Wednesday 15 March 2017

Richard Meirowitz | How to Choosing a Criminal Defense Attorney


A person charged with a crime, particularly for the first time, may be in a real quandary. How do they find the best criminal attorney for my case? Many people will have family members or friends who know lawyers but is that the best attorney for their case? The Internet is saturated with attorneys claiming to be experts but how reliable are their websites? This article briefly outlines some of the factors you want to consider in choosing a criminal defense attorney.

  •  Find an attorney with experience. See how long the he or she has practiced law. Ensure they specialize in criminal law. Examine their website and pay particular attention to the types of cases he or she has handled.



Hire an attorney with jury trial experience. Asked the attorney how many jury trials he or she has conducted. An attorney with jury trial experience provide you with the greatest opportunity for an acquittal if you are not guilty or if the prosecution cannot prove their case; and, the maximum leverage in negotiating a plea in a case in which you are guilty. Judges and prosecutors know those who are not afraid to try a case; those that carry the most respect and are offered the best dispositions for their client.

Ensure that the attorney has tried your type of case. Some may only specialize in murder cases; that is all they do. They may not be the best for your drunk driving or your drug case. Be sure that the attorney you have selected has successfully defended a case similar to yours.



Make sure the attorney you are hiring will be the attorney who handles your case. If you go to a large law firm you may speak to a partner who specializes in your type of case; however, that partner may pass your case to an associate with less experience. Be sure the partner will be representing you in court.

Look for a professional website. A successful attorney will have a professional looking website. If the attorney is a professional he will carry himself that way in all respects, including the way he presents himself to you, in the courtroom and on his website.


Asked another attorney. Attorneys in private practice know attorneys who specialized in all fields of law. If you have a family attorney that handles your real estate or probate matters that attorney can probably identify an excellent criminal attorney.

You get what you pay for. It is not always wise to find the cheapest attorney. Attorneys with little or no experience will often charge far less money than those attorneys with experience. Some attorneys will take a case with no intention of considering a trial. They will review it with the sole intent of having you plead guilty; the attorney should explore all avenues, including motions to dismiss, motions to suppress and trial, before having you change your plea to guilty.

Saturday 21 January 2017

Richard Meirowitz | 7 qualities every good lawyer should have

The skills you need for your ideal career are something that you can work on and develop over time. As they say: practice makes perfect! Here are a few that you should consider working on if you aspire to be a successful lawyer:


1) Good communication skills

Lawyers must be orally articulate, have good written communication skills and also be good listeners. In order to argue convincingly in the courtroom before juries and judges, good public speaking skills are essential. Communication and speaking skills can be developed during your studies by taking part in activities such as mooting or general public speaking.
Lawyers must also be able to write clearly, persuasively and concisely, as they must produce a variety of legal documents.
But it’s not all about projection. To be able to analyse what clients tell them or follow a complex testimony, a lawyer must have good listening skills.

2) Judgement 

The ability to draw reasonable, logical conclusions or assumptions from limited information is essential as a lawyer.
You must also be able to consider these judgements critically, so that you can anticipate potential areas of weakness in your argument that must be fortified against.
Similarly, you must be able to spot points of weakness in an oppositions argument. Decisiveness is also a part of judgement. There will be a lot of important judgement calls to make and little time for sitting on the fence.

3) Analytical skills

Both the study and practice of law involve absorbing large quantities of information, then having to distil it into something manageable and logical.
At times, there will be more than one reasonable conclusion, or more than one precedent applicable to resolving a situation.
A lawyer must therefore have the evaluative skills in order to choose which is the most suitable.

4) Research skills

Similarly, being able to research quickly and effectively is essential to understanding your clients, their needs, and to preparing legal strategies.
Preparing legal strategies requires absorbing and comprehending large amounts of information, then distilling them down into something manageable and useful.

5) People skills

Law is not an abstract practice. Irrelevant of how well someone does academically, at the end of the day lawyers work with people, on behalf of people, and the decisions that are made effect peoples’ lives.
They must be personable, persuasive and able to read others. This allows them to gauge juror’s reactions and the honesty of witnesses.
This allows them to decide upon the best approach to take in order to achieve the desired outcome: either clients taking their advice or reaching a favourable negotiation with the opposition. Read More.........

Richard Meirowitz | Essential Skills for Aspiring Lawyers

It doesn’t matter how far you are into your studies or your decision-making process; many of the abilities you need to be a good lawyer apply as much to work as a solicitor as a barrister, even if used in different ways, so it makes sense to start thinking about improving them as early as you can. This guide is intended to get you thinking about the kinds of things you’ll need to be able to do as a lawyer. It also provides you with some ideas of the things you can do to bring your talents up to scratch – even if you’re still at school.

