Elisabeth Haub School of Law News
Haub Law News
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StudentsOctober 11, 2024
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In the Media
Latest News
Bridget Crawford, a law professor at Pace University, said the tax on unrealized gains works like this: “If I bought Microsoft for $1 a share, and it’s currently worth $10 a share, even though I haven’t sold it, the Wyden plan would tax me on $9 of gain. Current law says, ‘Well, Bridget Crawford doesn’t get taxed until she actually sells it.’”
After successfully finishing in the top four in the regional competition, the Haub Law Advocacy Team advanced to the Semi Final Round in the All Star Bracket Competition last week which featured 64 of the top trial programs in the Country.
The Elisabeth Haub School of Law has established a Food Pantry program on campus available to students and their families who need food assistance.
Attorney Keith Sullivan of Pace University joins Shep Smith to discuss the legal liability of the disaster that killed eight people at the Astroworld concert in Houston, Texas, this weekend.
Possible charges could include misdemeanors inciting a riot, disorderly conduct and endangering the welfare of a minor, Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University Professor Leslie Garfield Tenzer told the US Sun.
The innovative program expands access to vital legal education for healthcare professionals in a post-pandemic era.
The timing puts the administration in a “precarious position” at the talks, Achinthi Vithanage, associate director of environmental law programs at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University, wrote in an email.
Pace University Professor Randolph McLaughlin was a featured guest on the Newsy Morning Rush Show to discuss the Charleston church massacre and its recent $88M settlement with the Department of Justice.
But Katrina Fischer Kuh, a professor at Pace Law School, said the potential for a broad ruling also can't be ignored. She pointed to the argument raised by the petitioners regarding the so-called major questions doctrine, which says large-scale regulatory initiatives that have broad impacts — in this case shifting states' power sources from coal to renewable — can't be grounded in vague, minor and obscure provisions of law.
New York state has a long tradition of leadership on the environment," said Nicholas A. Robinson, a legal scholar who has developed environmental law since 1969 and has served as a general counsel of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. He also teaches environmental law at Pace Law School.
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