22 Burst results for "New York Law School"

Monitor Show 23:00 10-21-2023 23:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

00:29 sec | Last month

Monitor Show 23:00 10-21-2023 23:00

"Interactive brokers clients earn up to 4 .83 % on their uninvested instantly available USD cash balances rate subject to change. Visit ibkr .com slash interest rates to learn more. That goes all the way up until March, we'll see what the DC circuit says. Thanks so much, Rebecca. That's Professor Rebecca Roy fee of New York Law School. This is Bloomberg Law on Bloomberg Radio. I'm June Grosso stay with us today's top stories and global business headlines are coming up right now.

Rebecca Rebecca Roy New York Law School Ibkr .Com June Grosso Today March DC Bloomberg Radio Up To 4 .83 % Bloomberg Law Professor
"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:53 min | Last month

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

"Interactive brokers clients earn up to 4.83% on their uninvested instantly available USD cash balances rate subject to change. Visit ibkr.com slash interest rates to learn more. The gag order that stands and he runs right up to the line and kind of pushes it and she admonishes them and this is kind of a game that goes all the way up until March. Thanks so much, Rebecca. That's Professor Rebecca Roy fee of New York Law School. I'm June Grosso and this is Bloomberg broadcasting 24 hours a day at Bloomberg.com and the Bloomberg Business Act. This is Bloomberg radio.President Biden is appealing to American citizens for support in the wars in Israel and Ukraine. So I caution the government of Israel not to be blinded by rage and here in America. Let us not forget who we are. We reject all forms. All forms of hate during a rare prime time address to the nation on Thursday. Biden argued support for the two nations is key to national security as he prepares to ask for Congressional aid. The president plans to send Congress a supplemental funding request tomorrow. The FBI continues to monitor threats in the US and overseas as the Israel Hamas conflict rages on the FBI has seen an increase in threats against Jewish Muslim and Arab communities. They're looking into the credibility of any and all threats and working closely with state and local law enforcement agencies. A number of Republican lawmakers say they've received death threats after voting against Ohio Congressman Jim Jordan for Speaker of the House. Both representatives Drew Ferguson of Georgia and Marionette Miller Meeks of Iowa said they received threats after they pulled their support for Jordan on the second speaker vote Wednesday.

Monitor Show 23:00 10-20-2023 23:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:53 min | Last month

Monitor Show 23:00 10-20-2023 23:00

"Interactive brokers clients earn up to 4 .83 % on their uninvested instantly available USD cash balances rate subject to change. Visit ibkr .com slash interest rates to learn more. The gag order that stands and he runs right up to the line and kind of pushes it and she admonishes them and this is kind of a game that goes all the way up until March. Thanks so much, Rebecca. That's Professor Rebecca Roy fee of New York Law School. I'm June Grosso and this is Bloomberg broadcasting 24 hours a day at Bloomberg .com and the Bloomberg Business Act. This is Bloomberg radio. President Biden is appealing to American citizens for support in the wars in Israel and Ukraine. So I caution the government of Israel not to be blinded by rage and here in America. Let us not forget who we are. We reject all forms. All forms of hate during a rare prime time address to the nation on Thursday. Biden argued support for the two nations is key to national security as he prepares to ask for Congressional aid. The president plans to send Congress a supplemental funding request tomorrow. The FBI continues to monitor threats in the US and overseas as the Israel Hamas conflict rages on the FBI has seen an increase in threats against Jewish Muslim and Arab communities. They're looking into the credibility of any and all threats and working closely with state and local law enforcement agencies. A number of Republican lawmakers say they've received death threats after voting against Ohio Congressman Jim Jordan for Speaker of the House. Both representatives Drew Ferguson of Georgia and Marionette Miller Meeks of Iowa said they received threats after they pulled their support for Jordan on the second speaker vote Wednesday.

Rebecca Thursday Wednesday Drew Ferguson Israel Congress Ukraine Rebecca Roy FBI America President Trump March Two Nations New York Law School Bloomberg Business Act Marionette Miller Meeks Jim Jordan United States Bloomberg Jordan
"new york law school" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

05:20 min | Last month

"new york law school" Discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show

"Joining us now is professor Alan Dershowitz, professor thank you so much for joining the program, professor it's been a very difficult week, a sad week, a heavy week, it's tragic, professor I'm curious were you even shocked at the response from some of these Harvard students, you know the community very well, you've built a whole career there, was this something where you were even surprised to see the outright Jew hatred gone public so quickly after a massacre of 1300 Jews? I was not surprised, when you propagandize young students for years and years and tell them that Jews are the privileged group and the Israelis are the colonialist settlers and you prevent speakers, for example I retired from Harvard 10 years ago, I have never been invited back to speak about Israel, once a group wanted me to speak but they told me I had to speak off the campus because they were afraid of violent reaction when I supported the two-state solution, I didn't support Hamas obviously that wants a one-state solution, no Jews, all I want from Harvard is a single standard, I want to know what Harvard would do if a group of students signed a petition saying we support the bombing of a gay bar that occurred somewhere or we support the bombing of a black church, it was the gays and the blacks who were at fault for them being bombed, I just want to know what President Gay of Harvard, what presidents of other schools would say if a group of students, 30 groups of students wrote petitions blaming blacks for the bombing of black churches, blaming gays for the burning or the shooting into a gay bar, whatever that standard is, I accept for Jews and for Israel but I will not and no donor to Harvard should accept a double standard that discriminates against Jews, against Zionists, against the state of Israel. So professor, we're starting to see a revolt amongst donors and you know a significant amount of the donations that come to Ivy League schools are from you know obviously alumni but also Jewish alumni, very generous, the Jewish community is incredibly generous, we're starting to see evidence that the Jewish community is saying no more, they're cutting off the money, do you think that Harvard and Penn for example, are they point, are they past the point of redemption, is it time to just cut it off, cut your losses and say we will no longer subsidize this outright Jew hatred? Well I wouldn't subsidize it now but I don't think they're beyond the point of redemption, I do think that they can have a reckoning, remember after one black man, George Floyd, was horribly murdered, one black man who had fentanyl in him, who was drunk and had a criminal record, one black man was killed, it caused a reckoning at Harvard, change of admission standards, change of curriculum, appointing dozens of diversity deans, don't you think it's time for a reckoning at Harvard University about its anti-Semitism, by the way which is 100 years old, anti-Jewish quotas, supporting the Nazis in the 1930s, Harvard has a major reckoning to do and I will not send Harvard a single penny until it does that reckoning and I have to tell you I have gotten calls not only from Jewish donors but from non-Jewish donors, friends of mine, former clients, others who are not Jewish and they said not a penny to Harvard, not a penny to Yale, not a penny to New York City University, let me talk about the worst university in the country, New York University, City University of New York Law School which has become the propaganda arm of Hamas, it had a Hamas supporting speaker at his graduation, its faculty voted unanimously, unanimously to boycott Israel and only Israel, nobody should hire anybody who graduated from that law school unless you want your students, your clients to be serviced by people who support rapists, who support lynchers, again this is comparable to the lynching of 3,000 black people in a hundred year history of the south, more Jews were lynched on one day than in any 10-year period during the lynchings and yet you have black leaders, Black Lives Matter saying we support Hamas hand gliders coming in and murdering children, you have other black groups and black organizations, the head of the New York University Student Bar Association comes out that way, fortunately she lost her job at Winston Strong, thank you Winston Strong for doing the right thing, you would not want any of her clients to be represented by somebody who supported rapists and beheaders and kidnappers so we have apply a single standard and that's the university's major fault, it applies a double standard to progressive, woke, left, racists and bigots and a very very different standard to democracies including Israel and including Jews who are regarded as the privileged, that has to end, I've been at universities now, elite universities for 65 years and it's not acceptable and I will not stand for it, I will urge all donors to cut all donations unless there's a reckoning.

