Roberta Kaplan > Kaplan Hecker & Fink LLP > New York, United States > Lawyer Profile

Kaplan Hecker & Fink LLP
350 FIFTH AVENUE
SUITE 7110
NEW YORK
NY 10118
United States

Work Department

Appellate Litigation; Commercial Litigation; Education; Employment, Discrimination and Sexual Misconduct; Investigations and Crisis Management; Public Interest Litigation; Regulatory Enforcement and Litigation; Trials

Position

Partner

Career

Roberta (“Robbie”) Kaplan is the founding partner of Kaplan Hecker & Fink LLP. In July 2017, Robbie founded Kaplan Hecker & Fink, seeking to build what she calls a “new fashioned, old fashioned” law firm that combines a cutting-edge civil and criminal litigation practice with a groundbreaking commitment to using the courts to serve the public interest. The Washington Post has described Robbie as “a brash and original strategist, with neither a gift for patience nor silence, a crusader for underdogs who has won almost every legal accolade imaginable.” 

With her decades of experience in both commercial and civil rights litigation, Robbie has consistently been recognized as one of the nation’s top litigators and was named the 2020 “Lawyer of the Year” by the New York Law Journal. In addition to receiving the Gold Medal Award from the New York State Bar Association and a Lifetime Achievement Award from the New York Law Journal, she has been named “Litigator of the Year” by The American Lawyer, “Lawyer of the Year” by Above the Law, “Top 10 Women in Litigation” by Benchmark Litigation, and the “Most Innovative Lawyer of The Year” by The Financial Times, among numerous other honors. As the ABA Journal has recognized, Robbie is “a specialist in emerging law. She litigates cases that shape the legal structure within which Americans live, love, work, and hail cabs.”  


Robbie leads a high-stakes commercial litigation practice, representing a broad array of institutions across technology, the sharing economy, education, and finance, including Airbnb, Uber, Columbia University, Brown University, Goldman Sachs, Pershing Square Capital Management, the Democratic National Committee, and Fitch Ratings in their most high-profile and complex legal challenges.  


Robbie is known nationwide for her impactful public interest practice, having successfully led the legal team representing writer E. Jean Carroll in her sexual battery and defamation suit against Donald Trump, securing a $5 million jury verdict on her behalf in a case where the jury reached its verdict in under three hours. This victory followed the firm’s early success in winning a groundbreaking lawsuit against the neo-Nazis and white supremacists who organized the racial- and religious-based violence that took place in Charlottesville in August 2017.  


Robbie is perhaps best known for successfully arguing before the United States Supreme Court in United States v. Windsor, the historic Supreme Court challenge that struck down the Defense of Marriage Act and helped pave the way to nationwide marriage equality, and has continued her deep-seated commitment to using the law to advocate for LGBTQ rights. Following her victory in Windsor, Robbie successfully litigated several LGBTQ rights cases in Mississippi, including successfully challenging the City of Starkville’s denial of a permit for its first ever LGBTQ pride parade. Today, Robbie leads the legal team challenging to Florida House Bill 1557 (widely known as the “Don’t Say Gay” law).  


Robbie is a 1991 graduate of Columbia Law School, where she currently serves as an adjunct professor of law. She holds an A.B., magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa, from Harvard College.  

Education

  • B.A., Harvard University, 1988
    magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa
  • J.D., Columbia University, 1991

Lawyer Rankings

United States > Industry focus > Education

Kaplan Hecker & Fink LLP’s diverse group represents educational institutions in most notably, gender-based misconduct, employment, student misconduct as well as athletics-related Title IX matters. The team has an active investigation practice, assisting education institutions with sensitive internal investigations into allegations of discrimination and gender-based misconduct, and has recently been at the forefront of the first wave of COVID-related tuition refund litigation filed against colleges and universities across the country. Litigator Roberta Kaplan leads the group from New York and handles high-stakes litigation across Title IX matters. Also based in New York, Gabrielle Tenzer acts in gender-based misconduct cases representing the likes of Brown and Columbia University. Joshua Matz supports the group out of the Washington DC office, particularly active in defamation disputes and sex discrimination matters.

United States > Industry focus > Sport

(Firms to watch)

Litigation boutique Kaplan Hecker & Fink LLP has significantly increased its expertise in the sports law area recently, representing major universities, as well as the NCAA, former players in the National Women’s Soccer League, and former professional athletes, in contentious and non-contentious matters. The group is led by Roberta Kaplan.

United States > Dispute resolution > Securities litigation: defense

Boutique litigation firm Kaplan Hecker & Fink LLP in New York has a reputation for securing favourable results for its clients, among them leading financial institutions and commercial businesses, in securities enforcement proceedings and complex securities litigation matters. For regulatory mandates, the firm calls upon six former federal prosecutors, among them Jenna Dabbs  and Mike Ferrara who served as members of the Securities and Commodities Fraud Task Force. For securities litigation, the practice is led by Sean Hecker, who continues to represent Stefan He Qin, the founder of cryptocurrency hedge fund manager Virgil Capital, in a securities fraud case and a parallel SEC enforcement action. Up-and-coming partner Shawn Crowley also plays a key role in that case. Key litigators Roberta Kaplan and John Quinn continue to act for Natixis S.A. in a residential mortgage-backed security repurchase lawsuit. Marshall Miller left to take up the post of Principal Associate Deputy Attorney General at the DOJ.