest self-examination. These insights would become central to his later work helping others handle their own crises.<ref name="ttst-interview" />


== Post-Release Career ==
== Post-Release Career ==


After his release, Stanland faced the challenges common to formerly incarcerated individuals, including difficulty finding employment and the stigma associated with a federal conviction. Rather than attempting to hide his past, Stanland chose to address it directly, eventually building a career as a speaker, author, and coach focused on reinvention and integrity.<ref name="interview" />
=== Reinvention ===
 
After his release from federal prison, Stanland faced the challenge that confronts many formerly incarcerated individuals: rebuilding a life in a society that often stigmatizes those with criminal records. His challenge was compounded by the loss of his relationship, his home, and his career during incarceration. He was, as he would later describe it, starting with a "blank canvas."<ref name="amazon-book" />
 
Rather than attempting to return to his former career in corporate sales, Stanland took a different path as a coach and speaker, using his own experience as the foundation for helping others going through their own crises and reinventions.<ref name="stanland-site" />
 
=== Reinvention Architect ===


Stanland published "Blank Canvas: How I Reinvented My Life After Prison," which details his crime, incarceration, and the process of rebuilding his identity. He speaks to corporate audiences about ethics and the rationalization processes that lead to fraud, as well as to individuals facing their own challenges with reinvention. His work emphasizes that meaningful change is possible but requires honest self-examination and sustained effort.<ref name="stanland-book" />
Stanland describes himself as a "Reinvention Architect and Mindset Coach." He works one-on-one with clients handling major life transitions, whether due to career disruption, personal crisis, or, like Stanland himself, the aftermath of serious mistakes. His approach emphasizes examining underlying beliefs and assumptions, releasing identities that no longer serve, and building a life aligned with authentic values and purpose.<ref name="linkedin-stanland">Craig Stanland, LinkedIn profile, "Keynote and TEDx Speaker, Author, From Prison to Purpose," linkedin.com/in/craigstanland.</ref>
 
=== TEDx Speaking and Cybersecurity Work ===
 
In 2020, Stanland delivered a TEDx Talk titled "How I Learned My Greatest Worth in Federal Prison," sharing the insights he gained from losing everything and rebuilding from scratch. The talk has reached thousands of viewers and helped establish him as a speaker on resilience and personal transformation.<ref name="ttst-interview" />
 
Beyond personal reinvention audiences, Stanland has developed a distinct niche in the cybersecurity and corporate ethics space. He contributes regularly to ''SecureWorld News'', a publication serving information security professionals, where he writes about the psychology of insider threats, ethical decision-making, and the subtle ways that individuals rationalize misconduct before it becomes criminal.<ref name="secureworld-stanland" /> His pieces for the outlet include examinations of how the desire for power and control can erode judgment over time, drawing directly on his own case as a framework for understanding how fraud and insider risk develop inside organizations.<ref name="secureworld-power">Craig Stanland, "Power, Control, and the Life You Lose Trying to Hold On," ''SecureWorld News'', secureworld.io.</ref> This work positions him not just as a personal transformation figure but as a practitioner with direct, first-hand expertise in the conditions that produce white-collar crime.
 
=== Writing ===
 
May 2021 brought the publication of his first book, ''Blank Canvas: How I Reinvented My Life after Prison.'' The book provides a detailed account of his crime, arrest, imprisonment, and subsequent reinvention, offering both a cautionary tale about the incremental nature of ethical compromise and a practical account of rebuilding after catastrophic failure.<ref name="amazon-book" /> Stanland has also described working on a second book, framed as a prequel exploring his life before prison and the gradual series of decisions that led to his crime. He has said he hopes the book will help others recognize warning signs in their own behavior before they reach their own breaking point.<ref name="scribe-author" />


== Public Statements and Positions ==
== Public Statements and Positions ==


Stanland has been forthright about his crime and the thinking that led to it, rejecting any attempt to minimize his responsibility. He has stated that understanding why he committed fraud was essential to ensuring he never repeated the behavior. His public speaking emphasizes the warning signs of ethical drift and the importance of integrity even when maintaining it is difficult.<ref name="stanland-book" />
Stanland speaks and writes about how white-collar crime develops through incremental ethical compromise. Small rationalizations accumulate into serious misconduct. He has described his own fraud as beginning with relatively minor boundary violations that grew over time as he became desensitized to their wrongness, a pattern he argues is common in insider threat cases and one that organizations often fail to detect until significant damage has already occurred.<ref name="secureworld-stanland" />


