Samuel Milner represents clients in a range of commercial litigation. In addition to his legal practice, he has published extensively on price regulation, stakeholder governance, and federal and state antitrust laws. His book, Robbing Peter to Pay Paul: Power, Profits, and Productivity in Modern America, recently received mention in an opinion of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, and citations to his articles on unfair methods of competition have appeared in legal briefing, agency material, and academic scholarship.
Prior to attending law school, Samuel held a lectureship at Yale University, where he taught courses on international economic development, American political economy, regulatory history, and business history.
- The University of Chicago (J.D. with highest honors 2022; Order of the Coif; David M. Rubenstein Scholar; Kirkland & Ellis Scholar; Dean's Award in Civil Procedure I and Criminal Law; American Bankruptcy Law Journal Student Prize; Law Review); Yale University (Ph.D. in American Economic History 2018; Harry S. Truman Library Institute Dissertation Fellowship; Falk Foundation Fellowship; Tobin Project Graduate Student Fellowship in Democracy and Markets; M.Phil. 2015; M.A. 2015); Harvard University (A.B. in History summa cum laude 2013, with a minor in Economics; Phi Beta Kappa; Colton Award for Excellence in the Preparation of a Senior Thesis in History; Podhoretz Prize in Jewish Studies; Rossano Prize in Harvard History; Detur Book Prize)
- Ohio and U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
- Law Clerk to: Chief Judge Jeffrey S. Sutton (2023-2024) and Judge Eric E. Murphy (2022-2023), U.S. Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit; intern to Judge Dan A. Polster, U.S. District Court, Northern District of Ohio (Summer 2020)
Bitte beachten Sie vor dem Versenden:
Die Informationen auf unserer Website sind für den allgemeinen Gebrauch und stellen keine Rechtsberatung dar. Der Versand dieser E-Mail ist nicht dazu bestimmt, ein Mandatsverhältnis zu begründen, und der Erhalt dieser E-Mail stellt kein Mandatsverhältnis dar. Alles, was Sie an jemanden in unserer Kanzlei senden, ist nicht vertraulich oder privilegiert, es sei denn, wir haben zugestimmt, Sie zu vertreten. Wenn Sie diese E-Mail versenden, bestätigen Sie, dass Sie diesen Hinweis gelesen und verstanden haben.