"Astonishing. ... A powerful and important picture of how mega law firms distort justice." — Washington Post
"Servants of the Damned is a feat of thoughtful, detailed research, rendering with clarity and even compassion the moral drift of 'big law.' As an attorney, I found it illuminating—but this is important reading for anyone concerned about law and policy." — Ronan Farrow, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Catch and Kill
“This fascinating book is somehow both devastating and rollicking all at the same time. Enrich brings us into the room to watch how a modest law firm built on honorable service gradually becomes an uber-shield for the worst of American greed and abuse—all in the quest for enormous billable profits and outsized power. From handling a fatal gas explosion to terrorizing a tobacco whistleblower to aiding Donald Trump, it’s all in here.” — Carol Leonnig, Pulitzer Prize-winning co-author of A Very Stable Genius and author of Zero Fail
“A deep dive into the law firm that became one of the key institutions in the president’s orbit. … Jones Day lawyers figured prominently in Trump’s rise to power and his exercise of it. Enrich treats the relationship as a sign of a broader decline in ethical standards at big American law firms.” — Financial Times
"A withering study of how big law got into bed with the 45th president. ... Informative and disturbing." — The Guardian
“A fast-moving, damning book. … Essential reading for students of the Trump corruption machine.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“A vivid, crackling account of the law at its most bullying. Readers will be outraged.” — Publishers Weekly
"Enrich’s stories provide a disturbing window into how the rules underpinning democracy have been weaponised by those meant to protect it." — New Statesman
"Enrich tells an important story of the gradual corruption of the rule of law, and of the broader corruption of our society." — American Prospect