1. Taking in lots of information and distilling the key points

This will be relevant whether you’re in a corporate firm reading all the documentation sent over as part of the disclosure process for a sale, or a criminal barrister reading through papers for a court case at short notice. Not only do you have to work out what’s relevant; you also need to be able to clearly explain it to your client or superior so that they understand where they stand. This is especially important if they need to make a decision on it.

 

Doing a law (or indeed any text-based) degree will improve your ability to do this immensely; you will have plenty of reading to do in short spaces of time! For additional practice or before you apply to university, try similar exercises with everyday information. Take a long news article and create a five-bullet summary, or explain something difficult you learnt at school to your parents in twenty seconds.

2. People skills

It cannot be overstated that legal work is client-centric, and that no matter how good you may be at the work you also need to be good at working with people! First seat trainees may not be meeting clients often but they will be expected to work well with the team they are sat with, and barristers rely on their reputation for work, which will inevitably be enhanced by being easy to work with. This isn’t an invitation to be over-personal with people but you do need to be polite, interested and interesting!

 

This is so early up the list because it’s easy to forget about when you think of qualities needed for legal practice, but it should also be the easiest to meet. Be polite to everyone, including staffand show a genuine interest in everyone you meet. The little touches can really help to make a good impression; if you’ve been talking to somebody about their current work, wish them the best of luck with it when you say goodbye.
On a more professional level, lawyers need to be able to listen carefully to any instructions they are given and work with others to come up with suggestions. Team activities at school or group projects at universities will show you the importance of agreeing on what needs to be done, and making sure that everybody knows what their individual tasks are. Take any opportunities to meet new people so that you are not too nervous when you reach university and are invited to dinners or events put on by firms or chambers. This can just be family friends or getting a job in a shop; the idea is just to get you comfortable speaking to new people.

3. Working to a deadline/ planning ahead
 

The first point to note here is that this sometimes just isn’t possible! This however makes it even more crucial that practising lawyers are as ahead on everything as possible so that it is possible to clear the desk for that one thing which is going to take over for the next twenty four hours. As in any walk of life, you need to make sure you are clear on the deadlines for any work you have to do, and prioritise according to those deadlines and how long each task will take. It’s an easy mentality to get into so start now! 

 

There’s no need to remember absolutely everything which needs to be done; keeping a diary is much more reliable. When you reach university especially, an important/urgent matrix is amazingly helpful – make a table with two columns (important/not important) and two rows (urgent/not urgent) and enter your current tasks into the four boxes which are made. It helps prioritise work and especially makes sure you don’t forget about those important tasks which don’t need to be done immediately but do have a future deadline and will take a while to complete. You don’t want to remember about it the day before! Read More........




 


Friday 20 January 2017

Richard Meirowitz | Trump says won't divest from his business while president


U.S. President-elect Donald Trump said on Wednesday he would maintain ownership of his global business empire but hand off control to his two oldest sons while president, an arrangement that watchdogs said would not prevent conflicts of interest in the White House.
Trump told a news conference he would resign from all positions overseeing his hotels, golf courses and hundreds of other businesses and move his assets into a trust to help ensure that he will not consciously take actions as president that would benefit him personally.
Trump, a Republican, is under pressure to distance himself from his businesses before he moves into the White House on Jan. 20. Unlike other U.S. government officials, the president is not required by law to steer clear of conflicts of interest.
"I could actually run my business and run government at the same time. I don't like the way that looks, but I would be able to do that if I wanted to," Trump said.
Ethics experts said the arrangement did not go far enough.
"Mr. Trump's ill-advised course will precipitate scandal and corruption," said Norman Eisen, a former White House ethics adviser under Democratic President Barack Obama.

Walter Shaub, director of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, said on Wednesday in a speech at a Washington think tank that his office recommends Trump "divest his conflicting assets" to avoid conflicts.


Trump appears to be still involved with his business while preparing to take office, saying he had turned down a $2 billion development deal in Dubai he had been offered over the weekend.
The company that made the proposal, DAMAC, confirmed the discussions had taken place.
The Trump Organization will not enter into any new overseas deals while Trump is president and will only undertake domestic projects after a company ethics adviser has approved them, said Trump adviser Sheri Dillon. Details of how the ethics adviser would operate, as well as several other aspects of the arrangements, were not immediately clear.
Trump will only know of those deals if he hears about them through the news media, said Dillon, a lawyer at Morgan Lewis who focuses on tax and ethics.
Trump's daughter, Ivanka, will have no further involvement in managing the organization or her own clothing brand. Ivanka Trump said on her Facebook page that she would take time off to settle her family into their new home in Washington. The president-elect has named her husband, Jared Kushner, to a senior advisory role in the White House.
Since Trump sold all his stocks last year, the Trump trust will hold only business assets and liquid assets such as cash, Dillon said.
A financial disclosure document he filed in May also showed loans from lenders such as Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE) and Ladder Capital (LADR.K). Trump will not have to file a new disclosure form until 2018. Read More...........

