Zimiles Views
Ellen Zimiles LAWi’83 will deliver the 2010 Commencement address to graduates of Syracuse University College of Law on Sunday, May 23, in the Carrier Dome. A graduate of SU College of Law, Zimiles is co-founder of Daylight Forensic & Advisory LLC, an independent fraud risk management firm conducting forensic investigations and advising on regulatory compliance, and is global head of investigations and compliance for Navigant Consultants (NYSE: NCI). Zimiles has more than 25 years of litigation and investigation experience, including some 10 years as a federal prosecutor. Before forming Daylight, she was a principal at KPMG, a Big Four accounting firm, for which she coordinated the forensic practice across all industry segments and was practice leader for the financial services industry. She is a leading authority on anti-money laundering programs, corporate governance, regulatory compliance, fraud control and public corruption matters.
Zimiles has worked with a multitude of financial institutions preparing for regulatory exams, developing remediation programs and assisting organizations as a regulatory liaison. Previously, she was an assistant U.S. attorney in the Southern District of New York for almost 10 years. She served in the civil and criminal divisions and was chief of the forfeiture unit for more than six years. Zimiles was also responsible for many high-profile money laundering, fraud and forfeiture cases. In recognition for her contributions as a federal prosecutor, Zimiles received the U.S. Department of Justice’s John Marshall Award for Outstanding Service and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Integrity Award.
Ellen Zimiles will deliver the 2010 Commencement address to graduates of Syracuse University College of Law on Sunday, May 23 in the Carrier Dome. Zimiles is a graduate of SU College of Law and most recently served as chief executive officer of Daylight Forensic & Advisory, LLC, an independent fraud risk management firm conducting forensic investigations and advising on regulatory compliance, among other matters.
In the mid-sixties, against the grain of contemporary movements surfacing at the time, Murray Zimiles began to work in a figurative, narrative genre. His results established a distinctly innovative body of work that embraces yet defies tradition. The work recalls tradition, fights tradition and at the same time establishes a new tradition,o" Zimiles notes. He imbues his work with intricate interplay and furious energy. It has been suggested that his major theme is paradise, or more precisely, paradise lost and partially regained. Murray Zimiles' most recent e"Animal Painting ----The New York Times Art Review of Murray Zimiles Retrospective at the Neuberger Museum of Art (2003)