Thirty percent of the incoming law school deans in the U.S. are women, creating a buzz throughout legal education. But, as Kathleen M. Boozang noted, women leaders are not news at Seton Hall Law, “it’s just one more way we are ahead of the curve.”
“Our founder, Miriam T. Rooney, was the first woman dean of an ABA-accredited law school back in 1951,” said Dean Boozang. “Of the Law School’s eight deans, three are women.
“So we began the tradition of breaking the mold from the very start.”
Paulette Brown ’76 has made a career of being first. As the 2015-16 President of the American Bar Association, Paulette Brown ’76 is driving innovation for the national organization of 400,000 members. She is the first woman of color to lead the ABA and believes the diversity she reflects should radiate throughout the legal profession.
During her keynote speech at the ABA meeting in Chicago, Brown evoked the words of attorney and civil rights leader Charles Hamilton Houston, affirming that lawyers are indeed “social engineers for justice.”
“As lawyers – regardless of our ideology, age, practice area, or place of employment – we all believe that this nation’s laws must be applied equally,” she said. “We deeply value the concept that the justice system must not only be fair, but must be perceived as fair by everyone in order to be effective.”
Dean Boozang was honored to celebrate Paulette Brown’s installation as ABA President. “Paulette’s speech inspired me,” Dean Boozang said. “She underscored the value of our profession’s traditions, yet challenged us to revisit, rethink, and, always, improve, both the substance and application of the law. Tradition and innovation – they are at the heart of Seton Hall Law’s commitment to our students, to our alumni, and to the legal profession overall. We could not be prouder that Paulette stands among our most distinguished graduates.”
Read more about the Seton Hall Law alumni community at law.shu.edu/alumni
ABA
’76
Boozang at the ABA Annual Meeting in Chicago in August 2015
As the new Dean of Seton Hall Law School, I am honored to introduce the 2015 issue of our annual alumni magazine.
I am both delighted and humbled to succeed Dean Patrick E. Hobbs. As I meet deans from other law schools nationwide, I discover that his extraordinary leadership over the past 16 years is legendary. Seton Hall Law is known for its meteoric rise by virtually every measure in every ranking.
Dean Hobbs’ success was built upon the foundation established by his predecessor, Dean Ronald J. Riccio, who fostered an ethos of rigor and compassion, inculcated in every student who graduated during his tenure. Both Deans Riccio and Hobbs molded a faculty who are nationally known for their scholarship and for the incomparable quality of their teaching.
On behalf of the entire Seton Hall Law community, I extend our gratitude to Dean Hobbs for his vision, his passion, and for the joy he brought to his work and which he shared every day with his colleagues, with our students and with you, our alumni.
I am pleased to continue my predecessors’ tradition of sharing with you the Law School’s many successes over the past year. Through impactful faculty scholarship and landmark events, Seton Hall Law continues to distinguish itself on the national stage.
Professor Thomas Healy, whose book on Oliver Wendell Holmes and the First Amendment was published to great acclaim last year, was named a Guggenheim Fellow, one of our nation’s most prestigious scholarly awards. Professor John Jacobi’s work monitoring the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, on behalf of New Jersey’s most underserved communities, fills a systemic gap. Professor Kristin Johnson hosted this year’s annual National Business Law Scholars Conference, convening academics who teach, study and influence the shape of corporate practices, regulations and policies.
Seton Hall Law hosted jurist Paul Clement, the 43rd Solicitor General of the United States, as the speaker at this year’s Larson Lecture, made possible by Peter N. Larson ’74. Paul Clement affirmed for students that, while there is no substitute for hard work and exhaustive preparation, they have the talent to achieve true excellence in the law.
Seton Hall Law commemorated the 50th anniversary of the Selma to Montgomery March with a special screening of the award-winning film, Selma. Professor Wilfredo Caraballo then moderated a panel discussion, in which Professors Mark Denbeaux and Brenda Saunders Hampden illuminated this tumultuous period with their personal experiences as civil
Letter from Our Dean
rights pioneers. Associate Dean Mark Alexander interpreted today’s events in light of this moment in civil rights history.
The inaugural “Diversity in Compliance” event, sponsored by the Center for Health & Pharmaceutical Law & Policy and Johnson & Johnson, with support from the Dean’s Diversity Council, brought together professionals and students to build their networks within this rapidly growing area in our region’s regulated industries, a field in which Seton Hall Law is internationally prominent.
Our success may also be measured in numbers. At #63, our U.S. News & World Report ranking solidifies our place in the top third of the nation’s 200 law schools. Likewise, Above the Law included Seton Hall Law among its Top 50 Law Schools for the third consecutive year. Just as important, Above the Law ranked Seton Hall Law tied at #1 for our Alumni Rating, based on your feedback about your alma mater. We are honored for the distinction and, as always, proud of our graduates.
The Seton Hall Law alumni network is uniquely strong –“fierce,” as one student put it. As a professor and Associate Dean for 25 years, I value the number of former students whom I count today among my good friends and esteemed colleagues.
I plan to spend this year meeting as many of you as possible, to share with you my vision for Seton Hall Law. I welcome your insights into how we can better support you in continuing to achieve your professional aspirations, and how we, as a Law School, can play a more integral role within the larger community.
Warm regards,
Dean and Professor of Law
A New Dean for Seton Hall Law
Rooted in firmly held traditions, welcoming innovation
“Seton Hall Law succeeds because we continually reinvent,” said Dean Kathleen M. Boozang, explaining how the current market requires the Law School to be nimble.
“Seton Hall Law distinguishes itself by anticipating the demands of a constantly evolving economy, enabling us to prepare our students to excel in the world into which they graduate.”
Dean Boozang follows Dean Patrick E. Hobbs, who led Seton Hall Law School from 1999 to 2015. The seamless transition of leadership is a natural outgrowth of Dean Hobbs’ and Dean Boozang’s longstanding friendship and working partnership over the decades. Both joined the Seton Hall Law faculty as assistant professors on the same day in 1990.
Serving as Associate Dean for more than half of Dean Hobbs’ tenure, Dean Boozang was one of the primary architects and drivers of the Law School’s strategic planning process in 2004. The resulting plan and its implementation through the concerted efforts of Seton Hall Law faculty, administration, and the Seton Hall Law Board of Visitors, resulted in the Law School’s meteoric rise over the past decade in the U.S. News & World Report rankings, to #63 in 2015. “No other law school has climbed more dramatically within the same time frame,” noted Dean Boozang, adding, “Imagine where we’ll be in another decade!”
