The Frederick Fisher Memorial Program is held in conjunction with the American Bar Association’s Consumer Financial Services Committee at the spring meeting of the Business Law Section. The Program format consists of a panel debate among leading consumer advocates, regulators and finance industry representatives on a topical issue in consumer finance. The lively, informative presentation is moderated by a CCFL member.
The program is open to CCFL members and registrants at the ABA Business Law Section Spring meeting.
2022 Fisher Program
The Fisher Memorial Program was held on May 19, 2022, at the Consumer Finance Law May Meeting at Loyola University, Chicago, IL
The topic was “Getting a Clearer Picture or Merely a Caricature? The Use of Alternative Data and Artificial Intelligence in Credit Decisions, Servicing, and Collection”
The moderator was Jim Milano, Chairman, Conference on Consumer Finance Law.
The panelists were:
- Rebecca (Becki) Kuehn, Partner, Hudson Cook LLP
- Jay Budzik, Chief Technology Officer, Zest AI
- Brad Blower, General Counsel, National Community Rein- vestment Coalition
Fisher Program Archives
- 2021 Program
- 2019 Program
- 2018 Program
- 2017 Program
- 2016 Program
- 2015 Program
- 2014 Program
- 2013 Program
- 2012 Program
- 2011 Program
- 2010 Program
- 2009 Program
Frederick Fisher
Frederick Fisher gained international fame as a young associate at Hale & Dorr L.L.P in Boston when his name was unjustly besmirched by Senator Joe McCarthy in the first nationally televised hearings by a congressional committee. It was this attack that triggered the famous “Have you no shame, sir” speech in defense of Fred by Hale and Dorr partner, Joe Welch, who was representing the United States Army in the hearings. This speech on national television resulted in resounding applause by the Senate Gallery and was the catalyst for ending McCarthy’s reign of terror and his censure by the full United States Senate a few months later.
Fisher spent his entire professional career at Hale & Dorr where one of early mentors was his senior partner, Reginald Heber Smith, the father of Legal Aid. Fred was a member and officer of the Governing Committee of the Conference for many years and was Chairman of the Conference at the time of his sudden death in the late 1980s. His warm and colorful personality made him much loved by the members of the Governing Committee.