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Coffey Modica Partners Named to 2025 Irish America’s Business 100

Consul General of Ireland Speaks on Vital Economic Connections Between Both Nations
December 22, 2025

Coffey Modica LLP, one of America’s fastest-growing insurance defense litigation firms, was honored to have members of the firm named to the 2025 Irish America Business 100. This annual list is a compilation of the most distinguished Irish-American and Irish-born business professionals in the United States.

Founding Partner Michael Coffey, Connecticut Managing Partner Megan E. Bryson, New York Managing Partner Patricia Mooney and Partner Lawrence Luppi were among the professionals celebrated at the Metropolitan Club on New York’s Fifth Avenue.

“What we are celebrating most this evening is the individual people themselves and their qualities,” said Consul General of Ireland in New York Gerald Angley. “They’re leading in their business organizations because of their exceptional talent, experience and drive. And they are leaders of people bringing those unique Irish social skills and emotional intelligence to better their work. We also celebrate their leadership they bring outside their day job.”

Keynote speaker and among the honorees was Heineken USA CEO Maggie Timoney.  She took on the CEO role in September 2018, as the first woman to lead a major U.S. beer company, bringing extensive global brand experience. Additional remarks were heard from leaders from Invest Northern Ireland, Irish-American publisher Niall O’Dowd and Irish-American editor and co-founder Patricia Harty.

Consul General Angley highlighted the vital importance of economic ties between Ireland and America and continuing to foster relationships amongst businesses in both nations, especially as Ireland will hold the Presidency of the European Union starting in 2026. According to the Consul General, investment by Irish companies in the U.S. is worth nearly $400 billion and 200,000 people are employed by 781 Irish companies across America.

For four decades, the Irish America Business 100 has recognized the oversized impact of the Irish on corporate America and its leadership. Among 2025 honorees were  1-800-Flowers founder Jim McCann and Stew Lenoard Jr. Leaders also representing AON, BBC, Bristol Myers Squibb, Fox Corp, JP Morgan, NYSE, Gartner, Bank of Ireland, UBS, Google, Microsoft, Oura, Columbia University, UMass Health, and University of Tennessee were included among the distinguished honorees.

“I am honored to be recognized not only for my work in the legal field, but also for my Irish heritage,” says Founding Partner Michael Coffey. “I take great pride in being named to the prestigious Irish America Business 100.”

A 25-year veteran of the legal profession, Coffey is founding partner of Coffey Modica LLP. He has argued more than 125 jury trials in state and federal courts throughout the nation, while arbitrating and mediating over 300 matters to successful conclusions. Coffey is also a member of ABOTA, American Board of Trial Advocates, the pre-eminent organization that recognizes the most outstanding trial attorneys in the U.S. His family hails from Ireland on both sides with his mother’s family from Co. Donegal and his father’s side from Fermanagh in the North.

Founded in 2021, Coffey Modica continues to be one of the fastest growing law firms in the nation with offices in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Georgia, and Florida. Coffey Modica LLP represents defendants in high-profile, high exposure matters across many disciplines and industries around the country. Known for being aggressive trial attorneys and litigators, Coffey Modica resolves matters on behalf of its clients with the most cost-effective resolutions aligned with their short- and long-term business goals and culture.

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Three Coffey Modica Partners Named to 2025 Irish Legal 100

Firm leadership honored among the most distinguished Irish American attorneys in the United States.
November 17, 2025

Coffey Modica LLP, one of America’s fastest-growing insurance defense litigation firms, is pleased to announce three of its partners have been named to the 2025 Irish Legal 100. This annual list is a compilation of the most distinguished Irish legal professionals in the United States, including several current members of the United States Supreme Court.

Founding Partner Michael Coffey, Connecticut Managing Partner Megan E. Bryson, and Partner Lawrence Luppi were among the legal professionals celebrated at this year’s ceremony, held at the residence of the Irish Ambassador to the United States in Washington DC. Deputy Irish Ambassador Fionnuala Quinlan and her husband, Ravi Ganti hosted the event.

The Irish Legal 100 was founded in 2008 to honor Irish American attorneys who “share one common bond: pride in their Irish roots.” The list recognizes corporate, major firm, and entrepreneurial attorneys, as well as those in the judiciary and at law schools. Previous attendees and honorees include U.S. Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett; Jane Sullivan Roberts, the spouse of Chief Justice John Roberts; Irish Ambassador Geraldine Byrne Nason; and the Attorney General of Ireland Rossa Fanning.