Richard Meirowitz | Texas lawyer found dead days after daughter’s suicide accidentally overdosed on cocaine



The Texas lawyer who was found dead just two days after his youngest daughter’s funeral died from an accidental cocaine overdose, officials said.
The Dallas County medical examiner’s office ruled Brian Loncar’s official cause of death as “the toxic effect of cocaine,” describing the manner of death as “accidental.”
The 56-year-old’s high blood pressure and heart disease were listed as secondary causes,WFAA reported.

Loncar, a personal injury attorney who appeared in TV commercials across Texas, was found dead on Dec. 4 inside a Rolls Royce parked in front of his law office.

Two days earlier, Loncar buried his youngest daughter, 16-year-old Grace, who committed suicide on Nov. 25.
“A little over a week ago Brian's miracle baby, Grace, took her own life,” his December obituary read. “As a result, Brian's tremendous heart that carried his family and friends gave out too soon. The stress and pain of losing a child was too much for his heart to bear.”

She would tell her family that she could never feel anything,” her own obituary read. “She couldn't feel all the love from everyone around her.”
Loncar’s firm, Loncar & Associates, was founded in 1988, and operates 11 offices across Texas. The lawyer starred in many of the practice’s commercials, well-known clips that billed him as “The Strong Arm.” Read More.......

Monday 16 January 2017

Richard Meirowitz | UpFront special: What is Obama's legacy?

In this week's UpFront, we speak to former US President Barack Obama adviser Derek Chollet on the legacy of the outgoing president's foreign and security policies.
In the Reality Check, Mehdi Hasan exposes Obama's dark legacy on deportations.
We also talk to Reggie Love, Obama's former personal aide and "body man", on what Obama is like when the cameras are off.
Headliner - How will Obama's legacy be remembered?
On January 20, President Barack Obama hands over the reins of power to President-elect Donald Trump.
Derek Chollet, former director at the National Security Council, spoke to UpFront about Obama's foreign policy decisions and his legacy.
"I think he will be missed," said Chollet, who was also assistant secretary of defense in Obama's administration. "As time goes on, there will be even greater appreciation here in the United States and around the world for many of President Obama's accomplishments in foreign policy."
When asked about Syria, Chollet admitted there were "many failures" by the Obama administration, but pointed out some success.
"Those of us who were involved in the making of Syria policy in the last five years don't look with any pride upon what Syria is today … [but] I think 1,300 tonnes of chemical weapons out of Syria is good for the world, good for us," says Obama's former adviser.
Chollet also rejected allegations by former State Department colleague Frederic Hof, who claimed Obama was a "failed president" because of Syria, and that his policy was influenced by accommodating Iran to keep the nuclear deal intact.
"I don't think there's any evidence of that, despite what former colleagues may assert," said Chollet. "I don't see that as in any way connected to any of the policy decisions on Syria."
On the subject of the controversial drone programme, which expanded under the Obama administration and was used to target a US citizen, Chollet said the outgoing president used the resources available, including the drone programme, "effectively".
"He's used them quite effectively ... I think there's been a lot of success in disrupting terrorist networks," said Chollet. "There are many instances, by the way, where he doesn't take the shot."
In this Headliner, former US Assistant Secretary of Defense Derek Chollet, who is the author of The Long Game: How Obama defied Washington and redefined America's role in the world, defends Obama's foreign policy decisions and legacy.
Reality Check - Barack Obama: The deporter-in-chief
There has been much talk about US President elect Donald Trump's hardline stance on immigration. But Trump will be inheriting a well-oiled deportation infrastructure from the Obama administration, which has deported 2.5 million people - more than every single US president of the 20th century combined.
In this week's Reality Check, Mehdi Hasan exposes the deporter-in-chief's legacy on deportation. Read More......

