Archive for September, 2017

September 18, 2017

Barrett Delivers Miller Lecture & Interviews Eichmann Prosecutor Gabriel Bach

On September 12th, Professor John Q. Barrett delivered a lecture, “From Nuremberg to Eichmann,” in this year’s Paul S. Miller Distinguished Lecture program, held in New York City and sponsored by the International March of the Living and Rutgers Law School.

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John Barrett

U.S. Department of Justice attorney and Nazi-hunter Eli Rosenbaum, longtime head of DOJ’s Office of Special Investigations, also lectured. The program also featured excerpts from Professor Barrett’s recent videotaped interview with Israeli Supreme Court Justice (retired) Gabriel Bach, who in 1961 was deputy prosecutor, in Jerusalem, of former Nazi SS officer Adolf Eichmann, a principal architect of the Holocaust.  For further information on this program, click here.

September 16, 2017

Warner’s Article To Be Reprinted in New York Commercial Law Goldbook

Professor Ray Warner’s article “Rejoice in New York’s Revised UCC, But Beware Traps,” discussing the 2014 revisions to New York’s UCC, has been selected to be reprinted in the 2018 edition of the New York Commercial Law Goldbook published by LexisNexis.

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G. Ray Warner

September 5, 2017

Levine Hosts Roundtable and Presents at SEALS

On July 10-11 Professor Kate Levine hosted a roundtable for junior criminal law scholars in conjunction with Jocelyn Simonson of Brooklyn Law School.  Fourteen scholars from schools including Harvard, Wash U., Ohio State, and Vanderbilt, presented works in progress. In addition to hosting, Professor Levine presented her current work in progress Discipline and Policing.  levine

On August 1, Professor Levine was an invited presenter at the Southeastern Association of Law Schools in Boca Raton, FL. S he presented her current work in progress Discipline and Policing at a panel titled, Procedural Issues in Policing the Police.

September 1, 2017

Sovern quoted by Politico and Bloomberg

Politico’s Morning Money newsletter quoted Professor Jeff Sovern on August 25 as follows:

BANK EARNINGS REACT — Via St. John’s professor Jeff Sovern: “Greg Baer misses the mark when he criticizes regulatory reform opponents for saying reform is unnecessary because banks are making record profits. Supporters of the reduced regulation reflected in the Financial Choice Act claim the rules mandated by Dodd-Frank make it hard for banks to operate and are causing some to close.

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Jeff Sovern

“Dodd-Frank supporters retort that If banks are making record profits despite the supposedly onerous regulations, banks must be doing just fine. It is hard to reconcile claims that regulations are putting banks out of business with reports of record profits.

In an August 4 story, Potential Successor to CFPB’s Cordray Unclear Under Dodd-Frank, Bloomberg also quoted Sovern:

Jeff Sovern, a professor of law at St. John’s University School of Law in New York City, . . . told Bloomberg BNA that Dodd-Frank’s language might allow the CFPB’s deputy director David Silberman to step in if Cordray leaves. “I’m not an expert on administrative law by any means, but surely an argument can be made that a director who resigns is both ‘absent’ and ‘unavailable,’ which means that the deputy director would automatically become acting director in light of the statutory text that the deputy director ‘shall serve as acting Director in the absence or unavailability of the Director,’” said Sovern, who’s also a coordinator of and contributor to the Consumer Law and Policy Blog.
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Sovern looked ahead to the potential next phase, saying President Trump probably would nominate a permanent director fairly quickly if Director Cordray were to resign. “In addition, as a filibuster could not be used to block a nominee for the directorship, the Senate would probably confirm a nominee rapidly, unless the president nominated someone who would divide the Senate Republicans,” Sovern said.

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