We want to imbue Seton Hall Law graduates with a commitment to serving the community no matter what career path they pursue.
— Dean Kathleen M. Boozang ’’
In addition, graduates’ bar passage rates have exceeded state averages in New Jersey and New York for nearly 10 years. And, with the Law School’s total employment rate of 93 percent for the Class of 2014, employment outcomes parallel those of the top law schools in the nation. Dean Boozang is known to students for her hands-on approach to student placement. She has carried that dedication into the deanship, having spent much of her first summer as dean “working to connect students with judges and law firms on both sides of the Hudson, in Washington, D.C., and in California,” she said, with a laugh.
Dean Boozang speaks of her and Dean Hobbs’ “parallel paths” in achieving a shared vision. “As Pat sought support for the initial strategic plan from our alumni, donors and the University, my role was to spearhead the plan’s fulfillment,” she said. “You see the results reflected in the kind of entrepreneurial, forward-thinking programs that we’ve developed and in the quality and caliber of our faculty. We preserved the ethos instilled by Dean Ronald Riccio – our faculty continue to be dedicated to the success of each and every Seton Hall Law student and graduate.”
“My strategic planning process always includes in-depth discussions with senior leaders in corporations,” Dean Boozang said. “They are the ultimate clients and employers whom our students will advise or serve when they graduate. Their business needs inform how law firms will practice law in the next five, ten or fifteen years. I have also grown relationships with many consulting firms who now compete with law firms, and am acutely aware that many multi-national corporations have essentially built in-house law firms.”
One of the emerging trends she capitalized on was compliance. “New Jersey is at the epicenter of our
world’s most highly regulated industries – life sciences and financial services,” she said. “Compliance represents an entire new profession which Seton Hall Law can educate, as well as a new pathway for our J.D. graduates.”
This year, Dean Boozang, working together with the Law School’s corporate law faculty, introduced both an M.S.J. degree in Compliance in Financial Services and a J.D. Concentration in Compliance. Today, Seton Hall Law offers the greatest array of compliance education and training programs of any law school in the country.
Dean Boozang cautions against these entrepreneurial activities detracting from the education of the many students who will ultimately spend their careers in small firms representing individuals and small-tomedium-sized entities. “We need to remember this in planning our curriculum, and in thinking about how to best serve our alumni,” she explained. One of Dean Boozang’s first initiatives is the creation of a working group to strengthen the Law School’s ties with those practicing in smaller firms, who, said Dean Boozang, “comprise a strong core of our alumni.”
A Dedication to Service and Social Justice
An inspiration for Dean Boozang’s candidacy for the deanship was Pope Francis’ call that each of us, and every community, “be an instrument of God for the liberation and promotion of the poor, and for enabling them to be fully a part of society.”
Indeed, Seton Hall Law’s Catholic mission and its presence in Newark is why Dean Boozang came to Seton Hall Law. “I think about our role in the community – as a citizen – in the same way I seek to identify new areas of the law we might develop,” Dean Boozang said. “I talk to as many individuals as possible in the judiciary, government and the community. What are the pressing
areas that need law reform in our state? What gaps exist in services? Where can Seton Hall Law make a difference? What expertise exists within our faculty that can help the community? We are developing a new strategic plan for the Center for Social Justice that matches the strengths of our clinical faculty with community needs and that offers every student an opportunity to have a clinical experience. We want to imbue Seton Hall Law graduates with a commitment to serving the community no matter what career path they pursue.”
Looking Forward
Where does Dean Boozang envision Seton Hall Law in five years? “We are already one of the top five Catholic law schools in the country, so I have my eye on the number one spot,” said Dean Boozang with a smile. “We will be driven first and foremost by its mission, while remaining a forward-thinking law school with both J.D. and graduate programs taking their cues from the marketplace – the sectors comprising the ultimate clients, and employers, of Seton Hall Law graduates.
“While preparing the next generation of attorneys will always represent our core activity,” Dean Boozang predicted, “we will be educating and training a growing number of professionals who do not want to practice law, but who choose to make their careers in public service or in the business world. As teachers, we need to have a broader vision of the pathways our students will travel.”
“Ultimately, I envision that the legal profession, government and industry will recognize Seton Hall Law for its excellence in educating not only future attorneys but also future policy-makers and business professionals,” Dean Boozang concluded. “I firmly believe that the J.D. is an outstanding preparation for any number of career paths, not just the practice of law. Our faculty will continue to produce innovative, impactful scholarship and continue to be more involved in on-the-ground reform efforts. Such engagement reflects the need for Seton Hall Law to remain a ‘good citizen,’ making our society a better place in which to thrive and prosper in all senses of the word.”
About Dean Kathleen M. Boozang
Dean Boozang came to Seton Hall in 1990 as a health law professor charged with founding the Law School’s now top-ranked Center for Health & Pharmaceutical Law & Policy. She served as Associate Dean to Dean Hobbs, as Vice Provost at Seton Hall University, and as Associate Dean for Academic Advancement.
Dean Boozang has focused much of her scholarship on nonprofit governance issues with a special focus on religiously-affiliated hospitals, and in recent years, explored the legal and policy issues related to corporate corruption and compliance.
Dean Boozang is a Fellow of The Hastings Center as well as a Fellow of the American Bar Foundation. She is also a member of the American Law Institute and is past president of the American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics (ASLME).
In 2013, the ASLME conferred upon Dean Boozang the Jay Healy Health Law Teacher Award. Dean Boozang currently serves on the Board of Trustees of the St. Joseph Healthcare System in New Jersey. After attending Boston College she graduated from Washington University School of Law in St. Louis, where she was inducted into the Order of the Coif and served as the managing editor of the Law QuarterLy. She received her LL.M. from Yale Law School.
Dean Boozang is pictured with Seton Hall Law graduates who have launched their careers with prestigious clerkships. Cymetra Williams ’15, left, is currently clerking for the Honorable Mary Catherine Cuff, Presiding Judge of the Appellate Division of the New Jersey Superior Court, who is temporarily assigned to the New Jersey State Supreme Court. In September 2016, Williams will clerk for the Honorable Michael A. Shipp ’94, U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey. Edan Lisowicz ’14, right, clerked for the Honorable Donald H. Steckroth, U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Jersey, until his retirement in February, and has since clerked for Judge Steckroth’s successor, the Honorable John K. Sherwood, with whom Lisowicz will remain for the coming year.
