Marshall Tracht (click here to see Professor
Tracht’s full profile)
Professor of Law
Director, LL.M. in Real Estate
Yale University, B.A. 1983 cum laude
University of Pennsylvania, J.D. 1990 magna cum laude
Order of the Coif; M.B.A. 1990 with distinction
Law Clerk, Hon. S. Martin Teel Jr., U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District
of Columbia
Marshall Tracht works with the Center for Real Estate Studies and directs
the Law School’s LL.M. in Real Estate program. He teaches
Bankruptcy, Real Estate Transactions and Finance, Advanced Real Estate
Financing, and related courses. Previously, Professor Tracht was a member
of the Hofstra University School of Law faculty for 14 years, serving as
Vice Dean from 2001 to 2006. He is co-author of Land Transfer &
Finance: Cases and Materials, Fifth Ed. (Aspen 2007) and Construction and
Development Financing, Third Ed. (Thomson West 2001), a member of the
editorial board of The Banking Law Journal, and a contributing
editor to the Real Estate Law Report. He has written extensively
in the areas of mortgage law and was awarded the 1997–98 Grant
Gilmore Award for excellence in legal scholarship. Before going into
academia, Professor Tracht practiced in the real estate and bankruptcy
groups at Arnold & Porter LLP in Washington, D.C., and clerked for the
Honorable S. Martin Teel of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of
Columbia.
Richard C.E. Beck (click here to see
Professor Beck’s full profile)
Professor of Law
Co-director, Graduate Tax Program
University of Chicago, B.A. 1963, Ph.D. 1973
Yale, J.D. 1980
New York University, LL.M. (Taxation) 1984
Fulbright Fellowships, University of Paris 1965–66, University of
Calcutta Sanskrit College 1967–68
Richard C.E. Beck is an expert in federal individual income tax. He has
testified before the Oversight Subcommittee of the House Ways & Means
Committee and the Senate Finance Committee on spousal liability income
taxes. Among other courses, Professor Beck teaches Taxation of Property
Transactions, Individual Income Tax, and Corporate & Partnership Tax.
Andrew R. Berman (click here to see Professor
Berman’s full profile)
Associate Professor of Law
Director, Center for Real Estate Studies
Princeton, A.B. 1984
New York University, J.D. 1988 cum laude (Journal of International Law and
Politics, Editorial Staff)
Professor Andrew R. Berman directs the Law School’s Center for Real
Estate Studies. He is a former partner with Sidley Austin Brown &
Wood’s New York Real Estate Group with more than 14 years of
experience in private practice. While at Sidley Austin Brown & Wood,
Professor Berman represented clients in all aspects of commercial real
estate finance, including complex financing transactions such as mezzanine
loans, preferred equity, and financings intended for securitization
markets. Professor Berman also has extensive experience in real estate
development projects, the sale and acquisition of real property and
mortgage loan portfolios, and complex commercial leasing. He joined the
law firm of Davis Polk & Wardwell as a corporate/real estate associate
directly from law school. He then moved to Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz
for four years as a real estate associate before joining Sidley Austin
Brown & Wood in 1995, becoming partner in 1998. Professor Berman is
actively involved with the Real Property Committee of the Association of
the Bar of the City of New York and the Urban Land Institute.
Elise C. Boddie (click here to see
Professor Boddie’s full profile)
Associate Professor of Law
Yale College, B.A. 1990 cum laude
Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, M.P.P. 1996
Harvard Law School, J.D. 1996 cum laude (Harvard Civil Rights-Civil
Liberties Law Review, Executive Editor)
Law Clerk, Hon. Robert L. Carter, U.S. District Court, Southern District
of New York
Elise C. Boddie teaches Constitutional Law, Land Use Regulation, and
Special Topics in State and Local Government. Previously, she was a
visiting assistant professor at Fordham Law School. Professor Boddie
entered academia after practicing civil rights litigation at the NAACP
Legal Defense & Educational Fund (LDF), where she was an associate
director of litigation and directed LDF’s Education Program. She has
litigated at the trial and appellate levels in the areas of affirmative
action, employment, school desegregation, and economic justice and has
argued in both the Eighth and Eleventh Circuit Courts of Appeals. Before
working at LDF, Professor Boddie practiced corporate litigation in the New
York office of Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP and was the
first recipient of the Fried Frank/NAACP-LDF fellowship. She has appeared
on CNBC Live, the Tavis Smiley show, and Court TV and has made guest
appearances on several radio programs.
