Daily Briefs ...

Honigman attorney Lynn Gandhi joins the board of the?Museum  of Contemporary Art Detroit

Lynn A. Gandhi, a partner in the State and Local Tax practice at Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP, was elected to the board of directors of the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit. MOCAD’s mission is to present art at the forefront of contemporary culture. As a non-collecting institution, MOCAD is responsive to the cultural content of our time, fueling crucial dialogue, collaboration, and public engagement.

Gandhi advises clients on a national basis regarding multistate tax strategies and represents taxpayers in state tax controversies. Her areas of concentration are state income and franchise taxes, sales and use taxes, gasoline, gaming and other excise taxes. Gandhi is also very experienced in unclaimed property matters and involved in investment incentive opportunities.  She is a Certified Public Accountant and was named in the December 2014 State Tax Notes (a Tax Analysts publication) as one of the "best in the profession." She also authors a State Tax Notes monthly column, "Smitten with the Mitten," which discusses Michigan tax issues.

Gandhi has been recognized in Best Lawyers in America since 2010, in Michigan Super Lawyers since 2011, and as a DBusiness “Top Lawyer” since 2013.

She earned a J.D. from Wayne State University Law School and an LL.M. in Taxation from New York University School of Law. Gandhi received a B.A., cum laude, from Kalamazoo College.


Hung jury for man in slayings of 2 during Detroit eviction

DETROIT (AP) — A trial for a man in the fatal shootings of a Detroit homeowner and his adult daughter during an eviction has ended in a hung jury.

Wayne County Circuit Court records say the first-degree murder case against 23-year-old Alonzo Long Jr. will go to trial again Oct. 8 after a verdict wasn’t reached Monday. A pretrial hearing is scheduled for Aug. 14.

On Nov. 28, 72-year-old Howard Franklin and 37-year-old Catherine Franklin were shot during a dispute over the removal of fixtures at a house Howard Franklin had acquired at a tax foreclosure sale. He had allowed people to stay in the house. The shooting occurred when he showed up with an eviction order.

Long has been described as a nephew of the home’s occupant.

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