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

03:54 min | 6 months ago

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"And then what happens with the Staley case and Staley was just opposed over this weekend and our colleague Ava on the legal team wrote about that but you know this for JP Morgan closes the door and on the on the victim part but there's still these other matters that are very much ongoing alright Hannah thanks so much for joining us Hannah Levitt a finance reporter from Bloomberg News she wrote the story along with Ava Benny Morrison from the legal team and there will certainly be more to come because there's another as she pointed out lawsuit from the US Virgin Islands as well as JP Morgan's lawsuit with Jess Staley right and those are you headlines know they're going to continue to be in among the most read stories obviously on the Bloomberg terminal so we'll wrap that up for today and we'll come back to it I guess unfortunately and we're going to look ahead to I'm really excited to talk about the business of planes in China so stay with us for that this is Bloomberg. Let's get down to Nancy Lyons right now she's in Washington DC with our World News. Thanks Matt Miami authorities are preparing for crowds tomorrow when former President Trump has reigned in federal court on multiple charges concerning his handling of classified documents this is Police Chief Manny Morales. Even though we're preparing we're bringing enough resources to handle crowd anywhere from 5 ,000 to 50 thousand we don't expect any issues. Morales says they've been monitoring social media and have seen no mentions of a credible threat. As for tomorrow's arraignment itself New York Law School professor Rebecca Royfi says we can expect a not guilty plea tomorrow from Trump and additional requests from attorneys on both sides. There may be some scheduling about discussion discovery which is the process by which one side obtains information that the other side is going to use at trial and perhaps a schedule for elections might be determined as well. Rebecca Royfi also tells Bloomberg none of tomorrow's proceedings will be public since cameras are not allowed in federal courtrooms. Transportation secretary Pete Buttigieg says Yesterday's collapse of a stretch of Interstate 95 in Philadelphia will cause extensive disruption in the region. Our federal highway administrator is on the ground right now and had been in touch with the delegation and other leaders and and the people of Philadelphia, the Pennsylvania DOT, and the entire region affected by this will have the full support of the United States Department of Transportation. Buttigieg was speaking at the annual convention of the American Council of Engineering Companies. The mother of a six -year -old Virginia boy who shot and wounded his teacher has pleaded guilty to a federal charge of using marijuana while possessing a firearm. Deja Taylor is accused of lying about her marijuana use on a form when she bought the gun, her which son her later used to shoot his teacher. Global news 24 hours a day powered by more than 2700 mother was a journalist and analyst in over 120 countries. Melissa from Michigan. I work an extra part -time job serving lunch at my child's school, but But I still can't afford to put food on our table. Daniel from California. choosing whether to pay the rent or pay to fix the car to get to work doesn't leave us with much at all now we even pay for meals. Hunger is a story we can end. End it at feedingamerica dot org brought to you by feeding America and the Ad Council wherever your business takes you Bloomberg radio is here with you. Breaking economic news crossing the Bloomberg. Powered by 100 journalists and analysts. Let's get to some of the day's gainers in more than 120 countries around the world. We are seeing a flatter picture for European stocks this morning. We're the only 24 -7 global business radio platform.

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

05:52 min | 11 months ago

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Nathan Hager And I'm Karen Moscow, and U.S. stock index futures are little changed this morning. We check the markets all day long here on Bloomberg with S&P and Dow futures that'll change NASDAQ futures lower down a tenth of a percent or 14 points. The Dax in Germany is up a third of a percent ten year treasury down one 32nd yield 3.44% in a yield on the two year 4.11% nymex crude oil up four tenths of a percent, Nathan. Karen, we'll get back to markets in a minute, but we begin with a growing political and now legal issue for President Biden. Attorney general Merrick Garland has named a special counsel after two sets of classified documents were found in one of the president's offices, and now his garage, President Biden says he has been cooperating fully. The Department of Justice was immediately notified. And the lawyers arranged for the Department of Justice to take possession of the document. So you're going to see, we're going to see all this unfold the president says he takes classified documents seriously. New York law school professor Rebecca Roy says this puts the president in a difficult position. None of this is good and it should be troubling and it should be troubling to Americans regardless of your political affiliation. No president, no former vice president should be taking classified documents and putting in them someplace keeping them someplace like a garage, even if that garage is locked. New York law schools are spoke with our Washington correspondent Joe Matthew on Bloomberg's sound on, catch the show weekdays at 5 p.m. eastern on Bloomberg radio or download sound on, wherever you get your podcasts. Meantime, Nathan geopolitics is in focus for President Biden today. He's meeting with Japanese prime minister fumio kushida at The White House, Bloomberg's at Baxter reports, there is expected to be an update on the nation's global security agreement. Both sides have already said that the alliance has never been stronger, but National Security Council spokesman John Kirby says threats from Russia and China are causing the agreements to be updated. We modernize the alliance by announcing that a tax two from and within space could lead to the invocation of article 5 of the U.S. Japan security treaty. Kirby says Japan is stepping up. Its commitment to the alliance, and it will pay huge dividends. In San Francisco, I met Baxter Bloomberg daybreak. Thanks, Ed. We now turn to the markets, our earnings for big banks kick off this morning. JPMorgan Citigroup Bank of America and Wells Fargo all report quarterly results, we get a preview from Bloomberg's Charlie wells. There have been so many pressures for these large American banks. There's the concern about a potential recession that we've been debating about for the past few weeks. There have been issues with a slowdown in deal making that is really hurt fees. It's looking like at some of these major banks investment banking revenue for the fourth quarter could be down about 51% and overall profits at these large banks are looking like in the fourth quarter they could be down about 15%. Bloomberg's Charlie wells says the outlook from bank CEOs may draw more attention this morning than the actual numbers. Well, as we await those results in Nathan, global stocks are heading for a healthy gain this week and they're growing optimism that easing inflation will lead to less aggressive rate hikes. Here's Philadelphia fed president Patrick harker. In my view, the days of us raising them 75 basis points at a time are surely passed. In my view, types of 25 basis points will be appropriate going forward. Philadelphia fed president Patrick harker made the comments after yesterday's consumer price data, which showed inflation continued to slow in December. And we may get more clues, Karen, on the direction of range interest rates. And a couple more fed officials speak today. New York fed president John Williams, Minneapolis fed chief Neil kashkari and Philadelphia fed president Patrick harker all speak at separate events today. Money UK, Nathan, the British economy unexpectedly grew in November. Let's go live to London and get the latest at Bloomberg a day break Europe anchor Stephen Carroll. Good morning, Stephen. Good morning, car than Nathan. The UK economy may avoid tumbling into recession for a little longer thanks to November's surprise .1% growth in GDP, consumer facing services helping to boost out button in particular, spending on hospitality during the World Cup. Strikes, though, affected activity in the postal and railway industries, the figures may strengthen calls for further interest rate rises from the Bank of England as inflation in the UK remains near the highest level in four decades in London. I'm Stephen Carroll, Bloomberg daybreak. Stephen, thanks staying in Europe, Sweden's inflation rate reached double digits for the first time in more than three decades in December, inflation there rose by an annual rate of 10.2%. That was higher than expected. Back here in the U.S., Nathan, we're seeing a big pay cut for one of the country's premier executives. Apple's CEO Tim Cook will see his total compensation decline this year. We get more from Bloomberg to Doug Krishna. Apple cited investor feedback, as well as a request from cook himself. The pay reduction will be more than 40% this year to $49 million, and most of that will take the form of stock grants. Apple has drawn criticism about cook's previous $99 million compensation package from groups such as institutional shareholder services. The advisory firm said half of the rewards didn't depend on performance criteria like the company's share price. Last year, a majority of Apple shareholders voted to approve cook's package in New York, I'm Doug prisoner Bloomberg daybreak. Doug, thank you, and in China today we have news that government entities are set to take so called golden shares in units of Alibaba and Tencent. That suggests Beijing is moving to ensure greater control over key players in the Internet arena. The shares could let officials influence the industry over the long term. Futures are little change this morning sewer down futures while NASDAQ futures are lower down about two tenths of a percent or 16 points. Straight ahead your latest local headlines plus a check of sports and this is Bloomberg.