Richard Meirowitz | Dear Donald Trump: A letter from Mexico

Dear Mr President-elect,
I am writing to you as a migration researcher and the coordinator of the Casa del Migrante (Migrant's House) in Tijuana, which provides assistance mainly to men who have been deported to Mexico from the United States.
I am also writing to you as the descendant of Chinese migrants, born in Tijuana, at the southern border of your country, where I have witnessed the impact of US migration policies first-hand while I was growing up.
The US has deported more than two million immigrants between 2010 and 2015. This represents more than twice the population of San Francisco. But, we also need to understand that we are talking about actual people and lives.
In recent years, the Mexican government has taken several steps affecting migrants trying to enter the US, such as introducing checkpoints within Mexico, and raising the speed of some freight trains on which Mexicans and Central Americans travel towards the "American dream".
I will tell you why this matters.
When I worked at the border between Guatemala and Mexico, I met Sandra, a woman from Honduras who was travelling towards the US with her 16-year-old daughter. Sandra was running away from the Mara Salvatrucha gang, one of Latin America's most powerful street gangs, which was trying to recruit her child by force.
As they tried to board one of these freight trains, Sandra's daughter managed to get on the train, but Sandra fell on to the rail tracks because of the train's high speed, and lost her left leg in the accident. Sandra spent weeks in the hospital, away from her daughter, who could not get off the train and spent two months looking for her mother.
Why am I telling you this story?
Because raising the speed of freight trains from 10 km/h to 60 or 70 is one of the measures that have been indirectly supported through different US programmes and funding schemes.
Through the years, the control of migration to the US has started to take place from the south of Mexico itself. In real life, these policies result in broken families, mutilations, death, and suffering.
Unfortunately, cases like that of Sandra and her daughter are very common. Just enter any migrant shelter in the south, along one of the migration routes that crisscross Mexico, or go on the main square of a city like Tapachula, and you'll see migrants with makeshift leg prostheses made out of PVC tubes and sellotape. Read More.....

Richard Meirowitz | Alec Baldwin's Donald Trump showers 'SNL' with urination jokes

Donald Trump isn't going to be happy about this sketch.
Alec Baldwin revived his Trump impression on Saturday Night Live to re-enact the president-elect’s news conference from earlier this week, his first in six months.
“On January 20th, I, Donald J. Trump, will become the 45th President of the United States. And then, two months later, Mike Pence will become the 46th," he joked.
But the majority of Baldwin’s imagined event was dedicated to the salacious claims from the recently leaked intelligence memo on Trump's ties to Russia, as one journalist after the next asks the president-elect about his “big Russian pee-pee party.”
“I am not talking about the pee pee. Because it didn’t happen. And it wasn’t as cool as it sounds,” Baldwin said, as the sketch devolved into a stream of urination jokes.

"I am going to bring back a thick stream of jobs back to this country, the biggest, strongest, steadiest stream I’ve ever seen," he continued. "This country will be literally showered with jobs, because I’m a major whiz at jobs. This will be a golden opportunity for me as president to make a big splash."
"Who’s with me? You're in? Urine? Urine?" Read more......

Monday 9 January 2017

Richard Meirowitz | America was a 'stan' long before Trump

Paul Krugman et al conveniently forget that corruption, cronyism and contempt for the rule of law long predated Trump.

Apparently, for a host of "progressive" writers, American history began on November 8, 2016.
People and events before that notorious date have been forgotten or marginalised, in effect, to sanitise America's not-so-distant past in order to paint an apocalyptic picture of its not-too-distant future as US president-elect Donald Trump prepares for his inauguration.
These writers aren't principally seized by a lazy, predictable historical revisionism - although there's certainly an irritating dose of that, to be sure - but rather a wilful amnesia that has infected their thinking and writing like a synapsis-sapping virus.
Lately, that contagion has contaminated the thinking and writing of marquee New York Times columnist and "progressive" Paul Krugman.
Earlier this week, Krugman penned a piece suggesting that America - with Trump and his fellow feather-bedding "cronies" manning the state's cash register - is destined to morph quickly into one of those garish, "tin pot" "Central Asian" "regimes", or "stans" for short.
Krugman's satiric abbreviation was instantly and wildly popular with his fellow progressives as the derisive column ricocheted quickly and widely on social media.
But Krugman's column proves that even Nobel prize-winning economists can conveniently forget the past in the smug, grating service of American hubris and exceptionalism.

Americastan

Look, Trump is an unabashed reflection of what America is and will continue to be - whether Krugman and company are prepared to admit it or not. America was a "stan" long before the Manhattan megalomaniac was elected president by more than 62 million Americans chomping to install their "stan"-like version of a tin-pot "dictator" into the White House.
Still, I don't recall any of the other "stans" invading and subsequently destroying a sovereign nation and its people based on cooked-up "intelligence".
I don't recall the other "stans" setting up "black sites" across the globe where countless people were shipped like pieces of baggage to be tortured out of the Red Cross's sight or those pesky, irrelevant human rights conventions.
I don't recall the other "stans" secretly hauling Muslim and Arab men - many of them innocent - to a gulag at Guantanamo Bay without charge to rot, to be tortured, go mad or commit suicide.
I don't recall the other "stans" unilaterally ordering extrajudicial killings by way of remote drones and having to apologise repeatedly and pay compensation for massacring children, women and men who thought they were attending a wedding, not their summary executions.
I don't recall the other "stans" engineering the near collapse of the global financial system because of the insatiable avarice of mostly middle-aged, pinstripe suit-wearing con men on Wall Street.
I could go on, but you and, perhaps, Krugman get the point.

