The follow-on exposure mapped
The disputes, guarantees, and obligations a move does not leave behind.
An audit of the Israeli disputes, obligations, and enforcement exposure that a relocation does not leave behind, so the move is made with the loose ends mapped rather than discovered later.
A move changes where you live; it does not erase what you owe, what you guaranteed, or what can be enforced against you. Open disputes, personal guarantees, ongoing obligations, and judgments that can be recognised abroad all follow a person across the border, and a relocation planned without reading them invites the worst kind of surprise. The firm audits that exposure before the move, ties it to the firm's disputes practice, and tells the client what has to be managed first.
The firm reads the move the way an opposing creditor or claimant would: what can still be pursued, and where the person can be reached after they have gone. It maps the exposure that crosses the border - including how an Israeli judgment can be enforced in the destination - because distance is not a defence. It ranks what has to be handled and in what order, and where the exposure is a live dispute, it connects straight into the firm's litigation practice.
The disputes, guarantees, and obligations a move does not leave behind.
Where an Israeli judgment, or a foreign one, could be enforced after you move.
What to settle, secure, or sequence before, during, and after the move.
A client preparing to relocate wants to know what their move does not leave behind. The firm audits the open disputes, guarantees, and obligations, reads where an Israeli judgment could be enforced in the destination, ranks what has to be handled first, and connects any live dispute straight into the firm's litigation practice.
Described in abbreviated, anonymised form to preserve client confidentiality.
Generally yes; relocating does not end open disputes or obligations, and personal guarantees travel with you, which is why the exposure is audited before the move rather than assumed to be left behind.
Often yes, through the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in the destination, so the cross-border reach of any judgment or potential judgment is read as part of planning a move.
That depends on the audit, which ranks the open disputes, guarantees, and obligations by exposure and reach, so the client knows what to settle, secure, or sequence before, during, and after the move.