Enduring Values that Drive Innovation at Seton Hall Law
In her letter welcoming new students, Dean Boozang writes,
Seton Hall Law’s cornerstone values – integrity, loyalty and engagement – define the Seton Hall lawyer . . . . The integrity and character of the Seton Hall lawyer explains why we stand out for excellence. Seton Hall loyalty means that your professors and classmates will be invested in your success throughout your career, from the moment you become a student.
“Looking over the last 25 years, it became clear that these foundational values comprise the core of our culture,” Dean Boozang commented. “When I meet with graduates, these values resonate for them, as well.”
Why the Seton Hall Lawyer is Unique
“Seton Hall Law engages our students in what it means to practice law from their first day. Faculty seek to ensure that our students not only grasp concepts and master their application, but also understand that the end game is to produce results for a client: an individual, company, or policy-maker,” Dean Boozang explains. “Whether meeting with judges or partners in law firms, I hear that Seton Hall graduates understand how to produce results, and they have an outstanding work ethic.”
“One of our most important recent curricular innovations is Introduction to Lawyering, a year-long course for first-year students, introducing them to the core functions of a lawyer. It enhances our legal research and writing training while incorporating practice experiences like interviewing, counseling and negotiating,” Dean Boozang said. Because Lawyering is taught by full-time faculty, 1L students have a ready mentor with whom they spend an entire year in a small group setting. Faculty inculcate the values of integrity, loyalty and engagement that Dean Boozang believes form the Seton Hall lawyer. “I am confident our 1L students will carry this experience with them for their entire careers” she said.
Building Career Success, One Student at a Time
Myriad externship, fellowship, summer employment and clinical opportunities, in a variety of settings, enable students to test their interests and then pursue career options with knowledge. The Road to
Success, a series developed by Dean of Students Cara Foerst and the Office of Career Services, hosts alumni from a spectrum of settings to share their roles, responsibilities and career paths. “A law degree offers many roads to professional success,” Dean Boozang observed.
“We work with each student individually to identify her career interests and the path that will help him achieve his aspirations. This approach produces better-prepared and more satisfied graduates.”
Dean Boozang also recognizes the importance of the Seton Hall Law alumni network in opening doors for its students and graduates. “‘Loyalty’ truly describes the bond our graduates feel toward both students and one another,” she said. “None of what we accomplish would happen without the continued engagement of our alumni.”
Faculty as ‘Active Citizens’
As a health law professor, Dean Boozang appreciates the power of scholarship to transform public policy, believing that law schools have a special obligation to deploy their assets to achieve reform. Professor Marina Lao’s career of antitrust scholarship resulted in her appointment as Director of the Office of Policy Planning at the Federal Trade Commission. Professor Rachel Godsil’s work on housing, land use and social justice led to her appointment, by Mayor Bill DeBlasio, as Chair of the New York City Rent Guidelines Board.
In addition, Professor Linda Fisher’s research on property foreclosures in lower-income neighborhoods exposed unethical practices within the financial services sector. And for the past 10 years, Dean Boozang noted, “Professor Edward Hartnett, one of the nation’s top constitutional law scholars, has co-authored Supreme Court Practice, the definitive guide to protocols in our nation’s highest court.”
“Most important,” concluded Dean Boozang, “is that engaged scholars make outstanding teachers and role models, exemplifying the possibilities of what you can accomplish with a law degree.”
Each year, Professor Rachel Godsil hosts a panel discussion during Orientation, talking with alumni about their law school experiences and their current professional roles. Pictured, from left, are the members of year’s panel: Matthew Colford ’10, Director, Advisory, KPMG LLP; Andrea Joy Albrecht ’11, Associate, Ceconi & Cheifetz, LLC; Professor Godsil; Danielle Counts ’12, Deputy Attorney General, Division of Child Protection and Permanency; Steven Llanes ’13, Associate, Lowenstein Sandler LLP; and Lauren Repole ’13, Associate, Simpson, Thatcher, & Bartlett, LLP.
Dean Patrick E. Hobbs
Celebrating
16 Years
of Distinguished Service as Dean of Seton Hall Law
‘‘
There
has never been a day when I have not looked forward to coming into this building,
Dean Hobbs is known to say—often when welcoming new students; exhorting them to feel the joy he has always felt as a member of the Seton Hall Law community.
In August 2014 Dean Hobbs announced he would step down. What followed was yet another year of distinguished, remarkable service. Here are some of the highlights.
’’
‘‘ ’’
My three favorite days of our academic year are, Orientation—today, when I get to usher in our newest incoming class; our Swearing-In Ceremony for the most recent graduating class; and Graduation. Welcome to the start of your legal career. Our faculty can’t wait to get a hold of you!
Orientation
August 18, 2014
Swearing-in Ceremony
December 3, 2014
“My parting words to our newly minted attorneys are always the same: You have worked hard to reach this moment. Take your oath seriously because, when all is said and done, your future as a lawyer will rise and fall with your reputation. Guard it with everything you have.”
Joining Dean Hobbs, from left, the Honorable David B. Katz ’87 Presiding Judge, Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part, who administered the state oath; and the Honorable Steven C. Mannion ’93, Magistrate Judge, U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey, who administered the federal oath.
Commencement
May 22, 2015
“Class of 2015, in your hand you hold a 2015 quarter painted red, in a plastic case. The quarter is to remind you that in times of trouble, or doubt, or jeopardy, I want you to call me. I gave you my cell phone number the first day of law school. Call me. I’ll get you through that moment.”
Dean Hobbs was the speaker for the 2015 Commencement, at which Seton Hall University conferred upon him an honorary Master of Laws degree.
The New Dean is Appointed:
Kathleen M. Boozang
April 24, 2015
A Farewell Tribute to Dean Hobbs
May 12, 2015
“On occasion, after an event wraps up, I’ll go back to the office to get my briefcase. Everyone has gone home and the building is empty. And I walk the building. I see the people, they are still here. Their spirit is still here, always with us.”
Seton Hall Law’s Board of Visitors, Alumni Council, student organization leaders, faculty and administration honored Dean Hobbs with a special celebration. Patrick C. Dunican Jr. ’91, Chair of the Board of Visitors, served as the master of ceremonies for the program. Led by the Board of Visitors, Seton Hall Law raised $782,800 for the Patrick E. Hobbs Endowed Scholarship, the largest endowed scholarship in the history of the Law School.
I am delighted that my colleague and friend will succeed me as Dean. She is the right person to lead Seton Hall during this time of extraordinary change in legal education and the practice of law. Under her leadership I am confident our Law School will reach even greater heights,
‘‘ ’’
Dean Hobbs wrote in his announcement to the community following Dean Boozang’s appointment by the Seton Hall University Provost.
