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.
Ms. Crowe has significant litigation services experience provided to clients and their counsel in the areas of finance, forensic reviews, economic damages, lost profits, claims analysis and evaluation, asset management, dispute resolutions, breach of contracts, fraudulent transactions, and corruption investigations.
Ms. Crowe specializes in litigation support consulting services for large complex commercial litigations, security class actions, construction claims, personal injuries, financial disputes, and business interruption claims across numerous private and public industry sectors.
Ms. Crowe’s extensive experience includes managing multi-billion-dollar real estate portfolios and government retirement funds, assisting bankruptcy trustees and administrators in Chapter 7 (liquidations) and Chapter 11 (reorganizations/turnarounds) cases, providing numerous domestic and international projects with various forensic reviews, internal fraud investigations in theft of corporate assets committed by insiders, bribery and anti-corruption allegations involved in Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), being part of key team contributors in performing several mega projects ($4 billion to $10 billion+) construction claims evaluation for owners, contractors, and subcontractors, and preparing the expert witness statements, reports, and testimony.
Ms. Crowe is fluent in Mandarin Chinese.
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.