Richard H. Chused (click here to see Professor
Chused’s full profile)
Professor of Law
Brown University, B.A. 1965 cum laude
University of Chicago, J.D. 1968 (University of Chicago Law Review, Topics
and Comments Editor), Bowman C. Lingle Fellow in Urban Studies,
1966–67
Richard H. Chused is a prolific scholar and an expert on property law, law
and gender, copyright law, and cyberlaw. Previously, he was Professor of
Law at the Georgetown University Law Center, where he taught for 35 years.
He also taught for five years at Rutgers School of Law in Newark. Professor
Chused is a member of various history associations and the Society of
American Law Teachers, where he was the Webmaster and a Board of Governors
member for many years. He has published numerous books and articles on the
legal history of gender and property law, and teaching texts in property
and in copyright. His recently published work includes a book chapter on
the treatment of the poor in American landlord-tenant law, an article on
copyright law in the digital age, a lengthy history of the famous
landlord-tenant case Javins v. First National Realty Corporation, a
historical essay on Myra Bradwell’s Chicago Legal News, and a
history of landlord-tenant court in New York City at the turn of the 20th
century.
Gerald Korngold (click here to see
Professor Korngold’s full profile)
Professor of Law
The College, University of Pennsylvania, B.A. 1974 summa cum laude and Phi
Beta Kappa
University of Pennsylvania Law School, J.D. 1977 cum laude (University of
Pennsylvania Law Review, Editor)
Gerald Korngold rejoined the New York Law School faculty in fall 2008 from
Case Western Reserve University School of Law, where he was the McCurdy
Professor of Law and served as Dean from 1997 to 2006. He was a faculty
member at New York Law School from 1979 to 1987 and Associate Dean for
Academic Affairs from 1984 to 1986. He has lectured nationally and
internationally on land and property law issues and writes and teaches in
the fields of property and real estate law. He is the author of Private
Land Use Arrangements: Easements, Real Covenants, and Equitable Servitudes
(Juris Publishing, 2004); co-author of two casebooks, Real Estate
Transactions: Cases and Materials on Land Transfer, Development, and
Finance (Foundation Press, 2002) and Cases and Text on Property (Aspen
Publishers, 2004); and co-editor of Property Stories (Foundation Press,
2004). Professor Korngold’s current research focuses on
privatization of public land use regulation, real estate transactions,
comparative global property rights, and other issues.
Frank W. Munger (click here to see Professor
Munger’s full profile)
Professor of Law
Co-chair, Law and Society Colloquium
Kenyon College, B.A. 1964 summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, Legal Services
Corporation Fulbright Fellow (1964-65)
University of Michigan, J.D. 1968, Ph.D. (Sociology) 1977
A scholar of public law and a specialist in social science research, Frank
Munger teaches Constitutional Law, Social Welfare Policy, Local Government,
Land Use Planning, and seminars on contemporary justice, poverty, and
globalization issues. Professor Munger has been General Editor of the Law
& Society Review, President of the Law and Society Association, Chair
of the Section on Sociology of Law of the American Sociological
Association, Chair of the Law and Social Sciences section of the American
Association of Law Schools, and has served on numerous editorial boards
and government research review panels. He has also served as Academic Dean
of Antioch Law School. He is a co-organizer of the New York Law and Society
Colloquium, an interdisciplinary workshop featuring leading international
scholars sponsored jointly by New York Law School and the Law and Society
Institute at New York University.
Richard Marsico (click here to see
Professor Marsico’s full profile)
Professor of Law
Director, Justice Action Center
Director, Economic Justice Project of the Justice Action Center
Fordham, B.A. 1982 summa cum laude
Harvard, J.D. 1985 magna cum laude
Law Clerk, Hon. Shirley Wohl Kram, U.S. District Court, Southern District
of New York
Richard D. Marsico directs New York Law School’s Justice Action
Center, where he is responsible for shaping the School’s efforts to
use law’s constructive power as a tool of justice and social
welfare. He brings extensive practical experience to the Justice Action
Center, having worked as a staff attorney in the Civil Division of the
Legal Aid Society in the Bronx and as law clerk to the Honorable Shirley
Wohl Kram of the U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York. He
teaches clinical courses at New York Law School, where he has supervised
students representing clients on diverse issues including discrimination,
community reinvestment, not-for-profit law, and political asylum.
