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Announcements and StatementsApril 8, 2026
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Pace News
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Dr. Darrin K. Porcher is a former NYPD officer and currently an adjunct professor at Pace University School of Criminal Justice and Monroe College.
Professor Irani DeAraujo was featured in this WalletHub piece about credit cards.
“Not all impressions are created equal,” said Larry Chiagouris, a marketing professor at Pace University. “I’m not saying [this tactic is] not ethical or illegal, but it raises issues. If someone is trying to play a game and that’s the purpose of this interaction, they may just be eager to play the game and are not that interested in the information being shared.”
The newly named Food and Farm Business Law Clinic at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University announced that it will expand its legal services with $225,000 in funding included for the clinic in the New York State budget.
In a New York Law Journal opinion essay, Dean Emeritus Richard L. Ottinger argues that the U.S. Supreme Court has shifted from interpreting the Constitution to effectively legislating from the bench.
Examining decisions from Citizens United and Bruen to West Virginia v. EPA and Shelby County, Dean Ottinger contends that recent rulings depart from constitutional text and long-standing principles of checks and balances—posing serious risks to democratic governance.
Professor Bennett Gershman writes about the Supreme Court's radical transformation including the Constitution’s regulation of government and religion.
Pace University Art Gallery is pleased to co-present the 2022 New York Latin American Art Triennial (NYLAAT), a series of exhibitions and cultural programming at seven sites across New York City that launched earlier this month. The portion of the Triennial at Pace University Art Gallery opened with a public reception from 5:00 p.m.–7:00 p.m., remaining on view through October 29, 2022.
Carman quoted Larry Chiagouris, a Professor at Pace University, to point out the obvious problem, “I’m not saying [this tactic is] not ethical or illegal, but it raises issues. If someone is trying to play a game and that’s the purpose of this interaction, they may just be eager to play the game and are not that interested in the information being shared.”
Larry Chiagouris, who works at Pace University as a marketing professor, told Bloomberg that while this isn't really illegal, it's also not a victimless crime. "If someone is trying to play a game and that’s the purpose of this interaction, they may just be eager to play the game and are not that interested in the information being shared," he said.
“Not all impressions are created equal,” said Larry Chiagouris, a marketing professor at Pace University. “I’m not saying [this tactic is] not ethical or illegal, but it raises issues. If someone is trying to play a game and that’s the purpose of this interaction, they may just be eager to play the game and are not that interested in the information being shared.”