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. Hallett has more than 30 years of experience in the building, civil engineering, and power sectors of the construction and engineering industries. He has experience in quantity surveying, contract administration, project management, and resolution for the past 23 years.
Kevin Hallett has more than 30 years of experience in the building, civil engineering, and power sectors of the construction and engineering industries. He has experience in quantity surveying, contract administration, project management, and resolution for the past 23 years.
Mr. Hallett has been involved in numerous large-scale disputes involving ADR, litigation, arbitration, and adjudication in the private and public sectors. He has provided contractual advice, prepared and defended construction claims, and submitted expert witness reports on projects in the UK, Africa, North America, the Middle East, and Europe. Additionally, he has national and international experience at the director level, teaching project management techniques to site personnel for one of Australia’s largest construction and engineering companies. His areas of expertise are in dispute resolution and avoidance, expert witness, commercial management, quantity surveying, contract administration, and project and financial management.
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.