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.
Cutchogue, located on the East End of the North Fork of Long Island, is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) in Suffolk County, New York, in the United States. 3,349 people were counted there in the 2010 census.
The Cutchogue CDP largely corresponds to the town of Southold’s Cutchogue hamlet.
The hamlet is 10.2 square miles (26.3 km2) in total, of which 9.7 square miles (25.2 km2) are land and 0.42 square miles (1.1 km2), or 4.2%, are water, according to the United States Census Bureau.
The Algonquian term from which the name Cutchogue originates means “principal place”. Before English-American settlers started coming in 1640, a large number of the Native Americans in the area resided at Fort Corchaug. The village’s oldest English-style home is The Old House, which dates back to around 1699. It has been designated a National Historic Landmark and is, in fact, one of the outstanding specimens of English residential architecture still standing in the United States.
Among the notable inhabitants of the 18th century are political figures Parker Wickham and his nephew John Wickham. Douglas Moore, a composer, was born in Cutchogue as well (1893–1969).
Cutchogue was the scene of three infamous murders committed by Nicholas Bain in 1854.
In 1973, Hargrave Vineyard was founded in Cutchogue and became the first winery on Long Island. Based in Cutchogue, the Long Island Merlot Alliance encourages winemaking with the primary Long Island grape, merlot.
The CDP was home to 2,849 individuals, 1,120 households, and 801 families as of the 2000 census. There were 351.7 people per square mile (135.8/km2) in the population. At an average density of 207.4 per square mile (80.1/km2), there were 1,680 dwelling units. The community was composed of 93.86% White people, 2.42% African Americans, 0.04% Native Americans, 0.53% Asian people, 1.72% people of other races, and 1.44% people of two or more races. Any race that was Hispanic or Latino made up 5.69% of the population.
Of the 1,120 homes, 27.6% included children under the age of 18, 62.3% included married couples, 6.7% included a single woman living alone, and 28.4% did not belong to a family. Individuals made up 25.1% of all households, and 13.9% of them had a single person 65 years of age or older. The average family size was 2.93, while the average size of a household was 2.48.
The population of the CDP was dispersed, with 5.1% being between the ages of 18 and 24, 24.7% being between the ages of 25 and 44, 28.3% being between the ages of 45 and 64, and 20.5% being 65 or older. It was 44 years old on average. There were 98.0 men for every 100 females. There were 94.9 males for every 100 girls over the age of 18.
In the community, the median income for an individual was $65,469, while the median income for a family was $71,611. The median income for men was $51,103 while it was $34,432 for women. In the CDP, the per capita income was $35,042. 5.6% of people, including 5.8% of those under 18 and 3.4% of those 65 and over, lived in poverty, making up about 2.0% of households.
Albert Einstein, who loved to sail, famously referred to Cutchogue’s Little Peconic Bay as “the most beautiful sailing ground I ever experienced.”[9] During the summers of 1938 and 1939, he rented a cottage on Nassau Point’s Old Cove Road, which is now known as West Cove Road. He also spent a lot of time by himself in a small sailboat he named Tineff, which is Yiddish for “worthless”. Despite receiving instruction in sailing on Little Peconic Bay, Albert Einstein’s sailing abilities were far from flawless.
On August 2, 1939, while in Cutchogue, pipe-smoking Einstein received a visit from fellow Hungarian Jewish physicists Leó Szilárd (who had created a nuclear chain reaction in a lab at Columbia University) and Edward Teller (both encouraged by Niels Bohr). Szilárd dictated the now-famous letter to President Roosevelt, informing him of recent advancements in nuclear physics and raising the possibility that the Germans were developing an atomic bomb. The letter was addressed to Roosevelt, urging him to begin his own program. The US government’s Manhattan Project, which resulted in the creation of the first atomic bomb, is largely credited as beginning with the letter.
In response to Szilárd’s initial explanation of the idea of a nuclear chain reaction, Einstein famously said, “Daran habe ich gar nicht gedacht!” ( “I really never thought of that before” ).
One of Long Island’s busiest business districts is New York State Route 110, or Broad Hollow Road, and East Farmingdale is home to numerous Long Island businesses. The CDP’s center is home to Republic Airport, which is situated next to Saint Charles Cemetery to the east. About one-third of the CDP’s total land area is comprised of these two sections. One of the most well-known amusement parks on Long Island, Adventureland, is situated in East Farmingdale directly across from Farmingdale State College.
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