By Cheryl Miller | November 7, 2019
Welcome to Higher Law. Check out our Q&A with practice leader Oren Bitan at Buchalter, and scroll down for our roundup of marijuana-related election developments from around the country. Thanks for reading, and your feedback is appreciated.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Harvey M. Stone and Richard H. Dolan | November 7, 2019
In their Eastern District Roundup, Harvey M. Stone and Richard H. Dolan discuss a decision in which the judge called for a shift in the legal profession's culture to encourage attorneys with mental illness to seek help; another decision enforcing an Internet arbitration clause against a customer; and a decision declining to dismiss IRS claims for money damages against a co-defendant who had benefitted from fraudulent conveyances by her father-in-law to escape estate taxes.
By Cheryl Miller | November 6, 2019
"Do we get all high school report cards? Do we get certified birth certificates? Do we get five years of medical records?"
By C. Ryan Barber | November 6, 2019
U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden said there is a "strong line of cases suggesting the House would have standing to bring this type of case."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Libin Zhang | November 5, 2019
New York state has enacted new disclosure requirements that could apply to any limited liability company (LLC) that transfers or acquires certain residential real property in New York by deed, which could have a dramatic effect on all residential condo developers.
By Jack Newsham | November 4, 2019
Albert Hessberg and his advocates said he diverted fees from his firm and began taking money entrusted to him by clients because of the pressure to give his family the same kind of life he had.
By Angela Morris | October 29, 2019
John O. Green, who serves in the Idaho Legislature, has been fighting a condition of pretrial release that banned him from having firearms or weapons, because he claims that he needs weapons to protect himself and his family from wild animals, such as bears, that frequent the rural town where he lives.
By Amy Guthrie | October 29, 2019
The firm eyes Latin America as part of an ambitious global expansion that includes countries rife with political tensions.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Conrad Teitell | October 25, 2019
The tax law encourages volunteers by allowing them to deduct the unreimbursed expenses they incur in helping charitable organizations. Conrad Teitell explores this topic in this month's edition of his Estate Planning and Philanthropy column.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Ezra Dyckman and Charles S. Nelson | October 22, 2019
In their Taxation column, Ezra Dyckman and Charles Nelson discuss 'Lipnick v. Commissioner,' a recent opinion issued by the U.S. Tax Court which clarifies how the interest characterization rules work in the context of partnerships that have made debt-financed distributions to their partners.
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