It's one thing to discuss card counting and things that are widely known on both sides of the table. It's quite another to discuss more sensitive topics that are kept out of the public domain for a reason. There are some games out there that many casinos don't even know are vulnerable. The smarter casinos (is that an oxymoron?) know more than others and are better at protecting their games. Some opportunities are very difficult to protect against without costing the casino lots of money (such as card counting). Other opportunities can be fixed with relatively simple changes that will cost the casino nothing or almost nothing. Lets not tell them every single thing that they are doing wrong, especially when it's trivial to fix it. I don't know if CAA is still available now or not, but I can assure you that you won't be finding a copy of it or any specific information from it unless you've developed a reputation as someone who is in this for the right reasons and can keep priviledged information under wraps. Spend some time around here, read, learn, discuss, and perhaps eventually you will be able to get the information you seek. But it won't be overnight.
By the way, thank you for editing the OP. That's a move in the right direction, at least. BTW, your statement that openly sharing this information couldn't "endanger or worsen the game" is 100% false. Providing info on this or any of the other games analyzed in the book could absolutely endanger a game at many venues.