Monday, January 16, 2012

Siegel, Teitelbaum, Evans and Goodman, please help us

Kill NY PML Sec 105 in Court or via an Opinion from Attorney General that he will not defend the constitutionality of NY PML Sec 105 and that it does not apply to the OTBs, public benefit corporations.
See

Open On 1st Palm Sunday, Otb Rakes In $2m - New York Daily News

articles.nydailynews.com/.../18220335_1_racing-and-wagering-boar...
Open On 1st Palm Sunday, Otb Rakes In $2m. BY JERRY BOSSERT DAILY NEWS SPORTS WRITER. Monday, April 14, 2003. New York City Off-Track Betting ...

Bettors need to be able to bet and OTB workers need the choice of whether to work or not while they still have a job. eg NYC OTB, bankrupt. Suffolk OTB filed or bankruptcy.

Please help!




January 15, 2012, 2:30 pm

A New Law Firm With 161 Years of Experience

With 161 years of collective legal experience, four seasoned practitioners have decided to start their own firm in Manhattan. From left to right: Norman Siegel, a lawyer; Herbert Teitelbaum, a lawyer; Saralee Evans, a retired Supreme Court justice; and Emily Jane Goodman, a Supreme Court justice.Hiroko Masuike/The New York TimesWith 161 years of collective legal experience, four seasoned practitioners have decided to start their own firm in Manhattan. From left: lawyers Norman Siegel and Herbert Teitelbaum; Saralee Evans, a retired Supreme Court judge; and Emily Goodman, a Supreme Court judge.
Norman Siegel and Herbert Teitelbaum were classmates at New York University law school. Mr. Siegel is married to Saralee Evans, a former acting State Supreme Court justice. Their wedding ceremony was performed by Emily Jane Goodman, a Supreme Court justice. They all come from Brooklyn. Collectively, they have 161 years of legal experience and a record of impact in and out of court. And now, when most of their contemporaries are contemplating retirement or have already quit, the four of them are starting a new law firm.
“I know lots of lawyers of my generation who’ve been put in a situation where they have to retire,” Mr. Siegel said. “I’m as energetic as ever, and I’m much more experienced. I know which issues are viable and which are policy issues. Herb is a better negotiator than I am. The two judges give us credibility.”
Besides, Ms. Goodman said, “golf seems so boring.”
Mr. Siegel, Mr. Teitelbaum and Ms. Evans (Ms. Goodman is of counsel to the firm for now) will open shop on Madison Avenue in February. The partners have already hired an associate and look forward to training other young lawyers.
Though they will take on a range of matters, they plan to make civil liberties cases a major focus of their work.
“While Norman and I have more of an insight on one side of the bench, getting insight into the other side is extremely valuable,” Mr. Teitelbaum said. “In addition to commercial work, we will have a docket of matters that will have a substantial impact on the lives of individuals and communities; not many other firms have that as a focus.”
As the former executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, Mr. Siegel is a seasoned veteran of legal skirmishes with the government. He is famous for challenging government’s powers of eminent domain in the taking of private property and curbs on free speech and assembly. He and Mr. Teitelbaum are suing the city over the confiscation of nearly 3,000 books when Occupy Wall Street demonstrators were evicted in November from Zuccotti Park in Lower Manhattan.
“We now have four people who could litigate that,” Mr. Siegel said. “If I was by myself, I might not be able to take it on.”
Mr. Teitelbaum has handled environmental litigation, headed the securities litigation branch at Bryan Cave and was executive director of the state Commission on Public Integrity. (He resigned in 2009 after the state inspector general accused him of leaking confidential information, a charge that he and his colleagues flatly denied.)
Ms. Evans served as an acting Supreme Court justice until she retired last month. The resignation of Ms. Goodman, an elected justice, takes effect next month. Before becoming judges, their practice included employment discrimination, matrimonial issues, public interest and cultural law. As judges, they helped settle a broad range of cases.
“Being a judge is the loneliest job in the world,” Ms. Goodman said, which was another reason she and Ms. Evans found the new law firm so appealing. “Also, we all love advocacy and as judges we don’t experience that.”
“The law can be used to effect change,” Ms. Evans said. “We each see that in different ways.”
“We won’t be shy about litigating against government,” Mr. Siegel said.
Or anyone else. He and Mr. Teitelbaum have already successfully represented a synagogue in their old Brighton Beach neighborhood whose congregants were concerned about noise from nearby rock concerts, and they are handling the case of a young Orthodox man accusing a rabbi of sexual abuse.
“None of us is a wallflower,” Mr. Siegel said.
Mr. Siegel and Mr. Teitelbaum are 68. Ms. Evans is 70, and Ms. Goodman is 71.
“Why would I want to retire?” Mr. Siegel said. “I’m at the peak of my game.”
“A lot of people want to retire because they don’t like the practice of law,” Mr. Teitelbaum said. “We love it.”

 NY PML
§  105. Supplementary regulatory powers of the board.  Notwithstanding
  any inconsistent provision of law,  the  board  through  its  rules  and
  regulations  or  in  allotting  dates  for  racing  or in licensing race
  meetings at which pari-mutuel betting is permitted  shall  be  empowered
  to:  (i)  permit racing at which pari-mutuel betting is conducted on any
  or all dates from the first day of January through the thirty-first  day
  of December, inclusive of Sundays but exclusive of December twenty-fifth
  and  Palm  Sunday  and  Easter  Sunday; and (ii) fix minimum and maximum
  charges for admission at any race meeting.

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