Almost everyone has heard of the metaverse and seen that word in a splashy headline. But what is it, really, and what could it become in the future? In some sense, the answer is simple and very broad: the metaverse is a new environment for people to interact, shop, play and learn, and a new environment for companies to advertise, market and sell. But the metaverse today is a new Wild West where potential for innovation is matched by potential risk factors in terms of ownership, liability, trademark and intellectual property, and much more. Jerome Walker, Flora Lau and Terry Dugan from the City Bar Digital Technology Task Force dive into the innovations and the risks that are emerging today. And they ask, with creators and companies galloping into the new frontier, where are they going and who will be in charge?
Tune in to hear more about:
• What is the metaverse? Why was it created? And what is the metaverse experience like?
• Who are some of the leading companies in the metaverse?
• Why should lawyers for example, even care about the metaverse?
• New vocabulary and concepts from the metaverse.
• What are the legal issues for influencers in the metaverse? How do you deal with the concept of ownership in the metaverse? Who owns the content of the metaverse?
• What are the trademark and IP issues in the metaverse?
• What are the product liability issues in the metaverse?
• What’s next for the metaverse? Who will lead the charge to Web 3.0 and how soon will we get there?
Access a transcript of this episode here: https://bit.ly/3vKCUWC
1/26/2024 • 48 minutes, 8 seconds
Closing The Digital Divide
The Digital Technology Task Force explores the crisis of unequal access to digital technologies. Robert A. Marchman and Jolevette Mitchell talk about how this huge issue can hide in plain sight, and they go over some of the existing efforts to close the gap as well as existing challenges. This episode also covers some of the pitfalls that even well-intentioned reforms must be careful to avoid.
Tune in to hear more about:
• What is the digital divide? Who are the communities that are affected?
• What is being done at the local, state and federal level to close the digital divide?
• How can existing programs be expanded, and how can existing programs better work together?
• How can reform efforts avoid the possible harms implicit in the use of many technologies?
Access a transcript of this episode here: https://bit.ly/48wlqvo
Related Resources
(NYS ConnectALL) Five-Year Action Plan - Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program: https://on.ny.gov/3tCipLf
(GAO) Broadband - National Strategy Needed to Guide Federal Efforts to Reduce Digital Divide: https://bit.ly/3vvjfK7
(City Bar) Support for Legislation Providing Internet Access to Individuals Living in Temporary Housing Throughout New York State: https://bit.ly/41S4eOL
(City Bar) Help Ensure Internet Access for New Yorkers Experiencing Homelessness: https://bit.ly/3vnKhDv
1/4/2024 • 32 minutes, 24 seconds
What's in Your Wallet: the CFPB Goes after Digital Wallets and Payment Apps
The City Bar Task Force on Digital Technologies explores the implications of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB)'s proposed rule on digital wallets and payment apps. After a review of the CFPB's authoritative reach, its enforcement authority, and its coordination with other regulatory agencies, we dig into the proposed rule – what its key provisions are, how its comment period was decided upon, and how it determines which entities will be affected. The group, which includes former senior CFPB officials, also discuss how attorneys could advise their clients about the CFPB entry into this space.
Tune in to hear more about:
• The role and power of the CFPB
• The CFPB’s rulemaking, supervision and enforcement authorities
• Implications of the CFPB's proposed rule on digital wallets and payment apps
• Lessons from previous CFPB supervision of larger participants
Access a transcript of this episode here: https://bityl.co/N6zc
12/21/2023 • 59 minutes, 36 seconds
Marybeth Peters: Renaissance Woman of Copyright
Lawyer. Leader. Public Servant. Trailblazer. Friend.
Marybeth Peters, the second-longest serving Register of Copyrights (1994 - 2010), died on September 29, 2022, in Washington, D.C., at the age of 83. With her passing, Register Peters left behind a lasting and far-reaching legacy in her storied 40-plus year career as a distinguished attorney, respected copyright law expert, and the director of the U.S. Copyright Office, where she helped shape and implement critical new laws, including the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act, the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, and the Uruguay Round Agreements Act among others. In addition, Register Peters was remembered as a mentor, teacher, and friend who touched the lives of everyone around her with grace and her unforgettable laugh.
Presented by the New York City Bar Copyright and Literary Property Committee, committee members Theodora Fleurant, a trademark attorney based in New York City, and Jose Landivar, an Associate at Coates IP, lead an unforgettable series of conversations with some of the people closest to Register Peters to look back on her life and legacy, including:
• Shira Perlmutter, the current Register of Copyrights and Director of the U.S. Copyright Office
• Maria Pallante, President and CEO of the Association of American Publishers who formerly served as the 12th Register of Copyrights
• Richard Dannay, Counsel at Cowan, Liebowitz & Latman, P.C.
• Eric Schwartz, Partner at Mitchell Silberberg & Knupp LLP, and former Acting General Counsel and Senior Legal Advisor to the Register of Copyrights
• David Carson, current Copyright Office Claims Officer who, formerly served as head of the Copyright Policy Team in the Office of Policy and International Affairs at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and as General Counsel of the U.S. Copyright Office
This podcast paints a fascinating portrait of a leading U.S. and international copyright law expert. It seeks to inspire listeners with lessons in leadership, courage, innovation, and dedicated public service.
This podcast would not have been possible without the support of the U.S. Copyright Office (https://www.copyright.gov/) and audio provided by the Copyright Clearance Center.
Photo: Courtesy of the U.S. Copyright Office.
Access a transcript of this episode here: https://bityl.co/MvSf
12/12/2023 • 1 hour, 29 minutes, 41 seconds
Is AI in Litigation Ready for Primetime? (U.S. v. Michel)
The City Bar’s Working Group on Judicial Administration and Artificial Intelligence is back to get into a recent headline-making case of AI allegedly misused in the courtroom. Harut Minasian, Stuart Levi, Richard Hong and David Zaslowsky break down the recent news about the US v. Michel: bad use of AI, or just plain bad lawyering? They discuss how AI can be used as a valuable tool in the legal toolkit for some tasks, but highlight the need for understanding the functionality, reliability, and limitations of AI technology. But whether or not AI can be reliably used today in some limited ways, the real question is: is AI ready for prime time?
Tune in to hear more about:
• Is the ineffective assistance of counsel claim in US v. Michel likely to succeed?
• How should lawyers disclose to clients the AI tools that they do use?
• Is using AI really so different from using other ‘new’ technologies like Lexis and Westlaw? Is it different from asking a Partner with specialized knowledge for input?
• Will it ever be the case that NOT using AI will be grounds for professional misconduct?
Access a transcript of this episode here: https://bityl.co/MfRf
11/30/2023 • 35 minutes, 46 seconds
The United Nations Global Compact
In this episode of the New York City Bar Association podcast, members of the United Nations Committee – Shubha Chandra, Yveline Dalmacy, Karl Fisher and Sophia Murashkovsky Romma – discuss the Association's recent membership in the UN Global Compact. The conversation touches upon the Global Compact's mission, its fundamental principles, and the broader implications of the partnership for the Bar Association and its members. Ensuring respect for justice, human rights, corporate sustainability, and adhering to the rule of law are important aspects underlined in the discussion. The episode also elaborates on the potential benefits for members such as access to diverse training on corporate sustainability.
Access a transcript of this episode here: https://bityl.co/MSo7
11/21/2023 • 15 minutes, 51 seconds
Updating New York's Uniform Commercial Code
Five members of the City Bar Digitial Technology Task Force explain the New York Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”) amendments and their potential impact on digital assets, trade finance and electronic commerce. Sandra Rocks, Ed Smith, Eric Marcus, Neil Cohen and Lorraine McGowen explain how adopting the amendments will benefit New York and will ensure that New York remains the preferred jurisdiction for parties transacting business.
Access a transcript of this recording here: https://bityl.co/MLKD
11/16/2023 • 19 minutes, 55 seconds
Pathway to the Profession, a Landscape of Exclusion
Why do you have to take the LSAT to get into law school? Is the modern Bar Exam the best way to protect the public and sort bar admission applicants? Why is the law school curriculum designed the way that it is? What does it mean to have the character and fitness to be a lawyer? Many lawyers take for granted that the answers to these questions are settled. The assumption is that these institutions help us select only the best and the brightest to enter the legal profession. In this episode of the City Bar Podcast, two academic experts help us probe those assumptions. They unpack the history, structure and outcomes of these institutions of selection. And they tease out the many interconnected ways in which the status quo functionally excludes people from underrepresented communities from entering the legal profession.
Tune in to learn about:
• How standardized tests that claim to predict law school success sort significantly based on economic class and race.
• How the Bar Exam still in use today has historical roots in purposeful exclusion.
• How Black and Latinx students get less financial aid and more debt on their paths through law school.
• How legal education is largely set up to benefit people who come in knowing something about the law and “legal culture,” to the detriment of first-generation lawyers.
• How character and fitness standards have historically largely reflected the bigotry and biases of the era.
• How the legal profession can begin to reverse course and make these institutions work to include more people with the motivation, intelligence, skills, talent and commitment to becoming a lawyer.
Resources:
Sealing the Leaks: Recommendations to Diversify and Strengthen the Pipeline to the Legal Profession: https://bit.ly/3I1eNFS
The Diversity Gap: Black and Latinx Representation Disparities in the Legal Pipeline: https://bit.ly/3ssibFP
Building Belonging Podcast: https://apple.co/3SAgnp6
Radical Reformation: Diverse Pathways to Attorney Licensure Will Yield a More Diverse Profession: https://bit.ly/460jNEw
Professor Carla Pratt’s Book – The End of the Pipeline: A Journey of Recognition for African Americans Entering the Legal Profession: https://bityl.co/LqhD
Professor Joan Howarth’s Book – Shaping the Bar: The Future of Attorney Licensing: https://bityl.co/LqhC
College Admissions Tests and Socioeconomic/Racial Discrimination: https://bityl.co/Lqf4
Robert J. Steinberg’s Study of Admissions Testing Efficacy: https://bit.ly/3u7nATc
Examining the California Cut Score: An Empirical Analysis of Minimum Competency, Public Protection, Disparate Impact, and National Standards: https://bityl.co/Lqf6
Building a Better Bar: The Twelve Building Blocks of Minimum Competence: https://bit.ly/40xrd15
Final Report of the Testing Task Force for the NexGen Bar Exam: https://bit.ly/3QPNZ0B
Access a transcript of this episode here: https://bit.ly/40wHKCa
11/10/2023 • 58 minutes, 35 seconds
Asset Tokenization and Blockchain
Robert Schwinger and Hector Ivan Velez are Co-Chairs of the Distributed Ledger Technology and Blockchain Subcommittee of the City Bar Task Force on Digital Technologies. They unpacked four key use cases for asset tokenization – real estate, art, commodities and carbon credits – in order to cover the basics of tokenization, the potential for democratizing access to investment opportunity, and the barriers to adoption.
Tune in to hear about:
• How tokenization could open global markets in some assets
• How courts have treated tokenized assets
• The risks presented by the tokenization of assets
• The legal and regulatory challenges to adoption of asset tokenization
10/12/2023 • 35 minutes, 34 seconds
Mastering Business Development Strategy
Adrienne Woods, a member of the City Bar’s Social Networking and Events Committee, sat down with Bruce Libman, a master business-development strategist, to unpack the fundamentals of effective networking that will generate business for lawyers.
Tune in to hear about:
• How effective networking is the process of opening yourself up to authentically engage others
• Practical examples of effective networking questions, planning and followup strategies
• Tips for developing and honing networking techniques
Register here for the Social Networking and Events Committee program at the City Bar on September 30, at which Bruce Libman will be the featured speaker: https://bityl.co/L8Nv
9/15/2023 • 41 minutes, 47 seconds
Web3 - The World of Decentralized Tech
Beth Haddock and Lewis Cohen are Co-Chairs of the Web3 Subcommittee of the City Bar Task Force on Digital Technologies, and they’re experts in the world of Web3, decentralized finance (DeFi), blockchain and cryptocurrency technologies. They helped us understand how the world of decentralized technologies is taking shape, what problems are being discussed and discovered by innovators, and where we stand to benefit from future breakthroughs.
Tune in to hear about:
• Takeaways for lawyers from two recent, major reports of the international Financial Stability Board. What lawyers could use in their practice and what they should think about when they think of developments in Web3.
• What is DeFi (decentralized finance) and what are DAOs (decentralized autonomous organizations)? How do we know when a project truly fits into these spaces?
• What are the incentives and differences between traditional finance and decentralized finance?
• What are the potential benefits of decentralized finance?
• What are reliable and reputable resources for people who want to learn more about decentralized finance?
