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Risk #2: AI Infrastructure Investing: Structuring, Disclosure and Contract Risks for Private Funds

By Margaret A. Dale, Michael R. Hackett, Dorothy Murray, Joshua M. Newville, Todd J. Ohlms, Robert Pommer, Seetha Ramachandran, Nathan Schuur, Robert Sutton, John Verwey, Jonathan M. Weiss, Edward Lister, Rachel Lowe, Adam Farbiarz, Adam L. Deming, Michael Guggenheim, Corey I. Rogoff & Hena M. Vora on March 26, 2026
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As has been widely reported, digital infrastructure has become one of the fastest growing investment structures in recent years, most recently driven by the explosion in demand from firms in the artificial intelligence (AI) industry. This in turn has led to unprecedented needs for capex spending for the construction, expansion and upgrading of data centers, cell towers and networks, fiber optics and other data transmission facilities and power production and transmission. 

AI infrastructure strategies seek to build and profit from operating long-lived physical assets, primarily data centers. These assets include the buildings themselves, the advanced computer chips and equipment within those buildings, the internal structural support, specialized cooling and other technical infrastructure necessary to operate that equipment and all of the necessary power and data transmission connections, all of which involves rapidly evolving technical, regulatory, local permitting and other requirements, not to mention coordination among a host of suppliers, operators and other counterparties. For a private fund structure capitalizing such complex projects, that mix tends to concentrate attention on (i) how the strategy is defined, (ii) how offering and marketing materials describe assumptions and underwriting inputs, (iii) how conflicts are managed, (iv) how asset-level contracts allocate remedies and operational downside risks and (v) how the fund and the assets could be impacted by trade regulation and foreign policy considerations.

From a US federal securities law perspective, the core discipline is familiar: investor communications should be accurate, complete in context and not misleading. From a private civil litigation perspective, obligations and claims can be framed through state-law contract principles, including under LPAs and side letters, and related theories tied to statements made in PPMs or otherwise during fundraising or ongoing reporting. The specifics of AI infrastructure investments add complexity to those baseline frameworks.

Defining Strategy and Scope

“AI infrastructure” is not a standardized asset class, and the label can mean different things across sponsors, investors and intermediaries. Depending on the mandate, it may include fully provisioned data centers, “powered shell” projects (buildings with power capacity but no servers), connectivity adjacent to compute sites, power procurement and grid interconnection arrangements and investments or financings tied to critical compute hardware and enabling equipment. It may also include, or exclude, adjacent software and investments in venture-stage businesses.

Because the term is elastic, alignment often starts with defining the scope in fund documents and marketing materials. Where AI infrastructure will be a material focus, fund sponsors and investors can benefit from well-aligned expectations, derived from clear descriptions of what is in-scope and out-of-scope, the expected mix of development-stage versus operating-stage exposure and any stated constraints or flexibility regarding leverage, structured products, co-investments, warehousing and related matters. If the strategy is intentionally flexible, then setting out guidelines for prioritized assets can reduce later confusion as to mandate scope.

Clear scope drafting can also help manage expectations for both fund sponsors and investors regarding ways in which the portfolio could shift over time, including movement across asset stages (development to stabilized) or across the capital stack (equity, preferred equity, debt).

Marketing Discipline

In any private fund offering, statements made to investors (in PPMs, pitchbooks, case studies, diligence responses and other communications) should be accurate, complete in context, and not misleading. For AI infrastructure strategies, investor-facing materials often include underwriting narratives where key drivers are assumptions about future operations. Examples include utilization and ramp timelines, pricing, power availability, equipment delivery schedules, permitting and energization dates, useful lives of technical components and counterparties’ performance.

Some of those assumptions may be informed by contracted commitments (for example, customer service agreements or power arrangements), but even “committed” arrangements can include exceptions, conditions, termination rights, force majeure exceptions and credit support limitations that are material to the risk profile. Managers and investors alike benefit when marketing and other communications distinguish assumptions from commitments where that distinction is material, and when “commitments” are described in a way that does not unfairly downplay material qualifiers.

Third-party inputs (market analyses, engineering and power studies, vendor statements, customer discussions and consultant analyses) can change quickly, and the same is often true of operational facts in development-stage assets. This, in turn, can have follow-on effects in underwritten return targets. Where underwriting inputs are referenced in marketing or diligence materials, clarity improves when those inputs are dated and summarized carefully and are revisited when there are known material developments. For SEC-registered investment advisers, the Advisers Act marketing rule and related recordkeeping requirements can make substantiation and version control particularly important, especially for material statements. If a manager is not SEC-registered, the same practical considerations still apply: keeping a record of the basis for material statements, and clearly disclosing any material underwriting criteria and assumptions, can reduce later disputes about what was said, when and why.

