Media & Publications

60 Minutes: Litigation Funding: A multibillion-dollar industry for investments in lawsuits with little oversight

60 Minutes: Litigation Funding: A multibillion-dollar industry for investments in lawsuits with little oversight

Ever heard of litigation funding? It's a relatively new, multibillion-dollar industry where investors fund lawsuits. Here's the idea: say someone was wronged by a big corporation but has no money to sue it. A litigation funder will pay for their court battle. In essence: they're betting on the lawsuit the way traders bet on stocks. If it's successful – they make money, sometimes a lot of money; if it fails – the funders get nothing – their investment is lost.

Read More
Zombie Litigation: Claim Aggregation, Litigant Autonomy and Funders' Intermeddling

Zombie Litigation: Claim Aggregation, Litigant Autonomy and Funders' Intermeddling

The main debate surrounding litigation funding in recent years has focused on the question of disclosure of funding agreements. While the issue is important, predominantly because of its effects on the course and outcome of individual cases, far more important are bigger, interrelated questions which have systemic effects on the civil justice system, the legal profession, and the nature of the rise of portfolio funding- which I here propose to view as a new form of undisclosed and unregulated claim aggregation- has broader-still effects including clients' potential, and at times actual, loss of autonomy over their cases as their lawyers become originators, brokers and/or managers of 'litigation assets.'

Read More
The Partnership Mystique: Law Firm Finance and Governance for the 21st Century American Law Firm

The Partnership Mystique: Law Firm Finance and Governance for the 21st Century American Law Firm

This Article identifies and analyzes the de facto and de jure end of lawyers’ exclusivity over the practice of law in the United States. This development will have profound implications for the legal profession, the careers of individual lawyers, and the justice system as a whole.

Read More
Report of the National Expert for the United States in Mapping Third Party Litigation Funding In The European Union

Report of the National Expert for the United States in Mapping Third Party Litigation Funding In The European Union

Commercial third-party litigation funding (“TPLF”) is not centrally regulated in the United States.  It is subject to the overlapping jurisdiction of state and federal courts, state and federal legislatures, regulatory agencies, and bar associations. Legislation, regulation, and oversight of TPLF is being undertaken at each of those levels – much of it centered around the questions of when and whether TPLF should be disclosed; how to mitigate conflicts of interest created by TPLF (including the potential for claimants to lose control over their case to funders); and the identification of any foreign individuals, entities, or countries that may be providing the funding. At least 12 state legislatures and the U.S. Congress have passed or considered TPLF legislation. Many federal and state courts have issued standing orders regarding litigation finance. In TPLF cases, courts have used their inherent powers to investigate potential abuse of process and to determine whether those appearing before the court are the real parties in interest. 

Read More
Financial Times on Chinese-funded lawsuit Challenges

Financial Times on Chinese-funded lawsuit Challenges

The Financial Times (FT), a top global business publication, recently published a major piece examining the future of the multi-billion dollar litigation funding industry. The article focused on the challenges and criticisms facing the sector, including regulatory scrutiny and the complexities of capital management, especially as it relates to foreign investment in U.S. and international disputes.

Read More
New Ariz. Law Practice Rules May Jump-Start National Reform

New Ariz. Law Practice Rules May Jump-Start National Reform

On Jan. 1, 2021, a far-reaching reform of the practice of law took effect in Arizona, opening the sector up to nonlawyer participation. Given the global context of the reform and the general economic climate, we predict that other states will follow suit in coming years, profoundly transforming the American legal profession.

Read More
WSJ: Litigation Financing Attracts New Set of Investors

WSJ: Litigation Financing Attracts New Set of Investors

The article, 'Litigation Financing Attracts New Set of Investors,' examined how hedge funds and other institutional investors are increasingly funding lawsuits in exchange for a portion of the recovery, a trend that is rapidly transforming the civil justice system.

As a leading expert in the field, Maya Steinitz was featured for her commentary on the ethical and regulatory challenges posed by the industry's growth.

Read More
How Much Is That Lawsuit in the Window? Pricing Legal Claims

How Much Is That Lawsuit in the Window? Pricing Legal Claims

Assessing the value of legal claims is the sixty-four thousand dollar question (no pun intended) of civil litigation.

Clients, as every litigator knows, often come into their attorneys' offices with a belief that they know how much their claim is worth. The attorney is then asked to validate that number.

Alternately, clients can come to their attorneys with a grievance-I have been injured, a counter-party breached its contract with me, I have been fired, our rainforest has been devastated by a mining company-and ask the attorney for an assessment of how much their grievance might be worth.

Read More
Whose claim is this anyway? third-party litigation funding

Whose claim is this anyway? third-party litigation funding

Imagine that a woman wants to bring a claim for sexual harassment against her powerful and wealthy former employer but can neither afford counsel nor find an attorney willing to take the case on contingency. A private funder provides the necessary financing for her to pursue her claim.

Further suppose that the employer in question is a former governor, now the sitting President of the United States, and that the investor is a wealthy supporter of the President's political opposition, and that the case starts a chain reaction that could have brought an end to the President's term in office.

Read More
Internationalized Pro-Bono and a New Global Role for Lawyers in the 21st Century: Lessons from Nation-Building in Southern Sudan

Internationalized Pro-Bono and a New Global Role for Lawyers in the 21st Century: Lessons from Nation-Building in Southern Sudan

From 2004 to 2006, the author led the pro bono representation of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (“SPLM”), assisting the SPLM in drafting and negotiating the National Interim Constitution of Sudan, the Interim Constitution of Southern Sudan and the Constitutions of two “transitional” states. The representation was part of an emerging trend in pro bono representations. In small but increasing numbers, private law firms have begun to take on pro bono projects with global significance - assisting governments and civil society in post-conflict countries to deal on an even footing with foreign investors, for instance, or working with international criminal courts to prepare indictments of war criminals.

Read More