Nieves v. Home Box Office, Inc. In 2006, Arshack successfully represented actress and singer Chanti Nieves’s privacy interests, when she was surreptitiously videotaped by
HBO’s reality show
Family Bonds as she stood on a street corner in Manhattan. Members of the cast made "crude remarks" about the effect Nieves’s appearance had on their genitals, and she sought damages. Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Debra A. James ruled in Ms. Nieves's favor that
Family Bonds would have had to show a "real relationship" between the show’s subject matter and the bystander’s image to avoid liability in an invasion of privacy case.
Upholding secrecy in Rosenberg Testimony In 2008 and 2015, Arshack represented
David Greenglass, the brother of Ethel Rosenberg, who was a key government witness in the case against
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. A group of historians sought to uncover Greenglass’s secret
grand jury testimony, which led to the conviction and subsequent execution of the Rosenbergs; letters Arshack wrote on his client’s behalf convinced a federal judge in the July 2008 decision not to unseal Greenglass’s testimony. Arshack, representing the estate of David Greenglass and his family, continued to resist the release of that grand jury testimony in 2015 after Mr. Greenglass’s death.
New York vs. Alain Robert In 2008, Arshack represented "French Spiderman" Alain Robert, who was charged with reckless endangerment, among other charges. Robert claimed to have climbed
The New York Times Building to raise awareness about global warming. After hearing Robert’s testimony, a grand jury decided to reduce his felony charges to minor non-criminal violations; Robert was sentenced to three days of community service, which he completed at the nonprofit organization
Gay Men’s Health Crisis.
Defense of former Qaddafi official In 2011, Arshack provided the United States defense of the highest-ranking former official of Libya’s Qaddafi regime to defect from Libya at the inception of the
Arab Spring. The defense, during a prolonged multi-pronged investigation of the official, required interaction with the FBI, UK Investigators, Scottish Police and SEC investigators, who sought information concerning events in which Libya was suspected of being involved ranging from the mid-1980s to 2010. Prolonged negotiations in Doha, Qatar, with various law enforcement agencies from different countries resulted in no charges being filed.
The People of the State of Colorado vs. James Holmes In 2013, Arshack was asked to join the legal team of the Aurora, CO "Dark Knight" movie theater shooter
James Eagan Holmes, in an attempt to compel the
Fox News reporter
Jana Winter to appear before a judge in Colorado. Winter refused to reveal confidential sources, members of Colorado law enforcement, who had violated a Colorado judge’s gag order by sharing the contents of Holmes’s notebooks with her. Holmes faced the death penalty, but was convicted and sentenced to 12 life terms for 12 murders, plus 3,318 years for attempted murder. Arshack won at both the trial and appellate levels, but the highest court in New York ruled against Holmes. Arshack appealed to the
United States Supreme Court, who declined to hear the case.
Created novel process for clearing individual maligned in a United Nations report In 2014, Arshack represented the single largest taxpayer in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), who had been identified in a very public
United Nations report prepared by UN area "experts" as a funder and supporter of rebel groups in that country. The individual denied the allegations and sought legal counsel to generate the evidence that the allegations were false and then convince the UN to retract the allegations made in the report, as these allegations had taken a severe toll on his business interests throughout the DRC and elsewhere in Africa and Europe. As a result of Arshack’s representation, the UN took the completely unprecedented step of agreeing to retract all of the damaging statements made against this individual; moreover, Arshack’s team addressed the lack of process within the UN structure to address allegations such as those made in these UN reports.
United States vs. Devyani Khobragade In 2013, Arshack represented Indian diplomat
Devyani Khobragade, then the Deputy Consul General in New York, who was arrested on charges of illegally obtaining a work visa for her children’s nanny and paying her far less than the minimum wage. The case received considerable press and comment from the US State Department. Arshack advised Khobragade against leaving the country without a judge’s permission amidst the media storm. Ultimately all charges against Khobragade were dismissed.
Kenyan nationals facing extradition and drug trafficking charges In 2014, Arshack was hired to consult in Mombasa, Kenya as Learned Counsel in the fight against the United States’ effort to extradite an associate of the two sons of slain drug baron Ibrahim Akasha from Kenya to the US to face drug trafficking charges.
Defense of Waleed Abulkhair In 2015, Arshack joined the defense team of Saudi Arabian lawyer and human rights activist
Waleed Abulkhair. In 2015, he traveled to Geneva in order to accept the
Ludovic Trarieux International Human Rights Prize on behalf of his client, who remains imprisoned.
Anne O’Hare Bynum vs. State of Arkansas In 2018, Arshack served as consulting attorney for
National Advocates for Pregnant Women, which represented Anne Bynum’s appeal against the state of Arkansas. Bynum, who had hid her pregnancy from her family, had a stillbirth in her home and was subsequently arrested for concealing a birth. She was initially sentenced to 6 years; Arshack argued and won her appeal. The court reversed the conviction and the prosecutor chose not to re-try her. ==Press==