Bankruptcy Solutions
The purpose of federal bankruptcy legislation, sometimes known as Title 11 of the United States Code or the “Bankruptcy Code,” is to provide an opportunity for financial reorganization or a fresh start for legitimate debtors who are unable to fulfill their obligations.
Foreclosure Solutions
As you are undoubtedly aware, many homeowners are in arrears on their mortgages as a result of the 2020 recession brought on by the coronavirus. At first, most lenders had been understanding and would have granted a brief suspension of the late payments.
Debt Negotiations & Settlements
Clients regularly hire the Law Office of Ronald D. Weiss, P.C. to represent them in negotiations with banks, mortgage holders, credit card issuers, auto financing providers, landlords, tax authorities, and other creditors.
Mortgage Loan Modifications
The most common strategy used by our firm to prevent a house in severe mortgage arrears from going into foreclosure is a mortgage modification. Mortgage modification and other potential Retention Options are the potential goals of most homeowners in foreclosure because most people experiencing serious hardships with their mortgages are looking for “Retention Options
Credit Card Solutions
For consumers, credit card debt and other unsecured personal loans are the most common types of debt. There are a few legal options for handling credit card debt, including the following: Litigation, bankruptcy, and/or negotiated settlements are the three options.
Debtor Litigation Defense
Many of The Law Office of Ronald D. Weiss, P.C.’s clients face the possibility of litigation or collection activities from their creditors because they are accused of having debt that they are unable to pay or because they contest the existence, amount, or obligation of the debt.
Landlord Tenant Solutions
Landlord-Tenant Law is one of our firm’s areas of expertise; we defend landlords and tenants in a variety of legal proceedings before the Landlord-Tenant Court and the New York Supreme Court. When it comes to eviction and/or collecting large amounts of past due rent.
Distressed Real Estate
A. Pre-Contract When a seller (the “Seller”) sells real estate to a buyer (the “Buyer”), there are usually a number of important steps involved. A seller will first list their property on the market for sale. A real estate broker is frequently hired by the seller to help locate possible buyers for their property.
Student Loan Solutions
In this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes,” as Benjamin Franklin famously said. This phrase has recently been amended by popular opinion to include student loans. Since most jobs these days require a bachelor’s degree, the amount of debt that Americans owe on their student loans
Tax Debt Solutions
Many people have trouble keeping up with their tax payments to the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance (“NYS”), which includes sales taxes, income taxes, payroll taxes, and other state taxes, as well as the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”), which includes individual income taxes.
Amagansett, pronouncedˌ/aeməˈɡænsət/, is a census-designated place that roughly maps to the hamlet of the same name in the Town of East Hampton, South Shore Long Island, Suffolk County, New York, USA. There were 1,165 people living in the CDP as of the 2010 United States Census.[2] In 1680, the Amagansett hamlet was established.
The moniker “place of good water” that the Montaukett people gave to a water spring close to what is now Indian Wells beach is whence Amagansett gets its name.
In contrast to the other Hamptons, Amagansett was first settled by the Dutch brothers Abraham and Jacob Schellinger, who moved to East Hampton between 1680 and 1690 after the English took over New Amsterdam, as well as the families of Baker, Conklin, and Barnes, who were descended from English settlers.
Four German spies were deposited from a submarine on Amagansett’s Atlantic Avenue beach during Operation Pastorius, a botched Nazi attempt to attack the United States in June 1942 of World War II. They then traveled to the village’s Long Island Rail Road station and boarded a train headed for New York. When he saw the weird, suspicious people on the beach, a Coast Guardsman on duty forewarned the FBI and the police.
The old Coast Guard station was transferred back to a place close to Atlantic Avenue beach in the spring of 2007. It had been relocated to a private property in 1966 to prevent it from being demolished. The East Hampton Town Marine Museum, which houses artifacts from the town’s nautical past, such as whaling relics and a cannon from the American Revolution ship HMS Culloden that ran aground at Montauk, formerly housed the Coast Guard barracks.
While on vacation in East Hampton in 1998, President Bill Clinton spoke on the radio on Saturday from the Amagansett Fire House.
A block from the coast, Amagansett boasts one of East Hampton’s largest concentrations of mansions, including a portion of Further Lane. The highest price for a private residential property was $107 million, achieved by one of the estates when it sold in 2007.
