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About The Firm
Deutsch &
Lipner is a law firm that was formed in 1985. Its principals are Herbert
M. Deutsch and Seth E. Lipner. Stuart C. Goldberg is Senior Counsel.
Collectively, Messrs. Deutsch, Lipner and Goldberg have over seventy
years experience practicing extensively in securities arbitration and
related litigation.
Herbert M. Deutsch is a graduate of Cornell University and the Law
School at the University of Southern California. Before Deutsch & Lipner
was formed, Mr. Deutsch was affiliated with law firms that advised,
developed and drafted limited partnership agreements. In addition to his
work in securities, Mr. Deutsch also represents individual and corporate
clients in real estate, tax and general legal matters. Mr. Deutsch has
appeared on CNN and has been quoted by the New York Times and Bloomberg
News Service on several occasions with regard to legal actions involving
Merrill Lynch.
Seth E. Lipner is Professor of Law at the Zicklin School of Business of
Bernard M. Baruch College in New York City, where he has been on the
full-time faculty for 28 years. Mr. Lipner is the author of numerous
scholarly articles and law books on fields as diverse as international
trade law, securities arbitration, and law and technology. As a member
of Deutsch & Lipner, Mr. Lipner focuses his practice on representing
investors and other individuals with grievances against providers of
financial services. The balance of Mr. Lipner's practice is federal and
state court litigation.
Mr. Lipner served as President of the Public Investors Arbitration Bar
Association (PIABA) between 2000-01, as well as in 1994-95, and has
served as Secretary to the organization and on its Board of Directors
since the organization's inception in 1990, and now holds the title
"Director Emeritus." Until 2001, Mr. Lipner also served on the Board of
Editors of Securities Arbitration Commentator. After that, he
served as a contributing editor to the PIABA Bar Journal. He has
also served on the National Arbitration and Mediation Committee of the
NASD from 1998 to 2002.
Mr. Lipner has appeared on CNN, NPR, BBC and the Wall Street Journal
Report, and has been quoted in publications such as Forbes, Business
Week, Newsweek, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, Newsday,
Investment News, the New York Law Journal and the National Law Journal.
Mr. Lipner’s essay, "The Case Against Restitution," was published on the
Op-Ed page of The New York Times on May 2, 2003. An article about the
clawback suits involving arch-theif Bernard Madoff appeared in The
Jewish Week. Mr. Lipner is currently a columnist for Forbes.com, where
he rights periodically on investor issues.
His most-recent scholarly article, co-authored with Prof. Lisa Catalano
of St. Johns Law School, is a ground-breaking work documenting the
development of what he calls “The Tort of Giving Negligent Investment
Advice.” His scholarly writings have been cited by, among others, the
Second Circuit Court of Appeals, the Southern District of Texas, and the
Federal District Court in Connecticut.
Mr. Lipner speaks often to bar groups, and in continuing legal education
programs, including the New York State Bar Association, Association of
the Bar of the City of New York, Practicing Law Institute, and PIABA.
Mr. Lipner publishes extensively on various aspects of law and
arbitration, particularly on issues involving arbitration administered
by FINRA. The text of many articles is accessible on this website.
Mr. Lipner's encyclopedic treatise, “Securities Arbitration Desk
Reference,” written together with Emeritus Professor Joe Long, is
available from West Publishing:
Securities Arbitration Desk Reference. The blog of a leading
securities arbitration law firm describes the book: "Professors Seth
Lipner and Joe Long have put together an essential reference book which
all attorneys should bring to the hearing".
In addition to representing clients in securities arbitrations and
litigation, Mr. Lipner argued three major cases in the New York
Court of Appeals concerning investor-rights in arbitration: Smith Barney
v. Luckie, Smith Barney v. Sacharow, and Kidder Peabody v. Sanders. He
has authored several amicus curiae briefs on behalf of investors,
including the PIABA brief in Mastrobuono v. Shearson Lehman. Mr. Lipner
also acted as lead counsel on behalf of the investors in the Adler
Coleman bankruptcy, the largest proceeding ever against SIPC.
Stuart C. Goldberg is the dean of securities arbitration. The author of
many leading books and treatises, he is best known for his large
victories over Prudential Securities in cases involving the limited
partnership scandals of the 1990s. In addition to 35 years as an
attorney, he is an accountant, a former U.S. prosecutor, former law
professor, and the holder of numerous aviation records. Mr. Goldberg's
latest securities related book is entitled "PIABA's 2001 Practice Guide
to NASD Discovery and Pre-Hearing Proceedings." In 1990, Mr. Goldberg
conceived the idea of PIABA, and became its first President, and
inspirational leader.
In March 2002, Messrs. Lipner and Goldberg recovered $3 million for a
client in a case against Merrill Lynch. It was the first such award in a
case involving losses from employee stock options.
In 2010, Deutsch & Lipner won three arbitration awards against UBS for
its sale of Lehman Brothers’ so-called Principal Protected Notes, and
another against UBS for its sale of Fannie Mae (FNM) preferred stock.
Since its inception, Deutsch & Lipner has counseled and/or represented
over thousands of investors who have legal disputes with brokerage
firms, and others in the financial community. The firm has represented
clients across the country, against virtually every major and regional
financial services company, in both arbitration and the courts. These
cases have involved claims including churning, inadequate disclosure,
unauthorized trading, breach of contract, improper execution, stock
manipulation, negligence, fraud, and unsuitability.
The firm represents only investors, and was awarded an "AV Preeminent"
rating from Martindale-Hubbell.
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