This webinar will be available for purchase until September 24, 2026.
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Nebraska MCLE #265072. 1.0 CLE Hours. (OnDemand credit)
This presentation will provide an overview of the framework articulated by the United States Supreme Court in Securities and Exchange Commission v. W. J. Howey Co., 328 U.S. 293 (1946), to define which investment contracts qualify as a security under federal law. Providing a review of the elements to the Howey framework, this presentation will revisit the most prominent case law. The focus of this presentation will then shift to digital assets, such as cryptocurrency, blockchain, and NFTs, defining and classifying these assets. The SEC has made several attempts to treat some of these assets as securities. The presentation will summarize the SEC’s arguments and cover applicable judicial opinions.
Irina Fox, Creighton University School of Law
Professor Fox specializes in business law, researching debtor-creditor relations and writing on bankruptcy issues. Prior to joining the faculty of Creighton University School of Law, Professor Fox practiced law in San Francisco at an AmLaw A-List firm of Latham & Watkins. She represented multinational corporations in complex business litigation, focusing on antitrust. Professor Fox worked on several high-profile mergers. She was part of a trial team in a highly publicized Silicon Valley case. She also represented emerging companies in finance transactions and worked on cutting-edge bankruptcy matters. She defended the rights of several pro bono clients. Professor Fox clerked for the Honorable Carl J. Barbier at the federal district court for the Eastern District of Louisiana. She graduated summa cum laude (second in her class) from the Louisiana State University Law Center and is a member of the Order of the Coif.
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If you have any questions for the presenter(s) of this webinar, please send your question via email to Allyson Felt at afelt@nebar.com. She will forward your question to the presenter(s), who will provide an answer promptly.
Active Nebraska attorneys are required to complete 10 hours of continuing legal education (CLE) each year. Two of those 10 hours must be in the field of professional responsibility (ethics). Nebraska attorneys may claim only 5 hours of distance-learning CLE per year. Webinars viewed on this portal are considered distance-learning. Under the new MCLE reporting process, the NSBA will report your attendance for this program, which will be automatically updated into your transcript. The NSBA has 30 days to report your hours to Nebraska MCLE, and your transcript may not update immediately. You are no longer able to log your own hours in your transcript; they must be reported by the sponsor.
For more information about Nebraska CLE requirements, see the MCLE Commission’s website at https://attorneys.nejudicial.gov/. For questions about CLE requirements, your own CLE transcript, or about reporting CLE credit online, contact the Nebraska Supreme Court’s Attorney Services Division at (531) 510-3641.
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