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Staff

February 7, 2019 By Staff

Partner Traci Buschner will be moderating a panel on Ethics at this year’s Federal Bar Association Qui Tam Conference.

Partner Traci Buschner will be moderating a panel on Ethics at this year’s Federal Bar Association Qui Tam Conference. See more details here http://www.fedbar.org/Education/Calendar-CLE-events/2019-Qui-Tam-Conference.aspx

Qui Tam 2019 Panel Preview: Ethics

Here Scott talks with panel moderator Traci Buschner of Guttman, Buschner & Brooks about her panel’s topic — the ethical questions that may arise during FCA litigation. Watch the video here https://www.employmentlawgroup.com/in-the-news/articles/qui-tam-2019-panel-preview-ethics/

February 5, 2019 By Staff

On the troubled state of law schools

by Reuben Guttman

American law schools are in trouble. I represent whistleblowers and ferret-out fraud for a living; I sense that something is very wrong in the world of legal education and a mere scan of cyberspace validates some of my concerns.

Start with Twitter and internet pop up ads. These are the cyber-bazaars where degree programs are hawked; and this degree advertising is no longer just the province of for-profit colleges looking to make a buck off students who can snag US Government-backed loans.

Law schools affiliated with seemingly reputable universities are taking to the internet to advertise degree programs that do not come close to enabling the practice of law.

Once thought of as specialized degrees for law graduates entering a technical area or students contemplating academia, LLMs are now being sold by the fistful to foreign students who will pay full freight.

To expand their output, US law schools are making many of these opportunities available online while waiving testing requirements to incentivize the flow of applications. And to service the new crop of students, many law schools are resorting to adjunct or contract faculty, leaving tenured faculty to concentrate on research and selected teaching. At the end of the day, students seeking a quality education from a branded institution are getting something akin to the second tier product of an outlet store.

What is driving all this is undoubtedly the need to grab the cash necessary to compete for US News rankings. And why is there a need for cash? It is simple, with the US News focus on JD programs, law schools need to recruit students with high GPAs and LSATs, which are the currency to get the rankings; and it is the scholarship money that lures the students to the classroom. The spending on students — too many of whom aren’t even in financial need — is something akin to the baseball free agent market.

Unfortunately, the truly top law schools are most likely to get the students with the deepest potential. This leaves lower-tiered schools left to bid for those students whose claim to accomplishment is statistics; indeed statistics without regard to college major, the rigor of the undergraduate institution, or the challenges that the student had to overcome in making it through college.

The truth is that too many law schools are turning themselves upside down and inside out to meet the criteria set by a for-profit magazine that calls itself US News but which actually no longer reports the news.

Placed in context, we live in an era where we relish competition and the data that comes with it. Our nation’s law deans are participating in a competition that is as obsessive to them as realty TV is to the millions of Americans who tuned into “The Apprentice.” The problem is that, with this rating chase, more than a few law schools are turning themselves into academic Ponzi schemes. Money brought in from these newfangled degree endeavors and online programs are being channeled to buy JD candidates with the “right stats.”

The system now favors well-heeled applicants with the financial backing to take LSAT review courses and who have never had to work through college, leaving them time to concentrate on course work. It discriminates against those who may be first in their family to go to college, worked through school, and scrounged together the dollars necessary for a college education. And it is a system that punishes the student who endeavored to push their intellect to the edge with challenging classes; perhaps including those in math and science.

Step back and think about it; our entire system of legal education and how schools award scholarship money is being crafted by ratings profiteers. Placed in perspective, we now have a President who was elected because a TV network anointed him the god of business management and 63 million voters were led to believe it to be true. And how is that going for us?

I could be wrong about this and so I have checked my concerns with colleagues who are law deans, law school administrators, or professors. In my informal outreach I could not find a single member of legal academia who said something positive about the US News rankings. The problem, of course, is that I have failed to find anyone who is willing to take on this ratings system which is both discriminatory and interferes with the task of educating future custodians of the rule of law.

Yet, as historians know all too well, there is often the day when someone wakes up and challenges practices that are well accepted but fundamentally wrong. In these perilous times, I hope that sooner rather than later there is an awakening to our perilous state of American legal education.

Reuben Guttman is a founding member of Guttman, Buschner & Brooks (GBB) PLLC. His practice involves complex litigation and class actions.

January 23, 2019 By Staff

Dan Guttman to Speak at U.S. – Asia Law Institute

Wednesday, January 23
12:15-1:50 pm
Furman Hall Room 318
245 Sullivan Street
New York, NY 10012

Dan Guttman is a teacher and lawyer and has been a public servant. Following two years (2004-6) as a Fulbright scholar in China (teaching/co-teaching courses in law, public policy, China-US relations, environment at Peking, Tsinghua, Shanghai Jiao Tong, Fudan and Nanjing Universities) he works with colleagues in China, the US and other countries developing educational programs, and practices law as of counsel to Guttman, Buschner & Brooks.

Learn more here.