A number of 18th and 19th century buildings that had been relocated on the estate in order to avoid demolition were moved elsewhere in the town as part of the settlement; five of these buildings were relocated to create a campus for the town of East Hampton.
Published in 1997, “Amagansett” is a visual history of the hamlet authored by Carleton Kelsey, a former town clerk and longstanding director of the Amagansett Free Library, and Lucinda Mayo, a descendent of one of the town’s founders from the 17th century.
In Amagansett, Montauk, the Hamptons, and other Long Island areas, a large number of homes and other structures dating back to the 19th and even 18th centuries still survive.
The CDP is 6.6 square miles (17.0 km2) in total, of which 6.5 square miles (16.9 km2) are land and 0.039 square miles (0.1 km2), or 0.37%, are water, according to the United States Census Bureau.
Amagansett was at the easternmost point of Long Island during the conclusion of the last ice age. Montauk was an isolated island in the Atlantic at the time. Sand filled in the void over the course of several millennia due to ocean currents and littoral drift. Napeague is the current name for this location.
Amagansett village, Beach Hampton, and the Devon Colony on Gardiner’s Bay are some of the town’s unique locations. The “Walking Dunes” near Napeague and the Atlantic Double Dunes, which are safeguarded by the federal, state, and nonprofit organizations The Nature Conservancy, are two other locations of geographic significance.
The CDP’s demographics
The CDP was home to 1,067 people, 493 households, and 281 families as of the 2000 census. The population density was 65.5 people per km^, or 169.6 people per square mile. At an average density of 264.5 per square mile (102.1/km2), there were 1,664 dwelling units. 1.69% African American, 0.28% Native American, 0.37% Asian, 0.28% from other races, and 0.94% from two or more races made up the racial composition of the CDP, which was 96.44% White. Latinos or Hispanics of any race made up 4.03% of the total population.
There were 493 households: 48.1% were married couples living together, 6.5% included a female householder living alone, and 43.0% were non-families. Of these, 21.1% included children under the age of 18. Individuals made up 34.9% of all households, and 15.6% of them included a single person 65 years of age or older. 2.16 was the average size of a home, and 2.78 was the average size of a family.
19.1% of people in the CDP were under the age of 18, 3.2% were between the ages of 18 and 24, 22.3% were between the ages of 25 and 44, 33.0% were between the ages of 45 and 64, and 22.4% were 65 years of age or older. It was 48 years old on average. There were 102.9 men for every 100 females. There were 94.8 males for every 100 girls over the age of 18.
In the CDP, the average household income was $56,406 and the average family income was $69,306. The median salary for men was $48,750, while it was $36,500 for women. In the CDP, the per capita income was $45,545. 5.3% of people and 2.4% of households were living in poverty; this group included 4.9% of those over 65 and 4.7% of people under the age of 18.
Amagansett Station on the Montauk Branch of the Long Island Rail Road serves the town of Amagansett.
Amagansett is the Hampton Jitney stop.
The Amagansett School, which serves grades PK through 6, is run by the Amagansett Union Free School District. After that, students attend grades 7 through 12 at East Hampton schools.
Amagansett is a well-liked resort area where a number of well-known people have lived or owned second homes over the years. These people include Christie Brinkley, Diane Sawyer, Paul McCartney, Scarlett Johansson, Kathleen Turner, James Frey, Billy Joel, Jerry Seinfeld, Harvey Weinstein, Liev Schreiber and Naomi Watts, Alec Baldwin, Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick, Peter Mayle, Jann Wenner, Suzanne Vega, Howard Stern, Lorne Michaels, Bill and Hillary Clinton, Shane McMahon, Randy Lerner, Andy Cohen, Babs Simpson,[9], Mitch Kupchak, and Larry Gagosian.
In the late 1950s, Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller stayed there for a summer. Founded by Procter & Gamble executives in the late 19th century, the “Devon Colony” was arguably the forerunner of the “summer people” movement. Performance artist Laurie Anderson lived in her Greenwich Village flat and her Amagansett property with her husband Lou Reed, referring to the latter as “our spiritual home.” In 2013, Reed passed away there.[10] The birthplace of Alfred Conkling is Amagansett.
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