Faculty in the News - Archive
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Professor Michael GreenbergerDetroit Free Press - Michael Greenberger, JD, former director of the CFTC's Division of Trading and Markets and professor at the School of Law, said end users would "wind up having a much safer derivative experience" if both they and the bank selling them the derivatives put up margin money.
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Monday, September 19, 2011
Associate Dean Mark GraberWYPR-FM - Mark Graber, JD, associate dean for research and faculty development and professor at the School of Law, discussed on the "Maryland Morning" program the intersection of first amendment rights to expression and the need for cities to maintain order in public areas.
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Monday, September 19, 2011
Professor Peter HollandThe Daily Record - The formula encourages out-of-court settlements by discouraging plaintiffs from asking for too much and defendants from offering too little, said Peter Holland, JD, a visiting professor at the Francis King Carey School of Law.
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Monday, September 19, 2011
Professor Peter HollandAccounts Receivable - Peter Holland, JD, MA, who runs a School of Law clinic that specializes in debt, said in a blog about the debt-buying business, "This is a $100 billion-dollar-a-year industry--the sale of 'accounts receivable.' It's created a crisis in our small-claims courts. There's tens of thousands of cases filed without proof just in Maryland. Nationwide, it's in the tens of millions."
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Sunday, September 18, 2011
Professor Maxwell ChibunduBaltimore Sun - The Housing Authority of Baltimore City often cites a lack of funds to explain its refusal to pay nearly $12 million in court-ordered judgments to former public housing residents. But the city's public housing agency has paid private lawyers about $4 million since 2005 to defend against those lead-paint claims. Maxwell Chibundu, JD, professor, School of Law, said he did not think the housing authority should be billed for such an expense.
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