January 14, 2019 By Staff

Former Federal District Court Judge Nancy Gertner Joins Guttman, Buschner & Brooks LLC

WASHINGTON — Former U.S. District Court Judge and current Harvard Law School lecturer Nancy Gertner has joined one of the nation’s leading whistleblower and complex litigation boutique firms, Guttman, Buschner & Brooks (GBB), as of counsel.

Lawyers at Guttman, Buschner & Brooks, with offices in Washington, D.C., Bala Cynwyd, PA, and Wilmington, DE, have represented whistleblowers in cases returning nearly $6 billion to Federal and State governments. In July of 2017, on the eve of trial, the firm settled a non-intervened False Claims case with Celgene for $280 million. Shortly thereafter, the firm settled a non-intervened False Claims Act case against Humana after defeating Humana’s motion for summary judgment.

Appointed by President Bill Clinton in 1994 to the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts, Judge Gertner (Ret.) brings decades of experience in employment discrimination, dispute resolution, and civil rights, among her many areas of expertise.

Judge Gertner is a graduate of Barnard College and Yale Law School where she was an editor on The Yale Law Journal. She received her M.A. in Political Science at Yale University and has been an instructor at Yale Law School, teaching sentencing and comparative sentencing institutions, since 1998. In September of 2011, Judge Gertner retired from the federal bench and joined the faculty at Harvard Law School.

Traci Buschner, GBB’s managing partner said, “We are frankly honored to have Nancy join our firm – she is a woman of boundless integrity, wit and empathy. Her life’s work is – and continues to be – a powerful testament to lawyers seeking to make the world a better place for all. We look forward to fighting alongside her in important cases that deserve attention.”

Beginning her career first as a Clerk for Chief Judge Luther Swygert of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, then as one of the few women criminal defense and civil rights lawyers of her time, Judge Gertner is a fierce advocate for her clients and a trailblazer in the industry.

Judge Gertner said, “I am delighted to be of counsel to GBB. Their whistleblower practice matches my public interest concerns, and their advocacy is creative and superb.”

GBB is a boutique firm with a diverse group of attorneys, including a former Congressman, a former Commissioner of the OSHA Review Commission, a law professor who is a national expert on complex litigation and trial practice, a former attorney with the FDA and the EPA who also holds a medical license and continues to practice, and former federal law clerks and prosecutors.

The firm has offices in Washington, DC, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. In addition to the recent Celgene and Humana litigations, attorneys at the firm represented the lead whistleblower in U.S. ex rel. McCoyd v. Abbott Labs, which involved the recovery of $1.6 billion for the government; one of several whistleblowers bringing FCA cases against GlaxoSmithKline in 2012, which resulted in the recovery of $1.04 billion (U.S. ex rel. Graydon v. GSK); one of the whistleblowers bringing FCA cases against Pfizer which resulted in the recovery of $2.3 billion (U.S. ex rel. DeMott v. Pfizer); the lead whistleblowers in U.S. ex rel. Sandler and Paris v. Pfizer, which resulted in recovery of $257.4 million; the lead whistleblower in U.S. ex rel. Szymoniak v. Bank of America, which resulted in the recovery of $95 million; three of the whistleblowers FCA cases against a large hospital chain (U.S. ex rel. Doghramji v. CHS), which resulted in the recovery of $98 million; the lead whistleblower in U.S. ex rel. Kurnik v. Amgen, which resulted in the aggregate recovery of $30 million from Amgen, Inc., Omnicare, and PharMerica Corp.; and the whistleblower in U.S. ex rel. Abrahamsen v. Hudson Valley, which resulted in a recovery of $5.5 million to the federal government and state government. More information on GBB can be found at www.gbblegal.com.

Announcement available on-line here.

January 14, 2019 By Staff

Judge Nancy Gertner (Ret.)

Judge GertnerJudge Nancy Gertner (Ret.)
Of Counsel

(202) 800-3001
ngertner@gbblegal.com

Judical Appointment
U.S. District Court Judge for the District of Massachusetts (1994 – 2011)

Education
Yale Law School
Barnard College

Admissions
United States District Court, MA
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
United States Supreme Court

Practice Areas
Employment Discrimination
Civil Rights

Honors & Awards
Thurgood Marshall Award, 2008
Margaret Brent Women Lawyers of Achievement Award, 2014
The Lelia J. Robinson Award, 2012
Arabella Babb Mansfield Award, 2012
Hennessey Award for Judicial Excellence
The Morton A. Brody Distinguished Judicial Service Award
Honorary Degree, Doctor of Laws, Brandeis University

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What to DOGE about Fraud, Waste, and Abuse?

Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’ve seen the headlines. “Department of Defense pays $32,000 to replace 25 coffee cups.” “Boeing overcharges Air Force by 8,000% for soap dispensers.” While … [Read More...] about What to DOGE about Fraud, Waste, and Abuse?

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On Demand CLE: Reuben Guttman, and Professor JC Lore present CLE covering topics in their book, Pretrial Advocacy, Wolters Kluwer-NITA (2021).”
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Undoing An American Ideal Of Fairness

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