The Larson Lecture becomes the Hobbs Lecture
February 10, 2015
“Peter Larson generously donated to refurbish this wonderful space, which is why we sit today in the Larson Auditorium. He wanted it to be a place where the spirit of civil discourse is well and consistently observed.”
In 2012, Peter N. Larson ’74 (pictured with Dean Hobbs) and his wife, Lee, inaugurated the Larson Lecture, inviting distinguished speakers representing the diversity of opinion on matters of national importance. The 2015 Lecture welcomed Paul D. Clement, the 43rd Solicitor General of the United States. This year, Peter Larson announced the lecture series has been renamed the Hobbs Lecture, in honor of Dean Hobbs.
Paulette Brown ’76 ABA President
“It’s always good to come back home,” said Paulette Brown as she opened her address to the incoming Seton Hall Law students at Orientation in August.
Brown visited her alma mater just two weeks after assuming the presidency of the American Bar Association, marking the launch of her initiative, Main Street ABA – a yearlong, nationwide tour of law schools and state and local bar associations. As the first woman of color to lead the ABA, Brown is determined to help the ABA broaden its pipeline, with bold initiatives to foster greater diversity and inclusion within the legal profession, and a part of that effort is her visits to boys and girls clubs across the U.S.
At Orientation, Paulette Brown shared her view of the vital role lawyers play in society: “I remember being in your place, never knowing any lawyers when I grew up,” she said. “I went to college thinking I would be a social worker so that I could save the world. I quickly learned that with a law degree and with the power that it gives, I could have much more impact.”
“There is a justice gap,” Brown continued, encouraging students to consider the law as both a profession and a call to service. “There is so much need for all of you, and for the talents you will bring to the legal profession. We know that, because you are here, you set a bar for yourselves that is very high. And it is very important that you never let anyone lower that bar for you – and that you never lower it for yourself.”
“The legal profession provides more hours of pro bono service than any other profession,”
Paulette Brown said to Seton Hall Law students in August. And she reminded her fellow alumni of the ABA’s annual Pro Bono Week, October 25-31, to recognize pro bono service and recruit volunteers nationwide, along with a new signature event, And Justice for All: An ABA Day of Service, which will take place on October 30. Visit www.celebrateprobono.org for more information.
Seton Hall Law student leaders, who give extensive amounts of time in service to the Law School, met with Paulette Brown for lunch following her remarks. Pictured, from left, are Joseph Dellera ’17; Nedda Alvarez ’17; Chelsea Ott ’17; Diane Lopez ’16 ; Dominic DiLeo ’17; Saige Sube ’17, Dina Ibrahim ’16, Paulette Brown, Noel Thomas ’16, Katherine Dadulla ’16, Latoya Dawkins ’17, Svjetlana Tesic ’16 and Pooja Patel ’16.
“Diversity and inclusion doesn’t just mean bridging racial, gender, or sexual orientation divides. It means recognizing what we have in common, how we have so many shared goals, and the many ways in which they make us a better, stronger, and a more noble profession,” Paulette Brown said during her acceptance speech at the national ABA meeting in early August.
ClassNotes
On June 12, 2015, Seton Hall University held its annual gala, “Many Are One,” to recognize Seton Hall University graduates who have given of their time and energy in service to the University community. Gregory L. Acquaviva ’06, the 2014-15 President of the Seton Hall Law Alumni Council, was among the honorees. He had served as Chief of Staff to New Jersey Lt. Governor Kim Guadagno, and she surprised him by joining the celebration. He is pictured with his wife, Devon, left, and Lt. Governor Guadagno, right.
| 1960s
James B. Ventantonio ’64 joined SAI Management Consulting as Executive Vice President. The Hon. Stephen B. Rubin ’69 joined The Rotolo Law Firm as Of Counsel.
| 1970s
Frederick Nugent ’71 became a member of the Santa Fe Community College Foundation Board. The Hon. Donald H. Steckroth ’72 joined Cole Schotz P.C. as a Member. Walter J. Greenhalgh ’74 received the Manny Katten Award from the Association of Insolvency & Restructuring Advisors. The Hon. Joel A. Pisano ’74 joined Connell Foley LLP as Of Counsel. Alfred C. Koeppe ’75 was awarded the NJUA Distinguished Service Award by the New Jersey Utilities Association. The Hon. Sallyanne Floria ’78 was appointed to lead the Essex County Vicinage. The Hon. Marlene Lynch Ford ’79 was named Assignment Judge for the Ocean Vicinage Superior Court. The Hon. Mark Janeczko ’79 was appointed a judge for the Bergen County Superior Court.
| 1980s
Arleen Tyndorf ’80 joined Health Republic Insurance of New Jersey as Senior Executive Vice President/Chief Compliance Officer. Thomas Ludlum ’82 was nominated to become a judge for the Workers’ Compensation Court of New Jersey. The Hon. Bonnie J. Mizdol ’82 was named assignment judge for Bergen County Superior Court. The Hon. Peter J. Melchionne ’83 was nominated for tenure in Bergen County. Louis Andreozzi ’84 was named CEO of the .law division of Minds + Machines. Kevin Clark ’84 joined Helmer, Conley & Kasselman, P.A. as Counsel. Stephen M. Gansler ’84 was appointed Senior Vice President and Global Head of Human Resources at Oxford Immunotec. Kathryn Koles ’84 was promoted to Senior Vice President and Deputy General Counsel of Comcast Cable. Liza M. Walsh ’84 was named Managing Partner of Connell Foley LLP’s Newark office. Mark Benevenia ’85, Managing Counsel, Merck & Co., Inc. was honored by the Pro Bono Partnership for his outstanding pro bono service to the Partnership’s clients. Michael Dillon ’85 was nominated to become a judge for the Workers’ Compensation Court of New Jersey. The Hon. John
G. Hudak ’85 was appointed a judge for the Union County Superior Court. Vivian Sanks King ’85 was appointed a judge for the Newark Municipal Court. Joseph A. Torcivia ’85, co-president of Torcon Inc., was named Monmouth University’s 2015 Distinguished Business Leader. Charles B. Carey ’86 together with John J. Grossi III ’91, formed the firm, Carey & Grossi, Attorneys at Law. Kathleen N. Fennelly ’86 was elected Secretary of the New Jersey State Bar Foundation. The Hon. Lisa A. Firko ’86 was nominated for tenure in Bergen County Superior Court. The Hon. Jane Gallina Mecca ’86 was appointed a judge for the Bergen County Superior Court. The Hon. Richard Wischusen ’86 was appointed a judge for the Union County Superior Court. Anthony F. DellaPelle ’87 was elected to the Board of Directors of Owners’ Counsel of America. The Hon. Rudolph Filko ’87 was approved for tenure for the Passaic County Civil Division. Richard E. Incremona ’87 joined Helmer, Conley & Kasselman, P.A. as Counsel. Thomas Huth ’88 was promoted to Senior Litigation Counsel in the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office. Lenore Molee ’88 was appointed Dean of the School of Professional Studies at Berkeley College. Anthony Principi ’88 was appointed to the Talbot Hospice Foundation. Marc D. Rosenberg ’88 joined Golenbock Eiseman Assor Bell & Peskoe LLP as a Partner. The Hon. Madeline Cox Arleo ’89 was appointed a judge for the U.S. District for the District of New Jersey. William J. Palatucci ’89 received the Women’s Political Caucus of New Jersey’s “Good Guy Award.” James A. Paone, II ’89 was elected Managing Shareholder at Davison, Eastman & Muñoz, P.A. Gianfranco Pietrafesa ’89 was named a 2015 NJ Super Lawyer in the business and corporate category.
