Attorney, Institute for Justice
John Wrench is a Constitutional Law Fellow at the Institute for Justice.
John grew up outside of Ithaca, New York, and received his law degree from the Case Western Reserve University School of Law in 2019. During law school, he served as editor in chief of the Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law and was a member of the Federalist Society. John interned in his law school’s First Amendment Litigation Clinic and was a judicial extern to the Honorable Paul E. Davison in the Southern District of New York. John graduated from Pace University in 2015 with a Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy and Religious Studies.
Assistant Solicitor General, Office of the Texas Attorney General
Executive Director, International Center for Law & Economics
Ian Adams joined ICLE as Executive Director in April 2020. He is responsible for ICLE’s strategic planning, programmatic implementation, and organizational growth. Ian’s substantive policy work focuses on the disruptive impact of burgeoning technologies on law and regulation, with a particular concentration on automation and the future of work, privacy and insurance.
Earlier in his career, Ian was Vice President of Policy at TechFreedom. Before that, he worked as Associate Vice President of Government Affairs at the R Street Institute and held staff roles in the California and Oregon state legislatures. Ian is also a public policy attorney at the international law firm of Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP.
Ian is a graduate of Seattle University, with bachelor’s degrees in history and philosophy, and received his juris doctor from the University of Oregon. He is a member of the California, District of Columbia, and Illinois bars.
Assistant Attorney General & Senior Trial Counsel to the Criminal Bureau, Massachusetts Attorney General
Kansas Securities Commissioner
Aaron Jack, J.D., M.B.A., is the Kansas Securities Commissioner, a position he was appointed to by Kansas Governor Sam Brownback in 2011. Aaron was previously the West-Central Zone Director for New York Life where his 3,200 registered representatives produced over $1.5 billion in sales annually. Aaron was the first director in the history of New York Life to raise $1 billion in new assets for the company's investment management subsidiary, NYLIM.
Mr. Morgan Wood Streetman is the founder and principal of Streetman Law in Tampa, Florida. Mr. Streetman is licensed to practice law in Florida and Mississippi, where he was born. He is also licensed to practice before all federal courts in the Northern and Middle Districts of Florida, the Northern and Southern Districts of Mississippi, and the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.
Mr. Streetman has a wealth of experience in business transactions and disputes. He advises small and closely-held businesses on all of their legal needs, which range from contracts with customers and vendors, to employee relations and human resources issues, to shareholder or member disputes, just to name a few.
Part of Mr. Streetman’s business practice is his focus on representing construction-related businesses and individuals. He has handled every aspect of construction law, including drafting contracts, helping individuals obtain proper licensing, construction liens, construction defect claims, and payment and performance bond claims against surety bonding companies.
Mr. Streetman represents individuals who have been injured by another’s negligence, which includes everything from car and trucking accidents, to dog bites, to a landlord’s allowing a criminal assailant to enter an apartment building common area and viciously attack a tenant by failing to secure common areas with locks and keys.
Mr. Streetman received his law degree from Duke University in Durham, North Carolina and his undergraduate degree in Economics from the University of Florida in Gainesville. While at the University of Florida, Mr. Streetman was honored with election to the Phi Beta Kappa Society, which is the nation’s oldest and most prestigious academic honor society. The Society invites less than 1 percent of graduating seniors to become members.
Senior Staff Attorney, Pacific Legal Foundation
Theodore Hadzi-Antich is a Senior Staff Attorney at the Pacific Legal Foundation's National Litigation Center. He is the lead attorney in three cases under the Clean Air Act involving challenges to greenhouse gas regulations of the United States Environmental Protection Agency. These cases, which raise issues of first impression challenging carbon dioxide regulation under the Clean Air Act, involve thousands of parties litigating in federal courts located in the District of Columbia.
Formerly an environmental regulator, law professor, and private practitioner, Mr. Hadzi-Antich has over 30 years of experience as an environmental lawyer and has handled a wide variety of matters under the federal Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, Toxic Substances Control Act, National Environmental Policy Act, and their state counterparts. He also has handled numerous environmental issues arising in connection with business transactions on four continents. Immediately prior to joining PLF, Mr. Hadzi-Antich served for 15 years as the founder and principal of The Law Offices of Theodore Hadzi-Antich, a law firm in Buffalo, New York, concentrating on environmental and international issues.
Mr. Hadzi-Antich is admitted to practice law in California, New York, Maryland, Tennessee, the District of Columbia, and the United States Supreme Court. He has been a frequent author and lecturer on environmental topics during his three decades as an environmental lawyer.
Mr. Hadzi-Antich received a J.D. degree from the University of Oklahoma College of Law in 1976 and a B.A. degree from the University of Connecticut in 1973.
Iowa Supreme Court Rejects Challenge to K-9’s Brief Contact With Car During Sniff
John Wrench
In State v. Bauler, the Iowa Supreme Court considered whether the U.S. or Iowa...
State Court Docket Watch: Washington v. Palla Sum
Daniel Ortner
In Washington v. Palla Sum, the Washington Supreme Court considered whether courts in Washington should...
Tech Roundup Episode 14 – Telematics in Cars and the Regulation of Auto Insurance
Ian David Adams
Ian Adams joined the podcast to break down the policy aspects of a recent Twitter...
Topics
Unlawful Limits on Religious Community in the Age of COVID-19
In America, the COVID-19 pandemic has required sacrifices of almost everyone and has thrown...
Carpenter v. United States: A Reevaluation of First Principles, One Year On
Dean A. Mazzone
Note from the Editor: The Federalist Society takes no positions on particular legal and public...
Misstep in Environmental Regulation?
TeleforumThe Economic Freedom Amendment: A States-Based Response to the Nationalizing Effects of Bailouts and Federal Ownership of Corporate Stock
Aaron Jack
Note from the Editor: This paper discusses a proposed state constitutional amendment that would deny...
Florida Court Snapshot
Morgan W. Streetman
On July 3, 2008, the Florida Supreme Court ruled that Florida Governor Charlie Crist usurped...