Mr. Aaron Rene Resnick
Business, Real Estate, Lawsuit & Dispute, Employment, Corporate, Commercial Litigation
Aggressive & Professional Legal Representation
Aggressive & Professional Legal Representation
Construction, Business, Class Action, International Antitrust,
1 Se 3rd Ave Suite 1240
Miami, FL 33131
Estate Administration, Wills & Probate, Trusts, Lawsuit & Dispute, Foreclosure
333 SE 2nd Ave, 20th Floor Ste. 2000
Miami, FL 33131
Real Estate, Business, Accident & Injury, Divorce & Family Law, State Appellate Practice
4 SE 1st St Floor 2
Miami, FL 33131
Business, Litigation, Workers' Compensation,
19 W Flagler St Suite 312
Miami, FL 33130
Criminal, Juvenile Law,
40 NW 3rd St Suite 200
Miami, FL 33128
Accident & Injury,
66 West Flagler Street Suite 1001
Miami, FL 33130
Civil Rights, Copyright, Contract, Commercial Real Estate, Business
701 Brickell Ave Ste. 1550
Miami, FL 33131
Environmental Law, Sexual Harassment, Discrimination, Whistleblower, Wrongful Termination
701 Brickell Avenue, Suite 1310
Miami, FL 33131
Criminal, DUI-DWI, Felony, Misdemeanor, Traffic
848 Brickell Ave Ste 800
Miami, FL 33131
Call today to learn more about my fee structure.
Attorney
Law Offices of Aaron Resnick, P.A.
2005 - Present
Attorney
Gunster Yoakley
2000 - 2005
Florida
1998
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
U.S. District Court, Middle District of Florida
U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida
U.S. Supreme Court
Emory University
BA (Political Science)
1994
A Sexy Investment, but Read the Fine Print
“A condo hotel is a very difficult investment strategy,” said Aaron Resnick, a Miami lawyer representing the football players in the suits. “It’s not such an easy, simple purchase where you are going to buy and get a rent check every month. It is a lot more complicated than that.”
Downtown Miami residents, club owners spar over noise ordinance
"At this point, while we understand that a lot people (would) like to have it resolved, our client has a right and has exercised that right," attorney Aaron Resnick said. Thursday's hearing was the latest chapter in a bitter fight between nearby residents and club owners -- a feud over 24-hour nightclubs, rooftop parties and whether recent citations were issued in accordance with the city's noise ordinance. "What is this plainly audible standard and how is it being interpreted and how is it being used?" Resnick, who represents one of the nightclubs, said. Attorneys have argued that code enforcement didn't do its job when handing out several violations to clubs over the Memorial Day weekend. The citations could, over time, lead the city to suspend their business licenses. "We have a city that's going after a landlord for issues related to residents who are on their balconies complaining about noise, and the city is using the wrong portion of the code to enforce that," Resnick said. The cries coming from residents have been equally as loud as the music that they want turned down. "Well, until recently, the city was not really enforcing the code, and recently they finally put resources to that, and they're now starting to enforce the code," resident Mark Kirby said. "And that's all we're asking. We not asking for the clubs to be closed."
LawReviewCLE Foreclosure Defense
2011
Foreclosure Defense THE SECOND WAVE OF FORECLOSURES: A TSUNAMI OR A RIPPLE?
2011
Business, Real Estate, Entertainment, Sports, Commercial Litigation