Professor Marsico’s scholarship now focuses on the Community
Reinvestment Act and predatory mortgage lending. He is examining ways to
encourage banks to make loans to businesses and residents of low-income
neighborhoods without encouraging predatory lending at high interest rates
and harsh terms.
Ross Sandler (click here to see Professor
Sandler’s full profile)
Professor of Law
Director, Center for New York City Law
Editor, CityLaw, CityLand, and CityRegs Newsletters
Dartmouth, A.B. 1961
New York University, LL.B. 1965, Order of the Coif, (Law Review); Root
Tilden Fellow
Professor Ross Sandler is the founding director of New York Law
School’s Center for New York City Law. He joined the Law School in
1993 after a long and distinguished career in public service. During the
early 1970s, he worked in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Manhattan as
the Chief Appellate Attorney and Chief of the Environmental Enforcement
Unit. His office’s successful prosecution of Hudson River polluters
led to the passage of the 1972 Clean Water Act. Later, as Senior Staff
Attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council, he headed the Urban
Environmental Unit, winning a pivotal Clean Air Act case. In 1981, Mayor
Edward Koch appointed Professor Sandler to the newly created position of
special advisor to the mayor, where his environmental law experience
helped revitalize the city’s mass transit system. In 1986, he was
appointed Department of Transportation Commissioner and proceeded to
reorganize the 8,000-person department with a program of maintenance and
repair still in place today.
One of the strengths of the LL.M. in Real Estate at New York Law School is the opportunity to study with some of the leaders of the New York real estate bar.
Lucas
A. Ferrara
Landlord/Tenant Law
Lucas A. Ferrara is a partner at Finkelstein Newman Ferrara LLP, a leading
landlord/tenant firm, where he represents primarily corporate clients in
real estate disputes. Professor Ferrara’s writing credits include
numerous essays and articles which have appeared in a variety of
publications including New York Newsday, the New York Law Journal, and the
New York State Bar Journal, and he is co-author of the West treatise
Landlord and Tenant Practice in New York.
Alexander Ferrini III
Construction Law; Construction Litigation
Alexander Ferrini is principal of his own construction law firm,
representing leading developers and other institutions in construction
negotiation and litigation. He is the author of numerous articles on
construction law and a regular instructor at continuing professional
education events.
Theresa Garelli
Title Insurance
Theresa Garelli is Senior Vice President and Counsel at First American
Title Insurance Company of New York, where she is responsible for national
and international business development. She has more than 20 years of
experience in the title insurance industry, including five years as the
Chief Claims Counsel at First American. Professor Garelli is a well known
speaker at legal conferences and is a member of the Board of Directors of
the Association of Real Estate Women.
Joseph
Giamboi
Real Estate Development
Joseph Giamboi is General Counsel of The Zucker Organization and is
responsible for overseeing all of the firm’s legal affairs,
including property acquisition, development, construction and property
management. The Zucker Organization, one of New York City’s most
prominent full service real estate organizations, has built, owns and
manages more than 3,500 apartments.
Emanuel B. Halper
Real Estate Negotiation and Drafting
Emanuel Halper is a real estate consultant, attorney, author and
teacher with extensive experience on both the legal and business sides of
transactions. He is a partner of the Canadian Pacific Realty Company, and
has served as president of Vornado, Inc,’s real estate subsidiary
and founding partner of a leading boutique real estate law firm. He is the
author of scores of articles and books on real estate, including leading
treatises on Shopping Center and Store Leases and Ground Leases and
Acquisition Contracts. An outstanding lecturer and teacher, Professor
Halper has served on the faculties of numerous universities, including
NYU’s Real Estate Institute, the Graduate School of Business at the
University of Wisconsin and Hofstra Law School. A member of the American
Bar Foundation, he is also the recipient of numerous professional awards,
including the ABA’s Spirit of Excellence Award for his work in
establishing its Community Outreach Program.