Resources
FSB Report - https://bityl.co/KOlC
US Treasury illicit finance report - https://bityl.co/KOlA
DeFi Alliance - https://bityl.co/KOl9
DeFi Education Fund - https://bityl.co/KOl8
Ethereum Foundation - https://bityl.co/KOl7
Vitalik Buterin blog - https://bityl.co/KOl5
Beth and Lewis' Twitters - @HaddockBeth; @NYcryptolawyer
8/10/2023 • 30 minutes, 25 seconds
The ChatGPT Case (Mata v. Avianca, Inc.) and AI in Courts: A Closer Look
A story of artificial intelligence, fabricated precedent, and a litigation gone awry that made cringeworthy headlines even outside the legal world. In Mata v. Avianca a lawyer submitted a brief in federal court citing precedent that ChatGPT had spun out of thin air. Three members of the City Bar Working Group on Judicial Administration and Artificial Intelligence break down how it happened and what we can learn about the use of artificial intelligence in courts. Tune in to hear Harut Minasian, Richard Hong and Stuart Levi discuss:
• How did the judge in the case deal with the fact pattern that emerged and how were the lawyers in question held accountable for their actions?
• Is there now a greater duty of oversight for lawyers in the new AI context?
• When is AI-generated material an aid for human work and when is it a source?
• How should lawyers responsibly disclose their use of AI tools to the court?
• What rules are judges around the country making about the disclosure of AI tools used in their courtrooms?
8/1/2023 • 44 minutes, 57 seconds
Building Belonging: The Legal Accountability Project
Aliza Shatzman is President and Founder of the Legal Accountability Project, a nonprofit aimed at extending support and resources to law clerks to ensure that they have a positive clerkship experience. Aliza talks about the mistreatment that she experienced as a law clerk. Her experience led her to discover the shocking lack of labor protections for clerks and the enormous power disparity between clerks and judges. Aliza was ultimately inspired to take on the deeply entrenched status quo in the clerking system. Tune in to hear about:
• The power dynamic that exists today which gives judges the power to mistreat clerks and potentially derail their clerks’ careers
• How law schools and their clerkship offices have been complicit in protecting bad actors and withholding information about bad judges from clerkship applicants
• How Aliza has improved accountability for judges and raised awareness in the community of law clerks
• What law clerks experiencing mistreatment can do to get help
• What changes need to be made to improve working conditions for clerks
• The centralized clerkship database created by the Legal Accountability Project that democratizes information about judges and clerkships: https://bityl.co/K4ND
You can read Aliza’s testimony to the House Committee on the Judiciary here: https://bityl.co/K6EO
DEIB for the People – a Collection of DEIB Content for Your Screens
Mary Ellen – Radical Queer Witches (https://bityl.co/K6EV)
Angie – Women Talking (https://amz.run/6vjB)
Tanya – Wednesday (https://bityl.co/K6EW) a recommendation to watch and to investigate bias: (https://bityl.co/K6Ei)
7/28/2023 • 46 minutes
This Lawyer's Life: Ellen Holloman - Partner, Cadwalader
A brand new professional development podcast from the City Bar where we talk with lawyers about seizing opportunities, learning lessons the hard way, and about what makes them tick.
Search for the This Lawyer's Life feed wherever you listen and subscribe!
Gregory Binstock, City Bar Director of Professional Development, sits down with Ellen Holloman, a Partner in Cadwalader’s Global Litigation Group. Tune in to learn more about:
• How learning flows both ways in Ellen’s mentor/mentee relationship
• How leaders should approach lessons in DEI that come from a new generation of attorneys who are at the bottom of the firm hierarchy
• How Ellen has navigated unsupportive encounters while seeking supportive spaces
• How DEI contributes to winning litigation
• How Ellen makes pro bono and service core elements of her career
7/21/2023 • 45 minutes, 13 seconds
What to Make of It: The Great AI Retooling — with Professor Anthony E. Davis
Heather Hatcher is Chair of the City Bar’s Health Law Committee and a public health policy advocate. Roland Trope is a Partner at Trope and Schramm LLP and an Adjunct Professor in the Departments of Law and of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. Heather and Roland interviewed Anthony E. Davis, Of Counsel at Clyde and Co. US and an international expert on professional responsibility. They discuss the transformations that AI tools will make to legal services, and they consider the challenges to evaluating and deploying those tools on behalf of the client.
• How will AI tools change the landscape of legal services?
• How can lawyers and law firms evaluate AI tools that purport to be applicable to individual use cases?
• What are the risks of using AI tools for legal services?
• How much technological expertise do lawyers need to have?
• Who is liable for mistakes made by AI tools?
• What are the ethical risks for lawyers using AI tools?
This interview was recorded on March 30, several weeks before the widespread reportage (https://bityl.co/JXfC) of the problems in Mata v. Avianca involving the misuse of the OpenAI application ChatGPT-4 that led to the submission of filings with the US District Court for the Southern District of New York citing and quoting fake cases.
6/29/2023 • 57 minutes, 44 seconds
Building Belonging: Recession-Proofing Commitments to DEIB
Ankura Consulting Group is a management consulting firm with over two thousand employees advising corporations in various industries and sectors e.g. cybersecurity, construction, litigation and human resources. Shawn Miles' and Patricia Rodriguez’s social-impact team helps companies ask themselves difficult questions about their own environments and values so that they can make sure that their people feel accepted, welcome and able to show up as themselves.
Patricia and Shawn speak about being intentional with Belonging, about building strategies and spaces for people to be honest and sometimes uncomfortable. They helped us understand the ways in which building psychological safety to get things wrong can be tantamount to building psychological safety to really try and get things right.
The Building Belonging crew carries this idea into a discussion about how to persevere in the face of an “anti-woke” movement that seeks to co-opt and undermine DEIB ideals. Tanya, Angie and Mary Ellen talk with Shawn and Patricia about how to be prepared for “anti-woke” arguments that are made in bad faith and how to keep the DEIB conversation going on a productive track. They also delve into the implications of these strategies in the political atmosphere of anti-woke, anti-DEIB regulations.
The data shows that organizations that succeed in DEIB also outperform their competitors financially. Patricia and Shawn talk about how improving DEIB improves organizational decision-making and makes companies more responsive to increasingly-diverse customer bases. Nevertheless, when recession happens and businesses need to make cuts, DEIB initiatives are often first on the block. Shawn and Patricia shared some of the talking points and strategies that they have used to remind companies that DEIB is good for long-term, sustainable growth as well as for retention of the top talent.
DEIB for the People – a Collection of DEIB Content for Your Screens
Angie – Milk (https://amz.run/6oME)
Mary Ellen – So You Want to Talk about Race? (https://amz.run/6oMF)
Tanya – Overruling Grutter: What Does Ending Affirmative Action Mean for Voluntary DEI Workplace (https://bityl.co/JQIr)
6/22/2023 • 53 minutes, 41 seconds
The Task Force on Digital Technologies
Jerome Walker, Lorraine McGowen and Edward So are Co-Chairs of a new City Bar Task Force on Digital Technologies. They introduce the Task Force, its objectives, its work so far, and its vision for the future.
6/14/2023 • 30 minutes, 18 seconds
Building Belonging: Using Privilege for Progress
Justice Rolando Acosta shares his story of growing up in the Dominican Republic and coming to New York at 14, finding opportunities by excelling academically and on the baseball field, and choosing the law and going to work at Legal Aid as a way of paying back the help that had been given to his family.
Justice Acosta and his daughter Zila Acosta-Grimes compare notes on their upbringing and their privileges, and how they have learned to use privilege as power.
Justice Acosta remembers for us his time building the Dominican community in Washington Heights and Inwood by building up social service infrastructure like Alianza Dominicana and Community Association of Progressive Dominicans alongside other community leaders like Adriano Espaillat and Dr. Raphael Lantigua.
Justice Acosta also shares insights about the challenges of making change happen at the institutional level, delving into his own efforts to modernize the Appellate Division First Department while he was Presiding Justice.
Justice Acosta talked with the ODEIB team about the importance of representation not just in the workplace and the boardroom, but in institutions of justice and as a building block of the rule of law.
DEIB for the People – a Collection of DEIB Content for Your Screens
Mary Ellen: #DoTheWork from writer/activist Rachel Cargle – https://bityl.co/IqtB
Tanya: Ru Paul’s Drag Race – https://bityl.co/IqtH
Angie: Crip Camp – https://bityl.co/IqtI (Streaming); https://bityl.co/IqtN (Home Page)
5/25/2023 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 9 seconds
Housing Part Proceedings and the Reality of Housing Court: Enforcing Orders to Correct
In this episode: Enforcing Orders to Correct, the fourth episode in our series on Housing Part Proceedings and the Reality of Housing Court.
Agata Rumprecht-Behrens, a court attorney currently assigned to the HP part in Queens housing court, moderates a panel discussion with Vijay Kitson, a partner at Hertz, Cherson Rosenthal specializing in landlord-tenant trial advocacy; Rachel Nager, a tenant attorney and advocate representing tenants in housing court; Paul Gdanski, a supervising attorney in the tenant anti-harassment unit at HPD; and Judge Shorab Ibraham, a housing judge appointed in 2018.
4/24/2023 • 57 minutes, 48 seconds
Building Belonging: Psychological Safety, Emotional Agility and Energy Management for Lawyers
Tanya, Angie and Mary Ellen speak with Julie Bosi and Valery Federici of Level Up Legal.
They talk about coaching in the legal industry and the way that the skills of the law can run counter to the skills of well-being, and how the work of building emotional well-being dovetails with the work of DEIB.
Tune in to hear about:
How coaching works in the context of the legal profession
How coaching is tailored to each individual lawyer
Combating negativity bias
Building psychological safety to break down systems of oppression
3/24/2023 • 1 hour, 5 minutes, 33 seconds
Building Belonging: The Diversity Gap In The Legal Pipeline
Tanya, Angie and Mary Ellen speak with Ashley Bernal, Director of Research and Impact for ProInspire.
Ashley was the Research Consultant for a City Bar report that made recommendations about diversifying and strengthening the pipeline to the legal profession. Ashley helped us understand the findings of the report. She also talked to us about some of the hierarchies in the educational system that work against DEIB. And we talked about the way that students fall out of the legal pipeline because legal education is often designed to be unsupportive.
Read Ashley's report, The Diversity Gap: Black and Latinx Disparities in the Legal Pipeline (https://bit.ly/3YwbRI8), and the City Bar's report on legal pipeline program, Sealing the Leaks: Recommendations to Diversify and Strengthen the Pipeline to the Legal Profession (https://bit.ly/3I1eNFS).
2/15/2023 • 46 minutes, 10 seconds
Building Belonging: Empowering Communities with Affinity Groups
Tanya, Angie and Mary Ellen speak with Zila Acosta Grimes, Associate at Debevoise & Plimpton.
Zila’s roots in New York’s Latinx community and legal community run deep. She shares her own immersive upbringing in those communities, and shares her playbook for building affinity groups that make inclusive and powerful spaces for communities not traditionally represented in the law.
Make an impact by being a part of our work:
Join the City Bar (admission fee waived) using this membership form: bit.ly/3qEJqbV
Join a City Bar committee: bit.ly/3xqT8SI
Sign up for our newsletter to keep up on all ODEIB programs, events, and news: bit.ly/3qE5raK
12/9/2022 • 1 hour, 8 minutes, 10 seconds
Mindful Lawyering Episode 3 - Positive Lawyering
Committee member Aimee Latorre speaks with Professor Jordana Confino of Fordham Law School. Jordana shares the wisdom of positive lawyering that she teaches to Fordham Law students, underlining the power and practices of self-compassion and a growth mindset.
More resources from the Mindfulness and Well-Being in Law Committee: https://bit.ly/3yZEyn8
Ethereal Meditation by Maarten Schellekens is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. No changes were made to this track.
12/6/2022 • 46 minutes, 50 seconds
Building Belonging: a DEI Practitioner's Perspective
Tanya, Angie and Mary Ellen speak with Yusuf Zakir, Chief Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Officer at Davis Wright Tremaine.
Yusuf shares his own journey into the DEIB space, the ways in which he invites colleagues into that space, and the way in which he has developed his firm’s approach to DEIB.
Make an impact by being a part of our work:
Join the City Bar (admission fee waived) using this membership form: https://bit.ly/3qEJqbV
Join a City Bar committee: https://bit.ly/3xqT8SI
Sign up for our newsletter to keep up on all ODEIB programs, events, and news: https://bit.ly/3qE5raK
11/15/2022 • 52 minutes, 10 seconds
Racial Justice Commission Measures on Your New York City Ballot
Staff from City Bar Office for Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging sat down with a Commissioner and the Special Counsel for the New York City Racial Justice Commission to discuss the process through which the Commission chose the measures that will appear on New York City ballots, and what changes New Yorkers can expect if the measures pass.
