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Failed Manhattan Firm’s Top Lawyer Allegedly Short $17 Million in Client Funds

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

A Manhattan real-estate lawyer under criminal investigation by New York City and federal authorities allegedly can’t account for $17 million in client funds, according to liquidators called in to sift through his failed law firm, WSJ Pro Bankruptcy reported. The collapse of real estate firm Kossoff PLLC has destroyed livelihoods, tarnished reputations and left a trail of unpaid creditors behind, said liquidation attorney Neil Berger during a court hearing yesterday. Lawyers are only beginning to sort through the trove of documents associated with the defunct firm, which was pushed into liquidation last month after a wave of civil allegations that its namesake lawyer had absconded with client money. Berger said in a virtual hearing in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York that liquidators are focused on collecting books and records for their investigation of the allegations and the firm’s collapse. The whereabouts of the firm’s top lawyer, Mitchell Kossoff, have been unknown since last month, according to the liquidators, who sought a court order yesterday forbidding anyone from taking or destroying documents from the firm’s offices at 217 Broadway or anywhere else. The Manhattan district attorney’s office and the U.S. attorney’s office in Brooklyn also are investigating Mr. Kossoff, whose lawyer said in the hearing that many of the documents at issue had been seized by prosecutors. Before the firm’s bankruptcy, Mr. Kossoff was accused in lawsuits of disappearing with client funds that were supposed to be sitting in escrow for real estate deals. He hasn’t been charged with a crime.