President Biden Bloomberg Philadelphia fed Patrick harker Nathan Charlie wells Nathan Hager Karen Moscow Merrick Garland Rebecca Roy Department of Justice Joe Matthew Bloomberg radio Japanese prime minister fumio John Kirby Baxter Bloomberg JPMorgan Citigroup Bank of Ame Stephen Carroll
"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

03:58 min | 11 months ago

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Year, really interesting to have you on Ben, thank you so much for your time Bloomberg's currency and rate strategist van ram. Let's get more on our top stories now from Leon garon's. Stephen good morning to you. The UK economy has defied shrinking expectations and did grew grow last November. GDP rose 0.1% in the month, a positive beat on The Economist's estimate solve 0.2% drop, the largest contribution to growth came from consumer facing businesses in a month where the World Cup did start, the Bank of England now anticipates the economy is about to slip into a slump that will last until 2024. Bank of England policymaker Catherine Mann says it may take a significant recession to tame inflation here in Britain when the BOE raised rates by 50 basis points to 3.5% last month, man alone voted for a 75 basis point hike in a speech in Manchester, man set out a bleak outlook, noting the UK productivity lags much of the rest of the G 7. And finally, the Chinese government is set to take a so called golden shares in units of tech giants, Alibaba and Tencent, according to a corporate database, Beijing bought 1% of an Alibaba digital media subsidiary and that was last month. The share structure could grant government officials influence over the industry, including the power to nominate directors. Global news, 24 hours a day on air and on Bloomberg quicktake, powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries. I'm Leanne guerin's, this is Bloomberg, Caroline. Thanks so much Leanne Goran's with our top stories still ahead on Bloomberg daybreak here will be looking to what to expect from the U.S. bank earnings reports that come today, JPMorgan Bank of America, Citigroup, reporting fourth quarter numbers later Bloomberg's Charlie wells will be joining us to discuss that. Honestly, to bring back daybreaker, we're live from London, this is Bloomberg. Bloomberg radio on demand and in your podcast E on the latest sound on podcast, New York law school professor Rebecca Roy fee on the appointment of a special counsel to investigate the discovery of classified documents tied to President Biden. It's really hard to know, but I think in this climate, it's just the smart thing to do. There is so much speculation right now about the Department of Justice. And it's under a haze of questions, both from the left and from the right. And so in a certain way, it's kind of a prophylactic move that makes it such that whatever is the outcome. There's a little bit more faith in that outcome if it comes from a special counsel than if it came from somebody who's directly reporting to the attorney general. There will be, of course, tandem investigations in Congress and so forth, but Department of Justice is the one that we need to pay attention to Rebecca based on what you know now, is this going to come down to a matter of intent or is Joe Biden in trouble here? In absolutely comes down to a matter of intent. And that's the thing that really tips this from being a situation in which a former vice president, current president, mishandled documents to one in which there is some kind of criminal liability. And it's important to note that mishandling documents itself is problematic and is something that the government should be aware of and seek to protect future future presidents and future vice presidents from prevent them from doing. But in this situation, the question of whether or not there would be any criminal charges, absolutely comes down to what was the former vice president and current president's intent in keeping these documents

Bloomberg van ram Leon garon Bank of England Catherine Mann Alibaba Chinese government Leanne guerin Leanne Goran JPMorgan Bank of America Charlie wells UK Rebecca Roy Tencent BOE President Biden
"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

04:54 min | 1 year ago

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Way of putting it? You know, I don't think that he has decided that an indictment is necessarily the way to go. I don't think that I think if you're, if you're handing something over to a special counsel, I think it's because there are you seriously think and indictment might be warranted. And I don't imagine that he would have handed this over to Jack Smith thinking to himself, yeah, Jack Smith will wind up this case and do nothing. So I think it's reasonable to conclude that the attorney general thinks that there are some serious criminal conduct and potential charges that are warranted, but I doubt that he has reached a conclusion because, you know, he's relying on Jack Smith for his judgment in that regard. I wonder, does this slow, he mentioned, you know, this will help agents continue their work. Will it slow things down as this architecture is put in place or does it accelerate the investigations that are already running? You know, that's a great question. I don't really think it will slow things down much. Obviously, as he explained in the press conference, some of the investigators who have been working on this case for a long time will continue on and they can create continuity. So all that really needs to happen is that the new special counsel needs to be briefed on everything that's going on. But that really can happen at the same time as their progressing. So my guess is if it slows things down, it's really not by a significant amount and it can proceed pretty much on pace. I want to bring people back not very long to the former special counsel Robert Mueller, as he was announcing the results of the Mueller report had finally concluded, listen. And as that fourth in the report after that investigation, if we had had confidence that the president clearly did not commit a crime, we would have said so. We did not, however, make a determination as to whether the president did commit a crime. That day let down a lot of people who were hoping that this would lead to an indictment or some sort of criminal charge. He mentioned at that time that because it was outside the scope of his of his authority, that he would not be the one to bring charges. Is that going to happen again does this have to go back to the DoJ back to the attorney general for that determination? No, this is entirely different because now Donald Trump is no longer president. So what happened there was that the special counsel special counsel Mueller had no power at least interpreted his role as having no power to indict because you can not at least in his interpretation indict a sitting president. And that's why he didn't come to any conclusion, because he figured, well, you know, people want to know the facts and the charge when he gets out of office. Exactly. The proper way of holding him responsible is impeachment, and then once he's out of office, a set of prosecutors can proceed if they want to proceed. But of course, things are different right now because even if the former president is a candidate, he has announced his candidacy and his campaign. He's not the president. And so there is no barrier to indicting him here. And so it's well within the job description of the special counsel to determine that charges are necessary and to bring those charges through a grand jury. So I don't think we would end up seeing that again. So the talk about the timing of Donald Trump's campaign announcement this week said, you know, he thinks he's bringing himself some protections potentially by doing this legal protections means nothing in this case. Right. I mean, it means nothing. It certainly has political meaning. And it certainly makes the job of the special counsel harder. But in terms of its ultimate effect on whether on the decision whether to charge, it doesn't, it doesn't bear on that. We're learning a lot as we do this all over again. Do you have a gut check that this leads to something meaningful? And if it does, in the throes of a presidential campaign? You know, I really don't know. It's hard to read the tea leaves. I would say that what we can conclude is that attorney general Garland thinks that there's at least substantial evidence of criminal conduct here and that it's worth an independent person taking a look at that. Two separate cases mean two separate results or is this all going to be folded into one massive investigation? My guess is it's going to be one investigation, although it is too distinct pieces of that investigation. So how that proceeds I'm not entirely sure either. We have a lot to learn yet. I hope you're going to come back and walk us through it Rebecca is very great to have you back very helpful to hear your insights Rebecca Roy, for your Professor of law at New York law school has been very helpful to us as we've worked our way through a legally challenged existence here for Donald Trump. The former assistant DA for New York county and up next, former assistant

