Stuart Slotnick | |
---|---|
Born |
New York City,
New York, U.S. | June 8, 1969
Alma mater | |
Occupation | Attorney |
Organization | Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney |
Title | Partner |
Spouse | Amy Albert |
Parent |
|
Stuart Slotnick (born June 8, 1969) is a New York City defense attorney and a partner at Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney.
In 2006, Slotnick married Amy Albert, a counsel to New York law firm Weiss & Hiller. [1] His father is Barry Slotnick, a litigation attorney well known for defending Bernard Goetz. [2]
Slotnick graduated from Brandeis University cum laude and attended New York University for law school. [1] He currently serves as the managing shareholder of Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney's New York office. [3] Prior to joining Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney, he served as a special counsel at a New York litigation boutique. [4]
Slotnick is known for defending several soldiers against the Army's stop-loss policy. In 2004, he successfully defended Jay Ferriola, a retired Army Captain who was ordered to redeploy to Iraq after completing eight years of service, under the grounds that the Army violated his due process rights. [5] [6] The case was the first to challenge the Army's stop-loss policy, which had affected tens of thousands of soldiers since the start of the Iraq War. [7] Slotnick went on to successfully try four more similar cases. [8]
Slotnick also serves as corporate counsel to billionaire casino magnate, Steve Wynn, in litigation matters that have resulted in successful dismissal of claims and positive settlements. [9] He has also served as a long-time lawyer for American Apparel. In December 2006, he helped them navigate a $250 million acquisition deal with Endeavour Acquisition Corp. [10] He later represented American Apparel when they were sued by Woody Allen for using Allen's image without permission. [11] [12] The suit was settled before trial by American Apparel paying Allen $5 million. [13]
Slotnick represented Donald Schupak of Renaissance Art Investors in their case against Salander-O'Reilly art galleries. [14] [15] Slotnick went on to secure hundreds of works from Salander for Renaissance Art Galleries. [16] He represented Weitz Communications in a suit against Capital Play over an allegedly unpaid consulting fee. [17] He won a $2 million suit for a woman who had permanent liver damage from the diabetes drug Rezulin. [18] Slotnick worked for Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz and was acknowledged for his work in the New York Times bestselling book Chutzpah. [19]
Most recently, Slotnick attained a settlement for Sportingbet PLC in a case against the United States Attorney of the Southern District of New York. [20] Sportingbet PLC, a publicly traded company on the London Stock Exchange (LON: SBT) entered into a non-prosecution agreement and forfeiture of $33 million. [21] The settlement was viewed as a positive one for Sportingbet, as a competitor, Partygaming PLC, settled similar charges in 2009 for $105 million. [22] [23]
Stuart Slotnick | |
---|---|
Born |
New York City,
New York, U.S. | June 8, 1969
Alma mater | |
Occupation | Attorney |
Organization | Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney |
Title | Partner |
Spouse | Amy Albert |
Parent |
|
Stuart Slotnick (born June 8, 1969) is a New York City defense attorney and a partner at Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney.
In 2006, Slotnick married Amy Albert, a counsel to New York law firm Weiss & Hiller. [1] His father is Barry Slotnick, a litigation attorney well known for defending Bernard Goetz. [2]
Slotnick graduated from Brandeis University cum laude and attended New York University for law school. [1] He currently serves as the managing shareholder of Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney's New York office. [3] Prior to joining Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney, he served as a special counsel at a New York litigation boutique. [4]
Slotnick is known for defending several soldiers against the Army's stop-loss policy. In 2004, he successfully defended Jay Ferriola, a retired Army Captain who was ordered to redeploy to Iraq after completing eight years of service, under the grounds that the Army violated his due process rights. [5] [6] The case was the first to challenge the Army's stop-loss policy, which had affected tens of thousands of soldiers since the start of the Iraq War. [7] Slotnick went on to successfully try four more similar cases. [8]
Slotnick also serves as corporate counsel to billionaire casino magnate, Steve Wynn, in litigation matters that have resulted in successful dismissal of claims and positive settlements. [9] He has also served as a long-time lawyer for American Apparel. In December 2006, he helped them navigate a $250 million acquisition deal with Endeavour Acquisition Corp. [10] He later represented American Apparel when they were sued by Woody Allen for using Allen's image without permission. [11] [12] The suit was settled before trial by American Apparel paying Allen $5 million. [13]
Slotnick represented Donald Schupak of Renaissance Art Investors in their case against Salander-O'Reilly art galleries. [14] [15] Slotnick went on to secure hundreds of works from Salander for Renaissance Art Galleries. [16] He represented Weitz Communications in a suit against Capital Play over an allegedly unpaid consulting fee. [17] He won a $2 million suit for a woman who had permanent liver damage from the diabetes drug Rezulin. [18] Slotnick worked for Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz and was acknowledged for his work in the New York Times bestselling book Chutzpah. [19]
Most recently, Slotnick attained a settlement for Sportingbet PLC in a case against the United States Attorney of the Southern District of New York. [20] Sportingbet PLC, a publicly traded company on the London Stock Exchange (LON: SBT) entered into a non-prosecution agreement and forfeiture of $33 million. [21] The settlement was viewed as a positive one for Sportingbet, as a competitor, Partygaming PLC, settled similar charges in 2009 for $105 million. [22] [23]