Learn more about the Racial Justice Commission ballot measures at the RJC website: https://racialjustice.cityofnewyork.us/
Don't Forget! Early voting in NYC begins on October 29. Learn more about early voting: https://www.nycvotes.org/how-to-vote/early-voting/
10/27/2022 • 45 minutes, 1 second
Building Belonging: Everything, Everytime, But Not All At Once
Tanya Martinez-Gallinucci, Executive Director of the Office for Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging; Angie Avila, ODEIB Manager of Development and Communications; and Mary Ellen La Rosa, ODEIB Diversity & Inclusion Coordinator; speak with Lissette Duran, Senior ESG Associate at Paul Weiss.
Lissette shares her experience of being lifted up in the journey of her career; how she has claimed a place in new spaces even while embracing her identity; and how she has safeguarded her sense of identity in the spaces that she chooses.
Make an impact by being a part of our work:
Join the City Bar (admission fee waived) using this membership form: bit.ly/3qEJqbV
Join a City Bar committee: bit.ly/3xqT8SI
Sign up for our newsletter to keep up on all ODEIB programs, events, and news: bit.ly/3qE5raK
Uptown by Independent Music Licensing Collective (IMLC) is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
10/11/2022 • 45 minutes, 42 seconds
Building Belonging: Professionalism as a Racial Construct
Tanya Martinez-Gallinucci, ODEIB Executive Director, Angie Avila, ODEIB Manager of Development and Communications, and Mary Ellen La Rosa, ODEIB Diversity & Inclusion Coordinator speak with Leah Goodridge about her article Professionalism as a Racial Construct and discuss how “professionalism” is used to subjugate marginalized groups.
Read Leah's Article "Professionalism as a Racial Construct": https://bit.ly/3DtLeMh
Make an impact by being a part of our work:
Join the City Bar (admission fee waived) using this membership form: https://bit.ly/3qEJqbV
Join a City Bar committee: https://bit.ly/3xqT8SI
Sign up for our newsletter to keep up on all ODEIB programs, events, and news: https://bit.ly/3qE5raK
Uptown by Independent Music Licensing Collective (IMLC) is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
9/15/2022 • 50 minutes, 26 seconds
Building Belonging: Reflections On What Comes Next
The staff of the City Bar Office for Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging discuss what Belonging means to them, the future of DEIB, the challenging work ahead, and weaving Belonging into our work every single day.
Contact diversity@nycbar.org to learn how you can be involved in future episodes.
7/13/2022 • 25 minutes, 49 seconds
Making It Work: The In-House/Outside Litigation Counsel Dynamic - Regeneron and Krieger Kim & Lewin
Christina Lewicky, a member of the City Bar’s Litigation Committee, speaks with Arun Bhoumik, Executive Director and Assistant General Counsel at Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc., and Edward Y. Kim, Co-Founding Partner of Krieger Kim & Lewin LLP.
They discuss the similarities between representing a corporate executive in an individual capacity and an institutional client; the differences between representing a founder-led and a legacy company; and the unique skills of a multicultural litigator.
7/6/2022 • 1 hour, 25 minutes, 56 seconds
Housing Part Proceedings and the Reality of Housing Court: Tenant Rights
In this episode, Tenant Harassment, the third episode in our series on housing part proceedings and the reality of housing court.
Agata Rumprecht-Behrens, a court attorney in Queens housing court, moderates a panel discussion with
Vijay Kitson, a partner at Hertz, Cherson Rosenthal specializing in landlord-tenant trial advocacy;
Rachel Nager, a tenant attorney and advocate representing tenants in housing court; and
Judge Shorab Ibraham, a housing judge appointed in 2018.
The statements and opinions of each speaker are their own and do not represent the views or opinions of other speakers, the housing court committee, the City Bar, respective law firms or the Office of Court Administration.
7/5/2022 • 1 hour, 7 minutes
AAPI Professional Career Trajectories
Ashley Wong, an associate at Sidley Austin LLP, speaks with William Ng, the current president of AABANY, and shareholder at Littler Mendelson, P.C., and Terry Shen, past president of AABANY and a partner at Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP.
5/26/2022 • 37 minutes, 40 seconds
Mindful Lawyering - Episode 2
A podcast of the City Bar Mindfulness and Well-Being in Law Committee. Committee members Aimee Latorre, Lisa Podemski and Tsui Yee discuss setting healthy boundaries at work.
For more mindfulness and well-being resources, visit the Mindfulness and Well-Being in Law Committee's webpage: https://bit.ly/3yZEyn8
Ethereal Meditation by Maarten Schellekens is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. No changes were made to this track.
5/25/2022 • 31 minutes, 52 seconds
2022 New York State Budget Advocacy – A Discussion with City Bar Committee Members
Elizabeth Kocienda, New York City Bar Director of Advocacy, speaks with three City Bar members about issues that they advocated to include in the New York State Budget. Lisa Pearlstein, Betsy Kramer, and Ed Murray discuss the work that they did through their City Bar Committees to bridge the digital divide for New Yorkers living in shelters; increase funding for representation of parents and children in family court and matrimonial proceedings; and reform the Joint Commission on Public Ethics.
Find more resources, including those mentioned in this podcast, by using this link: https://bit.ly/3kSGIwf
Uptown by Independent Music Licensing Collective (IMLC) is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
5/9/2022 • 47 minutes, 41 seconds
Good Cause Eviction: Pro and Con
Dorothy Heyl, Chair of the City Bar Real Property Law Committee, speaks with Justin La Mort and Alex Lycoyannis. Justin is the Supervising Attorney for the housing rights project of Mobilization for Justice, and former Real Property Law Committee Chair. Alex is a partner at Rosenberg & Estis, and a member of the Real Property Law Committee.
They talk about a bill in the New York State Legislature: Prohibition of Eviction without Good Cause. They dig into the meaning of "good cause" and the pros and cons of this bill.
4/13/2022 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 44 seconds
Mindful Lawyering - Episode 1
A podcast of the City Bar Mindfulness and Well-Being in Law Committee. Committee members Aimee Latorre, Stacy Schaffer, Alejandra Vargas, and Lisa Podemski share stories of their mindfulness journeys.
Ethereal Meditation (https://bit.ly/3JVjyQj) by Maarten Schellekens (https://bit.ly/3kfVooY) is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. No changes were made to this track.
3/4/2022 • 47 minutes, 49 seconds
Housing Part Proceedings and the Reality of Housing Court: HP Proceeding Nuts and Bolts
In this episode: HP Proceeding Nuts and Bolts, the second episode in our series on Housing Part Proceedings and the Reality of Housing Court.
Agata Rumprecht-Behrens, a court attorney currently assigned to the HP part in Queens housing court, moderates a panel discussion with Vijay Kitson, a partner at Hertz, Cherson Rosenthal specializing in landlord-tenant trial advocacy; Rachel Nager, a tenant attorney and advocate representing tenants in housing court; Travis Arrindell, supervising attorney at Department of Housing Preservation and Development; and Hon. Shorab Ibrahim, a housing judge appointed in 2018.
2/25/2022 • 35 minutes, 44 seconds
Housing Part Proceedings and the Reality of Housing Court: Civil Court Act and the Housing Part
In this episode: Civil Court Act and the Housing Part, the first episode in our series on Housing Part Proceedings and the Reality of Housing Court.
Agata Rumprecht-Behrens, a court attorney currently assigned to the HP part in Queens housing court, moderates a panel discussion with Vijay Kitson, a partner at Hertz, Cherson Rosenthal specializing in landlord-tenant trial advocacy; Rachel Nager, a tenant attorney and advocate representing tenants in housing court; Travis Arrindell, supervising attorney at Department of Housing Preservation and Development; and Hon. Shorab Ibrahim, a Housing Court judge.
2/22/2022 • 46 minutes, 32 seconds
The Daniel Anderl Judicial Security & Privacy Act
Concerns over violent threats to federal judges has led to a bill called the Daniel Anderl Act, named for a judge's son who was shot to death by a man enraged at the judge's decision in his case. We discuss the contents of the Act, and the challenges it might face, and answer the question: how will this legislation protect judges, and how might it inhibit the work of journalists?
Jennifer Rodgers, former federal prosecutor and Lecturer-in-Law at Columbia Law School, talks with Christopher Pioch and Jessenia Vazcones, Co-Chairs of the City Bar’s Task Force for the Independence of Lawyers and Judges, and Matthew Schafer, Chair of the City Bar's Communications & Media Law Committee.
1/26/2022 • 50 minutes, 57 seconds
Making It Work: The In-House/Outside Litigation Counsel Dynamic – Bayer and Sidley Austin
Christina Lewicky, a member of the City Bar Litigation Committee and the host of this podcast, speaks with Bill Dodero, Global Head of Litigation at Bayer and Jonathan Cohn, Partner at Sidley Austin. They discuss the value of outside counsel who are relentlessly selfless, resolute and solutions oriented strategists, and who produce efficient wins.
1/20/2022 • 1 hour, 9 minutes, 43 seconds
Making It Work: The In-house/ Outside Litigation Counsel Dynamic – PepsiCo
Christina Lewicky, a member of the City Bar Litigation Committee and the host of this podcast series, speaks with Farzin Firooznia, Senior Vice President and General Counsel, PepsiCo, Latin America; and Andrew (Drew) Tulumello, Co-Chair, Complex Commercial Litigation Practice, Weil, Gotshal & Manges. They discuss elements of a successful partnership, including philosophical alignment of values, creative whiteboard sessions, and joint efforts to transform external counsel into an effective advisor.
12/10/2021 • 1 hour, 17 minutes, 7 seconds
HEART - Humane Education for Animal Protection, Social Justice and Environmental Preservation
Joan Levenson, a member of the City Bar’s Animal Law Committee speaks with Meena Alagappan, Executive Director of HEART: Humane Education Advocates Reaching Teachers.
Arianna Mouré, an Associate at CSG Law, speaks with Julia Lopez, a Partner at Reed Smith, on her professional journey and her advice for aspiring Hispanic attorneys on finding their way in the legal profession. James A. Lewis, V. , Executive Director of the City Bar’s Office for Diversity and Inclusion, introduces the conversation.
10/11/2021 • 34 minutes, 15 seconds
Bankruptcy Code Safe Harbor
Thomas Slome, a Bankruptcy Partner at Cullen and Dykman and the Treasurer of the New York City Bar Association, is joined by moderator Camille Bent, a Bankruptcy and Restructuring Partner at BakerHostetler; Philip Anker, Co-Chair of the Bankruptcy and Financial Restructuring Practice Group at WilmerHale; and Jonathan Flaxer, a partner at Golenbock Eiseman Assor Bell and Peskoe LLP. All are members of the City Bar's Bankruptcy & Corporate Reorganization Committee.
Find the CLE materials and more at https://www.nycbar.org/media-listing/media/detail/bankruptcy-code-safe-harbor
9/17/2021 • 1 hour, 15 minutes, 1 second
A Pathway Out of Mass Incarceration and Toward a New Criminal Justice System: The City Bar Report
A Pathway Out of Mass Incarceration and Toward a New Criminal Justice System: The City Bar Report by NYC Bar Association
8/3/2021 • 1 hour, 13 minutes, 24 seconds
Inside the Policy Work of the New York City Bar Association
City Bar Senior Policy Counsel Maria Cilenti, Director of Advocacy Elizabeth Kocienda, and Policy Counsel Mary Margulis-Ohnuma discuss how they work with the Association’s 150-plus committees to take and advocate positions on a wide range of local, national and international issues; how they’ve adapted their work during the pandemic; and some of the issues addressed in recent months. This podcast was recorded in July 2021.
7/31/2021 • 44 minutes, 19 seconds
Three Former City Bar Diversity Fellows on Their Professional Journeys
Michele Natal, Co-Chair of the City Bar’s Recruitment & Retention of Lawyers Committee and an attorney at Mayer Brown, speaks with Muhammad Faridi, her Committee Co-Chair and a Partner at Patterson Belknap, and James A. Lewis, V, Executive Director of the City Bar’s Office for Diversity and Inclusion, about how the Diversity Fellows program has helped them and others make their way in the legal profession.
7/28/2021 • 43 minutes, 57 seconds
Access to Insurance in Underserved Communities
John S. Pruitt, a member of the City Bar’s Insurance Law Committee and a Partner at Eversheds Sutherland, speaks with Susan K. Neely, President and CEO of the American Council of Life Insurers, about what insurers are doing to offer life insurance and retirement security in traditionally underserved communities, and the challenges insurers and agents face in doing so.
7/8/2021 • 22 minutes, 4 seconds
Making It Work: The In-House/Outside Litigation Counsel Dynamic - Nike and DLA Piper
Christina Lewicky, a member of the City Bar’s Litigation Committee, speaks with Robert Leinwand, Vice President and Chief Litigation Counsel at Nike, and Scott Wilson, a Partner at DLA Piper.