Jack Smith Mueller Donald Trump Robert Mueller DoJ Garland Rebecca Roy Rebecca New York law school New York county
"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:59 min | 1 year ago

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"To have Alison Williams coming up at just moments to give us some thoughts on some of these big bank earnings. We had a lot today a lot more coming next week and we'll stay on top of that. Of course, markets mixed here. Let's head down to Washington D.C. right now. Check in with Amy Mars Amy. All right, thank you, Paul inflation is spreading deeper into the U.S. economy, and that slamming the door on hopes the Federal Reserve will dial back interest rate hikes, core inflation excluding food and energy. Jump to a 40 year high of 6.6% in September from a year ago, that was faster than forecast JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon told a conference, the fed probably won't be able to cool the U.S. economy without bringing on a recession. I don't know if it could be a soft landing. I don't think so, but it might mild recession or tough recession. My point in the tough recession, yeah, you would expect the market under the 20 or 30%. I'm not going to keep across those three things. But for all of us, you have to worry about risk. Yeah, of course, you should plan for those things. Jamie Dimon says his gut tells him the Federal Reserve will have to raise rates higher than four and a half percent in order to tame inflation. The House committee investigating last year's attack on the capitol has voted to subpoena former president Donald Trump. Lawmakers want to question him about the 2021 riot and are demanding documents and testimony about his role, law professor Rebecca Roy fee at New York law school tells Bloomberg how the committee arrived at a Trump subpoena. What the indication was at the end of that hearing was that the only person who could or people who could connect those dots have either pled the 5th or are Donald Trump. And so without the testimony of those people, we are left to infer what actually happened. Professor Rebecca Roy Fiat New York law school on Bloomberg sound on, which you can hear weekday afternoons at 5 on Bloomberg radio. The move comes just weeks ahead of midterm elections to determine control of Congress. Global news, 24 hours a day on air and on Bloomberg quicktake powered by more than 2700 journalists

Alison Williams Washington D.C. Amy Mars Amy fed Jamie Dimon U.S. JPMorgan Rebecca Roy Donald Trump Paul Bloomberg House committee New York law school Professor Rebecca Roy New York Congress
"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

03:29 min | 1 year ago

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Now, with the latest news from New York City and around the world, here's Michael Barr. Lisa John, the January 6th House committee display new evidence that showed the Secret Service had received tips, a potential violence nearly two weeks before the capitol riot, committee member democratic congressman Adam Schiff. According to the source of the tip, the Proud Boys plan to march armed into D.C.. They think that they will have a large enough group to march into D.C. armed the source reported, and will outnumber the police so they can't be stopped. Congressman Schiff along with the rest of the committee voted to subpoena former president Trump, Rebecca Roy Professor of law at New York law school was asked one how the committee arrived at a Trump subpoena. What the indication was at the end of that hearing was that the only person who could or people who could connect those dots have either pled the 5th or are Donald Trump. And so without the testimony of those people, we are left to infer what actually happened. Professor Roy fee made her comments on sound on which airs at 5 p.m. on Bloomberg. The U.S. Supreme Court handed former president Trump a loss in his fight over records, the FBI seized from his Mar-a-Lago estate. The high court refused to intervene and reinstate a special master's authority to review a set of key documents with classified markings. Pentagon officials are reacting after NATO's secretary general Jens Stoltenberg said Russia would be crossing a very important line if it used nuclear weapons in Ukraine in Brussels defense secretary Lloyd Austin said he would not speculate about hypothetical scenarios but added that the U.S. and its allies are focused on the war 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Russia could choose to deescalate and could choose to end this war because Putin started this war as a matter of choice. Secretary Austin called Putin's reference to nuclear weapons irresponsible and reckless. Lie from the Bloomberg interactive broker studios, this is global news 24 hours a day on air and on Bloomberg quicktake. Powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts and more than a 120 countries, I'm Michael Barr. This is Bloomberg. With a Bloomberg business of sports report, I'm Michael Barr. The goat is the latest owner of a major league pickleball team. Quarterback Tom Brady joined other investors, including former pro tennis player Kim Clijsters to buy a team. Brady and clysters are the latest to join a growing number of current and former pro athletes buying pickleball teams. Others include LeBron James and draymond green, former saints quarterback Drew Brees and former pro tennis player James Blake. A Madrid court froze more than €50 million or $48.7 million of a Qatari broadcasters assets after Spanish top flight soccer competition aliga requested the step in a spat over unpaid TV rights. The amount is said to cover wet pianos after it failed to settle a bill for rights for broadcasting matches to a base being owns rights broadcast league as matches in more than 30 countries in Europe, Africa, Asia and the Middle East, with the Bloomberg business of sports report. I'm Michael Barr. Burden LLP accountants and advisers presents industry chat with Jeff Kovacs, partner and head of the technology and life sciences practice. Software as a service or SaaS companies are transforming the enterprise software

Michael Barr Lisa John capitol riot Congressman Schiff president Trump Rebecca Roy Roy fee D.C. Adam Schiff Bloomberg Lloyd Austin House committee New York law school Secret Service Secretary Austin Putin Bloomberg interactive broker s Jens Stoltenberg Donald Trump Russia
"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:39 min | 1 year ago

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Each member of the panel took time to take part in this exercise today, typically we've only heard from a few in each hearing. We heard from all 9 today and were joined now once again by Rebecca Roy fee, who was with us earlier in this whole process and back to day to talk to us on Bloomberg. Joseph Solomon distinguished Professor of law at New York law school, former assistant district attorney for New York county, it's great to have you back here Rebecca. Let's start with the matter at hand, and that's the vote to compel to subpoena Donald Trump to testify. We don't think that is going to happen after Republicans take the majority, do we? I don't think it's going to happen anyway. The subpoena will go out and you will disregard that subpoena even if it were to go out before the change in administration or sorry rather the change in makeup of the House of Representatives. So I think this was more a symbolic ask than it was an act designed to actually obtain his testimony or documents from him. If Democrats somehow keep the house in this committee remains a going concern is at a different story? I really don't think it is. I mean, I think he's going to resist that subpoena and we've seen before that then Congress can perhaps refer this to the entire house and then if the house remained democratic they could perhaps make a referral to the Department of Justice, but I really don't think imagine that the Department of Justice would pursue contempt of Congress case against the former president. We heard some pretty interesting

Rebecca Roy fee Joseph Solomon New York law school New York county Bloomberg Donald Trump Rebecca House of Representatives Department of Justice Congress house
"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:21 min | 1 year ago