Governance and Conflicts

AI infrastructure strategies can involve multiple vehicles, affiliates and overlapping relationships across development, procurement and operations. Those features can increase conflicts sensitivity in fund governance. Common pressure points include allocation of investment opportunities and expenses among funds and accounts, cross-fund investments at different points in the capital stack (including different seniorities), decisions around follow-on financings and recapitalizations and affiliate-provided services (development management, construction management, operations and maintenance, procurement or related services) as well as related compensation. It is not always feasible to eliminate all conflicts, but the objective should be to at least make the process predictable and defensible. Clear disclosure of expected conflicts, coupled with defined approval mechanics (including any applicable LPAC mechanisms), can shape how issues are escalated and resolved.

Contract Risk Allocation at the Asset Level

Both fund sponsors and investors can benefit from ensuring that there is a mutual understanding of the risks that can arise in AI infrastructure investments. Such risks can include: concentration dependencies (on key customers, suppliers, electricity providers or other counterparties); volatility of short-term demand (relative to project forecasts); uncertainty of future needs (today’s facility designs may not match tomorrow’s needs); changes to customer base (loss or turnover of major tenants can disrupt cash flow); erosion of asset value and uncertainty of assets’ useful lives (assets might lose value if they become under-utilized or technologically outmoded, difficulty in estimating assets’ optimal lifespan); limited access to compute/equipment (supply-chain bottlenecks for GPUs, power gear, etc., can delay or restrict operations); constraints on permitting/utility connections (extensions in project timelines due to delays in permitting processes and power grid/data connection hookups); financing/interest rate risks (rising interest rates or tighter credit can impact project viability and returns); cybersecurity and data breach risks (concentration of valuable data in AI data centers, with liabilities/losses from any resulting breaches/downtime); physical disaster risks (natural disasters/extreme weather and related grid reliability issues, potentially affecting insurability); limited ability to use licensed intellectual property (in certain cases, third-party license terms may restrict how the infrastructure’s technology can be deployed, especially for AI uses); and changes in laws, regulation and policy (including AI governance, environmental and antitrust policy). 

It is also important to understand how these risks can be transmitted – and to whom – across a broader asset structure, where a setback in one area (for example, a construction delay or a supplier default) can cascade to other stakeholders. AI infrastructure projects typically allocate risk across counterparties through a set of interlocking agreements, rather than through a single “project” contract. These agreements can include land and permitting arrangements (securing the site and entitlements), interconnection and utility service (for power and network access), construction and equipment contracts (with builders and vendors, often with performance guarantees), purchase orders for compute capacity (ensuring demand via customer commitments), operations and maintenance agreements (governing uptime and management of the facility), power procurement arrangements (to supply the enormous energy needed, sometimes via dedicated utility or renewable deals), customer service or colocation agreements (outlining lease terms, service levels and security with end-users), financing arrangements (debt and equity deals that fund the project with their own covenants) and insurance policies (covering construction, liability, property damage, cyber incidents, etc.). Each layer of agreements may include its own remedies, caps, exclusions, cure periods, step-in rights and termination mechanics. In addition, obligations at one layer may be contingent on performance at another, meaning a failure in one contract can trigger consequences in others, creating a “risk transmission” effect throughout the project’s contractual structure. This complexity underscores the importance of mapping and disclosing material risks to the fund resulting from interdependencies and potential failure points across the structure.

Valuation, Performance Reporting and Updates

Complex assets can make for complex valuation, and complex mixes of complex assets even more so. Portfolios that mix development assets, stabilized assets and structured exposures can introduce consistency issues in valuation and performance reporting if not approached carefully. A thoughtful and consistently applied valuation framework (including guidelines on methodology and key inputs for different assets, any third-party involvement and governance procedures for overrides and methodology changes) can benefit all parties. Consistency in performance calculation methodologies can raise similar concerns, and similar benefits can be derived from having a thoughtful and consistently applied performance calculation framework that reflects key differences across these assets.