6/14/2021 • 38 minutes, 38 seconds
Copyright and Choreography
Clint Hannah and Stephanie Krasnov of the City Bar’s Entertainment Law Committee speak with Professor Deborah Gerhardt of the University of North Carolina School of Law and Amy Lehman of Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts.
5/11/2021 • 1 hour, 6 minutes, 25 seconds
Dog Shootings by Police - Understanding, Prevention and Deterrence
Sherry Ramsey, a member of the City Bar’s Animal Law Committee, speaks with John Thompson, Vice President of the Small & Rural Law Enforcement Executives Association and former Deputy Executive Director and Chief Operating Officer of the National Sheriffs Association.
4/6/2021 • 39 minutes, 3 seconds
COVID-19 and Product Liability
Hanson Horn and Gary Casimir of the Cook Group speak with Jordan Rutsky of Merson Law.
4/6/2021 • 44 minutes, 8 seconds
A Conversation with David Snyder of the American Property Casualty Insurance Association
Richard Liskov of the City Bar’s Insurance Law Committee speaks with the Vice President of the APCIA (American Property Casualty Insurance Association).
4/6/2021 • 27 minutes, 39 seconds
The Professional Disciplinary Complaints about the Conduct of Rudolph Giuliani
The Professional Disciplinary Complaints about the Conduct of Rudolph Giuliani and How They Might Unfold
Jennifer Rodgers, member of the City Bar’s Task Force on the Rule of Law, CNN legal analyst and adjunct law professor, speaks with Christine Chung, a trial and appellate attorney, former federal prosecutor and steering committee member of Lawyers Defending American Democracy, and Richard Maltz, Counsel to the Legal Ethics & Professional Responsibility Group at the firm of Frankfurt Kurnit and former member of the Departmental Disciplinary Committee for the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York.
Opinions expressed are those of the speakers and not necessarily of the City Bar.
3/3/2021 • 52 minutes, 35 seconds
A Conversation With Kara Swisher: Silicon Valley’s Most Feared Journalist
Kara Swisher, a journalist and author writing about information technology, will discuss her observations regarding the internet, the digital revolution it created and the possible future it may bring. Topics will include: the influence of Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and other platforms on our politics, especially on the January 6 attack of the U.S. Capitol; the effect of computer robotics on our economy; the development of artificial intelligence; facial recognition and other means of surveillance; the lack of gender diversity in the dot.com world, among other areas of public concern.
Swisher is an opinion writer for the New York Times where she also produces a twice-weekly podcast “Sway” on tech issues; she is an editor-at-large at New York Media, co-hosts the popular “Pivot” podcast and has authored two books. Her examination of the tech industry led Newsweek to call her “Silicon Valley’s most feared journalist.” She has established a reputation in the tech world for unrivaled access, having interviewed Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, President Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Rupert Murdoch, Stacey Abrams, and Kim Kardashian, to name just a few.
New York Magazine noted one of the reasons for Swisher’s unusual success is her longevity. She began covering tech in the early ’90s when the people in power today were just starting out. Amazon was looking for its first headquarters in Seattle, Google was in its garage and Netflix was a small startup. While working in the San Francisco bureau of The Wall Street Journal as one of the first reporters on the internet beat she wrote the column "BoomTown," which appeared on the front page of the Marketplace section. Swisher co-produced and co-hosted the Wall Street Journal’s "D: All Things Digital" conference series (now called the Code conference) with Walt Mossberg starting in 2003. It was, and still is, the country's premier conference on tech and media.
Following her remarks, Ms. Swisher will answer questions from the audience.
The moderator will be Adrianne Jeffries, investigative tech journalist for The Markup, founding editor at The Outline, former editor of Motherboard and reporter for The Verge, The New York Observer, The Virginian Pilot, The New York Times, Businessweek, and the Netflix documentary series Broken.
Sponsoring Committee:
Senior Lawyers, Diane Fener and Gertrude Pfaffenbach, Co-Chairs
Co-Sponsoring Committees:
Communications & Media Law, Matthew L. Schafer, Chair
Council on Intellectual Property, James R. Klaiber, Chair
Mental Health Law, Karen P. Simmons, Chair
Technology, Cyber and Privacy Law, Sylvia Khatcherian, Chair
2/17/2021 • 58 minutes, 42 seconds
Habeas Corpus for Elephants? - 44th Street Podcast November 2020
Susan Witkin, of the New York City Bar Association's Animal Law Committee, speaks to Kevin Schneider and Elizabeth Stein of the Nonhuman Rights Project about their organization and the cases it is bringing on behalf of nonhuman animals, including Happy the Elephant.
11/5/2020 • 42 minutes, 51 seconds
Bioethical Issues: The Development and Distribution of Vaccines for COVID-19 – 44th Street Podcast
Jennifer Paul Cohen, a member of the City Bar’s Bioethical Issues Committee, interviews Dr. James Colgrove, professor of Sociomedical Sciences at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health and Dean of the Postbaccalaureate Premedical Program at Columbia's School of General Studies, and Dr. Llew Keltner, Chief Executive Officer of EPISTAT, an international healthcare strategy company he founded in 1972, an associate professor at Case Western Reserve School of Medicine, and a guest lecturer in the Columbia University bioethics program.
Alan Brudner, Chair of the Bioethical Issues Committee, introduces the conversations.
9/10/2020 • 1 hour, 17 minutes, 10 seconds
Contact Tracing the Coronavirus - Part III - 44th Street Podcast
Christopher Dor is a Research Compliance Associate at Weill Cornell Medicine where he investigates allegations of scientific/research misconduct, manages conflicts of interest and drafts policy.
John Katt is Director of Technology, Development & Data at the Office of the New York City Public Advocate.
Tanya Blocker is a Senior In-House Counsel at National Grid, where she specializes in labor and employment law.
Co-Hosts:
Heather Hatcher (Health Law Committee, Science & Law Committee)
Wesley Paisley (Secretary, Information Technology and Cyberlaw Committee)
Tim Peterson (Information Technology and Cyberlaw Committee, Producer of Contact Tracing Podcasts)
8/21/2020 • 1 hour, 27 minutes, 27 seconds
Contact Tracing the Coronavirus - Part II - 44th
Panelist:
Charles Morgan https://www.mccarthy.ca/en/people/charles-morgan
Resources
Report: Technology Governance in a Time of Crisis https://www.itechlaw.org/technology-governance-time-crisis
International Technology Law Association / iTechLaw https://www.itechlaw.org
Segments:
Overview of Canadian Experience with Contact Tracing 0:00:43
Overview of Canadian Privacy Concerns with Contact Tracing 0:03:02
Application of Artificial Intelligence to Contact Tracing 0:06:55
GDPR Perspective of Artificial Intelligence Processing of Personal Data 0:09:06
Factors Affecting Speed of Contact Tracing Rollout Internationally Other Than Privacy Laws 0:10:51
Closer Look at Contact Tracing in Asia - South Korean Example, Legal Mandates, and Cultural Norms 0:13:48
Absolute and Relative Success of Contact Tracing 0:15:32
Urban Spikes in US and World, Patterns of Covid-19 Spread, Efficacy of Contact Tracing 0:18:21
Multinational Corporation Contact Tracing Solutions 0:21:37
Can the World Teach the United States Anything about Contact Tracing? 0:27:33
Limits on Personal Assembly, from a Canadian Legal Perspective 0:30:12
Fiduciary Duties and Canadian Data Broker Data Trusts for Contact Tracing 0:38:21
Report: Technology Governance in a Time of Crisis 0:40:58
8/19/2020 • 44 minutes, 55 seconds
Contact Tracing the Coronavirus - Part I - 44th Street Podcast
Panelists:
Professor Joseph Ali - https://bioethics.jhu.edu/people/profile/joseph-ali/
Dr. Brian Hutler - https://bioethics.jhu.edu/people/profile/brian-hutler-jd/
Resources:
Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resources: https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/contact-tracing
Report:
Digital Contact Tracing for Pandemic Response: https://muse.jhu.edu/book/75831 or free on Kindle at https://www.amazon.com/Digital-Contact-Tracing-Pandemic-Response-ebook/dp/B0892RZ3G2/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=Johns+Hopkins+ethics+contact+tracing&qid=1596979781&sr=8-1
Segments:
History and Evolution of Contact Tracing 0:02:00
International Historical Example of Contact Tracing 0:04:45
Stigma to Contract Tracing 0:05:55
Role of Public Health Officials with Digital Contact Tracing 0:08:09
Political Will to Employ Contact Tracing Digital Technology 0:11:51
Overview of Options and Recommendations 0:16:09
Overview of Apple and Google Efforts 0:21:16
The Decentralized Nature of Contact Tracing, and, Does it Work? 0:27:11
Law Enforcement Using Data 0:31:36
Stigma Historically Affecting Certain Populations - How does it affect homeless today? 0:34:59
Private Incentives to Supply Homeless Digital Contact Tracing Devices 0:44:53
Alternatives to Google/Apple Digital Contact Tracing Partnership 0:50:01
Spplementary Technologies: The Taiwan Experience 0:53:53
Voluntary C-19 Posting Status on Social Media 0:55:21
User Consent / Terms of Conditions for Apps 0:55:36
Mandatory App Usage in US? 1:00:34
Efficacy / Effectiveness of Contact Tracing Apps 1:05:13
Alternate Lead Digital Contact Tracing Entities (i.e., states, large employers) to Take Leads 1:08:23
Responsible Use of Tracking Technologies 1:14:57
Evidence that Digital Contact Tracing Works? 1:20:25
Process of Tech Development Hindering Identification of Vulnerable Populations 1:23:19
Scaling Digital Contact Tracing and Recommendations for State Government 1:23:59
Optimism About Digital Contact Tracing 1:28:59
NBA Bubble and Other Similar Efforts 1:33:00
Where Can Listeners Get a Copy of the Report? 1:34:41
Are Cities the Correct Governmental Entities to Deal with Pandemics? 1:35:42
8/17/2020 • 1 hour, 40 minutes, 46 seconds
The Supreme Court's Decision on DACA - 44th Street Podcast
Danny Alicea, the incoming Chair of the City Bar’s Immigration and Nationality Law Committee, spoke with Trudy S. Rebert and Carlos Vargas about DACA – the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program – and the recent Supreme Court decision in Wolf v. Batalla Vidal that upheld a challenge to its termination. Ms. Rebert is an attorney with the National Immigration Law Center and a member of the Wolf v. Batalla Vidal litigation team. Carlos Vargas is a plaintiff in the case. He arrived in the United States at age four, is currently in law school, and is one of the 700,000 people who have received protection under DACA.
7/24/2020 • 59 minutes, 13 seconds
The Policing of Black & Brown Bodies
As a national conversation over police abuse of Black and Brown people has emerged, many lawmakers and others are unveiling police reform measures. Join us for a discussion of the various proposed pathways and approaches to police reform. Our esteemed panel tackles some of the principal tensions confronting our society today and address the challenges of advancing change in how policing and law enforcement is carried out in this country. Also discussed: how the legal profession can best participate in this conversation and play a productive role in bringing about effective and timely change.
Moderator:
Sheila S. Boston, President, New York City Bar Association
Speakers:
Loretta Lynch, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP and former U.S. Attorney General
Paul Fishman, Arnold & Porter LLP and former United States Attorney for the District of New Jersey
Nicole M. Austin-Hillery, Executive Director, US Program, Human Rights Watch
J. Scott Thomson, former Chief of the Camden County Police Department, and former President of the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF)
Lorenzo M. Boyd, Vice President for Diversity and Inclusion, Chief Diversity Officer, University of New Haven
Sponsoring Committee:
Council on the Profession, Matthew Diller and Melissa Colon-Bosolet, Co-Chairs
Cosponsoring Committee:
Corrections and Community Reentry, Gregory Morril, Chair
Civil Rights, Zoey Chenitz, Chair
Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, Matthew Morningstar and Robert Marchman, Co-Chairs
Juvenile Justice, Fredda Monn, Chair
Mass Incarceration, Sean Hecker, Chair
New York City Affairs, John Owens, Chair
7/22/2020 • 1 hour, 35 minutes, 21 seconds
Bioethical Issues in the COVID-19 Pandemic: Resource Allocation, Triage Guidelines, & Other Concerns
Dr. Kenneth Prager, Director of Clinical Ethics at Columbia University Medical Center, speaks with Alan Brudner, Chair of the Bioethical Issues Committee of the New York City Bar Association, about ethical issues in health care arising from the COVID-19 pandemic.
5/14/2020 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 51 seconds
Postponed Events, Cancelled Trips, Disrupted Business – Insurance and Coronavirus Collide
Lindsay Kassof, in-house counsel for the Muscular Dystrophy Foundation, and member of the City Bar's Health Law Committee, moderates a discussion with insurance industry legal experts, including several on the City Bar’s Insurance Law Committee.