On the subject of reentry, Stanland has discussed the challenges formerly incarcerated individuals face and the importance of having a purpose and identity beyond one's criminal history. He advocates for giving people who have served their sentences opportunities to contribute meaningfully to society.<ref name="interview" />
On prison and rehabilitation, he advocates for approaches that help incarcerated individuals develop self-awareness and prepare for meaningful reentry. Programs that encourage reflection and personal growth, he argues, produce better outcomes than purely punitive approaches.
 
On reinvention, Stanland holds that losing everything, while devastating, can create conditions for more authentic living. He encourages clients to view their crises not just as endings but as opportunities to build lives more aligned with their actual values. That's the core argument of both his speaking work and his book.


== Terminology ==
== Terminology ==


* '''Wire Fraud''': A federal crime involving the use of electronic communications to execute a scheme to defraud.
* '''Wire Fraud''': A federal crime involving the use of electronic communications to execute a scheme to defraud.
 
* '''Service Contract Fraud''': A scheme involving false claims under warranty or service agreements to obtain goods or services fraudulently.
* '''Restitution''': Court-ordered payment from the offender to victims to compensate for financial losses caused by the crime.
* '''Restitution''': Court-ordered payment from the offender to victims to compensate for financial losses caused by the crime.
* '''Supervised Release''': A period of supervision following release from federal prison, during which the offender must comply with specified conditions.
* '''Insider Threat''': In cybersecurity and corporate risk contexts, a threat to an organization originating from people within it, such as employees or contractors, who misuse their access for personal gain or other harmful purposes.


== See also ==
== See also ==


* [[Jeff_Grant|Jeff Grant]]
* [[Prison_Consultants|Prison Consultants]]
* [[Prison_Consultants|Prison Consultants]]
* [[Federal_Good_Time_Credit_Policies|Federal Good Time Credit Policies]]
* [[Reentry_and_Life_After_Prison|Reentry and Life After Prison]]
* [[Reentry_and_Life_After_Prison|Reentry and Life After Prison]]


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[[Category:High-Profile_Federal_Offenders]]
[[Category:High-Profile_Federal_Offenders]]
[[Category:White_Collar_Crime]]
[[Category:White_Collar_Crime]]
[[Category:American motivational speakers]]
[[Category:People convicted of wire fraud]]

Latest revision as of 02:11, 12 May 2026

Craig Stanland
Born: 1974
New York
Charges: Wire fraud
Sentence: 2 years federal prison, 3 years supervised release
Facility: Federal prison
Status: Released

Craig Stanland (born circa 1974) is an American author, TEDx speaker, and reinvention coach who served two years in federal prison after pleading guilty to wire fraud for a service contract fraud scheme against Cisco Systems that resulted in $834,307 in losses.[1] He had built a career in corporate sales before exploiting Cisco's warranty replacement program by filing hundreds of false claims for defective computer networking equipment, then selling the replacement parts for personal profit. The FBI arrested him on October 1, 2013. After his conviction and two-year federal prison sentence, Stanland lost his career, marriage, home, and sense of identity. He contemplated suicide during incarceration, and writing became a therapeutic outlet that helped him survive. Since his release, he has rebuilt his life as a self-described "Reinvention Architect," helping others who have experienced catastrophic life changes to find purpose and meaning.[2] He has also emerged as a speaker in cybersecurity and insider threat contexts, drawing on his own case to explain how ethical failures develop inside organizations.[3]

His 2021 book Blank Canvas: How I Reinvented My Life after Prison documents his journey from federal inmate to speaker and coach.[4]

Summary

For years, Stanland lived what appeared to be an enviable life: a well-paying corporate job, a comfortable home, and a marriage, all built on his career in technology sales. Behind that facade, he was engaged in a fraud scheme that would ultimately destroy everything he had built.[1]

The mechanics of the fraud were straightforward. Stanland exploited Cisco Systems' warranty program by filing false claims for defective networking equipment. When Cisco shipped replacement parts, he sold them to third parties instead of using them to replace genuinely defective equipment. Over time, these fraudulent transactions accumulated into hundreds of thousands of dollars in illegal gains and losses to Cisco.[5]

