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LJN Newsletters

  • Denial of Special Permit Lacked Rational BasisChallenge to ZBA Determination Not Time-Barred

    July 31, 2025New York Real Estate Law Reporter Staff
  • Notable recent court filings in entertainment law.

    July 31, 2025Entertainment Law & Finance Staff
  • Trust accounting — specifically, the management and recordkeeping of client trust accounts — is an aspect of legal practice that demands meticulous attention. This article identifies best practices for trust accounting and recordkeeping and outlines common pitfalls in an effort to help lawyers maintain compliance and uphold client trust.

    July 31, 2025Diana C. Manning and Benjamin J. DiLorenzo and Kyle A. Valente
  • How can a court order be served to an anonymous individual during litigation? And if that individual is holding misappropriated cryptocurrency in a self-custodied, anonymous wallet, can those funds be seized and recovered? These questions are becoming more common in digital assets disputes, bankruptcies and litigations.

    July 31, 2025Jason Trager and Serkan Ersanli
  • A look at moves among attorneys, law firms, companies and other players in entertainment law.

    July 31, 2025Entertainment Law & Finance Staff
  • In May, Matthew R. Galeotti, Head of the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice, issued a department-wide memorandum setting forth the department’s enforcement priorities in the white-collar crime sphere. In it, the department announced an effort to combat crime that “poses a significant threat to U.S. interests,” including the “enabling of shadow-banking and sanctions evasions by hostile nation-states and terror regimes.” A potential obstacle to these enforcement efforts is the doctrine of foreign sovereign immunity. This doctrine, as its name suggests, has been used by courts to grant judicial immunity to foreign states, their instrumentalities, and their respective heads of state.

    July 31, 2025Andrew St. Laurent and Joseph DeBlasi
  • In April 2025, the United Kingdom secured its first-ever criminal conviction for a breach of Russian sanctions — a milestone in the global enforcement landscape. But beneath the headline lies a far more pressing narrative: how a sanctioned Politically Exposed Person (PEP) was able to enter the UK, open a bank account, and launder funds through mainstream financial and non-financial institutions without detection.

    July 31, 2025Matt Winlaw
  • 35th Annual Entertainment Law Institute

    July 31, 2025Entertainment Law & Finance Staff
  • Liquidated Damages Provision Not Disproportionate to Probable Loss

    July 31, 2025New York Real Estate Law Reporter Staff