| 1990s
Marie A. Accardi ’90 joined Reardon Anderson, LLC. John J. Grossi III ’91, together with Charles B. Carey ’86, formed the firm Carey & Grossi, Attorneys at Law. The Hon. Andrea Carter-Latimer ’92 was approved for tenure in Middlesex County Superior Court. Geraldine Reilly ’92 was appointed to serve as Chair of the Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board. Vernon Nelson ’93 has joined Wilson Elser Moskowitz Edelman & Dicker LLP in its Las Vegas office as a
Partner. Denise Crump Sharperson ’94 has joined the New Jersey State Bar Association as Assistant General Counsel and Director of Diversity Initiatives. John D. Williams ’94 was elected President of the Sussex County Bar Association and was also sworn in as Sussex County Counsel. Jeffrey B. Cianciolo ’95 became a Partner at McLaughlin & Quinn LLC. Derrick R. Freijomil ’95 became a Partner at Riker Danzig Scherer Hyland & Perretti LLP. Yasmeen S. Khaleel ’95 was a “Woman to Watch in 2015” by South Jersey Biz Magazine. Athina Cornell ’96 started her own firm, Sciarrillo Cornell Merlino, McKeever & Osborne, LLC. Jeralyn L. Lawrence ’96 received the 2014 New Jersey State Bar Association Distinguished Legislative Service Award. Karen A. Passaro ’96 was appointed Dean of the Division of Continuing Education and Professional Studies at Seton Hall University. John Michael Vazquez ’96 was nominated as a judge for the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey. Douglas A. Wheeler ’96 was elected Senior Vice President in the Office of Governmental Affairs at New York Life. Jennifer Borek ’97 became a Partner at Genova Burns Giantomasi & Webster. Allison G. Greenberg ’97 became Counsel with Fensterstock & Partners LLP. Jamie K. Brown ’98 was named Executive Director of the Lake George Land Conservancy. Meghan Bennett Clark ’98 was named an Equity Partner at Dilworth Paxson LLP. Mel Marquis ’98 co-authored the book, Litigation and
Dedication of the Dean’s Office
Patrick C. Dunican Jr. ’91 and his family showed their support for Seton Hall Law by dedicating the Dean’s office on the 3rd floor of the Law School building. The Dunicans’ generous gift is commemorated with a plaque outside the Dean’s office that was formally affixed in May 2015. Patrick Dunican is the Chairman and Managing Director of Gibbons P.C. and Chair of the Seton Hall Law Board of Visitors. Pictured, from left, are Dean Boozang, Patrick Dunican and Dean Hobbs.
Arbitration In EU Competition Law James I. McClammy ’98 became a Partner at Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP. Fruqan Mouzon ’98 was appointed General Counsel of the New Jersey State Senate Democratic Majority Office. Elaine Rocha ’98 was named Chief Operating Officer & Chief of Staff for AIG Investments. Dean R. Lospinoso ’99 was appointed Counsel at Riker Danzig Scherer Hyland & Perretti LLP. Gary J. Ruckelshaus ’99 joined Blank Rome LLP as a Partner. Theodore G. Zaleski ’99 was appointed Vice President of Clinical Effectiveness for Southern Ocean Medical Center.
| 2000s
Peter F. Berk ’00 became Counsel at Genova Burns Giantomasi & Webster. Eric Dittmann ’00 was named a Rising Star by Law360 Nicole DiMaria ’01 was named among the “2015 New Leaders of the Bar” by the New Jersey Law Journal Ramy A. Eid ’01 was appointed a Municipal Judge in Hudson County. John F. “Jack” Gillick ’01 was appointed a Trustee of the New Jersey State Bar Foundation. Terence O’Leary ’01 was appointed Deputy Secretary for Public Safety for the State of New York by Governor Andrew Cuomo. Neil Mody ’01 was named among the “2015 New Leaders of the Bar” by the New Jersey Law Journal. Sean A. Smith ’01 has been elected co-chair of the Essex County Bar Association’s Family Law executive
committee. Jennifer Critchley ’02 was named among the “2015 New Leaders of the Bar” by the New Jersey Law Journal. Leora B. Freire ’02 was voted in as President-Elect of the Florida Association for Women Lawyers for the 2015-16 term. Christopher E Kunkel ’02 was named among the “2015 New Leaders of the Bar” by the New Jersey Law Journal Obadiah English ’03 became a Partner at Mannion Prior, LLP. Dr. John F. McArdle ’03 was named Assistant Professor of Management at the Bertolon School of Business at Salem State University. Cherylyn Esoy Mizzo ’03 has been selected for the 2015 Fellows program of the Leadership Council on Legal Diversity. Peter M. Perkowski, Jr. ’03 was appointed Counsel at Riker Danzig Scherer Hyland & Perretti LLP. Natasha Songonuga ’03 became a Director at Gibbons P.C. Danielle M. DeFilippis ’04 became a Member of Norris McLaughlin & Marcus, P.A. Keya C. Denner ’04 became a Member of Norris McLaughlin & Marcus, P.A. Daniel Levy ’04 became a Member of the Firm at Epstein Becker & Green, P.C. Akinyemi Akiwowo ’05 joined Morgan Stanley as Vice President of Legal and Compliance. Nancy Del Pizzo ’05 joined Rivkin Radler LLP as Counsel. Deborah Kelly ’05 was nominated to the Morris County Historical Society’s Board of Trustees. Mark E. Lacis ’05 was named a Director and Shareholder at Ireland Stapleton Pryor & Pascoe.