Because operational and market conditions can shift quickly, managers may also benefit from clear divisions of responsibility for monitoring intervening events to determine whether any investor facing descriptions, case studies or risk discussions should be refreshed. Depending on materiality, potential triggers could include permitting delays, interconnection changes, supply disruptions, customer changes or shifts in expected capex or in-service dates. Where confidentiality obligations limit detail, managers could consider whether higher-level disclosures would still convey the material nature of an issue without implying facts that cannot be disclosed.

Sanctions, National Security and Outbound Investment Controls

Depending on counterparties, jurisdictions, end uses and technology characteristics, AI infrastructure investments can implicate US sanctions screening, export controls, national security review, and, in some cases, outbound investment control considerations. These regimes are fact-specific and evolve, so current requirements should be verified for the relevant transaction and timeframe.

Practically, fund sponsors can seek to manage these risks by implementing robust processes for investor and investment onboarding and diligence including investor and counterparty screening, by performing end-use and location diligence where relevant and by seeking appropriate contractual protections.

* * * * *

AI infrastructure projects can evolve faster than a private fund’s offering and governing documents. But these challenges are addressable. Clearly delineating investment scope, providing thoughtful disclosures, establishing clear conflicts management processes, mapping project-level risks and interdependencies, being mindful of foreign policy shifts and implementing consistently applied valuation and reporting guidelines can help to manage these risks.

Photo of Margaret A. Dale Margaret A. Dale

Margaret Dale is a versatile first-chair litigator who handles different types of complex business disputes for a wide variety of clients across many industries.

While her practice is diverse, she regularly handles privacy and data security matters, including regulatory investigations and class action…

Margaret Dale is a versatile first-chair litigator who handles different types of complex business disputes for a wide variety of clients across many industries.

While her practice is diverse, she regularly handles privacy and data security matters, including regulatory investigations and class action lawsuits stemming from data breaches. She also focuses on intellectual property, where she represents individual artists and arts-related organizations and museums. With respect to securities and corporate governance, Margaret handles SEC enforcement proceedings, shareholder and partnership disputes, stock option, warrant and preferred stock matters, escrow fights and Delaware 220 actions, as well as regulatory and internal investigations.

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Photo of Michael R. Hackett Michael R. Hackett

Michael R. Hackett is a partner in the Litigation Department and a member of the Asset Management Litigation practice. Mike is an experienced litigator and trial lawyer focused on sophisticated business disputes.

A significant portion of Mike’s practice concerns disputes and regulation involving…

Michael R. Hackett is a partner in the Litigation Department and a member of the Asset Management Litigation practice. Mike is an experienced litigator and trial lawyer focused on sophisticated business disputes.

A significant portion of Mike’s practice concerns disputes and regulation involving private funds, including private equity, venture capital, hedge, real estate and private credit funds, as well as other limited partnerships, where he regularly advises funds, fund sponsors, investment advisers and institutional and individual investors.

Mike’s experience representing private fund clients runs the gamut, from control contests within advisers, to disputes between limited partners and general partners, to representation of investment advisers in connection with regulatory examinations, investigations and enforcement matters. Mike also routinely represents fund sponsors and their portfolio companies, including in significant post-closing disputes.

In addition to his private funds practice, Mike represents public and private companies in a variety of complex commercial and securities litigation matters, including in the areas of corporate governance, fiduciary obligations, capital markets, financial services, and bankruptcy and insolvency.

Mike has been named a “Rising Star” by Massachusetts Super Lawyers, and was identified as an “associate to watch” by Chambers USA in 2017 and 2018.

During law school, Mike served as an intern judicial clerk to the Honorable William G. Young of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts.

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Photo of Dorothy Murray Dorothy Murray

Dorothy Murray is a partner in the Litigation Department specializing in investment and commercial dispute resolution. She supports clients across a wide range of sectors, including financial services, asset management/private equity, energy, telecoms, and maritime.

Dorothy represents clients in disputes arising from all…

Dorothy Murray is a partner in the Litigation Department specializing in investment and commercial dispute resolution. She supports clients across a wide range of sectors, including financial services, asset management/private equity, energy, telecoms, and maritime.

Dorothy represents clients in disputes arising from all aspects of their business, whether those disputes are post M&A, shareholder, employment, contractual, partnership or JV related.

Dorothy has experience managing litigation in common and civil law jurisdictions, and in commercial and investor state arbitration.  She is fluent with all the key divisions of the English High Courts and major arbitral institutional rules, including LCIA, ICC, LMAA, SCC, ISCID and UNICTRAL.  One of her particular interests is in the enforcement of arbitral awards.