Opinions expressed are those of the speakers and not necessarily of the City Bar.
4/14/2020 • 1 hour, 32 minutes, 20 seconds
A Conversation with the Chairman and Chief Executive of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission
Gary Kalbaugh, Chair of the New York City Bar Association’s Futures & Derivatives Regulation Committee, speaks with Dr. Heath P. Tarbert, the Chairman and Chief Executive of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
3/11/2020 • 31 minutes, 13 seconds
Fifteenth Annual Thomas E. Dewey Medal Presentation - 12/10/2019
The Association presents its annual Thomas E. Dewey Medal, awarded to outstanding assistant district attorneys in each of the District Attorney's offices within New York City and the Office of Special Narcotics Prosecutor for the City of New York.
This year’s medal winners are:
Astrid Borgstedt, Bronx County
Leonard Joblove, Kings County
Christopher Conroy, New York County
Robert J. Masters, Queens County
Lisa Davis, Richmond County
Andrés Torres, Special Narcotics
Keynote Speaker:
John M. Ryan, Acting District Attorney, Queens County
Among prosecutors in New York County, Thomas E. Dewey is remembered as having ushered in the era in which the District Attorney's office has been staffed by professional prosecutors chosen on merit rather than through political patronage. Dewey first came to the public's attention as a prosecutor in the 1930s, instituting successful criminal proceedings against gangsters, bootleggers and organized crime figures of the day. By 1937, Dewey was elected District Attorney of New York County, where he served one term before resigning to run for governor. The awards are made possible by the generosity of the firm of Dewey Pegno & Kramarsky LLP.
3/4/2020 • 1 hour, 42 minutes, 42 seconds
Legal Issues With International Art Exhibitions - 02/27/2020
A panel discusses the legal issues associated with international public and private art exhibitions. The panel addresses art loan and exhibition agreements, commercial and government indemnity insurance, import, export, temporary admission and VAT considerations, and governing law and forum selection clauses.
Moderator:
Diana Wierbicki, Chair of the Art Law Committee
Speakers:
Rudy Capildeo, Charles Russell Speechlys LLP
Derek Gillman, Distinguished Teaching Professor; Senior Adviser to the President for University Collections at Drexel University Wetphal
Jonathan Halpern, Chair of the European Affairs Committee
Megan Noh, Pryor Cashman LLP
Nicholas O'Donnell, Sullivan & Worcester
Eleni Polycarpou, Withersworldwide
Anne Rappa, Senior Vice President at Huntington T. Block
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Art Law Committee | Diana Wierbicki, Chair
Co-Sponsoring Organization:
Institute of Art & Law
The program examines legal and ethical issues surrounding prison based companion animal programs including dog training programs. Panelists discuss their own participation in such a program as well as the growth and scope of such programs more generally in the US. The panel explores benefits of such programs on the individual level as well as on the criminal justice system including implications for rehabilitation, vocational skill training and recidivism.
Speakers:
Liz Keller, Founder, Rescue Dogs Rescue Soldiers Project
Kimberly Spanjol, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice, Iona College
Gloria Gilbert Stoga, President and Founder, Puppies Behind Bars
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Animal Law Committee, Chris Wlach, Chair
Co-Sponsoring Association Committee:
Corrections and Community Reentry Committee, Greg Morril, Chair
10/11/2019 • 1 hour, 59 minutes, 39 seconds
Fighting Corruption: A Political And Ethical Imperative - 06/27/2019
Join us for a panel discussing how the profits from corruption fuel bad governance, conflict and terrorism. Governments falter due to corrupt officials who steal funds earmarked for public projects and enrich themselves with bribes. Grievances such as lack of services and unemployment have a common source: the plundering of a country’s wealth by predatory and corrupt political elites.
Proceeds garnered from the illicit trade in natural resources provide funds for militias to buy weapons and foment strife. Today’s deadliest conflicts are sustained by illegal enrichment from pillaging property such as ivory, minerals and timber, stealing from impoverished populations.
Panelists discuss possible solutions to address the ongoing scourge of corruption.
Moderator:
Elizabeth Barad, International Law and Gender Consultant, former Chair of the NYC Bar’s African Affairs Committee
Speakers:
April Dennis, Director of Anti-Money Laundering Modeling, Société Générale Americas
Kenneth Hurwitz, Senior Managing Legal Officer on Anti-Corruption, Open Society Justice Initiative
J.R. Mailey, Special Investigations Director, the Sentry
Zoe Reiter, Acting Representative to the US and Senior Project Leader, Transparency International
Alain Seckler, UN Political Affairs Officer, Africa II Division
Ulysess Smith, President & CEO, Telos Governance Advisers LLC
Sponsoring Association Committees:
International Human Rights Committee, Lauren Melkus, Chair
Co-sponsoring Committee Programs:
Asian Affairs Committee, Jian Wu, Chair
Inter-American Affairs Committee, David H. Flechner, Chair
Council on International Affairs, Michael D. Cooper, Chair
Middle Eastern & North African Affairs Committee, Timothy James McCarthy, Chair
7/18/2019 • 1 hour, 38 minutes, 53 seconds
Insurance Issues For Consumers
This program provides information on topics of interest to consumers, and the lawyers who advise them, regarding their purchases of, and problems with, life, health, auto, and homeowners insurance. Topics include resolving claims and disputes, coverage gaps, common and mandatory coverages, government resources, who needs to be licensed, and more. A representative from the NY Department of Financial Services also explains how the Department assists consumers.
Speakers:
Emily Clark, Community Service Society
James Dees, Consumers Assistance Unit, NYS Dept of Financial Services
Drexel Harris, Associate General Counsel, Reliance Insurance Company (In Liquidation)
Ann Kramer, ReedSmith LLP
Richard Liskov, Senior Counsel, Crowell & Moring LLP
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Insurance Law Committee, Drexel B. Harris, Jr. , Chair
6/3/2019 • 1 hour, 34 minutes, 54 seconds
Animal Law Lobbying 101: Getting Political for Animals
With hundreds of bills impacting the treatment of animals being introduced in local, state and federal legislatures annually, lobbying is increasingly used by both animal protection organizations and animal industries. Hear this panel discussion of animal law lobbying issues and strategies for organizations, industries and individuals.
Speakers:
Nancy Blaney, Director of Government Affairs, Animal Welfare Institute
Jennifer Hauge, Legislative Affairs Manager, Animal Legal Defense Fund
Julie Lewin, President, National Institute for Animal Advocacy
Sponsoring Committee:
Animal Law Committee, Christopher Wlach, Chair
6/3/2019 • 1 hour, 56 minutes, 5 seconds
Looking Forward And Looking Back: The Path To Deep Emissions Reductions In New York City's Buildings
New York City has set ambitious goals to reduce our City’s greenhouse gas emissions 80% by the year 2050 (“80x50”) in order to help stave off the most devastating impacts of climate change. To accomplish this, deep emissions cuts will be needed across every sector of the City, including from buildings, which account for two-thirds of all greenhouse gas emissions generated in New York City. This program will celebrate and build upon the impressive work that has been accomplished to develop consensus around the New York City Council’s Intro. 1253-C, a first-of-its-kind piece of legislation passed as part of New York City’s Climate Mobilization Act that will require New York City buildings over 25,000 square feet to meet strict emissions limits beginning in 2024. The process to reach consensus around how, when and to what extent emissions should be reduced required collaboration among many different stakeholders with concerns on various issues including emissions reduction impact, cost, timeline, and housing affordability. Significant challenges and opportunities to implement and further expand emissions reductions remain.
The first half of the program explores those previous consensus-building efforts and issues that were left unresolved in the mandate legislation. It then looks forward at the significant work that remains to implement the energy retrofits that will be needed to achieve the emissions reductions required by Intro. 1253-C. In particular, panelists and conference participants look at market-based mechanisms for financing these retrofits (including PACE financing, also passed as part of the Climate Mobilization Act) and at potential ways to achieve broader emissions reductions without threatening housing affordability. Finally, conference participants have the opportunity to join breakout groups for a facilitated discussion to explore potential opportunities to implement the retrofits at a wide scale. The facilitated conversations take place under the guidance of Tim Mealey of the Meridian Institute.
Keynote Speakers:
John Lee, Deputy Director for Buildings and Energy Efficiency, New York City Mayor's Office of Sustainability
Costa Constantinides, New York City Council Member
John Mandyck, Chief Executive Officer, Urban Green Council
Panel 1: Building Consensus on Building Emissions: Bringing the Right Voices to the Table
Speakers:
Cecil Corbin-Mark, WE Act for Environmental Justice
Jared Rodriguez, LeFrak Organization
Pete Sikora, New York Communities for Change
Moderator:
Alexis Saba, Sive, Paget & Riesel, P.C.
Panel 2: How the Market Can Support Needed Building Retrofits
Speakers:
Donnel Baird, BlocPower
Helen Chananie, Building Energy Exchange
Lisa DeVito, Con Edison
Fred Lee, New York City Energy Efficiency Corporation (NYCEEC)
Sadie McKeown, Community Preservation Corporation
Moderator:
Katie Ullman, Drift Energy
Facilitator:
Tim Mealey, Senior Partner and Managing Director, Meridian Institute
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Environmental Law Committee, J. Kevin Healy & Amy E. Turner, Co-chairs
Co-sponsoring Association Committee:
Energy Law Committee, Rossalyn K. Quaye, Chair
International Environmental Law Committee, Michael H. Burger, Chair
Co-sponsoring Organizations:
NYC Climate Action Alliance
Ida and Robert Gordon Family Foundation
5/30/2019 • 4 hours, 51 minutes, 21 seconds
Hackapalooza - Law Bits and Bytes - 44th Street Podcast
Bob Stern and Tim Peterson of the Information Technology and Cyberlaw Committee sit down with Adam Abresch of Acrisure, John Curran of Redpoint Cybersecurity, and Stephen Ramey of the Crypsis Group in a freewheeling discussion of hacking from technical, insurance, and legal perspectives, with specific content relating to how hacking affects lawyers both directly and in representation of their clients.
0:38 Guest Intro
2:00 Hacking Intro
5:06 How Do Hackers Infiltrate?
8:46 Social Engineering
12:10 How Insurance Handles Social Engineering
14:09 Creating a Cybersecurity Culture
18:31 Pen Testing and Phishing
20:25 Breach Response
21:36 Establishing a Risk Management Process
24:16 How Lawyers Respond to Client Breaches
27:31 The Importance of Logging
30:28 Reputation Risk
32:15 Small Law Firm Cybersecurity
35:20 Security Controls and Multifactor Authentication
38:24 Other Security Measures
42:04 Cybersecurity and Corporate Governance
45:51 Importance of Encryption
47:19 Segmentation of Data
50:28 Black Hat Hackers
52:47 Bug Bounty Programs
54:11 Insiders
55:47 Does Reputation of Company Matter in Targeting?
57:48 Ransomware Attacks
1:01:25 Limitations of Backups
1:03:30 Forensic Investigations
1:04:39 Dangers of Paying Ransom
1:06:43 Ransomware and HIPAA
1:09:37 The Legal Insurance Perspective
1:13:44 Are We Better Off Now Than We Were Five Years Ago? And Where Will We Be in Five Years?
1:17:18 Hackers as a Service
1:18:45 Trends in Insurance
1:20:58 Hacking Legal Summation
5/22/2019 • 1 hour, 24 minutes
What Role Should Prosecutors Play In Ending The Mass Incarceration Crisis
Author and legal commentator Emily Bazelon led a conversation with Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez. Gonzalez recently introduced Justice 2020, an initiative aimed at sending fewer people to prison, ensuring more people are released early from prison, minimizing collateral consequences, and collaborating with community-based organizations in finding solutions to over-incarceration. This discussion explored the role that prosecutors have played in creating a mass incarceration crisis in this country, as well as what prosecutors can do to play a constructive role in alleviating the crisis.
Speakers:
Emily Bazelon, Author, Charged: The New Movement to Transform American Prosecution and End Mass Incarceration
Eric Gonzalez, Brooklyn District Attorney
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Mass Incarceration Task Force, Sean Hecker, Chair
Co-sponsoring Association Committee:
Criminal Justice Operations Committee, Sarah Berger, Chair
Civil Rights Committee, Philip Desgranges, Chair
Related Resources:
If you are interested in this program, you might also be interested in this City Bar resource
Mass Incarceration: Where Do We Go From Here?