ClassNotes
On March 6, 2015, Seton Hall Law held its Annual Alumni Dinner Dance honoring Paulette Brown ’76, right, the 2015-16 President of the ABA and Partner at Locke Lord LLP. Karol Corbin Walker ’86, left, presented the 2015 Distinguished Graduate award to Paulette Brown at an event attended by alumni, supporters and friends.
Franklin C. McRoberts IV ’05 was named a 2014 New York Metro “Rising Star” in Super Lawyers Magazine Stephen J. Pagano ’05 joined Riker Danzig as Counsel. Jennifer Marino Thibodaux ’05 became a Director at Gibbons P.C. Tadd Yearing ’05 was named a “2015 New Jersey Rising Star” in Super Lawyers Magazine
The 30th Annual Red Mass
Gregory L. Acquaviva ’06 was named Vice President, State Government Affairs, for UnitedHealth Group. James W. Boyan III ’06 was named a “2015 New Jersey Rising Star” in Super Lawyers Magazine Jairo Cano ’06, Associate at Agostino & Associates, was selected as a 2014-15 Jack Nolan Fellow. Tracy McSweeney Child ’06 was named among the “2015 New Leaders of the Bar” by the New Jersey Law Journal. Oscar Pinkas ’06 was elevated to partner at Dentons US LLP. Brendan M. Walsh ’06 was named a 2015 “New Jersey Rising Star” in Super Lawyers Magazine John Cascarano ’07 has joined Failla Law Group, LLC as an Attorney at Law. Lisa Chapland ’07 joined the New Jersey State Bar Association as Director of Government Affairs. William “Bill” Ferreira ’07 was appointed a Trustee of the New Jersey State Bar Foundation. Christopher Kinkade ’07 became a Partner at Fox Rothschild. James Marlow ’07 joined Cores Services Corporation Sparta as Of Counsel. Matthew R. Petracca ’07 joined the Law Offices of Debra Lynn Nicholson as Of Counsel. He was also named among the 2014 “Rising Stars” in Super Lawyers Magazine Scott E. Reiser ’07 became a Member at Lum, Drasco & Positan LLC. David Sherman ’07 received the “Lawyers Who Lead by Example 2014 Award –Pro-Bono” from the New York Law Journal Wanda French-Brown ’08 was selected for membership in the “National Black Lawyers Top 40 Under 40.” Chana (Hecht) Chalupski ’08 was named Registration Coordinator for Taglit Birthright Israel: Young Judaea. Joao Magalhaes ’08 was
The 30th Annual Red Mass, the traditional service held in honor of lawyers and judges took place on September 19, 2014 at the majestic Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart in Newark. The St. Thomas More Medal was bestowed upon the Hon. Madeline Cox Arleo ’89, who was sworn in to the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey in April 2015. She is pictured with her husband, Frank Arleo, and the Most Reverend Bernard A. Hebda, Co-Adjutor Archbishop of Newark.
named among the “2015 New Leaders of the Bar” by the New Jersey Law Journal Robert Prongay ’08 became the second named Partner in Glancy Prongay & Murray LLP. Grace Byrd ’09 was named among the “2015 New Leaders of the Bar” by the New Jersey Law Journal Sanyam Parikh ’09 joined Norris McLaughlin & Marcus, P.A. as an Associate.
|
2010s
Jessica Jansyn ’10 was honored with the Elinor J. Ferdon Young Woman of Promise Award at the Girl Scouts of Northern New Jersey’s Women of Achievement Fundraising Gala. Jordan T. Cohen ’11 joined Mintz Levin as an Associate. William P. Conaboy, Jr. ’11 published an article, “Dealing with Known or Suspected Whistleblowers in Internal Investigations” in the October 2014 issue of the American Health Lawyers Association’s Long Term Care Services newsletter. Erika M. Lopes-McLeman ’11 became an Associate at Dentons US, LLP. Kristyl M. Berckes ’12 joined Norris McLaughlin & Marcus, P.A. as an Associate. Daniel Bonilla ’12 became a member of the Hanover Township Economic Development Advisory Committee. Eric M. Dante ’12 joined Drinker Biddle & Reath, LLP as an Associate. Desiree Grace ’12 became a Judicial Clerk to the Hon. Morton I. Greenberg, U.S. Court of Appeals. Amanda D. Laufer ’12 became Law Clerk to the Hon. Madeline Cox Arleo ’89 of the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey. Emily Metz Meredith ’12 was
named Vice President of Animal Care at the National Milk Producers Federation. Elizabeth Blakely Paquet ’12 joined Polsinelli as an Associate. Jessica CM Almeida ’13 joined Mazie Slater Katz and Freeman as an Associate. Christopher B. Fontenelli ’13 was named the first recipient of the New Jersey State Bar Association’s Pro Bono Award: New Attorney. Rose Maureen Harper ’13 joined Morrison Mahoney LLP as an Associate. Jonathan A. Keller ’13 joined East Orange General Hospital as General Counsel. Jennifer (Jascoll) Ljungberg ’13 joined Robinson Burns, LLC as an Associate. Kiaema R. Reid, MSJ ’13 joined Actavis plc as HCP Engagement Manager, Marketing Operations. Jacqulyn N. Simmons ’13 joined Morrison Mahoney LLP as an Associate. Benjamin J. Smith ’13 joined Rawle & Henderson LLP as an Associate. Frank E. Ferruggia, Jr. ’14 joined Genova Burns Giantomasi Webster as an Associate. Elizabeth A. Matecki ’14 joined McOmber & McOmber as an Associate.
In Memoriam
Seton Hall Law and the entire legal community mourned the loss of three beloved members this past year.
Joseph F. Sararyn ’76
April 6, 2015
Ahmed L. Bulbulia
Professor of Law
January 29, 2015
Marc Poirier
Professor of Law and the Martha Traylor Research Scholar
August 2, 2015
William B. McGuire ’58
Founding Partner, Tompkins, McGuire, Wachenfeld & Barry
Founding Chair of the Seton Hall Law Board of Visitors
May 12, 2015
Eduardo “Pancho” Cruz
Lopez ’84
June 21, 2015
Vernell Patrick ’90
April 23, 2015
Sean Cutshall ’02
September 30, 2014
Seton Hall University School of Law Board of Visitors 2015-16
Louis J. Andreozzi ’84 Chief Executive Officer .law Division, Minds + Machines
Mitch F. Baumeister ’72 (Former Chair) Partner Baumeister & Samuels, PC
Kathleen M. Boozang Dean and Professor of Law Seton Hall University School of Law
Paulette Brown ’76 Partner Locke Lord LLP
Frank T. Cannone ’91 Chairman, Corporate Department Gibbons P.C.
