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Profile Visibility  | | #13,272 in weekly profile views out of 55,400 lawyers in New York, New York | | #190,627 in weekly profile views out of 968,464 total lawyers Overall |
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| Practice Areas | Litigation; Class Actions; Shareholder Law; Accounting Malpractice Law | | | Education | Northwestern University, J.D., 1991, Duke University, B.A., cum laude, 1988 | | | Admitted | 1992, New York and U.S. District Court, Southern and Eastern Districts of New York | |
| Memberships | New York State and American Bar Associations. | | | Born | New York, N.Y., June 7, 1966 | | | ISLN | 901240246 | |
Documents by this lawyer on Martindale.com
A Lesson In Institutional Activism: The Texaco Discrimination LawsuitSteven B. Singer, September 18, 2009, previously published by The Advocate for Institutional Investors, First Quarter 1999 on January 1999 Leo Durocher, the famously pugnacious baseball manager, was once asked why he remained so combative throughout his entire career. Leo peered up at the scribe who dared to ask him such a question and sneered in response, "because nice guys finish last."
Having Your Cake and Eating It Too: Or Recovering Costs and Expenses While Serving as Lead PlaintiffSteven B. Singer, September 18, 2009, previously published by The Advocate for Institutional Investors, Fourth Quarter 1999 on December 1999 It is a fundamental principle of class action litigation that a class representative may not recover more than his or her fair share of a settlement. While this is in accord with the notion that the class representative is a fiduciary to the absent class members, and cannot put his or her interests... |
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