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"A volleyball Really Well in my hand wasn't big enough for a basketball I could jump My theory is always been of James nasmyth was Jewish He would have made the hoop a little bit lower Probably Right Are you graduated from Clark And then you go to New York law school Yes sir And then you started practicing law So I clerked for the chief bankruptcy judge And then because I had done well in law school So because of that I ended up getting offers in bankruptcy right I thought it was going to be a tax lawyer I was always good with numbers but since I clerked for a judge and I got all these offers to do bankruptcy law so I did that And I practiced for about a long time It was about a year That was enough for me All right Why practice two years There you go Yeah twice as long So then what happens is you decide to get in the investment business and how did you segue from practicing law after one year into the investment business So I went to work at firm as there was an investment firm small firm And at the end of the year I was making 50,000 And at the end of the year I had shifted over to the investment side And I had made the firm $25 million So this is an 86 And you're all excited you're going to get a bonus and I call my dad and I'm trying to figure out where do I ask So my father says well don't be greedy ask for half of 1% So I asked for a 125,000 And I thought you know that would be great And I had a child at the time And the person who's going to be the bonus is how much you want I said a 125,000 I think it would be fair And he goes no that's we're not going to do that I was like oh okay how much And I don't know if you've ever had this in your career Somebody's stands up They put their arm around you It's called an atta boy You're doing really well because we're going to give you $10,000 I was like okay thank you And then I left three months later And I went to work at cowan and company That was Mark lasry Cofounder and CEO of avenue capital group and cofounder of the Milwaukee Bucks on Bloomberg wealth with David Rubenstein And coming up we'll hear more from our class three about raising capital.

James nasmyth New York law school volleyball basketball Clark Mark lasry Cofounder avenue capital group David Rubenstein Milwaukee Bucks
"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

06:32 min | 1 year ago

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"I'm at Fox and I'm Denise colored food Welcome to Bloomberg wealth that David Rubenstein part of our best of Bloomberg series In this episode at the Bloomberg wealth summit we hear from Mark lasry who is a co owner of the Milwaukee Bucks and cofounder and CEO of avenue capital group about winning on the court and when investing And here's David Rubenstein with Mark blassie Let's listen in So is there more pressure when you're trying to win a basketball championship than when you're trying to please investors Where's the greater pressure Oh I think I think it's definitely trying to win a championship It's hard because a lot of like when you invest and you know this when you're investing you can control a lot more things In a basketball court you can't control whether somebody's going to make a shot You've got to get lucky You've got to be really really good but you also have to be really lucky And what's the greater pleasure making 5 times your money on a distressed debt investment or winning the NBA championship They're both fabulous I wish I could do one each year That would be great but I think there's a great feeling in being right on an investment that you've done a tremendous amount of work and you made money for your clients which I think is great I think winning a championship is it's a very surreal feeling because there's a whole city or state that is actually behind you We had 70,000 people at the finals And we had them all outside At 17,000 in stands And then literally like 60,000 people outside And when we won just the joy that you had brought to the city was phenomenal Let me ask you about the stress debt for a moment before we get back to basketball The stress debt implies that there's some company under stress usually But for the last couple of years there hasn't been that much distress So what if the stress debt investor has been doing with themselves other than buying basketball teams There hasn't been You're absolutely correct So what we've done is gone into the private lending business So I think investors want to try to make anywhere between ten to 15% and so our business has dramatically shifted over the course of the last three to 5 years to now we just lend money And we're lending money anywhere between 8 to 12% and our senior secured level And then you'll do half a turn leverage So it actually has been it's actually worked out really well And do you expect because interest rates are going up and inflation is up and the economy may be slowing down a bit that there is going to be more distressed debt in the next one or two or three years than you've seen the last one or two or three years Absolutely With rates rising that's actually good for us because the more issues there are in the economy or the more issues there are with people that's beneficial for what we try to do So let's talk about your background moment You were born in Marrakech Yes So your parents decided to move to the United States and when you came over here did you speak English at all or nothing No not at all I was actually I went to a public school in Hartford and because I had dark hair I was with all the kids who were Hispanic They thought I was Hispanic So they were speaking in Spanish and I was trying to learn I was trying to learn English so I was all confused All right so you were a high school basketball player The legend is that I was yes But I thought you went to Clark university and played basketball there as well I did I did but Clark was division three So I went I played and by my sophomore year I realized I wasn't that good So I then played in the club teams and I did really well there Okay so while you weren't able to dunk the ball I shouldn't have I could dunk a volleyball Really Well in my hand wasn't big enough for a basketball I could jump My theory is always been of James Naismith was Jewish He would have made the hoop a little bit lower Probably Are you graduated from Clark And then you go to New York law school Yes sir And then you started practicing law So I clerked for the chief bankruptcy judge And then because I had done well in law school So because of that I ended up getting offers in bankruptcy I thought it was going to be a tax lawyer I was always good with numbers but since I clerked for a judge and I got all these offers to do bankruptcy law so I did that And I practiced for about I mean it was a long time It was about a year That was enough for me All right Why practice two years I was going to say there you go Yeah twice as long So then what happens is you decide to get in the investment business and how did you segue from practicing law after one year into the investment business So I went to work at firm as there was an investment firm small firm And at the end of the year I was making 50,000 And at the end of the year I had shifted over to the investment side And I had made the firm $25 million So this is an 86 And you're all excited you're going to get a bonus and I call my dad and I'm trying to figure out where do I ask So my father says well don't be greedy ask for half of 1% So I asked for a 125,000 And I thought you know that would be great And I had a child at the time And my other person was giving me the bonus Because well how much you want A 125,000 I think would be fair And he goes no that's we're not going to do that I was like oh okay how much And I don't know if you've ever had this in your career Somebody's stands up They put their arm around you It's called an atta boy You're doing really well because we're going to give you $10,000 I was like okay thank you And then I left three months later And I went to work at Cowen and company That was Marc lasry Cofounder and CEO of avenue capital group and cofounder of the Milwaukee Bucks on Bloomberg wealth with David Rubenstein And coming up we'll hear more from our class three about raising capital You're.

David Rubenstein basketball avenue capital group Mark lasry Mark blassie Milwaukee Bucks Denise Bloomberg Fox NBA Clark Marrakech Clark university Hartford Naismith New York law school volleyball
"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:01 min | 1 year ago

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Justice Thomas has written that they were one being an amalgam and called her his best friend In one of the texts Ginny Thomas said to Mark Meadows thank you needed that This plus a conversation with my best friend just now I will try to keep holding on America is worth it Also she reportedly mentions her husband's name in speeches and communications with other activists so does that drag the justice into it Yeah again it's a tough issue I think it looks bad in many many ways but I also think we have an interest in not thinking of spouses as one and the same I mean you can think of situations now We have like two professional people And one of them is a judge And one of them is let's say very active in involved in the local chapter of the ACLU Now that doesn't mean that the judge I think would have to recuse himself in every case involving the ACLU more broadly And this underlying question of how to interpret the spousal relationship And so in the modern day I don't think we want to impute all of the statements all of the activity all of the ideological leanings of one spouse to another spouse But again at a certain point it crosses over to being something inappropriate And I think that is the point at which interest plays a role So you can't say just because Ginny Thomas has said things that if she were justice on the Supreme Court it would make it clear that she's already decided how she would rule in a case That doesn't mean that I think that justice commas would have to recuse He hasn't made similar remarks But at a certain point if she is so involved that her emails are at issue and there's a case that concerns those emails Well that's an interest And to me that's point at which he has to accuse Thanks Rebecca That's professor Rebecca Roy fee of New York law school Coming up next Supreme Court cases testing the scope of workplace arbitration You're listening to Bloomberg Adventure.

