Jason S. Kanterman
Stone & Magnanini LLP
Mr. Kanterman is a problem solver, dedicated to helping his clients navigate complex civil and criminal matters, and focused on achieving innovative and practical results. Mr. Kanterman works diligently to identify all viable options for achieving the client’s desired outcomes, and is prepared to counsel clients, both plaintiffs and defendants, in pre-litigation resolution, alternative dispute resolution, and if necessary, through trial and appeal.
Before joining Stone & Magnanini, Mr. Kanterman served as a law clerk to the Honorable Marie P. Simonelli of the Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division, where he worked on various legal topics, including complex whistleblower and insurance issues. Before that, he was a law clerk at White and Williams LLP, a large regional law firm, where he worked on insurance coverage litigation and complex products liability matters, including an internationally recognized defective product case involving a Scandinavian furniture maker.
Mr. Kanterman actively publishes on a number of legal topics, and his scholarship has appeared in some of the nation’s leading law reviews and most widely-used trial advocacy textbooks, with articles featured by the Rutgers University Law Review, the Rutgers Journal of Law and Public Policy, and the Emory Corporate Governance and Accountability Review. Topics on which Jason has published include federal civil litigation, whistleblower litigation, insurance producer liability, state constitutional law, criminal law, and statutory interpretation.
Jason graduated with honors from Rutgers Law School, where he was Business Editor of the Rutgers University Law Review, received a best-brief award for his work in the Hunter M
- Stockbroker & Investment Fraud
- Appeals & Appellate
- Civil Appeals, Federal Appeals
- Legal Malpractice
- Insurance Claims
- Bad Faith Insurance, Business Insurance, Disability Insurance, Health Insurance, Life Insurance, Motor Vehicle Insurance, Property Insurance
- Employment Law
- Employee Benefits, Employment Contracts, Employment Discrimination, ERISA, Overtime & Unpaid Wages, Sexual Harassment, Whistleblower, Wrongful Termination
- Products Liability
- Drugs & Medical Devices, Motor Vehicle Defects, Toxic Torts
- Gov & Administrative Law
- Administrative Law, Election Law, Government Contracts, Government Finance, Legislative & Government Affairs
- Arbitration & Mediation
- Business Arbitration, Consumer Arbitration, Family Arbitration
- Entertainment & Sports Law
- Personal Injury
- Animal & Dog Bites, Brain Injury, Car Accidents, Construction Accidents, Motorcycle Accidents, Premises Liability, Truck Accidents, Wrongful Death
- White Collar Crime
- Whistleblower Law (CEPA, Qui Tam/FCA)
- Free Consultation
- Contingent Fees
- New Jersey
- New York
- 3rd Circuit
- U.S. District Court, District of New Jersey
- U.S. District Court, Eastern District of New York
- U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York
- English: Spoken, Written
- Associate
- Stone & Magnanini LLP
- Current
- Adjunct Professor of Law
- Rutgers Law School
- - Current
- Rutgers School of Law-Camden
- J.D. (2016)
- Honors: Cum Laude
- Activities: Law Review, Moot Court, Mock Trial, Teaching and Research Assistant
- Rider University
- B.A. | Political Science & Global Studies
- United States District Court for the District of New Jersey
- ReNew Camden, Federal Prisoner Reentry Program Volunteer
- Current
- Considerations for the Next Administration: Criminal Justice Reform and Prisoner ReEntry
- 4 Emory Corp. Governance & Accountability Rev. 201 (Jan., 2017)
- Interrogatory Practice Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure: What is the Basis for the Speculative and Argumentative Objections?
- Rutgers U. Law Rev. Commentaries (Aug., 2017)
- New Jersey Insurance Producer Liability: Attempting to Define the Special Relationship Theory
- Rutgers U. Law Rev. Commentaries (Feb., 2017)
- Reviewing the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey’s Whistleblower Protection Plan: Added Protections for Whistleblowers?
- Rutgers U. Law Rev. Commentaries (Aug., 2017)