Teresa Giudce has talked quite a bit about how much she is going to hate having to leave her four kids behind when she turns herself in to a Connecticut prison camp on January 5. "The Real Housewives of New Jersey" star has been extremely hands-on with raising her girls and it has to be really hard for her to imagine not being with them every day. Perhaps it's something that she should have considered before going along with her husband, Joe Giudice's shady business dealings in the first place, but that doesn't really matter very much now. Giudice has always tried to control the way that people perceive her to be and we're learning today that someone burned by the reality star is getting ready to take direct aim at her and when it happens, Giudice will have no control over anything. Giudice first hired Wendy Feldman to basically save her from not only herself, but also the malestrom of bad press that has come her way. Now it looks like Feldman is going to help fan those flames long after Giudice is spending 23 hours a day in a tiny cell.
Feldman is a legal crisis expert that spends her days working with people just like Giudice, prepping them for court and helping them to deal with whatever public fallout may ultimately come from their dishonest actions. Feldman worked hard to try and help Giudice to help herself before realizing that the task was impossible. Feldman bailed from the Giudice's sinking ship but her own business is booming, so much so that she now has a book deal of her own.
According to a report by Radar Online, Feldman absolutely does intend to devote a few chapters of her life story to detailing the chaos that came from working with Giudice.
"There will be several chapters in my new book dedicated to my time spent working with Teresa Giudice. From the day I met her, until the day I quit, and how Teresa went downhill so fast after that. I had to juggle so many things while working with Teresa, including many of my other non-celebrity clients. It was a constant struggle with Teresa to get her to take responsibility for her actions, and I was basically on call for her 24/7," teases Feldman.
There is precious little that Giudice can do to silence Feldman now and her ability to do any type of damage control while behind bars for 15 months will be minimal at best. The question is whether or not people will really want Feldman's inside take on this last year or so of Giudice's life. Do you think that detailing her experiences with Giudice will ultimately be what moves Feldman's book from shelves? Tell us your thoughts in the comments below!
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