|
Dan Rabinovitz is a trial lawyer whose practice includes a wide variety of litigation. He is admitted to practice law in Massachusetts, Illinois, Colorado and Florida. Mr. Rabinovitz has tried hundreds of cases and regularly represents clients in the following areas:
- Business Litigation; - Securities Litigation: - Partnership Disputes; - White Collar Crime and State Criminal Defense; - Trust and Probate Litigation; - Intellectual Property Disputes; and - Employment law, including Harassment, Discrimination, Restrictive Covenants, and -- Misappropriation of Trade Secrets.
Mr. Rabinovitz represents clients before the United States Department of Justice, the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, FINRA, as well as state securities regulatory agencies, including those in Massachusetts, New York, and Illinois.
Mr. Rabinovitz has been an instructor for the National Institute of Trial Advocacy (“NITA”) since 2002, teaching young lawyers how to conduct all aspects of civil and criminal trials. He was also named a "Super Lawyer" in 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009 by Law and Politics and Boston Magazine. Mr. Rabinovitz will also be listed in the 2010 edition of Super Lawyers Corporate Counsel Edition, a national publication.
Mr. Rabinovitz’s practice also includes Entertainment Law, where he represents musical artists in various contract disputes and the pursuit of unpaid royalties. As a part-time professional trumpet player, who has worked for artists such as Solomon Burke, Son Seals, Luther Johnson and Sleepy LaBeef, he brings a special knowledge of the music industry to the firm.
Mr. Rabinovitz earned his B.A. from Union College in 1987 and his J.D. from Boston University in 1990. After spending the first seven years of his legal career as a prosecutor in Chicago, Illinois with the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office, prosecuting violent crimes, Mr. Rabinovitz returned home to Boston in 1997 and practiced with Abrams, Roberts, Klickstein & Levy; Dwyer & Collora, and Menard, Murphy & Walsh before joining the firm in 2006.

|