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Build a Customized Arizona CLE Compliance Mini Bundle

Individually select approved CLE courses from our centralized online library no matter where you practice.



The Arizona Mini Bundle contains eight (8) credit hours and allows you to select the courses you take from our Arizona course catalog including your required three (3) credit hours in ethics. 

The Arizona State Bar allows attorneys to take all fifteen (15) CLE hours online (interactive credits), including the three (3) required hours of Ethics.

The State Bar of Arizona does not approve or accredit CLE activities for the MCLE requirement. This activity may qualify for up to fifteen (15) hours toward your annual CLE requirement for the State Bar of Arizona, including three (3) hours of Ethics.


Please click here for answers to frequently asked questions and instructions on how to access your CLE.

$169.00
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Buy the bundle and earn credits for following courses!

Courses

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58 minutes
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Subchapter V in the COVID-19 Era
This panel will explore the development of subchapter V bankruptcies during their first year of existence, a.k.a. the COVID-19 era. The panelists will first perform a brief review of subchapter V bankruptcy cases and the way in which they differ from standard chapter 11 cases.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Interactive

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61 minutes
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Recent Consumer Case Law Developments with Bill Rochelle
This past year has seen a remarkable number of wide splits and controversial opinions. This panel of experts, moderated by ABI Editor-at-Large Bill Rochelle, will discuss and analyze current notable business and consumer bankruptcy cases.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Interactive

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55 minutes
cc
Cross-Border Rescue and Failure: Temas Candentes (Hot Topics)
This panel will discuss recent developments and decisions in international insolvency, including chapter 11 for non-U.S. companies, U.S. chapter 15 and offshore “soft touch” assistance.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Interactive

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55 minutes
cc
Counseling the Client During the Post-COVID Period
The panel will focus on counseling clients once we enter a post-COVID period, including when you should counsel your client to file, issues related to medical debts and tax refunds, and timing considerations.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Interactive

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75 minutes
cc
Taming a Black Swan: Establishing Feasibility in Uncertain Times
This session includes a panel discussion of the unique issues and challenges involved with demonstrating plan feasibility during our current pandemic economy. The panelists will also discuss how bankruptcy courts have dealt with the issues thus far, and how debtors can make their best cases before the court.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1.25 - Interactive

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66 minutes
cc
Litigating Common Causes of Action in Bankruptcy
Covering a wide array of bankruptcy litigation matters, this session will focus on issues relating to stay relief, discharge litigation, and post-discharge injunction matters. Evidentiary considerations and standards for relief will be highlighted, along with case law developments and practice tips from the experienced panelists.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Interactive

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75 minutes
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Rochelle's Rocky Mountain Case Law Update
Bankruptcy Judges Elizabeth Brown and Michael Romero will discuss the year’s widest splits and most controversial opinions with ABI Editor-at-Large Bill Rochelle. They also will analyze important decisions from the Tenth Circuit, the BAPs and the District of Colorado.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1.25 - Interactive

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72 minutes
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Ethics - Telling the Story on Your Timesheets: A Fee Examiner’s Tips for Creditors’ Lawyers and Bankruptcy Estate Professionals
We often forget that what we say and how we say it can signal more than we intended. One of the primary ways in which "what we say"/"how we say it" creates such signals is with the wording of time entries, whether or not those time entries are ever reviewed by a bankruptcy court. Clients read bills, too, so if one wants to communicate that their work was valuable and efficiently performed, the fable of Goldilocks comes to mind: The time entries need to be "just right." When they're not, clients and courts can draw conclusions that we never intended them to draw. This panel will discuss these issues and more.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Interactive Ethics