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Maya Ginsburg’s practice focuses on a wide variety of securities litigation matters and complex commercial disputes. She represents both plaintiffs and defendants in cases arising under the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, opt-out cases, fiduciary duty and derivative litigation, state blue sky litigation, shareholder activism, debtholders litigation, structured finance litigation with a focus on mortgage-backed securities, litigation arising from mergers and acquisitions, and other complex litigation. She is an experienced senior litigator who applies her keen problem-solving abilities and acute attention to detail, as well as the insights into the inner workings of the federal courts gained from two clerkships in the Northern District of Illinois and District of Alaska, to high-stakes litigation in federal and state courts nationwide.
Maya successfully argued before the Eastern District of New York and obtained dismissal of a consumer fraud lawsuit brought against a residential mortgage servicer. She has also recently appeared and argued matters before federal and state courts in New York, Delaware, Florida and Minnesota. She currently represents a prominent hedge fund in a highly contested CMBS matter for which she was instrumental in prevailing on appeal in a related matter before the Second Circuit. She also successfully won an appeal in Colorado, which created new law pertaining to third-party witness testimony. Additionally, as counsel for a financial services institution Maya created new law in Delaware Chancery Court pertaining to key witness trial testimony.
Maya Ginsburg’s practice focuses on a wide variety of securities litigation matters and complex commercial disputes. She represents both plaintiffs and defendants in cases arising under the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, opt-out cases, fiduciary duty and derivative litigation, state blue sky litigation, shareholder activism, debtholders litigation, structured finance litigation with a focus on mortgage-backed securities, litigation arising from mergers and acquisitions, and other complex litigation. She is an experienced senior litigator who applies her keen problem-solving abilities and acute attention to detail, as well as the insights into the inner workings of the federal courts gained from two clerkships in the Northern District of Illinois and District of Alaska, to high-stakes litigation in federal and state courts nationwide.
Maya successfully argued before the Eastern District of New York and obtained dismissal of a consumer fraud lawsuit brought against a residential mortgage servicer. She has also recently appeared and argued matters before federal and state courts in New York, Delaware, Florida and Minnesota. She currently represents a prominent hedge fund in a highly contested CMBS matter for which she was instrumental in prevailing on appeal in a related matter before the Second Circuit. She also successfully won an appeal in Colorado, which created new law pertaining to third-party witness testimony. Additionally, as counsel for a financial services institution Maya created new law in Delaware Chancery Court pertaining to key witness trial testimony.
Maya is fluent in Hebrew.
EXPERIENCE
Representing first-lien bondholder in adversary proceeding arising from the Wesco Aircraft Holdings, Inc. (Incora) adjudicating the validity of the company’s uptier transaction in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas.
Secured victory on appeal on behalf of certificate holders in a contested trust instruction proceeding pertaining to the distribution of reserved funds in a structured finance vehicle.
Successfully won tens of millions of dollars on behalf of certificate holders of commercial mortgage backed securities trusts on appeal before the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
Representing multi-billion dollar hedge fund in a securities fraud litigation arising under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 against Mohawk Industries, Inc.
Representing multi-billion dollar institutional investor in a securities fraud litigation arising under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 against The Boeing Company.
Secured summary judgment on behalf of senior certificate holder Appaloosa Management LP in a commercial mortgage-backed securities trust in a dispute over allocation of trust monies among certificate holders.
Representing the former CEO of a large company sold for hundreds of millions of dollars in a litigation alleging breach of representations and warranties and other claims arising from the merger transaction.
After trial, received one of only a few above-deal-price awards for a public company in an appraisal case in the past several years, as counsel for large institutional investors in Delaware Chancery Court; the group pursued their statutory right to appraisal of their $200 million stake in the company following the acquisition of Regal Entertainment Group by Cineworld Group PLC.
Representing a hedge fund in arbitration proceedings pertaining to a partnership divorce.
Representing a hedge fund in a litigation pertaining to its contractual rights to acquire shares of a large high-tech corporation.
Representing an activist shareholder in a dispute regarding unseating members of the board of a large company.
Secured summary judgment motion on behalf of senior certificate holder Appaloosa Management L.P. in a commercial mortgage-backed securities trust in a dispute over allocation of trust monies among certificate holders.
Representing Shareholder Representative Services LLC and several shareholders in a securities fraud litigation arising under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 involving use of inflated stock to acquire the shareholders’ former company.
Successfully argued a motion to dismiss before the Eastern District of New York relating to consumer fraud claims against a residential mortgage servicer.
Successfully won an appeal in Colorado, which created new law pertaining to third-party witness testimony as counsel for a financial services institution.
Successfully created new law in Delaware Chancery Court pertaining to key witness trial testimony as counsel for a financial services institution.
Counseling real estate development companies in matters relating to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Representing Appaloosa Management LP in claims arising out of the structured finance underlying the $5 billion sale of Stuyvesant Town in New York City.