New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Sidney Kess | March 20, 2020
The Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2020 (P.L. 116-94), which was signed into law on Dec. 20, 2019, made a number of dramatic changes that impact the taxation of children. Sidney Kess discusses the changes in this edition of his Tax Tips column.
By Ryan Tarinelli | March 19, 2020
Broome County Family Court Judge Richard Miller, who is challenging the termination decision, is alleged by the Commission on Judicial Conduct will failing to report tens of thousands of dollars in income on his state and federal tax returns over several years.
By Eva von Schaper | March 19, 2020
Two British traders were handed suspended prison sentences, while millions are to be recovered from the banks.
By Jack Newsham | March 18, 2020
"We're going to have more—and I'm seeing it—rate flexibility at Blank Rome," said one of the partners of the group.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jeremy H. Temkin | March 18, 2020
In this edition of his Tax Litigation Issues column, Jeremy H. Temkin writes that practitioners should be mindful of the growing body of case law holding that defendants convicted of various federal and state offenses involving false statements are all subject to deportation and precluded from seeking naturalization.
By Jim Turner | March 16, 2020
House Ways & Means Chairman Bryan Avila said the final package provides the state needed economic flexibility to respond to COVID-19.
By Jack Newsham | March 16, 2020
The partners, two in real estate and one in tax, joined Proskauer's second-largest office and bring decades of experience on a broad sweep of commercial real estate deals.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jennifer Weidler Karpchuk | March 13, 2020
On Feb. 4, Gov. Tom Wolf announced his proposed budget for 2020-21. The budget calls for a few key changes to the commonwealth's tax system.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joseph Lipari and Aaron S. Gaynor | March 4, 2020
Since a U.S. Supreme Court decision five years ago, several New York taxpayers have attempted to resurrect constitutional challenges to the dual residency problem—provisions of the New York state personal income tax that cause certain taxpayers to be subject to dual state taxes. In this edition of their Tax Appeals Tribunal column, Joseph Lipari and Aaron S. Gaynor discuss the most recent challenge—'Rusakoff'.
By Tom McParland | February 27, 2020
A First Department panel wrote that while New York City neighborhoods remain "deeply segregated," plaintiffs from the tax-reform advocacy group Tax Equity Now NY had not shown that property-tax disparities disproportionately impacted black and Hispanic residents,
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