- Melvyn Weiss
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Melvyn I. Weiss Born August 1, 1935
Bronx, New YorkOccupation Attorney Melvyn I. Weiss (born August 1, 1935) was an American attorney who co-founded the well-known plaintiff class action law firm Milberg Weiss.
Contents
Career
Mr. Weiss received a BBA in accounting from Baruch College of the City University of New York in 1957 and a JD Degree from the New York University School of Law in 1959. After getting married in 1959, Mel Weiss moved to Queens and became a member of the North Shore Democratic Club and the Bay Terrace Community Alliance,[1] where he successfully acted as campaign manager for several reform democrats in northeast Queens.
In 1960 he served in the army reserves, and after a six month active duty, joined a Wall Street law firm. In 1961, Mr. Weiss was also appointed by Mayor John Lindsay as the chairman of the NYC Sidewalk Café Study Committee, which succeeded in expanding the number of sidewalk cafés in New York from a handful to several hundred and changed the landscape of the city to what it is today.
In 1962, he was recalled during the Berlin Crisis and served for another year of active duty. After three years with another New York law firm where he practiced litigation, he co-founded the Milberg Weiss firm, which ultimately had offices throughout the country and practiced complex securities, anti-trust and consumer fraud actions predominantly representing plaintiffs in class-actions against major corporations.[2] Thereafter he handled, as a lead counsel, some of the largest complex actions in the country, such as the Washington Public Power Supply System, a municipal bond default case, which was then the largest ever in the country; the Michael Milken- Drexel Burnham case, dealing with the collapse of numerous companies, including savings and loans, as a result of the sale of junk bonds; Weiss’ efforts, along with the US government, led to a joint recovery of over 2 billion dollars. In addition, he was a lead counsel in numerous other major life insurance marketing fraud cases, such as the Tyco securities fraud case.[citation needed]
Bribery charges and incarceration
At one point Weiss dominated the market in securities class-action suits, in which investors who suffer losses typically claim that executives had misled them about a company's financial condition.[3]
On March 20, 2008, Melvyn Weiss announced through his attorney that he would plead guilty to making illegal client kickbacks in exchange for an 18- to 33-month prison sentence and fines and restitution of $10 million.[4]
Prior to his sentencing for what he admitted was “wrongful conduct,” and for which he was “profoundly sorry,” supporters had flooded the Federal court with over 275 letters detailing Weiss' philanthropic history, including $6.25 billion in settlements he helped win for Holocaust victims. Both the Federal judge hearing the case and U.S. Attorney called the support for Weiss “unprecedented.”
Weiss was sentenced to 30 months of incarceration on Monday June 2, 2008, where he served half of his sentence at the minimum security Federal Correctional Institution in Morgantown, West Virginia, with the remainder served under home confinement.[5]
Weiss is now on probation, and in 2010 he formed MIW Consulting, LCC, in Boca Raton, FL, to be available as a mediator or arbitrator in complex disputes.
Achievements and Philanthropy
Mr. Weiss has lectured extensively internationally. He was granted an honorary professorship at the University of Buenos Aires, and asked to serve on the board of the Salzburg Seminar Foundation in Austria, where he also served as a member of the faculty.
Mr. Weiss was a Commissioner of the Nassau County Charter Revision Commission, in Long Island, NY, after the county charter was declared unconstitutional. He also previously served on the boards of the Israel Policy Forum, NYU Law School, Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, the World Council of the American Jewish Congress, and the American Constitution Society.
He served as Vice Chairman of the Drum Major Institute for Public Policy, which acts as a think tank to aid the middle class, and as International Chair of the Hatikva Project, which built a memorial park on site of the Israeli Embassy attack in Buenos Aires.
He and his wife established a Public Interest Foundation at NYU Law School [6] to assist graduating students to accept public interest jobs and to pay off their student loans.
Awards
- The Anti-Defamation League’s Gotham Award and Humanitarian Award;
- The United Jewish Appeal’s Proskauer Award;
- The B’nai B’rith of Argentina Dignity and Justice Award;
- The Ellis Island Medal of Honor from the National Ethnic Coalition of Organizations Foundation, Inc
- Honored as one the outstanding graduates of Baruch College, in NYC in 1982
- Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers.
- The 1993 Arthur T. Vanderbilt Medal from NYU Law School and the Alumni Achievement Award.
- Accounting Today has named Mr. Weiss as one of its Top 100 Most Influential People. He has addressed national and state accounting and auditing boards and has testified before Congress. He has been frequently quoted as a leading authority on shareholder and consumer rights in the national media.
See also
References
- ^ [1]
- ^ | title = Inside a Class Action: The Holocaust and the Swiss Banks| first = Jane| last = Schapiro| publisher = Terrace Books| date = 2003 |
- ^ Koppel, Nathan (2008-03-21). "Class-Action King Weiss to Plead Guilty to Conspiracy". The Wall Street Journal. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120601957097151765.html?mod=googlenews_wsj. Retrieved 2008-04-04.
- ^ Martha Graybow (March 21, 2008). "US shareholder lawyer Melvyn Weiss to plead guilty". Reuters. http://www.reuters.com/article/telecomm/idUSN2040163220080321.
- ^ Edvard Pettersson (June 2, 2008). "Weiss Sentenced to 2½ Years for Kickback Scheme (Update1)". Bloomberg L.P.. http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aGqfpC4ZjoAw&refer=home. "Weiss, 72, must also forfeit $9.75 million and pay a fine of $250,000. He pleaded guilty April 2 to racketeering conspiracy, admitting he helped secretly pay a stable of plaintiffs to file suits from 1979 through 2005. By using them to sue first, the firm was more likely to lead cases and reap larger fees."
- ^ [2]
Categories:- Disbarred lawyers
- New York lawyers
- 1935 births
- Living people
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