Jeanine Pirro Popular Books

Jeanine Pirro Biography & Facts

Jeanine Ferris Pirro (born June 2, 1951) is an American television host and author, and is also a former judge, prosecutor, and politician in the state of New York. Pirro was elected as a judge of the Westchester County (N.Y.) Court in 1990. In 1993, she was elected to the position of Westchester County district attorney. She is the first woman to be elected to either of those positions. As district attorney, Pirro gained visibility in cases of domestic abuse and crimes against the elderly. Pirro was re-elected district attorney in 1997 and 2001. Pirro briefly sought the Republican nomination for United States Senate to run against Hillary Clinton in 2006, but dropped out to accept the nomination for New York Attorney General; she lost the general election to Democrat Andrew Cuomo. From 2008 to 2011, Pirro hosted a weekday television show entitled Judge Jeanine Pirro. From 2011 to 2022, she hosted Justice with Judge Jeanine on Fox News Channel. Pirro has authored six books, including Liars, Leakers, and Liberals: The Case Against the Anti-Trump Conspiracy (2018). Following the 2020 presidential election, Pirro made false claims of voting machine fraud. In 2022, Pirro became a co-host of The Five. She has been a frequent contributor to NBC News, including regular appearances on The Today Show. Pirro was named as a defendant in a February 2021 defamation lawsuit by Smartmatic. The allegation against Pirro was dismissed in March 2022. Pirro was among the hosts named in the Dominion Voting Systems v. Fox News Network defamation lawsuit for broadcasting false statements about the plaintiff company's voting machines. Fox News settled the case for $787.5 million and was required to acknowledge that the broadcast statements were false. Early life Jeanine Ferris was born and raised in Elmira, New York, the daughter of Lebanese-American parents. Her father was a mobile-home salesman, and her mother was a department-store model who spent much of her childhood in Beirut. Her parents were Maronite Catholics. Pirro knew she wanted to be an attorney from the age of six. She graduated from Notre Dame High School in Elmira in three years, interning in the Chemung County District Attorney's office during her time in high school. Pirro then graduated with a Bachelor of Arts from the University at Buffalo. She received her J.D. degree at Albany Law School of Union University in 1975, where she was an editor of the law review. Westchester County law career Assistant District Attorney In 1975, District Attorney Carl Vergari appointed Pirro to the position of Assistant District Attorney of Westchester County in New York State, where she began her career by writing appeals and handling minor cases. In 1977, Pirro approached Vergari and requested that he apply for a federal grant for local district attorney's offices to establish bureaus that specialized in domestic violence. She hoped that Vergari would take advantage of potential funding, as well as a 1977 change in New York law that moved many domestic violence cases from family court to criminal court. Vergari agreed to apply for the grant, and his office became one of four in the nation to win the grant. In 1978, he appointed Pirro to be the first chief of the new Domestic Violence and Child Abuse Bureau. Pirro was known to be an aggressive bureau chief. Due to possible coercion, she had a strict policy against dropping cases at a victim's request. On multiple occasions, Vergari spoke to Pirro concerning her violation of office policy. She had issued press releases with her own name—and not Vergari's—on top. The relationship between Pirro and Vergari disintegrated in the late 1980s, after Pirro claimed sole responsibility for the establishment of the Domestic Violence and Child Abuse Bureau. On June 1, 1990, just five months prior to Pirro's first appearance on the ballot for County Court Judge, she attracted widespread attention for rushing to conduct a bedside investigation of Maria Amaya at the Intensive Care Unit of United Hospital in Port Chester. Amaya had been charged with four counts of second-degree murder for the deaths of her four children. She was a 36-year-old immigrant from El Salvador who had a history of being hospitalized for mental issues. Amaya had killed the four children and attempted suicide, believing that they were being corrupted by drugs and sex. While recognized for her prosecution of domestic violence, Pirro was criticized for her relative prosecutorial absence in bringing charges involving major public corruption or organized crime. These criticisms intensified when Pirro's husband was later convicted of several felonies tied to organized crime, including tax evasion and conspiracy. "One would have to believe that there's no organized crime in Westchester County, not a single corrupt official, and every union in this county is as clean as the driven snow," according to William I. Aronwald, who headed the Federal Organized Crime Strike Force during the 1970s. During an abortive 1986 campaign for Lieutenant Governor of New York, Pirro boasted to have never lost a case in "about 50 trials." This number was disputed when presented in 2005 to colleagues, who said that the real number of trials personally handled by Pirro "wasn't more than 10." Pirro's then-spokesman, Anne Marie Corbalis, contended only that Pirro had a "100% felony conviction rate" as an Assistant District Attorney. County Court Judge Pirro left the District Attorney's office after her November 1990 election as a judge of the Westchester County Court. She had successfully run on the Republican and Conservative party lines against Democratic nominee and New Castle Town Justice Lawrence D. Lenihan and Right to Life Party nominee August C. Nimphius, Jr. Pirro is the first woman to serve as a judge of the Westchester County Court. District Attorney In November 1993, Pirro was elected Westchester County District Attorney; she is the first woman to hold that position. She was re-elected in 1997 and 2001. On May 23, 2005, Pirro announced that she would not seek re-election to a fourth term as Westchester County District Attorney. On December 31, 1993—within hours of Pirro's midnight inauguration as District Attorney—Scripps newspaper heiress Anne Scripps Douglas was savagely bludgeoned in the head with a hammer by her estranged husband, Scott Douglas, as she slept in their Bronxville, New York, home. By the time police arrived, Scott Douglas had fled the scene. Anne Scripps Douglas died in the hospital on January 6. Scott Douglas subsequently committed suicide by jumping off the Tappan Zee Bridge. Pirro, already known as a passionate prosecutor of domestic violence cases, was a frequent presence in the media during the period between the murder and when Scott Douglas's body washed ashore in Riverdale in early March 1994. This increase in Pirro's national profile led to her surfacing as a frequent contributor on network and cable televisio.... Discover the Jeanine Pirro popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Jeanine Pirro books.