5/14/2019 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 54 seconds
Springtime For Cannabis
On May 9, 2019 the Committee on Drugs and the Law hosted a conversation between policy experts and government representatives to discuss the proposed adult use cannabis legislation. The occasion marks the 75th anniversary of the LaGuardia Report, the first in-depth study into the effects of consuming cannabis in the United States, a study that controverted many of the myths promoted by drug prohibitionists. Presently, New York City and State face a shift to regulating the largest unregulated cannabis market in the United States after 92 years of prohibition. The panel discussed the challenges and issues that arise in implementing the proposed cannabis legislation currently in Albany.
Moderator:
Shea Gunther, Producer, of Marijuana Today: Business & Politics Podcast
Speakers:
Axel Bernabe, Assistant Counsel, Governor Cuomo for Health
Cristina Buccola, Founder of Cristina Buccola Counsel PLLC
Doug Greene, Legislative Director of Empire State NORML
Senator Liz Krueger, New York Senator, Chair of the Finance Committee
Melissa Moore, Deputy State Director of New York, Drug Policy Alliance
Anne Oredeko, Supervising Attorney, The Legal Aid Society Racial Justice Unit
Sponsoring Association Committees:
Drugs & the Law Committee , Luke Schram, Chair
Co-sponsoring Organizations:
Drug Policy Alliance
Start Smart NY
5/10/2019 • 1 hour, 45 minutes, 46 seconds
Hon. Jon O. Newman on “What’s Wrong With Federal Sentencing?” - The Leslie H. Arps Lecture
Welcome:
Roger Juan Maldonado, President, New York City Bar Association
Introduction:
Barry H. Garfinkel, Of Counsel, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Speaker:
Hon. Jon O. Newman, United States Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
The Leslie H. Arps Memorial Lectures are made possible by the generosity of the firm of Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP & Affiliates.
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Committee on The Leslie H. Arps Lectures, Barry H. Garfinkel and Scott Musoff, Co-Chairs
Former Arps Lecture Speakers Include:
Hon. Lewis F. Powell, Jr. (1989), Hon. Lawrence E. Walsh (1991), Hon. James L. Oakes (1992), Herbert Brownell (1993), Dean John D. Feerick (1996), Hon. Robert W. Sweet (1997), Hon. Patricia M. Wald (1999), Leon Silverman (2003), Hon. Elena Kagan (2005), Hon. Sandra Day O'Connor (2010), Hon. Pierre N. Leval (2012), George J. Mitchell (2013), Hon. Jose A. Cabranes (2015), Hon. Robert A. Katzmann (2016) and Jeffrey Toobin (2018)
5/9/2019 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 34 seconds
Parole Law and Reform - 44th Street Podcast
Gina Mitchell, a member of the City Bar’s Criminal Advocacy Committee, interviews Professor Steve Zeidman, a criminal defense attorney and the Director of the Criminal Defense Clinic at CUNY School of Law; Attorney Michelle Lewin, the Executive Director of the Parole Preparation Project in New York; and Jose Saldana, director of the Release Aging People in Prison Campaign, about parole law and reform in New York State.
5/7/2019 • 47 minutes, 44 seconds
Ransomware - Law Bits and Bytes - 44th Street Podcast
Host Tim Peterson and Jeremy Merkel, both members of the City Bar’s Information Technology & Cyber Law Committee, discuss the legal implications of the recent upsurge in ransomware attacks, particularly against healthcare providers.
1:38 - Intro to Ransomware
3:06 – Scenario: Paying the Ransom
6:43 - Alternate Scenario: Contacting the FBI
8:45 - Iranian SamSam Attacks
11:02 - Significance of DOJ indictments
11:53 – Factors in Target Selection
12:33 – Vulnerability of Healthcare Providers
13:50 – Role of Bitcoin in Ransomware Attacks
19:30 - Cryptopayments to Terrorists, Acts of War, and Cyberinsurance
23:56 - Cyberforensics and International Legislative Solutions
25:27 – The Allscripts Attack and Other Attacks on Healthcare Providers
29:06 - Effects Under GDPR, HIPPA, and Other Data Privacy Regulations
30:33 - Best Practices for Healthcare Providers
33:49 - Representing Municipal Ransomware Victims
35:29 – Wrap-up
5/7/2019 • 37 minutes, 15 seconds
Endangered Species Act Under the Trump Administration
The panel covered key regulatory and legislative changes to the Endangered Species Act (ESA) under the Trump administration including: new standards and rules, removal of species from protection, reduction of funding for certain initiatives, trophy hunting and import, and ivory trade and import of ivory and rhino horn. They also discussed recent key federal litigation interpreting Endangered Species Act, and touched upon currently proposed legislative, regulatory and statutory changes to the ESA.
Speakers:
Dr. Susan Lieberman, Vice-President, International Policy, Wildlife Conservation Society
Joseph Nelson, Partner, Van Ness Feldman
Asher Smith, Litigation Counsel, PETA Foundation
Danny Waltz, Staff Attorney, Animal Legal Defense Fund
Moderators:
Professor Randall Abate, Rechnitz Family Endowed Chair in Marine and Environmental Law and Policy, Monmouth University and Mikki Golar
Sponsoring Committee:
Animal Law Committee, Christopher Wlach, Chair
Cosponsoring Committee:
Environmental Law Committee, Kevin Healy and Amy Turner, Co-Chairs
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 51 minutes, 33 seconds
Puerto Rico and the Jones Act - 44th Street Podcast
New York City Bar President Roger Juan Maldonado and New York State Bar President Michael Miller speak with James Ostaszewski, a member of the City Bar's Puerto Rico Task Force who worked on its report in support of exempting Puerto Rico from the Jones Act, a law that restricts shipping and that independent studies say costs the recovering island hundreds of millions of dollars per year.
5/7/2019 • 44 minutes, 32 seconds
Privacy Law and Technology - Law Bits and Bytes - 44th Street Podcast
Host Tim Peterson of the Information Technology and Cyberlaw Committee interviews Dennis Dayman, the Chief Privacy and Security Officer of Return Path, on the evolution of privacy law and technology and what it means for the future of consumer privacy and electronic marketing efforts worldwide.
5/7/2019 • 57 minutes, 51 seconds
Animals in Transit
On February 28, 2019, a panel discussed issues around companion animals and transportation, including the use of service animals on public transportation, pets in ridesharing, and recent incidents in which pets have died during air travel.
Moderators:
Marissa Hight, Akerman LLP
Bari Wolf, Vernon & Ginsburg LLP
Speakers:
Erin Abrams, General Counsel, Via
Kleo King, Deputy Commissioner and General Counsel, Mayor's Office for People with Disabilities
Joel Lopez, Vice President, ASPCA Adoption Center
Evan Oshan, Oshan & Associates, P.C.
Sponsoring Committee:
Animal Law Committee, Christopher Wlach, Chair
Co-Sponsoring Committee
Transportation Committee, Sanford Balick, Chair
Disability Law Committee, John W. Egan, Chair
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 48 minutes, 11 seconds
Aging in America: Happiness in the New Old Age
People live longer today than ever before; in fact, Americans over the age of 85 represent one of the fasting growing age groups in the country. This program features three researchers whose findings challenge the accepted views on growing older. Join us as John Leland, Amy Nathan and Paula Span share their findings and provide information on a topic that faces all of us.
Speakers:
John Leland, Author, “Happiness Is a Choice You Make: Lessons from a Year Among the Oldest Old”
Amy Nathan, Author, "Making Time for Making Music"
Paula Span, Columnist, The New York Times, “The New Old Age" and “Generation Grandparent”
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Senior Lawyers Committee, Barry M. Bloom, Chair
Cosponsoring Committee:
Legal Problems of the Aging Committee, Britt Burner, Chair
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 19 minutes, 56 seconds
The Holocaust Beyond the Death Camps - Public Affairs Luncheon
Meticulous Nazi records of Jews killed in the death camps identify fewer than half of the Holocaust's victims. When, where and how were the other victims killed? Father Patrick Desbois, a French Roman Catholic priest, has sought and found the answer to this question. As a young priest, Father Desbois visited a town in Ukraine where his grandfather, a French Resistance fighter, had been incarcerated by the Nazis. By speaking with village elders, he learned of the process by which the town's Jews had been rounded up, executed and buried in mass graves. His research established that this process had been repeated thousands of times throughout Eastern Europe. Father Desbois discussed his research and the continued effort to uncover genocidal practices around the world, in this Public Affairs Luncheon on February 12, 2019.
Speaker:
Father Patrick Desbois has devoted his life to the study of the Holocaust and other genocides. He is a founder of Yahad – in Unum (“Together in One”), a global NGO dedicated to discovering genocidal practices around the world and providing documented proof of crimes against humanity. His organization presents “Holocaust by Bullets” – Enhanced Teacher Training seminars to educators around the world. He has spent the last several years with his team gathering testimony from survivors of the Yazidi massacres in Iraq at the hands of ISIS.
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Senior Lawyers Committee, Barry M. Bloom, Chair
Public Affairs Luncheon, Frank Wagner, Chair
Cosponsoring Association Committee:
International Human Rights Committee, Lauren Melkus, Chair
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 15 minutes
Reimagining Domestic Violence Services
On a daily basis, family and criminal courts depend on mandated domestic violence services for resolving cases of intimate partner violence. Thousands of defendants and respondents in our city are required to complete these services in order to have visits with their children or get back in their homes. Yet there is little evidence of the effectiveness of existing services and there continues to be a reliance on outdated services such as Batterers Accountability programs. New York City policymakers have been examining this issue and have developed a Blueprint for Abusive Partner Intervention. A report published in 2018, “Seeding Generations: New Strategies Towards Services for People who Abuse,” took a comprehensive look at this issue and the need for a new model of services. The report acknowledges that services to families also need to consider the trauma that those who harm have been through. This panel on January 17, 2019 served as an opportunity for policymakers to have a dialogue with family court and criminal court practitioners about the current and future state of domestic violence services.
Welcome:
Cecile Noel, Commissioner, Mayor’s Office to End Domestic and Gender-Based Violence
Moderator:
Purvi Shah, Consultant, Seeding Generations
Speakers:
Albery Abreu, Abusive Partner Intervention Specialist, Children’s Aid Society
Tanya Apparicio, Deputy Chief, Domestic Violence Unit, NY County District Attorney’s Office
Ana Bermudez, Commissioner, New York City Department of Probation
Juliana Chereji, Family Defense Practice, Brooklyn Defenders Services
Bea Hanson, Executive Director, Domestic Violence Task Force, NYC Office of the Mayor
Quentin Walcott, Co-Executive Director of Connect
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Council on Children, Lauren Shapiro, Chair
Co-Sponsoring Association Committees:
Children & the Law Committee, Sara L. Hiltzik, Chair
Domestic Violence Committee, Amanda M. Beltz, Chair
Education & the Law Committee, Laura D. Barbieri, Chair
Family Court & Family Law Committee, Glenn Metsch-Ampel, Chair
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 46 minutes, 3 seconds
Public Affairs Luncheon with Juan Williams
On December 6, 2018, Juan Williams, the political analyst for Fox News, bestselling author, and civil rights expert addressed the Trump administration’s sweeping rollback of the civil rights movement at the City Bar's Public Affairs Luncheon. Donald Trump’s campaign pitch to African Americans was: “What the hell do you have to lose?” According to Juan, the answer is: Quite a lot, as it turns out. He believes that the Trump administration’s policies and intentions pose a threat to civil rights without precedent in modern America. Based on his observations of the current state of politics and race relations with insights from the long, and sometimes forgotten, history of the civil rights movement, as Juan asserts in his new book, knowing our past is essential if we are to understand our present, and shape our future.
Speaker:
Juan Williams has covered and written about American politics for four decades. He is currently a columnist for The Hill, and was a longtime writer and correspondent for The Washington Post and NPR. Juan is currently a cohost of Fox News Channel's roundtable debate show The Five, and makes regular appearances across the network, where he regularly challenges the orthodoxy of the network's conservative stalwarts. He is also the author of numerous books, including Eyes on the Prize, Thurgood Marshall, Enough, Muzzled, and We The People.
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Senior Lawyers Committee, Barry M. Bloom, Chair
Public Affairs Luncheon, Frank Wagner, Chair
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 8 minutes, 12 seconds
Freedom of Speech in 21st Century America: Second Annual First Amendment Program
On December 3, 2018, experts discussed the legal issues relating to the First Amendment and freedom of speech. Topics included the scope and limits of First Amendment protection for certain types of speech, whether by news and media outlets, on school campuses, via social media, or as part of public protests. The program covered the current state of the law and recent developments. With an eye toward contributing to the public understanding of this complex area of law, it focused on the legal issues and on identifying and addressing the areas where legal line-drawing either is fairly easy or remains difficult and uncertain.
