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Canadian Bankruptcy Law Buffet Style With a U.S. Garnish

Event

When:
Mon, October 24, 2016
Category:
Webinars

Description

 General Information

Cost: Members: $299
Non-Members: $349

Register Now

Registration Includes: One telephone and web connection at one physical location


Time

3:00pm EST

About the Webinar

This webinar, conducted by bankruptcy and insolvency specialists from both Canada and the United States, will provide an overview of Canada's bankruptcy laws that have the most impact on U.S. trade creditors selling goods and/or providing services to Canadian companies and a comparison with U.S. bankruptcy law. There will be a discussion of creditors' rights under Canada's CCAA, BIA and other proceedings compared to creditors' rights under comparable U.S. Bankruptcy Code provisions. There will also be a discussion of recent Canadian retail filings.

About the Speaker

Bruce S. Nathan, Esq. is a partner of Lowenstein Sandler LLP in the firm’s bankruptcy, financial reorganization and creditors’ rights group. Bruce has more than thirty years’ experience in the bankruptcy, restructuring and insolvency field and is a recognized national expert on trade creditor rights and the representation of trade creditors in bankruptcy, insolvency and other legal matters.. He has represented trade and other unsecured creditors, unsecured creditors’ committees, secured creditors and other interested parties in many of the larger Chapter 11 cases that have been filed, and is currently representing the liquidating trustee and previously represented the creditors' committee in the Borders chapter 11 case. Bruce is co-chair of the Avoiding Powers Committee that is working with the American Bankruptcy Institute’s Commission to Study the Reform of Chapter 11 and also participated in ABI's Great Debates at their 2010 Annual Spring Meeting, arguing against repeal of the special BAPCPA protections for goods providers and commercial lessors, and was a panelist for a session sponsored by the ABI and co-sponsored by Georgetown University Law Center. He is also a member of ABI’s Board of Directors and is a former Co-Chair of ABI’s Unsecured Trade Creditor Committee. He is also the author of ABI’s Trade Creditor Remedies Manual: Trade Creditor Rights under the UCC and Bankruptcy Code and contributes to ABI Journal’s Last in Line Column . Bruce is also a member of NACM’s Government Affairs Committee, is a regular contributor to NACM's Business Credit, is a contributing editor of NACM’s Manual of Credit and Commercial Laws, and has co-authored The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005: an Overhaul of U.S. Bankruptcy Law, published by NACM. He also spoke at the 4th China International Credit and Risk Management Conference on the People’s Republic of China’s 2006 Law on Enterprise Bankruptcy. In 2011, Bruce received the Top Hat award, a prestigious award honoring professionals in the credit industry. He received his BA from the University of Rochester, his JD from the University of Pennsylvania Law School and his MBA from the Wharton School of Finance and Business.

Aubrey Kauffman, Esq. is a partner with Fasken Martineau and the Chair of the Toronto Insolvency and Restructuring Group. He is a director of the prestigious Insolvency Institute of Canada and a past Chair of the Ontario Bar Association - Insolvency Section. Aubrey’s practice focuses on advocacy matters related to domestic and cross border bankruptcy, insolvency and restructuring proceedings. Aubrey has acted in many high profile insolvency proceedings representing a wide gamut of stakeholders including court officers, debtors, creditors at all levels of the capital structure and government agencies. Aubrey is certified as a specialist in both Bankruptcy and Insolvency and Civil Litigation by the Law Society of Upper Canada and is recognized in the insolvency and restructuring area by several rating agencies including Lexpert, Best Lawyers in Canada, Chambers Global: Canada, and Who’s Who Legal.

Webinar Access

Instructions to join the Webinar will be sent to the main registrant's email address the day before. Remember! please log-in at least 15 minutes prior to the webinar commencing to ensure ample time for technical assistance if needed.

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