Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Wiggins & Dana LLP

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Jonathan_Freiman
Excerpt:
Jonathan Freiman "d
ivides his time between Yale Law School and the law firm of
 Wiggin & Dana. In 2003, he co-founded, with Dean Harold Koh, the National Litigation Project of the Allard K. Lowenstein International Human Rights Clinic at Yale and has spent the last five years there working on litigation addressing the balance between national security and civil liberty after 9/11. He has spoken on post-9/11 and other human rights issues in Europe, Canada, and the United States, at fora including the Federalist Society, a U.N. Expert Roundtable, PBS, and the BBC. As a partner at Wiggin & Dana, Jonathan represents clients in complex litigation and appeals. He has been listed in the last three editions of The Best Lawyers in America for his work as an appellate lawyer.
"While a student at the law school, Jonathan served as the Student Director of the Lowenstein Clinic, where he shared the Florida Supreme Court Award for Excellence in Pro Bono Lawyering and an award from the Cuban American Bar Association. He was a co-recipient of the Albom Prize for excellence in appellate advocacy related to a clinical program, a Keck Foundation Fellow in Legal Ethics, a Senior Editor of the Yale Law Journal, and a research assistant to Professors Paul Kahn and Harold Koh. Following graduation in 1998, Jonathan was a Visiting Lecturer at Yale College, where he taught a transitional justice seminar, Collective Violence and Memory. Just prior to the Bernstein Fellowship year, Jonathan clerked for the Honorable Louis H. Pollak, former Dean of Yale Law School. He spent his fellowship year examining ways to integrate international human rights law into the core legal curriculum, then remained in New Haven as a Schell Fellow at the Law School, where he and a team of students from the Lowenstein International Human Rights Clinic sp
ent two years researching and analyzing the law and practice of governmental interception of refugees at sea." [1]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Lieberman
Excerpt:
Lieberman was born in Stamford, Connecticut, the son of Marcia (née Manger) and Henry Lieberman.[6] He received a dual Bachelor of Arts in political science and economics from Yale University in 1964 and was the first member of his family to graduate from college. At Yale he was editor of the Yale Daily News and a member of the Elihu Club. He later attended Yale Law School, receiving his law degree in 1967. After graduation from law school, Lieberman worked as a lawyer for the New Haven-based law firm
Wiggin & Dana LLP.

http://www.tamcoforensicgroup.com/Sec%20Fra/SecFra.htm?gclid=CKaNiu_C66kCFeUaQgodlwExXA
Excerpt:
In 2009, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve engaged our firm principal, Thomas A. Myers, to develop and chair a week-long symposium regarding structured finance products in Washington, D. C. for representatives of each of the major federal banking regulatory agencies to discuss issues including CDO valuation, credit analysis, modeling of the cash flow waterfall, securitization issues including credit enhancement and subordination, credit default swap credit events, the role of the credit rating agencies, and other relevant issues.

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