Forgetting inconvenient truths

Like other pedestrian polemicists, Krugman begins his oh-so-pithy column with the oh-so-pithy caricature of Turkmenistan's president cementing, as it were, his "cult of personality" with a gaudy, oversized sculpture of himself on horseback.
Turkmenistan's resident narcissist-in-chief could have carved, I suppose, a 60ft-high, granite likeness of himself into a mountainside as a permanent ode to his greatness like, say, presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln at Mount Rushmore. Read More.......... Richard Meirowitz

Richard Meirowitz | Trump tweets his anger that Kellyanne Conway interview cut short



President-elect Donald Trump lashed out on Twitter on Sunday against NBC's Meet the Press, saying the show edited out nine minutes of a 10-minute interview that host Chuck Todd did with Kellyanne Conway, Trump's top counselor.
"Kellyanne Conway went to @MeetThePress this morning for an interview with @chucktodd. Dishonest media cut out 9 of her 10 minutes. Terrible!," Trump tweeted.
Conway, who served as Trump's campaign manager before being chosen as his top adviser, appeared on Meet the Press on Sunday morning to discuss Russia's attempt to interfere with the U.S. presidential campaign by hacking the Democratic National Committee and other political groups.The U.S. intelligence community issued a report Friday concluding that Russians were trying to help Trump and hurt Democrat Hillary Clinton.

Friday 6 January 2017

Richard Meirowitz | Most Beautiful Places You Must Visit Before you Die

Richard Meirowitz | Guidelines to Help You Choose Your Personal Injury Lawyer

Richard Warren Meirowitz | A Well-Known U.S. Attorney Converts to Islam!


Defending Muslims in complicated court cases, Tom's faith remains unshakable. He says Islam is his final journey!
Video By Raya
www.youtube/raya4islam, www.raya4islam.com, Face Book: Raya Shokatfard Official.

Richard Warren Meirowitz | US Attorney General, US Cities, Join UN to Create Global Police Force In...


Yesterday, Loretta Lynch announced before the United Nations that the Attorney General's Office, in collaboration with several US Cities will for a global law enforcement initiative called the Strong Cities Network. This is the implementation of UN rules and laws on US soil bypassing Congress and circumventing the Constitution.

Richard Warren Meirowitz | U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara on Leading Ethical Organizations


In a student-led interview at Stanford Graduate School of Business, Preet Bharara discusses the importance of considering ethics and integrity in business. “I don’t come here to lecture about the issues of morality,” Bharara says, “but these are issues of risk and relates to cost benefit issues.” Bharara is the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York and directs the investigation and litigation of cases brought on behalf of the United States. He oversees over 220 assistant U.S. attorneys dealing with a wide range of cases involving terrorism, narcotics, cybercrime, public corruption, organized crime and financial fraud.

Richard Warren Meirowitz | Busted: Former U S Attorney General Does Not Believe FBI Director James...


Former U.S. Attorney for the State of Texas, Congressman John Ratcliffe, who has extensive experience PROSECUTING Federal Offenses, including International and Domestic Terrorism, Illegal Immigration, Drug Trafficking, and PUBLIC CORRUPTION, calls out FBI Director James Comey on his version of why he allowed Cheryl Mills to be present during the interview of Hillary Clinton, as well as his overall decision NOT to Prosecute the former Secretary of State.

Today, the House Judiciary Committee will hear from Director James Comey on the challenges facing the FBI and how the FBI is addressing them. From San Bernardino to Orlando to the most recent terrorist attacks in New York, New Jersey, and Minnesota, the United States has experienced a rise in radical Islamic terrorism and we must ensure that the FBI has the resources needed for its counterterrorism efforts in order to thwart these heinous plots and protect Americans from harm.

“Additionally, many members of the House Judiciary Committee continue to have unanswered questions about the FBI’s investigation, Director Comey’s public statements on the matter, and the Justice Department’s decision to not prosecute Secretary Clinton for mishandling classified information through private email servers. It defies logic and the law that she faces no consequences for jeopardizing national security. It also appears that Secretary Clinton may have perjured herself and made false statements to Congress under oath. I’ve called on the Justice Department to investigate her for perjury and am interested to hear from Director Comey on the matter.”

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*Fair Use Disclaimer for News Broadcasting*: The Content in this video constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. This channel is making such material available in a effort to advance the understanding of the following, including but not limited to: environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues.

