I started my career as an Assistant Attorney General in New York enforcing the Martin Act and prosecuting real estate syndicators. After five years I left the Attorney General’s office to go into private practice. Within two years I became General Counsel to a regional broker dealer. That broker dealer grew during the five years that I was General Counsel from a sales force of 200 with 12 employees to a sales force of 800 with over 100 employees. By 1985 that broker dealer was one of the largest independent contractor broker dealers in the country. In 1985 I joined the Morristown law firm of Schenck, Price, Smith & King as a partner. While there I did transactional work forming and then representing a small regional broker dealer, drafting private placement offerings for several start-up companies, and representing clients on securities matters.
In 1991 I established my own firm to concentrate on securities litigation. I was then able to represent clients on a contingency basis. I continued to do transactional work and in 1993 and 1994 I took a golf clothing manufacturer public. The next year I successfully represented the president of a public computer services company in defending a hostile proxy takeover. In 1996 I drafted a private placement memorandum to raise in excess of $20,000,000 to purchase, develop and operate a private golf club in Croton-on-Hudson, New York. I continued to represent the developer until the Offering was completed in 1999 with the club fully subscribed and the property fully developed.
From 1996 to 1998, when a global settlement agreement was achieved, I was retained by an insurance carrier as co-counsel to defend a registered representative who sold in excess of $14,000,000 in lease interests issued by promoters who were alleged to have perpetrated a $970,000,000 securities fraud.
In 2000 I received a significant recovery in a joint state court and arbitration proceeding representing the estate of an elderly securities fraud victim. A total of $946,715.95 was received by award in just the arbitration, after 17 days of hearings.
In November 2007 I argued and won an appeal in the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirming an arbitration award I won years earlier.
Admitted to practice law in New York and New Jersey.
Also admitted in the New York Southern District Court, New York Eastern District Court, New Jersey District Court and the Second Circuit Court of Appeals.

My wife, Kathi, and I at the installation banquet for the Bar Association