In addition to representation in contentious matters, she uses her disputes experience to support clients at the transaction and pre‑action stages, working with companies and funds to identify, understand and mitigate personal and corporate liabilities and risks.

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Photo of Joshua M. Newville Joshua M. Newville

Joshua M. Newville is a partner in the Litigation Department in New York and a member of Proskauer’s White Collar Defense & Investigations Group and the Asset Management Litigation team.

Josh handles securities litigation, enforcement and regulatory matters, representing corporations and senior executives…

Joshua M. Newville is a partner in the Litigation Department in New York and a member of Proskauer’s White Collar Defense & Investigations Group and the Asset Management Litigation team.

Josh handles securities litigation, enforcement and regulatory matters, representing corporations and senior executives in civil and criminal investigations. In addition, Josh advises registered investment advisers and private fund managers on regulatory compliance, SEC exams and related risks.

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Photo of Todd J. Ohlms Todd J. Ohlms

Todd J. Ohlms is as a partner in the Litigation department and a member of the Asset Management Litigation Group. Todd has represented clients in business-critical litigation matters for over 25 years, and has tried several cases to verdict before juries and the…

Todd J. Ohlms is as a partner in the Litigation department and a member of the Asset Management Litigation Group. Todd has represented clients in business-critical litigation matters for over 25 years, and has tried several cases to verdict before juries and the bench. He has also participated in numerous arbitration proceedings, including counseling clients regarding disputes subject to international arbitration agreements.

Todd is often retained by private equity firms to counsel them and their portfolio companies on a wide range of matters and is frequently chosen to serve as outside general counsel to their portfolio companies. He also represents family offices in disputes related to their operating companies where sensitive and complex relationships often play as large a role in determining the result as the actual legal theories at issue.

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Photo of Robert Pommer Robert Pommer

Robert W. Pommer III is a partner in the Litigation Department and a member of Proskauer’s Securities Litigation, White Collar Defense & Investigations groups and the Asset Management Litigation team.

Bob’s practice focuses on a broad range of securities-related enforcement and compliance issues.

Robert W. Pommer III is a partner in the Litigation Department and a member of Proskauer’s Securities Litigation, White Collar Defense & Investigations groups and the Asset Management Litigation team.

Bob’s practice focuses on a broad range of securities-related enforcement and compliance issues. He represents private fund managers, financial institutions, public companies, and their senior executives in enforcement investigations and litigation conducted by the SEC, the U.S. Department of Justice, and other governmental entities and financial services regulators. He also conducts internal investigations and counsels investment advisers and public companies on regulatory compliance, corporate governance and other SEC-related issues.

Prior to his career in private practice, Bob served as Assistant Chief Litigation Counsel in the SEC’s Division of Enforcement for nine years. While there, he investigated and litigated several high-profile cases involving complex financial fraud and audit failures. Bob also worked on enforcement actions involving insider trading, investment adviser and broker-dealer issues, market manipulation and other violations of the federal securities laws.

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Photo of Seetha Ramachandran Seetha Ramachandran

Seetha Ramachandran is a partner in the Litigation Department.

She is a leading expert in anti-money laundering (AML), Bank Secrecy Act, economic sanctions and asset forfeiture matters. She represents banks, broker dealers, hedge funds, private equity funds, online payment companies, and individual executives…

Seetha Ramachandran is a partner in the Litigation Department.

She is a leading expert in anti-money laundering (AML), Bank Secrecy Act, economic sanctions and asset forfeiture matters. She represents banks, broker dealers, hedge funds, private equity funds, online payment companies, and individual executives and officers, in high stakes and sensitive matters. Her practice focuses on white collar and regulatory enforcement defense, internal investigations, and compliance counseling. In addition to her subject matter expertise, Seetha is an experienced trial and appellate lawyer, having conducted 10 criminal jury trials, argued 10 appeals before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and handled ancillary civil proceedings in forfeiture cases.

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Photo of Robert Sutton Robert Sutton

Robert is a partner of the Private Funds Group and a member of the Corporate Department. He is a seasoned practitioner with over 20 years of experience counseling managers and advisers of private funds on regulatory matters, as well as regulatory issues related…

Robert is a partner of the Private Funds Group and a member of the Corporate Department. He is a seasoned practitioner with over 20 years of experience counseling managers and advisers of private funds on regulatory matters, as well as regulatory issues related to the formation and operation of private equity, credit, real estate, infrastructure, hedge and other private funds.