*NOTHING IN THIS VIDEO OR ANY VIDEO ON THIS CHANNEL SHOULD EVER BE CONSTRUED BY ANYONE THAT THIS CHANNEL CONDONES UNLAWFUL ACTS OR VIOLENCE*. All grievances, should be settled in a humane, legal and ethical manner. Comments that are of a nature that construes “Hate Speech” or other violence will likely be automatically censored, and comments banned. Richard Meirowitz

Richard Warren Meirowitz | US Department of Justice on 1MDB - Part 1

Richard Warren Meirowitz | What is a Power of Attorney?


What is a "Power of Attorney"? | 01225 - 442353 | Under English and Welsh law it is a flexible form of protection for families faced with difficult (and sometimes sudden) circumstances that need to have solutions put in writing and backed by the force of law.

Helen Starkie is well-versed in dealing with the law and how to use it to help families to cope and deal with life changing events.

Richard Warren Meirowitz | What is a Power of Attorney? - Shadi Shaffer; Esq.


http://apelcenter.com Shadi explains in a general overview what a power of attorney is and what it is used for. She goes on to share the different types of Power of Attorney forms and why you would want one instead of the other. You will learn why everyone needs a power of attorney in order to make sure your finances are managed when you lack the mental ability to manage your affairs and sign important legal documents. http://youtu.be/WuOnb0Assxw

Subscribe to this channel for even more informational videos!

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Learn more about current legal issues on our blog: http://www.apelcenter.com/blog/

Wednesday 4 January 2017

Richard Meirowitz | Corporate Governance


An expert in corporate governance and operations management, William Pounds has served as a director of many companies and as a trustee of a number of non-profit organizations. From 1981 to 1991, he was the senior adviser to The Rockefeller Family. He observes, writes and teaches about the management and governance of organizations of all kinds. Pounds gave a presentation to students at the Tepper School of Business.

Richard Meirowitz | What is Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)?


What is Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)? This video clip tries to give competent but also entertaining answers to this question. The video is part of series "in a little green bag" at the University of St.Gallen, Switzerland.

© University of St.Gallen (HSG), Text by Prof. Thomas Beschorner (http://bit.ly/Beschorner), Production: http://www.zense.ch

To watch the second «Little Green Bags» video on the ten myths of entrepreneurship, please go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G8gRkJ....

Learn more online: http://www.presse.unisg.ch
Become our friend on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/HSGUniStGallen
Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/HSGStGallen

Richard Meirowitz | Stakeholder Theory


R. Edward Freeman of the Darden School of Business at the University of Virginia gives insights into "Stakeholder Theory". This video is part of the Masters Seminars in Business Ethics video series. The series features thought leaders in business ethics addressing topics in their particular fields of expertise, including their approach to teaching business ethics. The purpose of the series is to make the best thinking in business ethics globally available free-of-charge for educators, students, and managers interested in embedding ethics into business practice. This series is a partnership between the Darden School of Business at the University of Virginia and the Business Roundtable Institute for Corporate Ethics.

Richard Meirowitz | 'An Insider's Guide to Practising Corporate Law Across the Pond' - Geoff...


Professor Geoffrey Shields, Dean of Vermont Law School from 2004 to mid-2012 and a Herbert Smith visitor to the Law Faculty, gave a Centre for Corporate and Commercial Law (3CL) lunchtime talk on Friday 19 October 2012 on the practice of corporate law in US law firms, with particular reference to the hiring of overseas lawyers. He also discussed how those with corporate-related Masters' credentials might secure entry into investment banking, venture capital, government positions and teaching jobs.

Professor Shields is uniquely well positioned to provide law students with an "insider's" guide to opportunities in the US because before becoming Dean at Vermont he was a partner and chair of the Management Committee of Gardner Carton and Douglas, a major law firm based in Chicago and Washington DC. When in pratice Professor Shields specialized in legal issues relating to not-for-profit institutions, mergers and acquisitions, restructuring, finance, joint ventures, and related tax and securities matters.

For more information see the Centre for Corporate and Commercial Law website at http://www.3cl.law.cam.ac.uk/

Richard Meirowitz | Prosperity Consciousness - The Spiritual Science of Attracting Money (la...



Attracting money with the law of attraction requires a prosperity consciousness. There is a spiritual science that aligns with universal laws for manifestation of wealth and success. Once a person fully understands the mind set required to attract money into their life, it becomes easy to do.

★50 Law of Attraction Exercises, Tips & Tricks to Hack Your Mind & Increase Your Manifestation Power

Law of Attraction does not bring positive results without positive beliefs and positive patterns. These principles are the secret formula to follow if you wish to align with your desires the way countless others have. You are a limitless creator. Learn how to break free from self-imposed limitations and live the life you desire!

