Sharon Cohen Levin advises some of the world’s largest financial institutions on policies, controls and systems to ensure they are not laundering money. She also heads one of the leading art fraud practices in the country and played a key role in returning a precious long-missing 1734 Ames Stradivarius violin to its rightful owners. Before joining WilmerHale last year, she headed the asset forfeiture unit of the Southern District U.S. Attorney’s Office for 19 years, taking on some of the legal world’s most fascinating cases, from thwarting terrorist funding networks to recovering looted dinosaur skeletons. Between 2006 and 2015, she was responsible for $13.9 billion in forfeitures, representing more than 59 percent of federal forfeitures in the whole country.
If I weren’t a lawyer, I’d be …
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