Best Seller Jeanine Pirro Books of 2024

  • Guilty By Reason of Insanity synopsis, comments

    Guilty By Reason of Insanity

    David Limbaugh

    "Today’s Democrats are pushing policies that are simply insane, and David Limbaugh proves it in his terriffic, and tremendously important, new book, Guilty by Reason of Insani...

  • The Big Lie synopsis, comments

    The Big Lie

    Dinesh D'Souza

    "Of course, everything [D'Souza] says here is accurate... But it's not going to sit well with people on the American left who, of course, are portraying themselves as the exact op...

  • Summary Of Liars, Leakers, and Liberals By Jeanine Pirro The Case against the Anti-Trump Conspiracy synopsis, comments

    Summary Of Liars, Leakers, and Liberals By Jeanine Pirro The Case against the Anti-Trump Conspiracy

    Speed Read Publishing

    Speed Read Publishing has created a Summary of book for your reading pleasure. Designed to enhance your reading experience. What does this Summary Include?Each Part wise Chapt...

  • Justice in the Age of Judgment synopsis, comments

    Justice in the Age of Judgment

    Anne Bremner & Doug Bremner

    From Amanda Knox to O.J., Casey Anthony to Kyle Rittenhouse, our justice system faces scrutiny and pressure from the media and public like never before.  Can the bedrock of “i...

  • The Cost synopsis, comments

    The Cost

    Maria Bartiromo

    The world needs a strong America, and America needs an economic revival after the Coronavirus season of shutdowns. Can the playbook that resulted in the greatest job market in hist...

  • Sommario Di Bugiardi, Leakers E Liberali Di Jeanine Pirro Il Caso Contro La Cospirazione Anti-Trump synopsis, comments

    Sommario Di Bugiardi, Leakers E Liberali Di Jeanine Pirro Il Caso Contro La Cospirazione Anti-Trump

    Speed Read Publishing

    Speed Read Publishing ha creato un riassunto del libro per il tuo piacere di lettura. Progettato per migliorare la tua esperienza di lettura.Cosa include questo riepilogo?Ogni capi...

  • The Briefing synopsis, comments

    The Briefing

    Sean Spicer

    NOW A NATIONAL BESTSELLER!Wall Street Journal BestsellerUSA Today BestsellerPublisher’s Weekly BestsellerConservative Book Club Bestseller“One of the best reads of 2018."  ...

  • Why We Fight synopsis, comments

    Why We Fight

    Sebastian Gorka

    "Sebastian Gorka was [President Trump's] strategist. Dr. Gorka knows Donald Trump and the threats we face. Buy and read Why We Fight to find how we win and what it means ...

  • Network of Lies synopsis, comments

    Network of Lies

    Brian Stelter

    Fox News paid almost a billion dollars in legal settlements to bury the contents of this “essential…grinding, momentumbuilding” (The New York Times) account of the network’s blatan...

  • Samenvatting Van Leugenaars, Lekken En Liberalen Door Jeanine Pirro De Zaak Tegen De Anti-Trump-Samenzwering synopsis, comments

    Samenvatting Van Leugenaars, Lekken En Liberalen Door Jeanine Pirro De Zaak Tegen De Anti-Trump-Samenzwering

    Speed Read Publishing

    Speed Read Publishing heeft een samenvatting van het boek gemaakt voor uw leesplezier. Ontworpen om uw leeservaring te verbeteren.Wat houdt deze samenvatting in?Elk deels wijs hoof...

  • Beyond the Big Lie synopsis, comments

    Beyond the Big Lie

    Bill Adair

    Bill Adair, Pulitzer Prize winner, journalism professor, and founder of Politifact, presents an eyeopening and engaging history of political liars and a vision for how to make them...

  • He Killed Them All synopsis, comments

    He Killed Them All

    Jeanine Pirro

    Former prosecutor Jeanine Pirrothe “true hero” (New York Post) of the hit HBO documentary series The Jinxoffers the transfixing true story of her tireless fifteenyear investigation...

  • Exonerated synopsis, comments

    Exonerated

    Dan Bongino

    As seen on The Ben Shapiro Show!A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER “Great new book by wonderful and very street smart author Dan Bongino, EXONERATED, THE FAILED TAKEDOWN OF...

  • Blackout synopsis, comments

    Blackout

    Candace Owens

    NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLERIt’s time for a black exit.Political activist and social media star Candace Owens addresses the many ways that Democrat Party policies hurt, rather than he...

  • Open Borders Inc. synopsis, comments

    Open Borders Inc.

    Michelle Malkin

    "Michelle Malkin’s latest book is required reading for anyone wishing to understand the forces and interests behind the open borders and mass migration lobby." Pawel Styr...

  • Hide Your Children synopsis, comments

    Hide Your Children

    Liz Wheeler

    Having conquered all the major institutions of our culture, the left is closing in on its final frontieryour children. In this new book, Liz Wheeler exposes where the forces of wok...