Rob has a deep knowledge of the market practice of asset managers and in particular, as it relates to Advisers Act-related issues. From some of the largest and most sophisticated firms in the global asset management industry to start-ups and mid-sized firms, Rob’s experience includes a wide spectrum of funds and asset classes across their life cycles. Rob regularly advises on matters in connection with: U.S. investment adviser registration and regulation; Advisers Act and other U.S. securities law issues relating to the formation, marketing and offering of private funds; Identifying and managing conflicts of interest, and addressing related Advisers Act risks, SEC examinations, and exam readiness preparation; Design and implementation of investment adviser compliance policies and procedures; U.S. regulatory issues relating to purchases and sales of investment advisory businesses (minority stake and control stake transactions, buy-side and sell-side representations); Advisers Act and other U.S. regulatory issues relating to private fund restructurings and recapitalizations, strip sales, continuation fund formations and similar transactions; Advisers Act issues relating to the formation of SPACs by investment advisers; and, Investment Company Act status analyses of private fund structures, investment transaction structures and other non-registered investment company structures.

Rob has been recognized by his clients and peers for his extraordinary work, gaining various accolades including mentions in preeminent directories such as The Legal 500.  He is also very active within the private funds industry, contributing to numerous publications and collaborating on several speaking engagements.

Prior to joining Proskauer, Rob was a partner in the Investment Funds Group at Kirkland & Ellis.

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Photo of John Verwey John Verwey

John Verwey is a partner in the Corporate Department and a member of the Private Funds Group.

John advises on a wide number of regulatory issues at a national UK and European level, including firm authorisations, change in control, market abuse, Electronic Money…

John Verwey is a partner in the Corporate Department and a member of the Private Funds Group.

John advises on a wide number of regulatory issues at a national UK and European level, including firm authorisations, change in control, market abuse, Electronic Money Regulations, Payment Services Regulations and client money rules. He represents a variety of clients that range from private equity firms and insurance intermediaries to global investment banks and sovereign wealth funds.

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Photo of Jonathan M. Weiss Jonathan M. Weiss

Jonathan Weiss is a partner in the Litigation Department. Jonathan represents both plaintiffs and defendants in a wide range of high-stakes litigation, including antitrust, class action, financial services, securities and other complex commercial litigation. Jonathan has won multiple noteworthy jury verdicts, including the…

Jonathan Weiss is a partner in the Litigation Department. Jonathan represents both plaintiffs and defendants in a wide range of high-stakes litigation, including antitrust, class action, financial services, securities and other complex commercial litigation. Jonathan has won multiple noteworthy jury verdicts, including the fourth largest jury award in the history of the State of Arizona (over $110 million), and has significant appellate experience briefing and arguing appeals in both state and federal courts across the nation.

Jonathan has been recognized as a “Rising Star” by Southern California Super Lawyers every year since 2011, and was recognized by Legal 500 U.S. in their 2015 leading lawyers in appellate litigation edition, noting his “incredibly dedicated” advocacy on behalf of his clients. Jonathan has also spent considerable time on pro bono matters, for which he has been honored by Public Counsel among other organizations.

In addition to his busy practice, Jonathan has taught courses on Ninth Circuit appellate advocacy throughout Southern California and has lectured at several universities nationally, including Harvard Law School, UCLA Law School, the University of Illinois and the University of Pittsburgh. Jonathan is also a member of the Pacific Council on International Policy.

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Edward Lister

Edward Lister is a special regulatory counsel and a member of the Private Equity Transactions and Mergers & Acquisitions Groups.

Read more about Edward Lister
Photo of Rachel Lowe Rachel Lowe

Rachel E. Lowe is a special regulatory counsel in the Corporate Department and a member of the Private Investment Funds Group.

Rachel advises on financial services regulation specializing in sustainable finance and ESG regulation. She has particular expertise in drafting and advising on…

Rachel E. Lowe is a special regulatory counsel in the Corporate Department and a member of the Private Investment Funds Group.

Rachel advises on financial services regulation specializing in sustainable finance and ESG regulation. She has particular expertise in drafting and advising on the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) and the Taxonomy Regulation. Rachel has also supported with EU MiFID and AIFMD sustainability updates for clients, including from a governance and organizational perspective, as well as providing drafting and training support. She also advises on the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), including analysis of its applicability for large international group structures.

