Teaching online since 2012 gave me something I hadn't expected: a front-row seat to how people actually think about crime. When you spend years answering questions about investigations, explaining how criminal minds work, and watching students grapple with real cases, you start noticing patterns that most fiction ignores. The gaps between what actually happens in an investigation and what gets portrayed on screen became impossible to ignore. That's a strange thing to carry around—it colors everything you read, every show you watch.
When I started AmericanMafiaHistory.com, it wasn't with some grand plan. It grew out of a genuine obsession with understanding how these organizations actually functioned—their structure, their codes, the way pressure and consequence shaped every decision. Studying organized crime for over a decade gave me something more valuable than facts: it gave me an intuition for how crime stories need to feel authentic. The difference between fiction that rings true and fiction that feels hollow often comes down to understanding the invisible architecture underneath—the real-world mechanics that make a story believable even when nothing about it is real.
More than forty thousand students later, what stayed with me wasn't any single lesson I taught—it was what I learned from them. Their questions revealed where logic broke down, where explanations fell short, where the gap between dramatic convenience and actual consequence created friction. When I finally sat down to write Criminal Code, I wasn't just drawing on research. I was drawing on years of watching people engage with crime stories, understanding what made them lean forward and what made them check out. The book became an opportunity to apply everything I'd absorbed about investigations, about storytelling, about the specific texture of how crimes unfold and get solved.
Writing the second book forced me to get more intentional about structure. The first novel had grown organically from accumulated knowledge, but when you're building a series, you can't rely on instinct alone. Each book reinforced how much structure matters—not just plot structure, but the deeper architecture of how clues are planted, how motives are revealed, how pressure builds toward inevitable consequences. I found myself thinking constantly about what I'd absorbed from years of studying investigations: the way real cases often turn on small details that seemed insignificant until suddenly they weren't.
The Code Series taught me that writing crime fiction is really about understanding the weight of decisions. Every choice a character makes has ripple effects, and part of what makes a crime novel satisfying is watching those ripples play out with the kind of inevitability that feels almost inevitable only in retrospect. The lessons from studying criminal behavior—the way certain types of people think, the patterns that repeat across investigations—found their way into how I built tension, how I paced revelations, how I made sure every element served the whole.
Now, looking at the world through the lens of both educator and novelist, I see connections I never would have spotted before. The analytical habits I developed studying real cases inform how I construct fictional ones. The storytelling instincts I honed writing fiction sharpen how I communicate complex investigative concepts. That blend of rigor and narrative instinct is at the heart of everything I do—and it's what makes Kryme.ai possible. Taking these accumulated experiences and finding a way to let them amplify each other, to create something that helps others navigate the same terrain I spent years mapping—that's where this all leads.
More than a decade of exploring the intersection of education, investigation, and narrative.