Ginny Thomas Mark Meadows Justice Thomas ACLU America Supreme Court Thanks Rebecca Rebecca Roy New York law school Bloomberg Adventure
"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

05:48 min | 1 year ago

"new york law school" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Is facing calls to recuse himself from any cases involving the 2020 election or the January 6th insurrection This after revelations that his wife Jenny Thomas repeatedly pushed to overturn the presidential election in a series of texts with Trump White House chief of staff Mark Meadows Thomas did not recuse himself from a case involving the release of former president Donald Trump's White House records to the January 6th committee and he was the only justice to vote against turning the records over Democrats like senator dick Durbin are calling for Thomas to recuse himself in these cases while Republicans like senator Josh hawley say it's not necessary To think that he would consider a case where his wife is frequently contacting the chief of staff for the president and giving advice on matters that are going to be ultimately litigated by the court that is the ultimate conflict of interest She's an independent person you know And she's got her own political views She's been doing this a long time And if you want to take issue with her that's fine but she's not on the bench She's on the bench Joining me is ethics expert Rebecca Roy fee a professor at New York law school Rebecca what are the rules for recusal that Supreme Court Justices follow There are rules that are drafted for all judges And those rules require a judge to disqualify himself or herself whenever that judges impartiality might reasonably be questioned But that's a really broad role And in general there are some more specifics about when judges normally recuse themselves and the general proposition is interpreted in light of those more specific rules And one thing that's kind of important also is that Supreme Court Justices are a little bit different than other judges in that There is no one to take their place when they recuse themselves And so for that reason it's generally a good idea for judges to be a little bit more conservative about exercising their discretion to recuse themselves in particular cases If a party thinks that a Supreme Court Justice would be biased there's no mechanism for trying to force a recusal Is there No Party can and many times has requested recusal but it's really at this point up to the discretion of that individual justice whether or not to do so Part of that is because of the separation of powers you can't really have let's say congressional rule because that might be unconstitutional But you could imagine a situation in which the Supreme Court as a whole were to decide whether a particular justice were to recuse him or herself But for the most part the Supreme Court has shied away from doing that and part out of a kind of collegiality and the idea that once you've reached the point where your Supreme Court Justice you should be trusted to make that decision on your own And the law also says that judges should not participate in proceedings in which their spouse has an interest that could be substantially affected by the outcome of the proceeding Right So that's one of those more specific rules that I mentioned earlier That goes to defining this question of when a justice is impartiality could be reasonably questioned because that's such a broad proposition that the more specific ones have more bite so to speak because essentially they're getting at the problem of impartiality but in a very specific kind of way that's been tried in the past So according to the texts that have been revealed Ginny Thomas weighed in on Trump's legal team legal strategy She was actively involved in trying to get the election overturned Justice Thomas participated in two cases related to the 2020 election He was the only justice who dissented when the Supreme Court allowed the release of records from the Trump White House to the committee Should he have recused himself from those cases My view in this matter is that for the case having to do with the email specifically justice Thomas if he knew that his wife had emails that were at issue in that case should have recused Because in that case then she might have had an actual interest So more than just sort of her own ideological agenda She might have had a personal interest either criminal liability civil liability or at least personal embarrassment at issue in that case And so it seems to me that he if he knew really should have recused The other cases for me are a harder call because what it is that is her interest is less concrete And that makes it more difficult and not clear cut because Supreme Court Justices in the past It's very clear that there's a record for recusing themselves in cases in which let's say they have a financial and trust or a spouse has a financial interest or they're connected to a party in the litigation All of those are cases in which you see most Supreme Court Justices recusing themselves in most cases But the connection here is a little bit more attenuated And so I think therefore you have to look at the particular case And see whether or not there's a concrete interest rather than just a sort of broad ideological interest because that's the kind of case that you really can't have Supreme Court Justices recuse in all the time I mean if you remember president Trump called for justices Sotomayor and I've given the Berg to recuse themselves in old Trump related cases because they had said some things indicating their bias against him And that's not the way this system works So we have to find a line between those two where it's not just like there's a strong ideological interest There's actually has to be some kind of concrete interest at stake Ginny Thomas has said that her work doesn't present a conflict with her husband's work on the Supreme Court.

Supreme Court Jenny Thomas Mark Meadows Thomas senator dick Durbin senator Josh hawley Rebecca Roy White House Trump New York law school Donald Trump Thomas Ginny Thomas Trump White House Rebecca Justice Thomas president Trump Sotomayor Berg
"new york law school" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