From a UK perspective, Rachel supports clients with the TCFD-related requirements in the Financial Conduct Authority’s ESG Sourcebook and is increasingly engaged on the UK’s Sustainability Disclosure Requirements (SDR).

More broadly, Rachel has worked with litigation colleagues to assist clients with understanding and mitigating greenwashing-related legal and regulatory risk.

Read more about Rachel Lowe
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Photo of Adam Farbiarz Adam Farbiarz

Adam Farbiarz is an associate in the Litigation Department.

Adam’s practice encompasses a wide range of complex commercial litigation and dispute resolution. He represents clients in corporate governance, securities, and M&A-related disputes. Adam has also litigated a number of highly technical contract performance…

Adam Farbiarz is an associate in the Litigation Department.

Adam’s practice encompasses a wide range of complex commercial litigation and dispute resolution. He represents clients in corporate governance, securities, and M&A-related disputes. Adam has also litigated a number of highly technical contract performance issues, including claims pertaining to the execution of a major construction project in Afghanistan, and the faulty implementation of a firmwide software build at a Fortune 200 company.

Before joining Proskauer, Adam founded and led a food service tech startup that continues to work with hundreds of restaurants in the New York City area and beyond.

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Photo of Adam L. Deming Adam L. Deming

Adam Deming is an associate in the Litigation Department and a member of the firm’s Appellate Practice Group and the Asset Management Litigation team.  He focuses on complex litigation in federal and state courts, covering a broad spectrum of business disputes touching on…

Adam Deming is an associate in the Litigation Department and a member of the firm’s Appellate Practice Group and the Asset Management Litigation team.  He focuses on complex litigation in federal and state courts, covering a broad spectrum of business disputes touching on corporate governance, fiduciary obligations, financial services, securities and insolvency.  Adam has also represented clients in appeals spanning various areas, including bankruptcy, labor relations, patent and constitutional law.

Prior to joining Proskauer, Adam served as a law clerk to the Honorable Patty Shwartz on the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.  Adam was also an associate in the New York office of an international law firm.  Adam graduated cum laude from the University of Pennsylvania Law School, where he was the managing editor of the Journal of Constitutional Law and an Arthur C. Littleton Fellow instructor in legal writing.  Before law school, Adam was a Teach for America Corps Member in New Orleans, Louisiana, where he taught middle school English for three years.

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Photo of Michael Guggenheim Michael Guggenheim

Michael Guggenheim is an associate in the Litigation Department.

Michael earned his J.D. from Harvard Law School and his B.A., summa cum laude, from Rutgers University. While at law school, Michael worked for the Litigation Department of the San Francisco City Attorney…

Michael Guggenheim is an associate in the Litigation Department.

Michael earned his J.D. from Harvard Law School and his B.A., summa cum laude, from Rutgers University. While at law school, Michael worked for the Litigation Department of the San Francisco City Attorney, was a teaching assistant for the Harvard Law School Negotiation Workshop, and litigated election law cases with Common Cause. He also served as the Executive Managing Editor of the Harvard Law & Policy Review and coached the Boston College mock trial team.

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Photo of Corey I. Rogoff Corey I. Rogoff

Corey Rogoff is a litigation associate in Washington, D.C. with a focus on securities litigation. Corey earned his J.D. from Columbia Law School, where he was a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar and served on the Columbia Journal of Tax Law. While a…

Corey Rogoff is a litigation associate in Washington, D.C. with a focus on securities litigation. Corey earned his J.D. from Columbia Law School, where he was a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar and served on the Columbia Journal of Tax Law. While a summer associate at Proskauer, Corey seconded at Major League Baseball’s Washington Nationals franchise. Corey earned a B.A. in Political Science from Johns Hopkins University.

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Photo of Hena M. Vora Hena M. Vora

Hena Vora earned her J.D. from Emory University School of Law, where she received the Pro Bono Publico honor and a Transactional Law Certificate. In addition, she was a national competitor on the Moot Court Society and served as president of Emory’s South…

Hena Vora earned her J.D. from Emory University School of Law, where she received the Pro Bono Publico honor and a Transactional Law Certificate. In addition, she was a national competitor on the Moot Court Society and served as president of Emory’s South Asian Law Students Association. While at Emory, she served as judicial intern for Judge Denny Chin at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, legal extern for General Electric and securities research assistant to Professor George Georgiev.

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  • Posted in:
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  • Blog:
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    Proskauer Rose LLP
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