By Avalon Zoppo | Brad Kutner | March 7, 2023
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear an admiralty dispute involving choice-of-law clauses in maritime contracts according to Monday's orders list.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Brad Kutner | March 6, 2023
"I think they'll take a harder look at the willful vs. non-willful in order to get those penalty numbers back up to what they otherwise would have done," warned one tax attorney.
By Patrick Smith | March 1, 2023
Jeffrey Davis said new tax incentives for infrastructure and energy transition, coupled with the firm's footprint, made the timing right for a change.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joseph Lipari and Aaron S. Gaynor | February 28, 2023
While most of the updated regulations correspond to New York's own corporate tax reforms, others take the opportunity to address recent court decisions and similar impetuses for change.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael Rikon | February 24, 2023
In city after city, highways that were built to appease white suburban commuters, and enabled through eminent domain and funds from the 1949 Housing Act and 1956 Interstate Highway Act, were shoved through African American neighborhoods, causing surrounding blight and pollution. Among the Black neighborhoods divided by highways were Treme in New Orleans, the Brooklyn area of Charlotte and Overtown in Miami.
By Everett Catts | February 22, 2023
Sean R. Gannon will join the firm as senior counsel in its tax controversy and litigation practice and will work out of its Atlanta office.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Sidney Kess | February 22, 2023
The good news is that penalties can be avoided, minimized, or abated, if proper action is taken.
By Jim Turner | February 16, 2023
The state's Save Our Homes program places a 3% cap on annual increases in taxable values of homesteaded property. The proposal would lower that to 2%.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By David E. Kahen and Elliot Pisem | February 15, 2023
In their Taxation column, David Kahen and Elliot Pisem discuss two recent Tax Court memorandum decisions which underscore the importance of taking applicable tax rules into account when decisions are being made as to how to incur and report expenses, with a view to minimizing the potential for issues to arise on audit.
By Brad Kutner | February 14, 2023
"Even those of us who engage in controversies with the agency for a living prefer a well-resourced IRS to provide adequate services to taxpayers," said new Kirkland & Ellis hire David Foster.
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