Design Matters with Debbie Millman

10:04 min | 2 years ago

"new york law school" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

"Movement and community of women. Yes that was so wildly excited. The first night we ever the first day we ever did which was at the hammerstein ballroom. Which seats twenty. Five hundred people right. I had invited all these amazing actors to perform it and no one had done it at that. Point and marissa's today had come to see me performed with joanne woodward. Paul newman if you could imagine yes okay. And i went to her first because she had seen it and she said yes and once i had then i could go to the next person say but melissa doing in there like all right i'll do it and then i'd say versatile may and will be coberger doing event and it grew and grew but the night we okay. It was totally imagine in the nineties. Totally packed twenty five hundred people. Boy george was there. it was just like the wildest thing you've ever seen. None of these women had ever said vagina publicly. Have ever done anything like that. So everyone was like vomiting and just completely freaked out by stage and every time one woman would go out and do her monologue. Everyone would be watching on this monitor. They all hold hands. They all scream and yell and they. It was the most beautiful sisterhood of support of love. And i'll never forget glenn who up so much. I had asked her to do the reclaiming counties because it was really about taking word back and of course she was like what are you crazy. My mother will never talk to me and she hung up the phone and she called me back two weeks later and she said i really get it. I just want you to go out there with little glasses being all waspy and by the end of it just want you to and she did and when you open that word and by the end the entire twenty five hundred people were screaming and it was like the roof of that theatre blew off that night. It blew off and to me. It was the beginning of the movement to end violence against women and girls and there have been many women of course working on it before me and we're always in a line and a chain of sister. After sister supporting sister right. Our movement goes back to african american women who were fighting slavery right. It goes back to. That's when that movement began and then there's each stage of are now we've moved into me too but to be in that movement for that chunk of years doing the play spreading the play getting women to share their stories talk about their stories. Break the silence. It was glorious us. It was it was it was on detroit. I don't even know that. I could have had that dream. You know you founded nonprofit. You mentioned vide after the vagina. Monologues debuted and this effort as well as your subsequent effort with one billion rising. You're building the city of joy in the congo. It's been a force in the global fight against gender violence and yes there have been other movements and we hope that will never be a time when we don't need these movements. But you have done more than most. You've raised over one hundred million dollars to help her advocate sexual violence. You've helped lead the conversation. Educate millions of people about these topics even powered women all over the world. What made you decide to congo. Well i been in bosnia. i had been in kosovo. I've been in haney. I've been enough ghanistan. I didn't war-zones where women were being systematically raped as a tactic of war. And i was really obsessed fast with it to be honest with you because i could see the pattern spreading as a tactic to destroy women all over the world but what happened was the un someone from the un called me and asked me if i would interview dr dini mcgee and i was so shocked that anyone from the un was calling me. And i actually didn't wanna do it. Because we were already working in afghanistan and bosnia and haiti. And all these places and we just didn't have the bandwidth but then i read his resume and i was so moved by what he was doing as gynecologist. What the fight. He was in the midst of that. I agree to interview him. And it turned out to be this amazing interview at new york law school for like five hundred people and you know when you meet someone and you feel like they are on some level of transcendent radiance and and what the work. They're doing so mind-blowing. I mean is is. We're legally bloodshot from all the hardest. He had been seeing and he just said to me at the end of the interview. Would you come which you help us. You're the only person i know. Who's talking about the china's and i'm trying to talk about what's happening to the vaginas of women in congo. And if you could come if you could be with us maybe you could help. Bring the word out. Maybe just could you comment in. So i did and I have to say that trip to the congo on the trip to panzi hospital. What i saw there was out of. It was just the most devastating Shocking intersectional reality of racism. Colonialism capitalism sexism merging in this horrifying cauldron at all of it was being enacted on the bodies. Women there were. There were hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of women in the hospital. All of whom had been rigged. All of whom were leaking. All of whose bodies were destroyed from rape and he was there by himself trying to figure out what to do. And i don't know. I can honestly say i think my brain was shattered like it. There was a shattering. It was the beginning. It was the beginning of another whole. I would say stage of my life. I mean dr. Mcguigan has gone on to win the nobel peace prize and christine schuler. Describe her who was is the most extraordinary activist leader woman who i met when i went there. We all became three of us became very very close and decided that we would create displays called the city of joy. And it's been one of the most beautiful beautiful experiences of my life and it's truly turning pain to power. It's a place of radiance. You've said that inside the stories of the unspeakable violence inside. The women of the congo was determination and life force. You had never witnessed for our listeners. That might not be aware. Can you talk a little bit about city of joy and what it is and how it came to be when the city of joy is in bukavu which is eastern congo where most of the conflict has been. We opened it ten years ago. Christine and i spent weeks and weeks going everywhere asking the women what they wanted. What they wanted was a place where they could heal where they could transform where they could learn where they could become leaders and so it became our desire to build a place called city of joy where the women could literally turn their paint power and it hosts on ninety women for six months at a time. Everything is paid for their food their comfort they're healing on they go through incredible Program of therapy through art through theater through dance through music and through basic therapy but it's all groups there because everything is all healing is done in community. They learned their rights. They learned permaculture. They learned self defense and they go from being victims to survivors to leaders. Over the course of six months we were able to get this amazing land so we have three hundred and fifty. Hector's called the world farm where women than go afterwards to become permaculture cultural farmers and they learn how to really be the best kind of farmers in their own communities. Some stay at the farm many go back to their communities where we help them buy and purchase land where they then begin their own collectives in their communities with other women who graduate from city of joy and they then begin to create these farming communities and they become leaders in their community where they bring the school the skills and the teachings that they've learned it city of joy and where they vet other women who can they send to city of joy. So it's this very very eko friendly system of people who graduate bringing other people in who bring other people in an and at sisterhood. Passing onto sisterhood. And we've now graduated. I think fourteen hundred women and is unbelievable. The women are just doing so well. You know they've become leaders. They've become they run collectives they've become Nurses they've become doctors they become you know And what. I'm most proud of is city of joy is owned by the congolese. It's run by the congolese. There are no outsiders who work there. They have professionalized entire staff. It's there's it's completely theirs and you know our our work on this side of the Water is to find the money to keep them going. But you know it's it's been you know one of the most beautiful beautiful beautiful projects. And i think now after these years were ready to start to see whether we can start developing more city of joys in other parts of the world the i mean talk about a purpose in life. What what have the women of the congo and the work that you've done they're taught you..

congo un hammerstein ballroom joanne woodward dr dini mcgee bosnia Boy george Paul newman marissa panzi hospital melissa vagina christine schuler glenn haney new york law school bukavu kosovo detroit
"new york law school" Discussed on The Erick Erickson Show

The Erick Erickson Show

03:22 min | 2 years ago

"new york law school" Discussed on The Erick Erickson Show

"Of new york would would driving out of the city like he drove the money. Changers out but manhattan. Now has a new. Da alvin brag and alvin. Brag is essentially wants to do like the district attorney in san francisco and not prosecute crying. This is from national review. Kyle smith alvin brag has won the democratic primary for. Da of new york county manhattan by promise not to prosecute minor crimes such as trespassing resisting arrest. Turnstile jumping and traffic offenses in a debate. Bragg who previously prosecuted state crimes in the attorney general's office in federal ones in the southern district of new york boasted that he had only ever prosecuted one misdemeanor. He charged some men for blocking access to a planned. Parenthood office non incarcerations the outcome for every case except those with charges of homicide or the death of the victim a class b violent felony which deadly weapon causes physical injury or felony sex offenses said his campaign material in an overwhelmingly democratic city. Brag is almost certain to win the general election against a republican opponent in the fall. His proposals threatened to be yet. Another catastrophe for manhattan. The economic heart of the region by bringing san francisco's laws affair prosecution philosophy to new york city and promoting social decay in the name of social justice. A co director of the racial justice project of new york law school brags graduate of harvard. Who claims that police pointed guns at him six times before he was twenty one. When he was growing up at harlem he specifically rejects the broken windows model policing whose implementation a company. Twenty years of steep declines in the crime rate under rudy giuliani and mike bloomberg. Now that the crime rate a spiking in the last two years murders are up forty three percent shootings of doubled. He frames crime primarily as a quality of life issue for criminals. While calling for reduced police funding bragg said he will not seek life sentences and opposes the new york police department's gang database instead. He suggests starting a database on new york police department misconduct. He wants to hire a public defender in his office. Public vendors don't feel the need to welcome prosecutors into their office and when it comes to parole brag says he will default on the side of the applicant. Instead of the state in other words she wants to keep the crime wave boy so new york city just elected. Eric adams to be there mayor. I mean yeah. There'll be general election but he's going to be the mayor and law and order. It wants to crack down on at the same time. The white folks of manhattan have decided to put up a da. Who is going to be soft on crime and not prosecute anyone. How is this gonna work exactly. I suspect we're going to see the. Da try to prosecute the mayor and get rid of the mayor and put in a someone who who's weak on crime. This is going to complicate the democrats effort to make sure everyone knows. They're actually tough on crime. She'll be fantastic to watch. but man. i have no desire given the situation to go to new york city where the. Da is.

manhattan Da alvin brag Kyle smith alvin new york police department new york county racial justice project of new san francisco new york alvin mike bloomberg Bragg new york city rudy giuliani harlem Eric adams bragg Da
"new york law school" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

