What Will You Learn
Attendees will learn how to identify complex assets early, gather the right information, and assess how title and control affect what’s in the marital estate. They’ll learn practical frameworks to classify assets as marital, separate, or hybrid, including how to handle tracing and commingling. They’ll also learn how to choose and challenge valuation methodologies, key assumptions, and common discounts. Finally, they’ll learn targeted discovery and deposition tactics to build a valuation record that supports settlement leverage and trial presentation.
What Will You Gain
Attendees will gain a repeatable, litigation-ready process for handling equitable distribution involving complex and high-value property. They’ll gain sharper issue-spotting and a clearer plan for directing experts, discovery, and negotiations. They’ll gain confidence in attacking weak valuation positions and defending their own with credibility. Most importantly, they’ll gain tools to convert valuation findings into stronger settlements and a cleaner case if trial is necessary.
Key topics to be discussed:
This course is co-sponsored with myLawCLE.
Date / Time: March 19, 2026
Closed-captioning available
Charles Wilhoite, Managing Director | Citizens Financial Group, Inc
Charles Wilhoite is a Managing Director at Willamette Management Associates and the national director of the firm’s tax-exempt entity and health care services practice. His work spans valuation and forensic assignments including business and stock valuations, economic damages calculations, forensic accounting analyses, gift and estate tax valuations, ESOP-related studies, M&A valuations, purchase price allocations, and high-wealth marital dissolution property division, and he has testified nationally on damages, tax-related issues, and valuation issues.
Education & Credentials
Recognition & Leadership
Professional Involvement
Experience
Jad Greifer, Co-Chair | Cohen Clair Lans Greider & Simpson LLP
Jad Greifer is a senior matrimonial attorney and firm leader at Cohen Clair Lans Greifer & Simpson LLP, where he was elevated to serve as co-Chair in 2023. He is recognized for his work in complex family-law matters and has received national/industry recognition, including being selected by Corporate LiveWire as New York City Divorce Lawyer of the Year (2014 & 2015). He earned his J.D., cum laude, from Harvard Law School (1995) and his B.A., cum laude, from Emory University (1992), where he was elected Phi Beta Kappa.
Education & Credentials
Recognition & Leadership
Professional Involvement
Experience
Shannon Rogers Simpson, Co-Chair and Managing Partner | Cohen Clair Lans Greifer & Simpson LLP
Shannon Rogers Simpson is the firm’s Managing Partner and an experienced trial lawyer who practices in all areas of matrimonial and family law. Her work includes custody, visitation, and support issues; valuation and equitable distribution of marital assets; and the negotiation and drafting of prenuptial, postnuptial, and separation agreements. She has negotiated successful settlements, guided clients through mediation, and when necessary litigated complicated financial and custody matters through trial, including matters that have drawn national and international attention.
Education & Credentials
Recognition & Leadership
Professional Involvement
Experience
I. Asset Identification in Divorce: Identify Complex Assets, Gather the Right Information Early, and Assess How Title and Control Affect What’s Actually in the Marital Estate | 1:00pm – 1:30pm
This segment shows attorneys how to surface the full marital estate, especially high-value and non-obvious assets, before the case’s leverage calcifies. You’ll learn what information to collect early, how to follow control and cash flow to what actually exists, and why “title” is often a starting point rather than the answer. The focus is on building an asset map that is complete enough to drive strategy, discovery, and settlement from day one.
II. Asset Classification (Marital/Separate/Hybrid): Apply Clear Frameworks to Determine Whether Each Asset Is Marital, Separate, or Mixed, including How to Handle Tracing and Commingling Issues | 1:30pm – 2:00pm
Attorneys will work through a practical framework for determining whether property is marital, separate, or a hybrid interest that requires apportionment. The discussion emphasizes how real-world facts, timing, source of funds, and conduct during the marriage, reshape classification outcomes even when documents look clean. You’ll also learn how to handle tracing and commingling problems in a way that preserves arguments and minimizes avoidable evidentiary gaps.
Break | 2:00pm – 2:10pm
III. Valuation Strategy for Complex Assets: Select Defensible Valuation Methodologies, Address Key Assumptions, and Evaluate Any Applicable Discounts or Adjustments While Anticipating Challenges from the Other Side | 2:10pm – 2:40pm
This portion equips counsel to choose valuation approaches that can survive scrutiny and to understand the assumptions that drive the number far more than the math does. Speakers break down how to evaluate methodologies, identify pressure points in inputs and projections, and apply or challenge common discounts and adjustments with credibility. The goal is to help you develop a valuation position that is defensible for trial and persuasive for settlement.
IV. Litigation-Ready Proof and Leverage: Use Targeted Discovery and Depositions to Build a Valuation Record That Supports Settlement Leverage and, if Necessary, a Clear Trial Presentation | 2:40pm – 3:10pm
Attorneys will learn how to turn valuation issues into a disciplined discovery and deposition plan that builds proof instead of just generating paper. The segment focuses on locking down admissions, testing opposing experts, and creating a record that makes your valuation narrative easy for a mediator or judge to accept. You’ll leave with tactics for converting the valuation record into settlement leverage and, when necessary, a clear and compelling trial presentation.