Opening Remarks:
Roger Juan Maldonado, President, New York City Bar Association
Panel:
Alex Abdo, Senior Staff Attorney, Knight First Amendment Institute
Floyd Abrams, Senior Counsel, Cahill Gordon & Reindel LLP
Daniel J. Kornstein, Partner, Emery Celli Brinckerhoff & Abady LLP
Carmelyn P. Malalis, Chair & Commissioner, NYC Commission on Human Rights
Nadine Strossen, John Marshall Harlan II Professor of Law, New York Law School
Moderator:
Jamal Greene, Dwight Professor of Law, Columbia Law School
Sponsoring:
New York City Bar Association
City Bar Justice Center
City Bar Office for Diversity & Inclusion
Co-Sponsoring Association Committees:
Civil Rights Committee, Philip Desgranges, Chair
Federal Courts Committee, Laura Grossfield Birger, Chair
Communications & Media Law Committee, Katherine M. Bolger, Chair
Legal History Committee, Daniel J. Kornstein, Chair
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 44 minutes, 34 seconds
Elections Delayed, Governance Denied - The Way Forward for the Congo
The presidential election first scheduled for 2016 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and then for 2017 never took place. The election is now scheduled to take place on December 23, 2018. The Prime Minister has said that President Kabila will not run again, and he will abide by the constitutional limits. The delayed elections spurred anti-Kabila marches and protests, led by laity of the Catholic Church and youth activists. The government has cracked down on this opposition, harassing, arbitrarily arresting, detaining, injuring, and killing protestors. Many still remain in detention despite increasing health problems. The panelists examined the way forward for the DRC and the role opposition leaders, youth activists, the Catholic Church, and duly-elected officials can play in strengthening civil society.
Speakers:
H.E. Ambassador François Nkuna Balumuene, The Democratic Republic of the Congo Ambassador to the United States--Invited
Tatiana Carayannis, Director of the Social Science Research Council’s Understanding Violent Conflict Research Initiative and convener of the DRC Affinity Group
Sasha Lezhnev, Deputy Director of Policy at the Enough Project
Kambale Musavuli, Human Rights Activist and Spokesperson for Friends of the Congo
Moderator:
Elizabeth Barad, Esq., International Law and Gender Consultant
Sponsoring Association Committee:
African Affairs Committee, Victoria Safran, Chair
Co-Sponsoring Association Committees:
United Nations Committee, Simon O’Connor, Chair
Council on International Affairs Committee, Michael D. Cooper, Chair
International Human Rights Committee, Lauren Melkus, Chair
Co-Sponsoring Organization:
Cyrus R. Vance Center for International Justice, Alexander Papachristou, Executive Director
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 58 minutes, 32 seconds
Pilots, Plans, & Promises: Is Desegregation Possible in New York City’s Schools?
Focused on New York City’s schools grades K-8, panelists on November 8, 2018 discussed the history of school segregation and integration efforts; diversity pilots and plans; school admission screens, G&T programs, and their potential for desegregation; accountability, legal constraints, and best practices. Whether you are an education advocate, parent, practitioner, public official, student, or concerned citizen, this exciting and thought-provoking conversation is packed with information you will want to know.
Speakers:
Matthew Gonzales, Director, School Diversity Project, New York Appleseed
Richard D. Kahlenberg, Senior Fellow, The Century Foundation
Brad Lander, Member, New York City Council
Emmy Liss, Chief of Staff, Div. of Early Childhood Educ. & Student Enrollment, NYCDOE
Dennis D. Parker, Director, Racial Justice Program, ACLU
Moderator:
Clara Hemphill, Founder and Editor, InsideSchools
5/7/2019 • 2 hours, 16 minutes, 37 seconds
Cannabis on the Horizon: Cannabis Legalization in New York City
Re-legalization of cannabis for general adult use in New York City has never been closer, but how ready is the most populous metropolitan area in the United States - and the country’s largest urban cannabis market for commercial manufacture, delivery, home cultivation and over-the-counter sale of cannabis? On November 1, 2018, the City Bar’s Drugs & the Law Committee held a panel discussion examining the legal and policy changes that will be necessary in order to make a safe and orderly transition from a criminal market to a viable regulated market.
Speakers:
Axel Bernabe, Assistant Counsel, Governor Cuomo for Health
Steven Epstein, Founding Partner, Barket, Epstein, and Kearon LLP
Jerome Levy, Partner, Duane Morris
Joseph Levey, Founding Partner, Helbraun & Levey
Donovan Richards, New York City Council Member
Preston Niblack, New York City Deputy Comptroller for Budget
Moderator:
Kristin Jordan, Chair, Cannabis Practice Group, Newman Ferrara LLP
5/7/2019 • 2 hours, 4 minutes, 47 seconds
Changing Marijuana Laws' Effect on the Workplace
On October 22, 2018, the City Bar’s Labor & Employment Law Committee held a program on how the evolving treatment of marijuana under the law affects the workplace. Learn how legalization of medical and recreational marijuana affect rights and obligations under the ADA, FLMA, and more.
Speakers:
George Schwab, Kraus & Zuchlewski LLP
Anne Dana, Seyfarth Shaw LLP
Jay Jaffe, 1199 SEIU
Moderator:
Hanan Kolko, Meyer Suozzi English & Klein P.C.
Sponsoring Committee:
Labor & Employment Committee, Katherine Greenberg, Chair
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 35 minutes, 8 seconds
UN Rapporteur Diego Garcia-Sayan on the Independence of Judges And Lawyers
In 1994, the UN Commission on Human Rights noted the increasing frequency of attacks on the independence of judges, lawyers, and court officials as well as the link which exists between the weakening of safeguards for these officials and human rights violations. In response, the Commission appointed a Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers to investigate and report on these attacks. The current Special Rapporteur, Professor Diego García-Sayán discussed his current role and work with attendees. This work includes his yearly report to the United Nations, examinations into judicial corruption, ideas on current international legal standards, efforts to update those standards so that they remain applicable in the face of new challenges to the legal and judicial professions, as well as both oversight and enforcement mechanisms.
Panel:
Diego Garcia-Sayan, UN Rapporteur on the Independence of Judges Lawyers
William A. Wilson III, Chair of the Task Force on the Independence of Lawyers and Judges
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Task Force on the Independence of Lawyers and Judges, Lawyers William A. Wilson III, Chair
Co-Sponsoring Organization Committee:
Council on International Affairs, Michael D. Cooper, Chair
International Human Rights Committee, Lauren Melkus, Chair
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 43 seconds
The Regulation of Pet Food
Pet food is a multibillion-dollar industry and has a significant impact on our current food system. Many humans consider themselves to be “pet parents” or “pet guardians” instead of “pet owners” which may have contributed to the growth in this industry. This program reviewed federal, state and local authority to regulate pet food and the relevant statutes. The program also discussed what information is mandatory on pet food labels and whether this information is meaningful to consumers. The program also focused on recent marketing trends in the pet food industry, such as holistic, natural, and organic pet foods, and what these terms even mean in the pet food context. Recent pet food recalls, including the 2007 melamine scandal, and the impact of failures in pet food regulation on human health was also discussed.
Panel:
Ellen Fried, Adjunct Professor, NYU Department of Nutrition and Food Studies
Mary Alestra, Assistant Attorney General, Consumer Frauds and Protection Bureau, NYS Attorney General’s Office
Moderator:
Bari Wolf, Vernon & Ginsburg LLP and Member, Animal Law Committee
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Animal Law Committee, Christopher Wlach, Chair
Co-Sponsoring Association Committee:
Consumer Affairs Committee, Darren Bowie, Chair
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 37 minutes, 54 seconds
Public Affairs Luncheon with Jeh Johnson - Protecting the Homeland: What’s Behind the Headlines?
Jeh Johnson served as Secretary of Homeland Security from December 2013 to January 2017. Secretary Johnson was responsible for the federal government’s response to many of our nation’s most pressing issues, including immigration; cybersecurity; Russian interference in the election; counterterrorism; natural disasters; nuclear, chemical and biological threats; and the protection of critical infrastructure and the nation’s leadership. At the City Bar's Public Affairs Luncheon on October 9, 2018, Secretary Johnson reflected on his leadership experiences and shed light on the latest headlines.
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 6 minutes, 9 seconds
Presentation of Honorary Membership to Loretta Lynch
On October 4, 2018, the New York City Bar Association presented Honorary Membership to Loretta Lynch, former U.S. Attorney General and U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York. Roger Juan Maldonado, the City Bar's President, gave welcome remarks and Hon. Kiyo A. Matsumoto, United States District Court Judge, Eastern District of New York, and Chair, Honors Committee, introduced Loretta Lynch and presented her with the award.
5/7/2019 • 36 minutes, 22 seconds
Banished from NYC: Housing Restrictions Facing People on the Sex Offender Registry
In New York City, there are hundreds of men and women on the sex offender registry who are subject to the Sexual Assault Reform Act (SARA) residency restriction, which prevents them from living within 1,000 feet of a school. This little-known restriction has created enormous constitutional problems. Because our densely-populated city contains virtually no residences that comply with this restriction, prisons are holding these people past the length of their prison sentences if there is no SARA-compliant housing available – a time period that usually extends longer than a year. This event on September 11, 2018 addressed the history and policy behind the residency restriction, the impact of SARA on people who have committed sex offenses, and the legal challenges being made on behalf of people affected by SARA.
Panelists:
Michael Burke, Hodges Walsh Messemer & Burke, LLP
Bill Dobbs, Publisher, Dobbs Wire, newsletter about sex offense law and policy; Advisor, Sex Offense Litigation and Policy Resource Center at Mitchell Hamline Law School
Emily Horowitz, Professor and Chairperson, St. Francis College, Sociology and Criminal Justice Department
Susannah Karlin, Licensed Social Worker, Center for Appellate Litigation
Robert Newman, Legal Aid Society, Criminal Defense Practice, Special Litigation Unit
Greg Williams, The Fortune Society
Moderator:
Camilla Hsu, Appellate Counsel, Center for Appellate Litigation
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Criminal Justice Operations Committee, Sarah J. Berger, Chair
Co-Sponsoring Organization:
New York Sex Offense Working Group
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 26 minutes, 55 seconds
Forum for the Democratic Attorney General Primary Candidates
On September 4, 2018, the New York City Bar Association and the New York Law Journal co-hosted an "Evening with the Candidates" Forum for the Democratic Attorney General Primary Candidates. The candidates covered a wide range of issues, from immigration and ICE in the courts, corruption, and consumer protection, to criminal justice reform, health care, and income inequality. From left: Roger Juan Maldonado (Moderator), President, New York City Bar Association; Candidates: Leecia Eve, Vice President, Government Affairs, Verizon; Letitia James, New York City Public Advocate; Sean Patrick Maloney, U.S. Representative for New York's 18th Congressional District; and Zephyr Teachout, Associate Professor of Law, Fordham University; Susan DeSantis (Moderator), Deputy Editor-in-Chief, New York Law Journal.
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 25 minutes
Immigration and the Border - 44th Street Podcast
City Bar Senior Policy Counsel Maria Cilenti speaks with Jen Kim, Co-Director of the Immigrant Justice Project at the City Bar Justice Center, and Caitlin Miner-Le Grand, the City Bar Justice Center’s Fragomen Fellow about immigration and the border.
5/7/2019 • 35 minutes, 40 seconds
Workers - Sexual Harassment & the Law: A Call to Action for Lawyers in the Era of #MeToo
Part 3: Challenges and Strategies for Low-Wage and Immigrant Workers in Reporting Harassment - Where Criminal, Administrative, and Regulatory Remedies Intersect
Sexual Harassment & the Law: A Call to Action for Lawyers in the Era of #MeToo
Speakers: Danielle Alvarado, Daniela Contreras, Rebecca Nathanson, Hon. Laura Safer Espinoza, Marrisa Senteno, Cristina Velez
Topics:
Sexual harassment in agricultural work and how to prevent
What does sexual harassment look like in domestic workplaces and what rights do domestic workers have that differ from workers in other settings?
What is a U visa and how may someone who has been a victim of workplace sexual harassment be eligible?
Explanation of anti-retaliation provisions under New York State wage and hour law, and NYDOL’s U visa certification policy.
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This program provided a morning plenary addressing the changing legal landscape in the wake of the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements and a luncheon discussion around sexual harassment within the legal profession. In addition, break-out CLE sessions covered:
An Overview of Employer Best Practices for Investigating, Preventing and Addressing Sexual Harassment in the Workplace
Challenges and Strategies for Low-Wage and Immigrant Workers in Reporting Harassment
#MeTooAcademia: Special Considerations When Litigating Employment Discrimination Cases on Campus
Jurisdiction in Sexual Harassment: Where Criminal, Administrative, and Regulatory Remedies Intersect
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 17 seconds
Jurisdiction - Sexual Harassment & the Law: A Call to Action for Lawyers in the Era of #MeToo
Part 2: Jurisdiction in Sexual Harassment- Where Criminal, Administrative, and Regulatory Remedies Intersect
Sexual Harassment & the Law: A Call to Action for Lawyers in the Era of #MeToo
Panel: Christin Damiano, A.D.A. Jennifer Gaffney, Hollis V. Pfitsch, Council Member Keith Powers, Electra Yourke
Questions:
How should a victim of sexual harassment choose where to report?
