Articles From Bruce L. Richman

The Richman Report: Summary of new tax law changes By Bruce L. Richman Family Law, September 2003 President Bush recently signed the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 (JGTRRA).
The Richman Report—the importance of the site visit as part of the business valuation process By Bruce L. Richman Family Law, January 2002 Often I am asked whether or not a site visit is needed in preparing a valuation of a closely held company.
The Richman report By Bruce L. Richman Family Law, June 2001 Much too involved to give a detail explanation of the tax bill in this column, the following are areas to take notice for tax law changes that can affect your area of practice.
The Richman Report By Bruce L. Richman Family Law, May 2001 We have all heard about "substance over form," but when it comes to transferring IRA's, it is "form over substance."
The Richman report: opportunities for tax savings in connection with an adoption through the “adoption tax credit” By Bruce L. Richman Family Law, February 2001 One of the comments we normally hear about adoption is the cost involved.
The Richman report By Bruce L. Richman Family Law, January 2001 Beware! The transfer of a nonqualified stock option incident to a divorce may be taxable.
The lawyer and the business appraisal By Bruce L. Richman, James Kazmier, Matt Rychetsky, & Mary Warmus Family Law, May 2000 During law school did anyone ever tell you that when you became a lawyer you would need to know the calculation of "weighted average cost of capital" or the "premise of value" or "the build-up approach to cost of capital" or "what the standard of value is"?

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