Widely respected trial lawyer, negotiator and presidential advisor will act as a neutral for legal disputes
LOS ANGELES – May 17, 2021 – Signature Resolution, a leader in alternative dispute resolution, announced today that Ambassador Robert C. O Brien has joined the firm as a neutral mediator. O Brien joins Signature Resolution after decades of serving as a trial lawyer, negotiator, and an advisor to three presidential ad
Widely respected trial lawyer, negotiator and presidential advisor will act as a neutral for legal disputes
LOS ANGELES â May 17, 2021 â Signature Resolution, a leader in alternative dispute resolution, announced today that Ambassador Robert C. O’Brien has joined the firm as a neutral mediator. O’Brien joins Signature Resolution after decades of serving as a trial lawyer, negotiator, and an advisor to three presidential administrations.
“I am pleased to be working with Signature Resolution,” said O’Brien. “I know that at Signature Resolution, I can use my experience as a lawyer and diplomat to assist parties to achieve fair and satisfactory solutions to their disputes.â
Members of Congress and the Federal Trade Commission FTC pushed for emergency legislation, the Consumer Protection and Recovery Act, HR 2668 would amend Section 13(b) of the FTC Act to explicitly reaffirm the FTC’s longstanding authority to obtain injunctive and equitable relief
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The son of migrant workers became California’s first Latino Supreme Court justice
UCLA School of Law Joshua Rich |
May 12, 2021
The loss of former California Supreme Court justice and UCLA School of Law professor Cruz Reynoso, who died on May 7 at age 90, has left the UCLA Law community saddened.
Members fondly recall a formidable but thoroughly humble and kind collaborator and mentor who rose from a childhood as the son of migrant workers to become California’s first Latino Supreme Court justice and then a treasured UCLA Law professor for 10 years in the 1990s.
“Cruz Reynoso was beloved by generations of UCLA Law students who benefited from his extensive practice and judicial experience,” says Professor Laura E. Gómez, a close colleague. “He inspired Latino students and young lawyers by sharing his personal story often punctuated with phrases and truisms in Spanish as one of 11 children whose parents migrated from Mexico to rural Orange County, where h