Cuomo, meanwhile, denied he made a mistake in shutting down the panel in a March 2014 deal with Assembly leaders to
pass financial disclosure rules.
Not exact matches
The push by a JCOPE commissioner appointed by Silver to legislators applying for exemptions from new
financial disclosure rules —
passed in the wake of Silver's corruption indictment earlier this year — to submit the paperwork seeking exemptions by hand, in person, and not just by email, could weaken future corruption cases.
Jacob, who was appointed to the panel by former Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, argued that legislators applying for exemptions from new
financial disclosure rules —
passed in the wake of Silver's corruption indictment earlier this year — should be allowed to submit the paperwork seeking exemptions by hand, in person, and not just by email.
On July 29, 2015, the U.S. House
Financial Services Committee
passed H.R. 3192 (Rep. Hill, R - AR), which would delay the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau's (CFPB) enforcement of the new Truth in Lending Act and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (TILA - RESPA) integrated
disclosure rule.