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What Will You Learn
How legal, financial, mental health, and valuation professionals collaborate across the full lifecycle of a divorce — from pre-filing through post-judgment — and how to identify, value, and protect complex assets including businesses, compensation packages, and digital holdings.
What Will You Gain
Practical tools to manage high-conflict client dynamics, reduce case delays, structure durable settlements, and advise clients on the short- and long-term financial consequences of divorce — including retirement planning and post-decree stability.
Key topics to be discussed:
Date / Time: June 17, 2026
Closed-captioning available
2026-06-17 14:00:00
What Will You Learn
Attendees will learn how to distinguish legitimate tax planning from abusive or fraudulent schemes using core legal principles and enforcement trends. They will understand why law firm owners are prime targets and how aggressive marketing tactics create hidden exposure. The program explains the IRS “Dirty Dozen” and the strategies most often challenged. Participants will also learn the financial, civil, criminal, and ethical consequences tied to improper tax positions.
What Will You Gain
Attendees will gain a practical framework for evaluating tax advice before implementation. They will be better equipped to identify red flags, question advisors effectively, and pause risky decisions. The program strengthens their ability to protect their firm, license, and reputation from audit and enforcement exposure. Participants leave with a defensibility-focused mindset designed to safeguard long-term professional and financial stability.
Key topics to be discussed:
Date / Time: April 30, 2026
Closed-captioning available
2026-04-30 13:00:00
What Will You Learn
This program moves beyond rule recitation to examine how ethical judgment operates in high-discretion arbitration settings. Attendees will learn to distinguish actual bias from the appearance of impartiality, understand how disclosure obligations are evaluated by parties, institutions, and courts, and recognize how a neutral’s procedural decisions shape perceptions of fairness and legitimacy.
What Will You Gain
Attorneys will leave with a sharper strategic lens for assessing neutrals, advising clients on forum selection, and addressing disclosure concerns before they escalate. The program also builds practical awareness of the modern pressures on neutral independence — repeat appointments, institutional expectations, and professional visibility — and how those dynamics directly affect client outcomes and confidence in the arbitral process.
Presented by the Federal Bar Association’s Alternative Dispute Resolution Section Co-sponsored by the American Inns of Court
Key topics to be discussed:
Date / Time: April 15, 2026
Closed-captioning available
2026-04-15 14:00:00
What Will You Learn
How legal, financial, mental health, and valuation professionals collaborate across the full lifecycle of a divorce — from pre-filing through post-judgment — and how to identify, value, and protect complex assets including businesses, compensation packages, and digital holdings.
What Will You Gain
Practical tools to manage high-conflict client dynamics, reduce case delays, structure durable settlements, and advise clients on the short- and long-term financial consequences of divorce — including retirement planning and post-decree stability.
Key topics to be discussed:
Date / Time: June 17, 2026
Closed-captioning available
2026-06-17 14:00:00
What Will You Learn
Attendees will learn how to distinguish legitimate tax planning from abusive or fraudulent schemes using core legal principles and enforcement trends. They will understand why law firm owners are prime targets and how aggressive marketing tactics create hidden exposure. The program explains the IRS “Dirty Dozen” and the strategies most often challenged. Participants will also learn the financial, civil, criminal, and ethical consequences tied to improper tax positions.
What Will You Gain
Attendees will gain a practical framework for evaluating tax advice before implementation. They will be better equipped to identify red flags, question advisors effectively, and pause risky decisions. The program strengthens their ability to protect their firm, license, and reputation from audit and enforcement exposure. Participants leave with a defensibility-focused mindset designed to safeguard long-term professional and financial stability.
Key topics to be discussed:
Date / Time: April 30, 2026
Closed-captioning available
2026-04-30 13:00:00
What Will You Learn
This program moves beyond rule recitation to examine how ethical judgment operates in high-discretion arbitration settings. Attendees will learn to distinguish actual bias from the appearance of impartiality, understand how disclosure obligations are evaluated by parties, institutions, and courts, and recognize how a neutral’s procedural decisions shape perceptions of fairness and legitimacy.
What Will You Gain
Attorneys will leave with a sharper strategic lens for assessing neutrals, advising clients on forum selection, and addressing disclosure concerns before they escalate. The program also builds practical awareness of the modern pressures on neutral independence — repeat appointments, institutional expectations, and professional visibility — and how those dynamics directly affect client outcomes and confidence in the arbitral process.
Presented by the Federal Bar Association’s Alternative Dispute Resolution Section Co-sponsored by the American Inns of Court
Key topics to be discussed:
Date / Time: April 15, 2026
Closed-captioning available
2026-04-15 14:00:00
Billing, time management and timekeeping are often difficult for attorneys. Most clients ask for estimates. Underestimate your time and you will have an unpleasant conversation with your client about excess charges. Overestimate your time and you will have an unpleasant conversation with your partners and colleagues about time that could have been billed but wasn’t. Finding the right balance is essential to success for any new lawyer working for a law firm (even if you are the only lawyer in your firm). The billable hour or flat fee is the product of a law firm. Learn best practices for billing and collections. How these are managed can be the difference between success and failure personally and as a business.
Key topics to be discussed:
Date / Time: December 17, 2025
Closed-captioning available
2026-03-31 14:00:00
FAQ
Yes — the Basic Unlimited Pass gives members access to all online live, replay, and on-demand CLEs, excluding only the live conferences. With the Premium Unlimited Pass, members receive access to over 11 multi-day live conferences as well.
Yes — myLawCLE is an officially accredited CLE provider and seeks CLE approval in all 50 states. Our live webinars, on-demand programs, and replays meet or exceed state bar requirements, ensuring your CLE credits are fully recognized wherever you practice.
Yes — after completing the CLE webinar, attendees select their state for CLE credit and fill out an online evaluation form. Once submitted, a CLE certificate is emailed to them and uploaded to their dashboard.
Yes — myLawCLE develops CLE programs meeting all required CLE types, including mental health, ethics, professionalism, technology, substance abuse, and elimination of bias.
myLawCLE maintains all CLE programs in its library for 12 months following the original broadcast date. Attendees can access any program that remains available in the system during this period.
Yes — all of myLawCLE’s programs are originally broadcast live, with a chat box available for attendees to submit questions during the webinar. Additionally, replays and on-demand versions offer email correspondence with the presenters for any follow-up questions.
Requirements
The Alabama State Bar MCLE Commission requires attorneys to complete 12 credits, including 1 ethics, by December 31 of each year. All credits must be reported by February 15 of the following year. A maximum of 12 credits, including 1 ethics credit, may be carried over for 1 year only.
Formats