International Arbitrators, Litigators Setting Themselves Apart
Florida attorneys concentrating in international litigation and arbitration can soon set themselves apart from local and national competition.
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Florida attorneys concentrating in international litigation and arbitration can soon set themselves apart from local and national competition.
In law school interviews, it’s important to explain why you’re a strong candidate, experts say.
Sequor Law, the Miami firm formed in 2017 as the successor to Astigarraga Davis, on Monday hired insolvency and litigation lawyers Leyza Florin Blanco and Fernando Menendez Jr. as partners.
This June, we welcomed two new powerhouse attorneys as partners of Sequor Law. We sat down with Leyza Florin Blanco and Fernando Menendez to discuss what led them to our firm, their viewpoints on their unique practice areas, and their interests and community involvement.
Sequor Law has added two former GrayRobinson PA shareholders, including one of the founding members of that firm’s Miami office, to its own Miami-based bankruptcy practice, the firm has announced.
A recent change to a state law concerning the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in Florida may make it easier to avoid payment of valid debts.
Two weeks after its UK sister company filed for Chapter 15 protection in New Jersey, the joint liquidators of a Gibraltar-registered payday loans business embroiled in fraud and mismanagement allegations, have sought recognition of their appointment in Miami.
Sequor Attorneys Arnie Lacayo and Nyana Abreu Miller have been recognized in the top 50 Rising Legal Stars by Latinvex for Latin America.
Burford Capital, the world’s largest litigation finance firm, announced this week that it had raised another $250 million in a span of just 24 hours, the latest sign that litigation funding is still booming.
In the fall of 2016, Roger Ailes was by all accounts a very wealthy man. Fox News had just pushed him out from the company he built over allegations of sexual harassment, but paid him $40 million for his troubles. So he did what many other rich retirees before him have done: he bought a house in Florida.