
eCourse
Working Your Bankruptcy Case: ESAPA, Expert Witnesses and Forming a Creditors’ Committee
Contains material from Dec 2015
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Session 2: Do's and Don'ts for Handling Expert Witnesses in Bankruptcy Court - Practical tips from the perspective of a bankruptcy judge and a litigator.
Session 3: The Formation and Functioning of a Creditors’ Committee: Making Sausage or Baking a Soufflé? - While creditors must be free of disqualifying conflicts to be able to serve on a Committee, their appointment is not the end of the inquiry or their duties. What about retention of professionals? Claims trading? Access to non-public information? Multiple committees?
Includes: Audio Paper Slides
Preview Sessions
Show session details
Theodore "Thad" O. Bartholow, Hon. Marvin Isgur, Adam E. Miller
Download session materials for offline use
Session 1 —45 mins
RESPA (Dec 2015)
RESPA plays an important role in the administration of consumer mortgage loans. Consider the interplay between RESPA and consumer bankruptcy law and discuss the interactions between the debtor, the trustee and the mortgage servicer in bankruptcy cases.
Originally presented: Nov 2015 Bankruptcy Conference
Theodore "Thad" O. Bartholow,
Armstrong Kellett Bartholow P.C. - Dallas, TX
Hon. Marvin Isgur,
U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of Texas - Houston, TX
Adam E. Miller,
Office of the U.S. Trustee - Kansas City, MO
Show session details
Jerry Kenneth "J. Ken" Johnson II, Hon. Robert Lee Jones
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Session 2 —46 mins
Do's and Don'ts for Handling Expert Witnesses in Bankruptcy Court (Dec 2015)
Practical tips from the perspective of a bankruptcy judge and a litigator.
Originally presented: Nov 2015 Bankruptcy Conference
Jerry Kenneth "J. Ken" Johnson II,
Fleming Nolen & Jez L.L.P. - Houston, TX
Hon. Robert Lee Jones,
U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Northern District of Texas - Lubbock, TX
Show session details
William R. Greendyke, Michael A. McConnell
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Session 3 —28 mins
The Formation and Functioning of a Creditors’ Committee: Making Sausage or Baking a Soufflé? (Dec 2015)
While creditors must be free of disqualifying conflicts to be able to serve on a Committee, their appointment is not the end of the inquiry or their duties. What about retention of professionals? Claims trading? Access to non-public information? Multiple committees?
Originally presented: Nov 2015 Bankruptcy Conference
William R. Greendyke,
Norton Rose Fulbright - Houston, TX
Michael A. McConnell,
Kelly Hart & Hallman LLP - Fort Worth, TX