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Technology Stocks : Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN)
AMZN 229.12-0.2%Nov 26 3:59 PM EST

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To: hdl who wrote (146075)8/24/2002 12:27:18 PM
From: H James Morris  Read Replies (2) of 164684
 
Here's several of the best pickle suckers in the USA.
I hear some call Harvey Miller "Dr. Doom".
Btw
SHAREHOLDER SUITS
Bill Lerach?
The best. He lives 10 minutes from me and handles all my shareholder suits.

>>BANKRUPTCY
Harvey Miller

After a decade of reliably good news for American business, it’s Miller time again. The economic realities of 2000 and 2001 have been more friendly than the roaring ‘90s to Harvey Miller, who represents failing companies, restructures businesses, and plays tough with the creditors who come to collect. He has been called “Dr. Doom” by the Wall Street Journal, “the Dean Acheson of distressed debt” by the New York Observer and, more to the point, “the world’s leading bankruptcy lawyer” by the National Law Journal.

A graduate of Brooklyn College and Columbia Law School, Miller’s career has led him to wealth, controversy, and a stature confirmed by seminal texts he has written and by his testimony before Congress on the intricacies and implications of bankruptcy law. He has handled Chapter 11 filings for such prominent clients as Sunbeam Corp., Continental Airlines, Eastern Air Lines, Texaco, and R. H. Macy & Co. During the Macy’s case, his correspondence with a lawyer for the department store’s bondholders revealed how Miller gets his way with all the subtlety and warmth of an exchange on The Weakest Link. “Your letter of April 6, 1994,” Miller wrote at one point, “once again demonstrates your persistence in being ‘oblivious to the obvious,’ as well as your deficiencies in respect of legal scholarship.”

“You have to understand that bankruptcies are dramas,” says the 68-year-old New Yorker. “Some of them are like divorce cases. It’s the lives, the drama. It’s real people. And if you’re successful, people have jobs, they have a rehabilitated business.”

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