When sexual harassment is severe, it may violate criminal law, such as sexual abuse, forcible touching, and unlawful surveillance.
What constitutes a violation of the NYC Human Rights Law with regards to sexual harassment in the workplace.
When and how can a victim of sexual harassment report to the EEOC, and what does that process look like?
Explanation of recent legislation passed by NY City Council to expand statute of limitation and jurisdiction for sexual harassment complainants.
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This program provided a morning plenary addressing the changing legal landscape in the wake of the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements and a luncheon discussion around sexual harassment within the legal profession. In addition, break-out CLE sessions covered:
An Overview of Employer Best Practices for Investigating, Preventing and Addressing Sexual Harassment in the Workplace
Challenges and Strategies for Low-Wage and Immigrant Workers in Reporting Harassment
#MeTooAcademia: Special Considerations When Litigating Employment Discrimination Cases on Campus
Jurisdiction in Sexual Harassment: Where Criminal, Administrative, and Regulatory Remedies Intersect
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 3 minutes, 14 seconds
Intro - Sexual Harassment & the Law: A Call to Action for Lawyers in the Era of #MeToo
Part 1: Introduction And Morning Plenary
Sexual Harassment & the Law: A Call to Action for Lawyers in the Era of #MeToo
Introduction: Roger Juan Maldonado, President, New York City Bar Association
Speakers: Commissioner Carmelyn Malalis, S. Jeanine Conley, Carrie Goldberg, Andrea Johnson, Cynthia Lowen, LaDonna Powell, Elizabeth Saylor
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This program provided a morning plenary addressing the changing legal landscape in the wake of the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements and a luncheon discussion around sexual harassment within the legal profession. In addition, break-out CLE sessions covered:
An Overview of Employer Best Practices for Investigating, Preventing and Addressing Sexual Harassment in the Workplace
Challenges and Strategies for Low-Wage and Immigrant Workers in Reporting Harassment
#MeTooAcademia: Special Considerations When Litigating Employment Discrimination Cases on Campus
Jurisdiction in Sexual Harassment: Where Criminal, Administrative, and Regulatory Remedies Intersect
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 6 minutes, 54 seconds
The State of Federal Social Welfare Policy Under the Trump Administration
This panel features a discussion of three developments in federal social welfare policy under the Trump administration: (1) work requirements imposed on SNAP recipients; (2) work requirements imposed on Medicaid recipients; and (3) anticipated regulatory changes to “public charge,” which would prevent non-citizens from obtaining Lawful Permanent Resident (LPR) status for using (or their U.S. Citizen dependents using) a broad range of government benefits and services, many of which function as work supports for low-wage workers, such as the Earned Income Tax Credit and subsidized health insurance. The panel examines these reforms in the historical context of welfare reform, including its emphasis on work requirements and the exclusion of immigrants, look at the recent Executive Order and legislative proposals on work rules and discuss strategies for addressing the changes, including litigation.
Speakers:
Jamila Michener, Assistant Professor, Department of Government, Cornell University
David A. Super, Professor, Georgetown University Law Center
Mara Youdelman, Managing Attorney, National Health Law Program (NHeLP), D.C. Office
Jackie Vimo, Economic Justice Policy Analyst, National Immigration Law Center
Lynn D. Lu, Clinical Professor, CUNY School of Law
Katharine Deabler, Staff Attorney, National Center on Law & Economic Justice
Moderator:
Susan Welber, Chair, Social Welfare Law Committee; Staff Attorney, The Legal Aid Society, Civil Practice Law Reform Unit
Sponsoring Committee:
Social Welfare Law Committee, Susan Welber, Chair
Co-Sponsoring Committees:
Immigration and Nationality Law Committee, Victoria Neilson, Chair
International Human Rights Committee, Anil Kalhan, Chair
Civil Rights Committee, Philip Desgranges, Chair
Pro Bono and Legal Services, Alison King and Amy Barasch, Co-Chairs
Co-Sponsoring Organizations:
City Bar Justice Center
New York Immigration Coalition
The Legal Aid Society
Make the Road NY
5/7/2019 • 2 hours, 4 minutes, 57 seconds
Deputy AG Rod Rosenstein's Keynote Speech at the City Bar’s 7th Annual White Collar Crime Institute
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein gives the keynote address at the New York City Bar Association’s 7th Annual White Collar Crime Institute on May 9, 2018.
5/7/2019 • 28 minutes, 40 seconds
The Immigration Courts and Due Process - 44th Street Podcast
City Bar Senior Policy Counsel Maria Cilenti speaks with Vickie Neilson, Chair of the City Bar’s Immigration and Nationality Law Committee, about the immigration court system and concerns over changes in procedures that could speed up the deportation process at the expense of due process and the independence of immigration judges.
5/7/2019 • 29 minutes, 51 seconds
How to Get on the Ballot in New York City
The program provides an overview of what is sometimes an intimidating process, breaks it down to basics, and provides attendees with an understanding of what is necessary to run for office in New York City. The panel covers topics ranging from evaluating for which offices you are qualified to run, the mechanics of petitioning, the administrative process of filing and defending your petitions at the Board of Elections, and an overview of why and how petitions wind up the subject of court battles. There is also information on a candidate's responsibility to comply with Campaign Finance law, and a review of best practices for setting yourself up for a successful experience with those filings.
Speakers:
Martin E. Connor, Private election law practitioner, 30 years in the NYS Senate, former NYS Senate Minority Leader, Chair of City Bar Election Law Committee
Sarah K. Steiner, Private election law practitioner, Former Chair of City Bar Election Law Committee
Douglas A. Kellner, Co-Chair, New York State Board of Elections
Raphael Savino, Deputy General Counsel, Board of Elections in the City of New York
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Election Law Committee, Martin E. Connor, Chair
5/7/2019 • 2 hours, 9 minutes, 24 seconds
A Conversation with Ambassador Dani Dayan, Consul General of Israel in New York
Ambassador Dani Dayan discusses the state of affairs in the Middle East and offers a review of Israel’s diplomatic, humanitarian and economic relationships in the international arena. Additionally, Ambassador Dayan addresses the subject of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and offers his observations on the issue.
Ambassador Dayan represents the State of Israel to communities throughout New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Delaware. Born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, he is the first Hispanic Consul General of Israel in New York.
The Public Affairs Luncheon Series features speakers who address matters of public interest. The luncheons provide a forum to enable members of the City Bar to network, socialize and discuss matters of interest. The luncheons are open to the public.
Speaker:
Ambassador Dani Dayan, Consul General of Israel in New York
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Senior Lawyers Committee, Barry Bloom, Chair
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 19 minutes, 44 seconds
Guns And The Law - 44th Street Podcast
Adam Skaggs, the Chief Counsel of Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, speaks with Ira Feinberg, a member of the City Bar’s Executive Committee and Association Secretary, about the legal issues involved in gun control.
This podcast is intended to move the conversation beyond the often misleading political and Second Amendment rhetoric surrounding gun rights to a discussion about Second Amendment law: what the Constitution and the courts actually say about these issues.
5/7/2019 • 36 minutes, 13 seconds
Say It Ain't Soy! The Labeling of Plant-Based Alternative Foods
The dairy industry has made recent legal efforts to stop companies from using the terms “milk” and “cheese” for plant-based foods like soymilk and nut cheeses. The industry claims these product names mislead consumers and cash in on the reputation of animal-derived foods. Plant-based food producers disagree and have called for regulations that expressly let them use these terms for their products. Attorneys representing dairy farmers and plant-based food organizations discuss the issue at this program.
Speakers:
Nigel A. Barrella, Law Office of Nigel A. Barrella
Lorraine Lewandrowski, Lawyer and Dairy Farmer
Lori Barrett-Peterson, Chair, NYC Bar Animal Law Committee
Moderator:
Bari Wolf, Vernon & Ginsburg LLP
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Animal Law Committee, Lori Barrett-Peterson, Chair
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 49 minutes, 22 seconds
Breaking the Silence - a New Way Forward on Mental Health - Chirlane McCray, First Lady of NYC
Hear the First Lady of New York City discuss ThriveNYC, a program intended to eliminate the stigma of mental health issues and provide New Yorkers with the tools to respond to these challenges.
Speaker:
Chirlane McCray, First Lady of New York City
Sponsoring Association Committee:
New York City Affairs Committee, Jerry Goldfeder, Chair
Co-Sponsoring Association Committees:
Bioethical Issues Committee, Mary Beth Morrissey, Chair
Disability Law Committee, John Egan, Chair
Health Law Committee, Kathleen Burke, Chair
Lawyer Assistance Program Committee, Hon. Linda Poust Lopez, Chair
Mental Health Law Committee, Naomi Weinstein, Chair
Mindfulness & Well-Being in Law Committee, Cecilia Loving, Robert Chender and Bjorn Sorenson, Co-Chairs
5/7/2019 • 57 minutes, 33 seconds
Global Crackdown On Civil Society
This event addresses the global crackdown on civil society space and the resulting challenges in protecting fundamental rights and freedoms. While threats are global, documented in over 100 countries, this event focuses on those experienced specifically in India, Russia/Eastern Europe and the United States. The worldwide trend, which extends beyond authoritarian regimes to democracies in many regions, includes new laws restricting or prohibiting protest and other forms of political activism; direct targeting of activists, journalists, and human rights defenders; and regulatory and funding obstacles aimed at non-profit organizations. Discussion addresses restrictions on the freedoms of assembly and expression in the United States in the context of a worldwide pattern of shrinking space for civic engagement and dissent. The speakers also share resistance strategies activists and human rights defenders are using to counter this crackdown.
Speakers:
Sukti Dhital, Deputy Director, Robert L. Bernstein Institute for Human Rights
Melissa Hooper, Director, Human Rights and Civil Society, Human Rights First
Baher Azmy, Legal Director, Center for Constitutional Rights
Moderator:
Judge Sidney H. Stein, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York
Sponsoring Association Committee:
International Human Rights Committee, Anil Kalhan, Chair
Co-Sponsoring Association Committees:
Asian Affairs Committee, Angus Ni, Chair
Council on International Affairs, Martin Flaherty, Chair
European Affairs Committee, Victor Muskin, Chair
Task Force on Independence of Lawyers & Judges, William August Wilson III, Chair
Task Force on National Security & the Rule of Law, Mark Shulman, Chair
United Nations Committee, Michael Cooper, Chair
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 37 minutes, 3 seconds
Pillage Crimes: Ivory, Minerals and Cultural Heritage
In many of the world’s most destabilized areas, the grand theft of pillage is a regular and frightening occurrence. Poaching of ivory and theft of minerals to fund armed groups and the destruction of religious sites and cultural heritage have been well documented. This program discusses the many pillage crimes currently being committed and the restrictions on such pillage in domestic and international law, including the Rome Statute and U. S. Dodd Frank Act.
Speakers:
Carly Oboth, Policy Advisor, Global Witness
Holly Dranginis, Senior Legal Analyst at The Sentry
Jimmiel Mandima, Program Officer, African Wildlife Foundation
Karen Mosoti, Head of the Liaison Office, International Criminal Court to the United Nations
Moderator:
Elizabeth Barad, International Law and Gender Consultant, former co-chair of the NYC Bar's African Affairs committee.
Sponsoring Association Committee:
African Affairs Committee, Victoria Safran and Melanie Claussen, Co-Chairs
Co-sponsoring Association Committees:
United Nations Committee, Michael Cooper, Chair
Council on International Affairs, Martin Flaherty, Chair
International Human Rights Committee, Anil Kalhan, Chair
Cyrus Vance Center for International Justice
5/7/2019 • 1 hour, 48 minutes, 58 seconds
The Pros And Cons Of A Ban On Declawing Cats
Some states and municipalities, including New York State, are considering laws that would ban the practice of onychectomy, the surgical declawing of cats. At this program, advocates in favor of and advocates opposed to the New York bill discuss its potential impact on animals and veterinarians in New York.
Speakers:
Benjamin L. Hart, Animal Behaviorist and Distinguished Professor Emeritus, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis
Dr. Jenny Conrad, Founder and Director, The Paw Project
Dr. Eileen Jefferson, New York State Representative, Humane Society Veterinary Medical Association, Director of New York State Legislative Affairs, The Paw Project, Owner/Founder, Ethical Veterinary
Moderator:
Jane Hoffman, Member, Animal Law Committee
Sponsoring Association Committee:
Animal Law Committee, Lori Barrett-Peterson, Chair