Maury Cartine ’76 Partner-in-Charge, Tax Department Marcum, LLP
Christopher J. Christie ’87 Governor, State of New Jersey
Michael Critchley ’72 Founding Partner Critchley, Kinum and Vazquez, LLC
Rinaldo M. D’Argenio ’79 Of Counsel Arturi, D’Argenio, Guaglardi & Meliti, LLP
Joseph J. DePalma ’82 Partner Lite, DePalma & Greenberg, LLC
Anthony P. DiTommaso, Jr. ’97 Chief Executive Officer Ivy Equities
Mariellen Dugan ’91 (Vice Chair) Senior Vice President & General Counsel New Jersey Resources Corporation
Patrick C. Dunican Jr. ’91 (Chairman) Chairman & Managing Director Gibbons P.C.
Kathryn P. Duva ’01 Chief Executive Officer Main Events
Susan A. Feeney Partner McCarter & English, LLP
Todd M. Galante ’86 Shareholder LeClairRyan
Rev. Nicholas S. Gengaro Chaplain Seton Hall University School of Law
John C. Gibbons ’72 Senior Managing Director OSO Group, LTD
Bernard M. Hartnett ’55 Retired, Former Member of Connell Foley
The Honorable Katharine S. Hayden ’75 United States District Court District of New Jersey
Patrick E. Hobbs
Dean Emeritus and Professor of Law Seton Hall University School of Law
Alfred F. Jablonski ’66
Chief Executive Officer
The Sage Foundation
Colleen E. Tracy James ’96
Partner Mayer Brown LLP
Stephen B. Judlowe ’65 Of Counsel
McElroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney & Carpenter, LLP
Wendy Johnson Lario ’92 Shareholder Greenberg Traurig, LLP
Peter N. Larson ’74 (Former Chair) Former Chairman & Chief Executive Officer of the Brunswick Corporation
Joseph P. LaSala ’72 (Secretary) Partner
McElroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney & Carpenter, LLP
Kevin H. Marino ’84 Partner
Marino, Tortorella & Boyle, P.C.
Denis McLaughlin Professor of Law
Lynn Fontaine Newsome ’81
Partner
Newsome O’Donnell, LLC
David M. Orbach Chairman of the Board Regal Bank
James C. Orr ’64 Of Counsel
Wilson, Elser, Moskowitz, Edelman & Dicker, LLP
William J. Palatucci ’89
Special Counsel Gibbons P.C.
Robert F. Perry ’89
Managing Partner King & Spalding, NY Office
Ronald J. Riccio
Professor of Law, Dean Emeritus Seton Hall University School of Law
Elaine A. Rocha ’98
Chief Operating Officier & Chief of Staff AIG Investments
Brent Saunders President & Chief Executive Officer
Actavis
James B. Ventantonio ’64
Executive Vice President SAI Management Consulting
Sarah Waldeck
Professor of Law
Seton Hall University School of Law
Justin P. Walder
Member Walder, Hayden & Brogan, P.A.
Karol Corbin Walker ’86
Shareholder LeClairRyan
Honor Roll of Giving
The outstanding legal education that Seton Hall Law provides its students would not be possible without the generous support of alumni, friends, faculty, staff, parents, businesses, and organizations. Every gift to Seton Hall Law is greatly appreciated. Your generosity is important because of the positive impact it has on our students and faculty, as well as the Law School as a whole. Honor rolls recognize and thank donors for their gifts, and share with fellow alumni and friends the inspiring example of giving.
This Honor Roll acknowledges gifts made between July 1, 2014 and June 30, 2015. Thank you!
Individuals
$100,000+
Mitch F. Baumeister ’72
Robert F. Perry ’89
Lynn Samuels
Organizations
$100,000+
Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund
The MCJ Amelior Foundation
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Individuals
$50,000 –$99,999
Joe Braunreuther
Maury Cartine ’76
Robin Cartine
Christina Dunican
Patrick C. Dunican Jr. ’91
Barbara Garland
Organizations
$50,000 –$99,999
Johnson & Johnson
New Jersey State Bar Foundation
Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth
Individuals
$25,000 –$49,999
Joseph M. DeCotiis ’94
Robert Osborne Meyer ’77
Organizations
$25,000 –$49,999
DeCotiis, Fitzpatrick & Cole, LLP
Gibbons P.C. Sage Foundation
Individuals
$10,000 –$24,999
Diane G. D’Agostino ’75
James S. D’Agostino ’74
Gary Dicoviatsky
Mariellen Dugan ’91
Kathryn P. Duva ’01
Helen Judlowe
Stephen B. Judlowe ’65
Michael Lario
Wendy J. Lario ’92
Lee Larson
Peter N. Larson ’74
Debra A. LaSala
Joseph P. LaSala ’72
Kevin H. Marino ’84
Rita Marino
Thomas M. Nee ’73
Lynn Fontaine Newsome ’81
James M. O’Brien
Judy A. O’Brien
Joseph A. Torcivia ’85
Frank J. Vecchione ’64
Diego R. Visceglia ’71
Organizations
$10,000 –$24,999
BARBRI Bar Review
James Boskey Memorial Foundation
Community Foundation of New Jersey
Greater Houston
Community Foundation
The International Foundation
The Michael J. Kosloski Foundation
Marino, Tortorella & Boyle, P.C.
McElroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney & Carpenter, LLP
Newsome O’Donnell, LLC
The Nicholson Foundation
Organizacion Mundial De Boxeo Inc.
The Torcivia Family Foundation
Individuals
$5,000 –$9,999
Lisa Andreozzi
Louis J. Andreozzi ’84
Emily Panreck Cannone
Frank T. Cannone ’91
Richard J. Cino ’90
Kevin T. Coughlin ’80
Therese Boyle Coughlin
Colleen D’Alessandro
Henry F. D’Alessandro
Susan A. Feeney
Alena Galante
Todd Mark Galante ’86
Bernard M. Hartnett ’55
The Honorable Joseph Hayden
The Honorable Katharine S. Hayden ’75
Robert A. Lord ’86
Daniel J. McCarthy ’87
Brian J. Molloy ’78
Sean Monaghan ’83
Diane C. Nardone ’88
Dara Orbach
David M. Orbach
Laura Palatucci
William J. Palatucci ’89
Mary Lou Parker ’75
Kevin M. Prongay ’73
Nan Prongay ’74
Robert V. Prongay ’08
Laura Simonyan Rensel ’94
Robert G. Rose ’74
Paul Sauchelli ’92
Bernard A. Schwartz ’78
Scott Stephen Servilla ’95
John James Sumas ’00
Anita Winkler Ventantonio
James B. Ventantonio ’64
Justin P. Walder
Yolanda Walder
Karol Corbin Walker ’86
Paul Walker
Organizations
$5,000 –$9,999
American International Group
Andreozzi Consulting LLC
Caesars Entertainment
Operating Co., Inc.