What is instructive about Stanland's case is his willingness to examine and discuss the psychological factors that led him to commit fraud. He has written and spoken extensively about the rationalizations he used to justify his conduct, how small ethical compromises grew into larger ones, and the identity crisis he experienced when his criminal behavior was exposed. His work now focuses on helping others avoid similar pitfalls and, for those who have already experienced serious failure, helping them rebuild their lives with greater authenticity and purpose.[6]

Background

Early Life and Career

Craig Stanland was born in 1974 and grew up in New York. He built a career in corporate sales, eventually working in the technology sector. By outward appearances, his life was successful: good income, professional respect, and material comfort. Stanland has described feeling disconnected from his work and uncertain about his identity beyond his professional achievements, a theme that runs throughout his later writing and speaking.[1]

The Fraud Scheme

Starting in 2012, Stanland began exploiting the warranty policy of Cisco Systems, one of the world's largest technology companies. Cisco's warranty program allowed customers with service contracts to receive replacement parts for defective networking equipment. Stanland controlled or had access to approximately 18 service contracts for Cisco networking parts.[7]

He filed hundreds of false service requests claiming equipment was defective when it was not. Cisco, believing the claims were legitimate, shipped replacement parts to addresses he controlled. Rather than using these parts to replace genuinely defective equipment, Stanland sold them to third parties and pocketed the proceeds. The scheme continued until federal investigators identified the pattern of fraudulent claims. The total loss to Cisco was ultimately calculated at $834,307.[1]

In his later speaking work, Stanland has pointed to this scheme as a case study in how insider threats develop. Not through a single dramatic decision, but through incremental rationalizations. He argues that the warning signs were present long before the fraud reached its full scale, a point he now makes directly to cybersecurity and corporate audiences.[3]

Indictment, Prosecution, and Sentencing

FBI Arrest

On October 1, 2013, FBI agents arrested Craig Stanland at his home on federal wire fraud charges. The arrest marked the end of his former life. Within a relatively short period, he would lose his career, his marriage, his home, and his sense of identity.[1]

Conviction and Sentencing

Stanland pleaded guilty to wire fraud charges related to the Cisco warranty scheme. He was sentenced to two years in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release. He was also ordered to pay $834,307 in restitution to Cisco Systems for the losses caused by his fraud.[8]

The sentence reflected both the nature of the fraud and Stanland's acceptance of responsibility. Unlike some white-collar defendants who contest charges or minimize their conduct, Stanland acknowledged what he had done and has since made a public practice of examining the factors that led him to do it. That willingness to speak openly about his own case is a key part of what distinguishes him in the reinvention and insider threat speaking spaces.[6]

Prison Experience

Incarceration and Crisis

Stanland served his two-year sentence in conditions that forced him to confront questions about his identity. Stripped of all external markers of achievement, he found himself alone with who he actually was. The experience was a complete dismantling of everything he had built around his career and material success.[1]

The psychological toll was severe. Stanland has spoken openly about contemplating suicide during his incarceration, consumed by shame and guilt over what he had done and uncertain whether he could ever rebuild a meaningful life. There was a practical dimension to this silence: if guards learned he was having suicidal thoughts, he risked being placed in solitary confinement for his own protection, a prospect that would have made his situation considerably worse.[7]

Writing as Therapy

Unable to speak openly about his darkest thoughts, Stanland turned to writing. Three days. One hundred eighty-six pages. The result was a raw, unfiltered exploration of his life, his crime, his imprisonment, and his hopes for the future. This writing became the therapy that helped him survive the remainder of his sentence and planted the seeds for what he would later describe as his reinvention.[7]

The experience gave Stanland a direct understanding of the power of self-reflection and honest self-examination. These insights would become central to his later work helping others handle their own crises.[5]

Post-Release Career

Reinvention

After his release from federal prison, Stanland faced the challenge that confronts many formerly incarcerated individuals: rebuilding a life in a society that often stigmatizes those with criminal records. His challenge was compounded by the loss of his relationship, his home, and his career during incarceration. He was, as he would later describe it, starting with a "blank canvas."[4]

Rather than attempting to return to his former career in corporate sales, Stanland took a different path as a coach and speaker, using his own experience as the foundation for helping others going through their own crises and reinventions.[1]