Eddie Coronado is lottery winner who explains how the Law of Attraction works and how it can be used to attract money. He shares his wealth of metaphysical knowledge to audiences worldwide and through his books, videos and recorded materials. He has used the Law of Attraction to win big lottery prizes and has manifested other wonderful things through the Universal Law.

Richard Meirowitz | The Complete Guide Book To the "Law Of Attraction"! (Good Stuff!)


We (YouAreCreators) created this channel to share one of the greatest secrets of the universe, and the secret is, we literally create our reality! (Quantum Physics now proves this) We are all governed by a set of Universal Laws, and these laws were created by GOD, to aid us in creating the life we desire. One of these laws is known as the "Law Of Attraction", or the law of "Reaping and Sowing". This law simply states, whatever you give out in Thought, Word, Feeling, and Action is returned to you. Whether the return is negative, or positive, failure or success, is all up to what you give out. Many authors and celebrities such as, Wayne Dyer, Oprah Winfrey, Will Smith, Jim Carrey, Steve Harvey, Rhonda Byrne, and many others has testified to this amazing Law Of Attraction. Its time you learn this wonderful secret...

Richard Meirowitz | How To Survive Martial Law


Forecasters, analysts, and billionaire investors are now saying that it is not a matter of if, but when, the USA will be hit with the full force of the worst economic depression in its history. This Second Great Depression is expected to be far more severe and prolonged than the long, horrible, and tragic Great Depression of the 1930's.

Is your home paid off? How secure is your job? If you lost your house or apartment tomorrow, where would you go?

Traditional "prepping" philosophies tend to focus on escaping to a prepared retreat in the countryside. However, most American middle class families, even those who still have jobs, are only three or fewer missing paychecks away from financial disaster and they simply cannot afford a fixed location, rural retreat.

Prolonged unemployment has already found many former middle class families impoverished, unprepared, and living without adequate shelter and other necessities of life in one of the growing number of makeshift tent cities, or even in their cars. The need for a long-term plan to survive and keep your family intact during a massive financial crisis is stronger than ever.

PREPPING FOR THE REST OF US

This exhaustive and comprehensive work uses facts, history, and actual events as a guide to show you what to expect, and how any average family, even with a modest income, can meet these challenges in a timely manner. With a few basic preparations and some planning done now, while you still have time, anyone of any income level can weather the coming crisis. This can position you to survive, adapt, and thrive in the face of whatever the future holds.

Locusts on the Horizon is much more than simply another 'store food and ammo' prepper book. This book is built around the concept of MASH (Mobile Adaptable Sustainable Homestead). The concept of the US Army's MASH units, essentially a portable town, has been scaled down to that of a single family portable homestead which fulfills the requirements of SEMS (Six Elements of Modern Survival).

We feel that the hour is late and the need is great, so 'Locusts on the Horizon' is made available for the price of only about two or three candy bars at a supermarket checkout. This book is over 247,000 words, and printed out it would be over 1,187 pages. We offer it for a small fraction of what a book this size would normally sell for because we feel so many families are vulnerable to what is coming.

'Locusts on the Horizon' can be read with free reader software from Amazon on any PC, Mac, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, Android Phone, Android Tablet, Windows Phone, and Blackberry. It can also be read online through any browser via Amazon's Kindle Cloud.

Tuesday 3 January 2017

Richard Meirowitz | How to Become a Lawyer


Have you ever believed about how to become a lawyer? Well, your dream isn't that challenging to turn into reality. In fact, all you require to do is follow the five methods listed in this guideline to identify your name as a effective lawyer.

1) Start Planning from High School

If you are a high school student who desires to how know how to become a lawyer, you're in luck; while law schools won't go through your high school transcript, you can still make for your future career. You can start to:

Develop abilities such as writing logically, seriously analyzing problems, and working with various people
Take innovative courses in humanities
Enroll in Latin and philosophy courses
Get involved in extracurricular actions such as the debate team, student government and mock trial team
Apply for internship at the workplace of a lawyer.

2) Get Your Bachelor's Degree

The next step in this how to become a lawyer information is obtaining your bachelor's degree from a identified institution. You should make sure to work hard to maintain you GPA high; a low or regular GPA isn't acceptable in law schools. In addition, you should make sure to keep your relationship with your teachers friendly because you will require their letter of suggestions later on.


3) Register and Analysis for the Law School Entrance Test

Throughout your junior year, you should apply for and sit for the Law School Admission Test (LSAT). The LSAT is a half-day standard test that is expected for admission to all American Bar Association (ABA) approved law schools. The test will determine your reading and verbal skills to assess whether or not you would be prepared for this career. However, make confident to enroll in a preparatory course before sitting for the exam for the LSAT can support you gain admission in a law school even if your GPA isn't that high.