Columbian Foundation
Connell Foley LLP
Jackson Lewis P.C.
LeClairRyan
Lord, Kobrin, Alvarez & Fattell, LLC
McCarter & English, LLP
New Jersey Law Journal
Schwab Charitable Fund
Schwartz Foundation
Village Supermarket, Inc.
Wilentz, Goldman & Spitzer P.A.
Individuals
$1,000 - $4,999
Evans C. Agrapidis ’83
Leonard J. Altamura ’66
Frederick W. Alworth ’88
Frank P. Arleo
The Honorable Madeline C. Arleo ’89
Anthony J. Arnone ’01
Anne Serzan Babineau ’77
Robert L. Baechtold ’66
Laura Diane Flynn Baldini ’96
Matthew Baldini ’96
Patricia A. Barbieri ’91
Robert S. Basso
The Honorable Marie White Bell ’73
Michael Daniel Bell ’97
Deborah A. Bello ’79
Kyle C. Bisceglie ’92
Kathleen M. Boozang
Colleen Denise Brennan ’91
Paulette Brown ’76
Brian B. Buynak ’82
Lan Hoang Cadigan ’97
Richard Thomas Cadigan ’97
Eleanor S. CampbellSwank ’97
Gregory G. Campisi ’82
Charles C. Carella
Angela Christine Carmella
Michael Timothy Carton ’96
Lizanne J. Ceconi ’82
Priscilla Chenoweth
The Honorable Christopher J. Christie ’87
Mary Pat Christie
The Honorable Vicki A. Citrino ’92
Mark A. Clemente ’81
Terence G. Connor ’67
Keith W. Cook ’00
William J. Cozine ’64
John Bryson Degnan
Nicole Forma Degnan ’95
Philip James Degnan ’96
Janet M. Dempsey-Malone
Roger W. Dinella ’91
Timothy M. Donohue ’84
Donna du Beth Gardiner ’89
Joseph J. Dvorak ’66
Kathleen B. Estabrooks ’77
The Honorable Lisa Anne Firko ’86
Adrian M. Foley, Jr.
Mary V. Foley
Paula Ann Franzese
Jerome J. Froelich ’72
Eugene F. Gaughan
Kalman Harris Geist ’65
Angelo J Genova
Scott D. Greenberg ’01
Brian W. Hanse ’88
William C. Hanse ’70
Martin Alan Hewitt ’99
John Edmund Hogan ’98
John P. Inglesino ’90
Luke P. Iovine ’90
Susan Vera Iovine ’91
Gregory J. Irwin ’79
John V. Jacobi
Colleen Elena Tracy
James ’96
Stephanie M. Kay ’92
Michael C. Keefe ’87
Thomas C. Kelly ’73
Brian S. Kern ’06
Richard C. Kielbania ’00
Kevin M. Kilcullen
Benjamin F. Lambert ’68
James N. Lawlor ’92
Herbert Henry Leckie ’00
Charles William Lefevre ’96
John N. Lemieux ’79
Daniel R Levy ’04
Kevin MacGillivray
John F. MacLeod ’71
Robert K. Malone ’84
Mark Manigan ’97
Stephen M. McCabe ’65
James Irving McClammy ’98
Madelyn Camacho McClammy ’98
Grant William McGuire ’95
The Honorable John A. McLaughlin ’65
Cynthia H. McNutt ’07
Sheila Frances McShane ’00
Eli Morawiec ’91
Debra Marie Mouridy
Glenn J. Mouridy ’79
Melissa A. Natale ’03
Frederick F. Nugent, Jr. ’71
Bernadette Haggerty Olson
Thomas M. Olson ’82
Laurence B. Orloff
Joseph A. Panepinto, Sr. ’70
Jacqueline C. Pirone ’04
Bridget Marie Polloway ’00
Merric J. Polloway ’00
The Honorable Anthony J. Principi ’75
Jamie Carolyn
Pukl-Werbel ’98
Thomas F. Quinn ’81
Peter C. Richardson ’77
Elaine A. Rocha ’98
James F. Ryan, Jr. ’74
The Honorable Henry E. Rzemieniewski ’70
Z. Lance Samay ’70
Nina Maria SavignanoDonohue
John L. Shahdanian ’97
Karen M. Spano ’95
Brian G. Steller ’82
Candice Steller
Charles A. Sullivan
Ann Uliano
Charles J. Uliano ’74
Joseph T. Walsh, III ’89
Liza M. Walsh ’84
Marcia B. Welcome ’81
The Honorable Deanne M. Wilson ’80
Marc E. Wolin ’92
Peter R. Yarem ’79
The Honorable Mara Eileen Zazzali-Hogan ’98
Organizations
$1,000 - $4,999
1180 Raymond
A.B.O.T.A.
Arleo, Donohue & Biancamano, LLC
The Association of the Federal Bar of the State of New Jersey
Robert Bianchi ’88 Partner, Bianchi Law Group, LLC
Mayling C. Blanco ’06 Associate, Blank Rome LLP
Eric Brophy ’99 Partner, Diegnan & Brophy, LLC
Marc A. Calello ’89 The Law Office of Marc A. Calello, Esq. P.C.
David V. Calviello ’96 (Emeritus Member) Assistant Prosecutor, Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office
Michelle Capezza ’96 Member of the Firm, Epstein Becker & Green, PC
John Cascarano ’07 Attorney at Law, Failla Law Group, LLC
Amy Cattafi ’08 Director, Healthcare Compliance Certification Program Seton Hall University School of Law
John F. Chiaia ’93 Partner, Chiaia & Associates LLC
Tamara R. Coley ’10 Regulatory Counsel, Division of Policy Development Office of Generic Drugs, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, Food & Drug Administration
Frank J. DeAngelis ’96 (Emeritus Member) Partner, Mound Cotton Wollan & Greengrass
Javier Diaz ’12 Assistant Counsel, Office of the Governor