Attention:
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Build a Customized North Dakota CLE Compliance Bundle

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



With one simple purchase, you can complete up to thirty (30) self-study hours with three (3) in ethics towards fulfilling your North Dakota CLE  requirements.

North Dakota llows their attorneys to earn no more than thirty (30) of their required forty-five (45) CLE hours via self-study programming.

You have one full year from the date of your purchase to complete your programs.

Please click here for answers to frequently asked questions.


$269.00
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Buy the bundle and earn credits for following courses!

Courses

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58 minutes
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Cybersecurity and Being Secure in Your Practice: How Confident Are You in Your Competency?
This panel will dive into the Model Rules of Professional Conduct, which require lawyers to be competent in technology. The panelists will review today’s hot ethical technology pointers, as well as pitfalls that every insolvency professional should be aware of in their practice.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Self-Study Ethics

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56 minutes
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Riding the Wave: Visiting and Revisiting the Automatic Stay, Discharge Injunction, and Sanctions in the Wake of Fulton v. City of Chicago and Taggart v. Lorenzen
This panel will discuss the current state of the law and open issues regarding the automatic stay, discharge injunction and sanctions in light of the Supreme Court’s rulings in Fulton v. City of Chicago and Taggart v. Lorenzen.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Self-Study

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58 minutes
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Understanding and Enhancing the Business Value of Post-COVID-19 Distressed Businesses
Many businesses thrived and grew during the COVID-19 pandemic, while others died on the vine. How do you understand the value of distressed businesses in a post-COVID-19 world? This panel will explore how to evaluate post-COVID-19 business plans and tax strategies to enhance and preserve value.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Self-Study

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62 minutes
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Mass Tort Chapter 11 Cases Today: Sexual Abuse, Opioid and Asbestos Cases
Opioid, sexual abuse and asbestos cases have been all over the news in the last few years. This panel of experts will discuss and analyze the complex issues involved in mass tort chapter 11 cases today, including current issues involving future claims, nonconsensual releases and plan-confirmation issues.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Self-Study

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61 minutes
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Ethics: Hold or Fold Them?
Ever get stuck with one of “those” clients? (We’ve all been there.) What do you do when you uncover serious problems with a debtor? Learn the right —and wrong —ways to extract yourself from a problem case. This panel will discuss limited-scope representation and the ability of the attorney to withdraw before, during and after the bankruptcy case.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Self-Study Ethics

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62 minutes
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Post-Filing Issue-Spotting
Sometimes a bankruptcy case isn’t over when it’s over, especially when certain issues arise (like the debtor suddenly “discovering” a bank account he or she forgot to “mention”). Learn how to navigate some of the most common post-filing problems that can crop up.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Self-Study

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59 minutes
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Defending a 523/727 Action
Bankruptcy discharges go to “honest but unfortunate debtors,” but creditors (because they want their money!) don’t always give up their quests to extract money, even after a bankruptcy case concludes. These useful case examples will guide practitioners through a survey of the most common quarrels over discharges and exceptions.

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Self-Study

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68 minutes
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Taking Rule 3002.1 Sanctions Down the Gravel Road to Casa Blanco
In this session, the panelists will cover both Gravel (and the dissent) and a recent bankruptcy court opinion (In re Blanco) that rejects the reasoning in Gravel. Can the two cases be reconciled? What is the standard that must be established to justify the imposition of sanctions when mortgage-servicers fail to comply with Rule 3002.1’s requirements, and what are the limitations on the amount of sanctions that can be considered appropriate?

American Bankruptcy Institute

1 - Self-Study