News | May 8, 2026
A recent study by Tatyana Avilova, Economist at Secretariat has been selected by the Editor of JAMA Health Forum as an Editor’s Choice: Clinical Trial of 2025.
Mr. Bolling provides forensic accounting, damages, and valuation-related services in complex commercial disputes, with experience in intellectual property, accounting-intensive matters, and selected digital-asset-related engagements.
Chase Bolling provides forensic accounting, damages, and valuation-related services in complex commercial disputes. His experience includes intellectual property and other accounting-intensive matters across litigation, arbitration, and advisory engagements.
Mr. Bolling has worked on matters involving patents, trademarks, trade secrets, breach of contract claims, and digital-asset-related disputes. His work has addressed damages, valuation, licensing, revenue recognition, earnout-related issues, solvency, and other accounting analyses and financial reporting questions. He has supported matters across a range of industries, including technology and digital assets, life sciences, oil and gas, industrials and manufacturing, sports-related matters, government contracting, and energy-related issues.
Prior to joining Secretariat, Mr. Bolling served as an Assistant Controller in the private industrials and manufacturing sector, where he supported financial reporting, cost accounting, treasury and lender relations, inventory, payroll, and risk management activities. Mr. Bolling holds a BBA in Accounting and an MBA in Management from King University. He is a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) licensed in Tennessee, and Certified in Financial Forensics (CFF) from the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA).
A recent study by Tatyana Avilova, Economist at Secretariat has been selected by the Editor of JAMA Health Forum as an Editor’s Choice: Clinical Trial of 2025.
Secretariat Experts Recognized in Lexology’s 2026 Investigations Report
Ten of Secretariat experts have been recognized in the Lexology Index 2026 Investigations report, produced in partnership with Global Investigations Review. The guide highlights leading investigations lawyers, digital forensic specialists, and forensic accountants who are trusted to support the most demanding matters worldwide.
AI is rapidly reshaping how financial institutions in Latin America approach compliance, shifting from reactive monitoring to proactive financial crime detection. Advanced AI platforms specialized in crime detection enable banks to process vast datasets, identify anomalous behaviors, and map hidden relationships across accounts and jurisdictions. This is particularly relevant in a region characterized by complex cross-border flows, uneven regulatory enforcement, and significant exposure to illicit economies.