Reinvention Architect

Stanland describes himself as a "Reinvention Architect and Mindset Coach." He works one-on-one with clients handling major life transitions, whether due to career disruption, personal crisis, or, like Stanland himself, the aftermath of serious mistakes. His approach emphasizes examining underlying beliefs and assumptions, releasing identities that no longer serve, and building a life aligned with authentic values and purpose.[9]

TEDx Speaking and Cybersecurity Work

In 2020, Stanland delivered a TEDx Talk titled "How I Learned My Greatest Worth in Federal Prison," sharing the insights he gained from losing everything and rebuilding from scratch. The talk has reached thousands of viewers and helped establish him as a speaker on resilience and personal transformation.[5]

Beyond personal reinvention audiences, Stanland has developed a distinct niche in the cybersecurity and corporate ethics space. He contributes regularly to SecureWorld News, a publication serving information security professionals, where he writes about the psychology of insider threats, ethical decision-making, and the subtle ways that individuals rationalize misconduct before it becomes criminal.[3] His pieces for the outlet include examinations of how the desire for power and control can erode judgment over time, drawing directly on his own case as a framework for understanding how fraud and insider risk develop inside organizations.[10] This work positions him not just as a personal transformation figure but as a practitioner with direct, first-hand expertise in the conditions that produce white-collar crime.

Writing

May 2021 brought the publication of his first book, Blank Canvas: How I Reinvented My Life after Prison. The book provides a detailed account of his crime, arrest, imprisonment, and subsequent reinvention, offering both a cautionary tale about the incremental nature of ethical compromise and a practical account of rebuilding after catastrophic failure.[4] Stanland has also described working on a second book, framed as a prequel exploring his life before prison and the gradual series of decisions that led to his crime. He has said he hopes the book will help others recognize warning signs in their own behavior before they reach their own breaking point.[6]

Public Statements and Positions

Stanland speaks and writes about how white-collar crime develops through incremental ethical compromise. Small rationalizations accumulate into serious misconduct. He has described his own fraud as beginning with relatively minor boundary violations that grew over time as he became desensitized to their wrongness, a pattern he argues is common in insider threat cases and one that organizations often fail to detect until significant damage has already occurred.[3]

On prison and rehabilitation, he advocates for approaches that help incarcerated individuals develop self-awareness and prepare for meaningful reentry. Programs that encourage reflection and personal growth, he argues, produce better outcomes than purely punitive approaches.

On reinvention, Stanland holds that losing everything, while devastating, can create conditions for more authentic living. He encourages clients to view their crises not just as endings but as opportunities to build lives more aligned with their actual values. That's the core argument of both his speaking work and his book.

Terminology

  • Wire Fraud: A federal crime involving the use of electronic communications to execute a scheme to defraud.
  • Service Contract Fraud: A scheme involving false claims under warranty or service agreements to obtain goods or services fraudulently.
  • Restitution: Court-ordered payment from the offender to victims to compensate for financial losses caused by the crime.
  • Supervised Release: A period of supervision following release from federal prison, during which the offender must comply with specified conditions.
  • Insider Threat: In cybersecurity and corporate risk contexts, a threat to an organization originating from people within it, such as employees or contractors, who misuse their access for personal gain or other harmful purposes.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Craig Stanland, "My Story," craigstanland.com.
  2. Inner Path Seekers, "Craig Stanland - Reinvention Architect," theipsproject.com.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Craig Stanland, author page, SecureWorld News, secureworld.io.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Blank Canvas: How I Reinvented My Life after Prison, Lioncrest Publishing, ISBN 1544519478.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Time to Shine Today, "267-Reinventing His Life After Prison - TTST Interview with Reinvention Architect, Author and Coach Craig Stanland," timetoshinetoday.com.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Scribe Media, "Meet Our Authors: Craig Stanland," scribemedia.com.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Inner Path Seekers, "Life After Prison - Craig Stanland: Losing Everything You Have," theipsproject.com, June 2021.
  8. Family Office Advisors/GROCO, "Craig Stanland - Reinvention Architect and Mindset Coach," groco.com.
  9. Craig Stanland, LinkedIn profile, "Keynote and TEDx Speaker, Author, From Prison to Purpose," linkedin.com/in/craigstanland.
  10. Craig Stanland, "Power, Control, and the Life You Lose Trying to Hold On," SecureWorld News, secureworld.io.