WNYC 93.9 FM

05:03 min | 2 years ago

"new york law school" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

"Will lose one seat in the House of Representatives as we're reporting, And yet, the Census Bureau said the state could have held onto that seat if it had just 89 more residents. That's less than 100. How are we supposed to feel about that? Well, we feel terrible that when you freeze the populations and all all the other states and at 89 more people to New York, you know that results in a loss of a congressional district. But the bright side is that New York has stemmed. It's slide since World War two of losing between two and five district's every 10 years. So there's some. I guess you'd call it consolation in that and hopefully the state will have Ah, robust economic recovery post pandemic and we'll see the numbers strength and as we move into the next decade, why is this state losing the population? Well, the population growth in New York has slowed down a bit, especially since 2016 after Donald Trump closed the doors and immigration and the immigration and the population influx in the Southwest, and the and the south has increased at a greater pace. So what does losing one congressional see? What does it mean for New York's cloud in Washington and four of New Yorkers getting the federal aid they pay for? Well, the federal aid numbers, you know, are all driven by different kinds of formula. So this you no, no, no. One size fits all. But you know that, of course, is a challenge in terms of the loss of a congressional district. You know, every See that New York guests provides for more power in voting in Congress in memberships on committees potential chairmanships US it all It all adds up and your New York is, after all, the Empire State. We need to do all we can to maintain that status. Hear what may what may be the $64 billion question. Do we know yet where that health seat will come from? Did population grows slowest in New York City or upstate? Well, the population growth has been slower, upstate New York Most of the increase that we saw between 2010 and 2016 until the you know the immigration numbers were cut drastically by the Trump administration. Losses or more reflective upstate New York. But New York is now looking to use new kinds of criteria to drug congressional District Lines. District's much you must be much more compact than they have been his smaller in size, tighter and shape. It's always too hard to tell where that Woz might occur. This political process ahead of us where AH, a commission has to recommend new lines to the Legislature by the end of the year. Which the Legislature can accept or reject, of course, subject to the governor's approval. I usually say that those who think they know what's going to happen now are the least involved in the least informed You know, Jeff in 2014, New York voters approved the redistricting process that was meant to remove the kind of partisanship you talking about from this equation. So how so? And how a political will it really be? Well, there's the new commission that the voters approved in 2014 is just getting underway of the commission just received several million dollars in funding from the state legislature. You know, it has about eight or nine months ahead of it to meet to hold out reach hearings to listen to the public to develop a draft plan by September and to report a final plan recommendation to the Legislature by the end of the year, so this process has to play itself out. There are four Democrats for Republicans and two Independent members of the commission makes for a 10 member commission with no tie breaking vote, so it's got a challenge ahead of it to be able to reach consensus on a plan. I say we know Juries, he will keep its 12 representatives, according to the early census results, we'll live district's also have to be redrawn, though. Yes, every state's congressional district have to be redrawn. To comply with the so called one person, one vote requirement. That means that each district especially if the congressional District level must be equally populace in numbers, So the District's in New Jersey. Although not changing in the total delegation size will need to be reshaped, re drawn to reflect population equality. All right. Jeffrey Weiss is a senior fellow, An adjunct professor at New York law School. Jeff, Good to talk to you. Thank you so much. Okay. You're welcome. Good talking with you Take her. April is.

New York City Donald Trump 2014 Jeffrey Weiss $64 billion New York House of Representatives Jeff September 12 representatives 2016 New Jersey Congress Juries World War two Washington Census Bureau Republicans April 2010
"new york law school" Discussed on WCBM 680 AM

WCBM 680 AM

01:50 min | 3 years ago

"new york law school" Discussed on WCBM 680 AM

"Constitutional law. Expert New York Law school professor Donnie Government says that would be a real long shot would really be sort of groundbreaking for the vice president of majority the president's Cabinet to step in and actually state that the president is unable to perform the responsibilities of his office. He says. The 25th amendment generally invoked only when a president is temporarily incapacitated due to a medical emergency. And tomorrow, President Trump will head to Texas. Some say it's hope he spends his last days trying to trumpet his policy accomplishments, beginning with a trip to Alamo, Texas on Tuesday to highlight border wall construction and efforts to curb illegal immigration correspondent Julie Walker U. S Customs and Border Protection reports. 452 miles of new Border wall has been completed. World Health Organization. Experts visit China this week investigating the origins of the coronavirus correspondent Charles Teledesic's says Chinese authorities finally agreed to the visit after months of delay. Australia and other countries have called for a major probe into the origins of the virus, prompting angry responses from Beijing. But China's disease, experts say They've been currently busy with multiple small scale virus clusters on our breaks that have been reported in the last couple of weeks. The Foreign Ministry says. Our experts are wholeheartedly in the stressful battle to control the epidemic. Breaking her silence on the violence. Melania Trump, saying that she is disappointed and disheartened by the deadly riot at the U. S. Capitol. Wall Street's out features down 282 points Mass at features off 1 17. Or on these stories, town hall dot com. Tell me why really factor is so successful in lowering or eliminating pain? I'm often asked that question. Beatings have child. But the father and son, founders of.

President Trump vice president new Border wall Donnie Government China New York Law school Texas Charles Teledesic World Health Organization Alamo Cabinet professor Beijing Julie Walker U. U. S. Capitol Australia
Trump caps judiciary remake with choice of Barrett for court

AP News Radio

00:56 sec | 3 years ago

Trump caps judiciary remake with choice of Barrett for court

"Amy Coney Barrett's replacement of Ruth better Ginsburg would represent the most dramatic ideological change on the Supreme Court in nearly thirty years it would also cement conservative dominance of the court for years to come Gloria Browne Marshall professor of constitutional law at John Jay college says based on Barrett's record and what she has stated one thing is certain she was going to use the inroads made by Ruth Bader Ginsburg two on duty and roads made for women New York law school constitutional law professor Donna Edwards Vince says one of the open questions about Barrett is the extent to which she intends to follow story decisis which is the established prior decisions of the court economy Barrett's position specifically on roe versus Wade is unclear certainly as an appellate judge she dissented in number of cases that upheld abortion restrictions I'm Julie Walker

Amy Coney Barrett Supreme Court Professor John Jay College Ruth Bader Ginsburg Donna Edwards Vince ROE Julie Walker Gloria Browne Marshall New York Wade
Trump caps judiciary remake with choice of Barrett for court

AP News Radio

00:56 sec | 3 years ago

Trump caps judiciary remake with choice of Barrett for court

"Amy Coney Barrett's replacement of Ruth better Ginsburg would represent the most dramatic ideological change on the Supreme Court in nearly thirty years it would also cement conservative dominance of the court for years to come Gloria Browne Marshall professor of constitutional law at John Jay college says based on Barrett's record and what she has stated one thing is certain she was going to use the inroads made by Ruth Bader Ginsburg two on duty and roads made for women New York law school constitutional law professor Donna Edwards Vince says one of the open questions about Barrett is the extent to which she intends to follow story decisis which is the established prior decisions of the court economy Barrett's position specifically on roe versus Wade is unclear certainly as an appellate judge she dissented in number of cases that upheld abortion restrictions I'm Julie Walker

Amy Coney Barrett Supreme Court Professor John Jay College Ruth Bader Ginsburg Donna Edwards Vince ROE Julie Walker Gloria Browne Marshall New York Wade
Bon Jovi, The Cars Rock Their Way Into Hall of Fame

Pro-Tech A/C & Heating's Around the House

01:14 min | 6 years ago

Bon Jovi, The Cars Rock Their Way Into Hall of Fame

"Your health issuing company and other factors not available in all states it was a reunion to remember that after centenarian showed up to her college get together in new york city florence zimmermann joined her fellow hunter college alumni at the school on that happens upper east side that's part of the city university of new york zimmerman is a retired new york city judge and was the oldest of a group of alumni ages sixty six and up florence who's one hundred and three finished college in nineteen thirty seven a later became one of the first female graduates of new york law school the first class dark college wonderful zimmerman was presented with a framed photo of herself as a student she says hunter prepared her very very well for her professional life todd abc news last night rock royalty was on full display descending on the shores of lake erie for the rock and roll hall of fame induction ceremony in cleveland ohio abc's matt wolf was there welcome to the rock and roll hall of fame thirty third annual induction ceremony rock and roll hall of fame president greg harris there ushering in the class of two thousand eighteen i up from the state of new jersey bon jovi all the fans who supported this we share this honour with you the cars also getting in brodmann recco cassock acknowledging some family inspiration i'd like to thank my wheelchair grandmother for forcing me to sing also.

Matt Wolf Brodmann Recco Greg Harris President Trump Todd Abc City University Of New York Hunter College New York Florence Zimmermann ABC Ohio Cleveland Lake Erie Hunter Zimmerman New York Law School