4) Join in Law School

Once you pass the LSAT and complete your college education, you should get prepared to focus in your field. So, the 4th step in this how to become a lawyer information is enrolling in the best law schools around. Consider Yale, Harvard, Stanford and other top educational institutions that offer a law program. Throughout your years in law school, make sure to:


Are eligible for law review
Choose valuable subjects such as intellectual-property law
Create specialist contacts
Master all the abilities you would require in your profession
You may select to apply for the bar without a degree, i.e. you can become a lawyer in some states with four years of study at an unaccredited law school or four years of studying law in a law office program. However, both of these choices won't get you as much achievements as a law school degree.


Richard Meirowitz | Donald Trump's Israel ambassador is hardline pro-settler lawyer

Donald Trump has named as his ambassador to Israel a pro-settler lawyer who has described some US Jews as worse than concentration camp prisoner-guards.
David Friedman, a bankruptcy lawyer who represented the president-elect over his failing hotels in Atlantic City, served Trump’s advisory team on the Middle East. He has set out a number of hardline positions on Israeli-Palestinian relations, including fervent opposition to the two-state solution and strong support for an undivided Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.
He has called President Barack Obama an antisemite and suggested that US Jews who oppose the Israeli occupation of the West Bank are worse than kapos, Nazi-era prisoners who served as concentration camp guards.
Liberal Jewish groups in the US denounced the appointment as “reckless” and described Friedman – a man with no experience of foreign service – as the “least experienced pick” ever for a US ambassador to Israel.
Yossi Dagan, a prominent Israeli settler leader and friend of Friedman, welcomed the news, describing him as “a true friend and partner of the state of Israel and the settlements”. Morton Klein, the president of the Zionist Organization of America, said Friedman had “the potential to be the greatest US ambassador to Israel ever”.


An indication of how Friedman views Israel came in a 16-point action plan he issued with another Trump adviser in November. It included “ensur[ing] that Israel receives maximum military, strategic and tactical cooperation from the United States” and a declaration of war on the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement and pro-Palestinian campus activism.
Friedman, 57, has worked with Trump for more than 15 years and advised the president-elect on the Middle East during his election campaign. He represented Trump after the umbrella company for his three Atlantic City casinos, Trump Entertainment Resorts, went into bankruptcy in 2009.
He said he was looking forward to taking up his post in “the US embassy in Israel’s eternal capital, Jerusalem”, indicating Trump’s determination to overturn years of US policy and move the embassy from Tel Aviv. The change would be a potentially explosive gesture in the Middle East, as the status of Jerusalem is one of the issues in the long-stalled Israeli-Palestinian negotiations.
Also controversial is Friedman’s presidency of the American Friends of Bet El Institutions, an organisation that supports a large illegal West Bank settlement just outside Ramallah.
His links with Bet El, along with recent revelations that the family charity of Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, gave money to one of the West Bank’s most hard-line ideological settlements, suggests the settler movement will have an unprecedented number of advocates in the heart of Washington.
The announcement appears to have caught Israeli analysts by surprise. The Haaretz columnist Chemi Shalev said Friedman made Israel’s rightwing prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, “seem like a leftwing defeatist”.
“From where Friedman stands,” he said, “most Israelis, never mind most American Jews, are more or less traitors.”
Friedman disagrees with the general international consensus that the settlements are illegal and he opposes a ban on settlement construction on the West Bank and in East Jerusalem.
He wrote in the Jerusalem Post during the US election campaign that Israel would feel “no pressure” under a Trump administration. “America and Israel will enjoy unprecedented military and strategic cooperation, and there will be no daylight between the two countries,” he said.
In a column for the Israel National News website, he compared the liberal Jewish US lobby group J Street to concentration camp prisoner-guards and described its supporters as “smug advocates of Israel’s destruction delivered from the comfort of their secure American sofas – it’s hard to imagine anyone worse”.
He went further at the Saban forum earlier this month, saying J Street’s supporters were “not Jewish, and they’re not pro-Israel”.
The National Jewish Democratic Council tweeted: “Trump must stand for a strong US-Israel relationship and take it seriously. [There] hasn’t ever been a less experienced pick for US ambassador to Israel.”
Lara Friedman, of Americans for Peace Now, tweeted: “I don’t know about the Palestinians, but I know Jews who truly care about Israel’s security, democracy & place in the world are outraged.”
Like Trump, Friedman is an admirer of Vladimir Putin, and has portrayed the Russian president as fighting Islamic State in Syria despite little of the Russian war effort being focused on Isis.
“Vladimir Putin gets it,” Friedman wrote in November last year. “He may be a ‘thug,’ as he was recently described by Senator [Marco] Rubio, but he knows how to identify a national objective, execute a military plan, and ultimately prevail.” Read More... Richard Meirowitz