Jeremy S. Friedberg 
Contact
Phone: 410.581.7403
Email:
Jeremy S.
Friedberg attended Albany Law
School of Union University where he received a joint J.D./M.B.A. cum laude. Graduating near the top of
his class, Jeremy served as Associate Editor of the Albany Law Review. Jeremy is a member of the
Maryland, Virginia and District of Columbia bars and is admitted to all Federal and State courts in these
jurisdictions, as well as the Supreme Court of the United States and the United States Court of Federal
Claims.
A talented lawyer with an
outstanding courtroom record and
extensive experience in negotiation, documentation and workout of numerous asset based transactions and
debtor-in-possession financing, Jeremy's litigation experience extends from complex fraud cases in the
United
States District Court to bankruptcy and state court collection actions, as well as representing receivers
and assignees for the benefit of creditors. Additionally, Jeremy has experience in asset acquisitions,
software development, distributorship agreements and other highly technical corporate law
matters.
Jeremy brings to LLFF lending
experience gained prior to becoming an attorney at G.M.A.C. and Fidelcor Business Credit Corporation (now
The CIT Group/Business Credit, Inc.).
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Vice-president and an executive board member of the Association of Commercial Finance Attorneys
Co-chair of the A.B.A. Litigation Section, Creditors Rights
Litigation Subcommittee
Chair of the A.B.A. Business Law Section, Commercial Loan
Documentation Subcommittee
Chair of the Maryland State Bar Association’s Business
Law Section Uniform Commercial Code Committee
Liaison from the Commercial Finance Committee of the A.B.A.
Business Law Section to the A.B.A. Diversity Committee
Regional Coordinator for the Uniform Commercial Code
Committee of the A.B.A. Business Law Section to state bar associations
Fellow, American College of Commercial Finance Lawyers
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Decisions:
Mooney v. University System of Maryland, 178 Md.App. 637 (2008)
Wachovia
Bank, National Association v. Miremadi, 2008 WL 114466 (Bank. Md. 2008)
King v. States Resources,
Corp., 2007 WL 1126861, cert. denied 129 S.Ct. 103 (2008)
The CIT Group/Equipment Financing, Inc. v. Asterbadi, 124 Fed.Appx. 808 (4th Cir. 2005)
In re Doctors Health, Inc., 238 B.R. 594 (Bankr. Md. 1999) aff'd 249 B.R. 99 (D. Md. 1999)
In re Architectural Millwork, 226 B.R. 551 (Bankr. W.D. Va. 1998). |
Speeches, Programs and Educational Panels:
Loan Restructuring: Let's Make a
(new) Deal, American Bar Association, February, 2009
Hot Topics in Bankruptcy, Association of Commercial Finance Attorneys, May, 2008
Applicable Other Law
ERISA, Sarbanes-Oxley and the Patriot Act in Loan DocumentationPatriot Act in Loan Documentation, American Bar Association, August, 2007
Ethical Issues in Negotiating and Drafting Opinion Letters, Association of Commercial Finance Attorneys, March, 2007
After the Default: Litigation Under UCC Article 9, American Bar Association, September, 2006
Ethical Issues in Loan
Documentation, American Bar Association, August, 2006
Third-party Agreements: Hot Documentation Issues in Third-Party Agreements,American Bar Association, April, 2006
UCC: Avoiding Common Pitfalls and Keeping Your Priorities Straight, Young Lawyers Institute, American Bar Association, March, 2005
Anatomy of a Deal - A Secured Transaction from the Cradle to the Grave, Maryland Institute for Continuing Professional Education of Lawyers, November, 2004
Revised Article 9: Questions from
the Perplexed: Common Drafting Issues,
American Bar Association, November, 2003
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"The New UCC Article 9 – Evolution or Revolution?"
4 Md. St. B. J. 55, 1999.
"On second thought ... Modifying a loan to avoid
bankruptcy" 14 Bus. L.T. No. 3, 13 (2005)
"Office of Foreign Asset Control: Do you Really Know Who
Your
Borrower Is?" 17 Bus. L.T. No. 5, 59 (2008)
"Forms Under Article 9 of the UCC, Second Edition (2009)" Contributing
Author
"Commercial Lending Law: A State-by-State Guide (2009)"
Editor
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