David M. Ledy
Drafting Workshop
David M. Ledy is the Chief Operating Officer of U.S. Realty Advisors, a
leading real estate firm that both invests in projects and serves as an
advisor to companies, financial institutions, developers, and investors on
the acquisition, structuring, and financing of real estate assets. Prior to
joining U.S. Realty Advisors, he was Chairman of the real estate workout
group at Shea & Gould.
Richard G. Leland
Land Use Law
Rick Leland is a partner at Fried Frank, with over 30 years experience
representing real estate developers, energy companies, non-profit
organizations and public authorities. His practice encompasses a wide
range of land use and environmental matters, including zoning, takings,
environmental impact assessments, regulatory and transactional counseling,
and litigation. A former Chairman of the Environmental Committee of the
Real Estate Board of New York, Professor Leland has also taught at land
use and environmental law courses for more than twenty years.
Charles J. Maikish ’74
Land Use Law
Charles Maikish is an attorney and engineer whose varied and distinguished
career includes helping to rebuild the World Trade Center after the 1993
terrorist bombing, serving as Executive Vice President for Global Real
Estate at J.P. Morgan Chase, and running the Lower Manhattan Construction
Command Center in the wake of the 2001 destruction of the World Trade
Center. He is a member of the School’s Center for Real Estate
Studies Advisory Board, and has previously taught Land Use at NYU.
Lawrence
Schnapf ’84
Environmental Problems in Business Transactions
Lawrence Schnapf, who practices with Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP, is one
of New York’s leading environmental attorneys and is as accomplished
in the classroom as in his practice. He has served as Chair of the
Environmental, Energy, and Natural Resources Law Committee of the
ABA’s Section on Business Law and Co-chair of the NYS Bar
Association’s Brownfields Task Force. He is also a prolific writer
on environmental law and policy.
Richard Siegler
Cooperatives and Condominiums
Richard Siegler, a partner at Stroock & Stroock & Lavan LLP,
represents many of New York’s leading coop corporations and condo
associations. Known as one the top experts in the field, he is the author
of regular columns for the New York Law Journal and Habitat, and serves as
Counsel to the Real Estate Board of New York’s Residential Management
Council. He has a passion for the classroom and has taught at New York Law
School for more than 20 years.
Mark A. Silberman
Preservation Law
Mark A. Silberman serves as General Counsel of the NYC Landmarks
Preservation Commission, the largest such agency in the country, where he
oversees all policy and regulatory initiatives, litigation, rule-making
procedures, application reviews, and enforcement actions. Before joining
the Landmarks Preservation Commission, he was an attorney with Paul,
Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP.
Ventura Simmons
Affordable Housing and Community Development
Ventura Simmons is a senior attorney at the Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD), where he represents the agency in major real
estate transactions, with an emphasis on affordable housing development,
management and preservation, and complex private/public financing and
development projects. Before joining HUD, Professor Simmons was a real
estate attorney at Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP.
L.
Stanton Towne
Commercial Leasing
L. Stanton Towne, an accomplished commercial leasing attorney, recently
joined Studley, one of New York’s top commercial leasing brokerage
firms, as a senior managing director. He was previously a partner with
McDermott Will & Emery and with Towne Dolgin Sawyier & Horton, a
firm he co-founded and co-managed for eight years. He started his legal
career with international law firm Sullivan & Cromwell. Among other
honors, he is a past chair of the Committee on Real Property Law of the
Association of the Bar of the City of New York.
Benjamin Weinstock
Advanced Real Estate Transactions
Benjamin Weinstock is Co-chair of the Real Estate Department of Ruskin
Moscou Faltischek, P.C., one of Long Island’s largest and most
prestigious firms. He has extensive experience in complex commercial real
estate transactions, real property acquisition and development, and
financing. Professor Weinstock is the Secretary of the New York State Real
Estate Board and a frequent lecturer for continuing legal education
programs sponsored by the New York State Bar Association and several other
CLE providers.
LL.M. in Real Estate
New York Law School
185 West
Broadway
New York, NY 10013-2960
T 212.431.2391
F
212.431.1830
E RealEstateLLM@nyls.edu