At the height of the Vietnam War, Jerry Elmer committed his first felony by publicly refusing to register for the draft. Over the next 20 years, using nonviolent tactics, Jerry worked for peace, justice, and the environment, from organizing draft board raids with Father Phil Berrigan to touring the killing fields of Cambodia to protesting nuclear power plants before and after Three Mile Island. The only convicted felon in Harvard Law School's class of 1990, Jerry Elmer gives us his lifetime of lessons in nonviolent protest as an example for all who wish to make a positive difference today.