Overbilling, Corrupt Courts,Malpractice,... Proskauer Rose Complaints seem to be never ending.. Kerstin Lindholm seems to have perserved through quite a bit of injustice.. Great Job!!!
" Swedish Heiress: Proskauer Overbilled, Churned File in Case of ...
Swedish heiress has sued Proskauer Rose for nearly $9 million, accusing the firm of manipulating its billing practices to overcharge her by millions.
In a separate malpractice claim, she alleges that the firm mishandled her suit against the jet-setting art buyer who purchased an Andy Warhol silkscreen that had been stolen from her, court records show.
The heiress of a Swedish building fortune, Kerstin Lindholm of Greenwich, Conn., retained Proskauer Rose in March 2002 to pursue claims against Peter Brant, the media mogul and Warhol enthusiast who purchased "Red Elvis" for $2.9 million in 2000 while it was on loan to the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, court records show.
Brant bought the painting--worth at least $12 million in 2003--from a crooked Swedish art dealer who sold it out from under Kerstin Lindholm, according to court records and this New York Times story. The dealer eventually served prison time for the theft, but Lindholm never got the painting back"
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"Swedish Heiress Sues Proskauer Rose for Overbilling in Case of Stolen Warhol
A Swedish heiress has sued Proskauer Rose for nearly $9 million, accusing the firm of manipulating its billing practices to overcharge her by millions. In a separate malpractice claim, she alleges that the firm mishandled her suit against the jet-setting art buyer who purchased an Andy Warhol silkscreen that had been stolen from her, court records show.
The heiress of a Swedish building fortune, Kerstin Lindholm of Greenwich, Conn., retained Proskauer Rose in March 2002 to pursue claims against Peter Brant, the media mogul and Warhol enthusiast who purchased "Red Elvis" for $2.9 million in 2000 while it was on loan to the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, court records show.
Brant bought the painting -- worth at least $12 million in 2003 -- from a crooked Swedish art dealer who sold it out from under Lindholm, according to court records and this New York Times story. The dealer eventually served prison time for the theft, but Lindholm never got the painting back.
A Connecticut judge ruled in favor of Brant in 2005.
Now Lindholm and Proskauer Rose are involved in an ugly dispute over fees that peaked earlier this month, when Lindholm sued the firm in state court in Connecticut.
And her legal team at Bello, Lapine & Cassone in Stamford, Conn., has included something of a smoking gun as an exhibit in their complaint -- an internal Proskauer memo written on letterhead bearing the name of a Proskauer Rose associate who appears to have reviewed the firm's Lindholm file at some point. (The note is undated.)
In the handwritten note, the associate writes that descriptions of Proskauer Rose 's work "may suggest double billing for same work," that "rates are quite high" and that there was an "overall excessive handling of every item in the case."
Through a spokesman, Proskauer Rose called Lindholm's allegations "entirely without merit." The associate who wrote the note, Mara Lainie Taylor, did not return a message seeking comment. Lawrence Weinstein, the lead Proskauer Rose attorney on the Brant litigation, did not return a call seeking comment.
Lindholm's lead lawyer, Lawrence Lapine, declined to comment on the case.
Proskauer Rose originally sued Lindholm in 2007 for unpaid fees.
In her new complaint, Lindholm claims Proskauer Rose estimated the case would cost her between $300,000 and $350,000, records show.
But Proskauer Rose 's bills had already hit that range in May of 2003, about 14 months into the case, and, with no end in sight, Lindholm began agitating for a discount. Proskauer Rose LLP granted her three separate discounts over the next two years, eventually agreeing to cut its hourly billing rates by 75 percent.
Even so, Lindholm claims, her monthly bills continued to increase until the firm's final bill ended up at $1.4 million, discounted from $2.8 million.
Her complaint alleges that Proskauer Rose kept the billable numbers up by "billing paralegal work at attorney rates"; "having attorneys perform paralegal work"; "billing twice for the same work"; "billing for the same services multiple times"; and "handling every item in the case in an excessive manner, a practice commonly known as churning the file." These accusations appear to have been taken from Taylor's note.
Lindholm claims she has paid more than $1 million to Proskauer Rose in legal bills so far, and the breach of fiduciary duty count in her suit seeks $850,000 -- the difference between Proskauer's original estimate and the amount she has paid.
The larger malpractice count seeks $8 million and accuses the firm of failing to pursue a claim against the Guggenheim. Lindholm believes she has a course of action because the museum should have notified her immediately when Brant asserted a claim of ownership to "Red Elvis" over the phone in 2000, according to the complaint. Had the museum done so, the suit claims, Lindholm could have stopped delivery of the painting to an address in Denmark, where the dealer arranged for its sale to Brant.
Lindholm's agent suggested Proskauer Rose LLP sue the museum, but the firm concluded she had no claim against the Guggenheim. Lindholm also pushed for a jury trial, but the firm waived her right to a jury trial and argued the Brant case before a judge instead.
The suit claims Proskauer Rose LLP did so because Lindholm wasn't paying her bills and the firm wanted to finish the case quickly. "
Proskauer Rose LLP - Kerstin Lindholm Click HERE
http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1202430274183
http://www.ifar.org/web_registration.php?caller=/case_summary.php?docid=1248295359
http://www.museum-security.org/03/033.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/03/13/arts/
accusations-of-theft-envelop-warhol-work.html?pagewanted=all
Proskauer Rose Fraud on the Courts?
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