“As a member of the Irish Legal 100, I am honored to once again receive this great recognition and to be among many distinguished industry peers from coast to coast,” said Founding Partner Michael Coffey.

Coffey, one of the founding partners of Coffey Modica LLP, has been practicing law for over 25 years, having served as defense attorney in more than 125 jury trials in state and federal courts throughout the nation, while arbitrating and mediating over 300 matters to successful conclusions.

“It was a privilege to be recognized as part of the Irish Legal 100 celebration held in our nation’s capital,” says Managing Partner Megan Bryson. “I am proud to be considered in the company of so many of our country’s top legal scholars and practitioners to celebrate our Irish heritage and dedication to the legal practice.”

Bryson’s practice has spanned state and federal courts and regulatory agencies, with a focus on areas of professional liability, including medical malpractice, employment law, commercial litigation and product liability. She received both her bachelor’s degree and JD from The University of Notre Dame.

“It is an immense honor to be recognized among the top Irish American legal professionals for the second year in a row,” says Partner Lawrence Luppi.  Admitted to practice in New York, California and Texas, Luppi’s practice focused on defending high exposure, major disasters, including construction accidents, fires and explosions, products and premises liability, and class action litigations. He is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame Law School.

This is the fourth consecutive year in which at least one Coffey Modica partner was selected as one of the Irish Legal 100, with New York Managing Partner Patricia Mooney honored by the organization in 2023.

Founded in 2021, Coffey Modica continues to be one of the fastest growing law firms in the nation with offices in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Georgia, and Florida. Coffey Modica LLP represents defendants in high-profile, high exposure matters across many disciplines and industries around the country. Known for being aggressive trial attorneys and litigators, Coffey Modica resolves matters on behalf of its clients with the most cost-effective resolutions aligned with their short- and long-term business goals and culture.

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New York Owners Must Go Beyond a New Law to Prevent E-Bike Fires

BY LARRY LUPPI

On any given night, a hungry New Yorker will pull up their favorite food delivery app and place an order.

Within minutes, a delivery driver will arrive with the food and a miracle of modern technology will have satisfied one person’s hunger for at least one more night.

But what the hungry New Yorker perhaps does not fully appreciate is that the same technology powering their phone also powered the delivery driver’s e-bike: a lithium-ion battery. And they may also be unaware that lithium-ion batteries are a leading cause of fatal fires in New York City.

In 2022, there were 220 fires started by lithium-ion batteries in New York City, causing six deaths. So far this year, we’ve seen 87 injuries and 13 deaths in Manhattan, including four deaths and two injuries in a Chinatown apartment fire when an e-bike battery purportedly exploded in the repair store below.

In an effort to contain the scourge of deadly e-bike fires, New York’s Local Law 39 will go into effect on Sept. 16, 2023, prohibiting the sale, lease or rental of e-bikes, and their batteries, that do not meet standards set forth by the Underwriters Laboratories or other standards established in consultation with the Fire Department of the City of New York.

While landlords may welcome any legislative action aimed at curbing these deadly blazes, they cannot rely on Local Law 39 alone to prevent all property damage or injuries associated with such fires.

The law may put parameters on the new stock of e-bikes being sold in New York City shops, but there are an estimated 65,000 e-bikes already traversing the five boroughs. Rounding up the old bikes that may thereafter fall below the new standards is impractical.

In August, several major international e-bike manufacturers either filed for bankruptcy or issued warnings about their ability to remain in business. This can result in greater opportunity for older, vintage bikes to fall into disrepair, as warranties evaporate and sources for replacement parts dry up.

Without access to proper customer support, someone who spent valuable money on such a bike, only to find that the battery is just not holding a charge, may have no choice but to log onto the Internet to buy what they think is a replacement battery that fits. What few understand is that while it might fit the device, the voltage may not be compatible. The result may eventually set a home or building ablaze.

And with many lithium-ion batteries being imported, it is also important to note that obtaining jurisdiction over the battery manufacturers is far from a sure thing.

As FDNY Commissioner Laura Kavanagh explained in the spring, lithium-ion fires are “not a slow burn; there’s not a small amount of fire, it literally explodes.” In addition, the fires are “very difficult to extinguish” and therefore “particularly dangerous.”

When deliveries became an essential service during COVID, this spurred the city’s legalization of e-bikes and scooters. Outside of relying on Local Law 39 or waiting for the state legislature to institute a wholesale prohibition on owning or using e-bikes, property owners have limited means to protect their buildings or their occupants from these devices.

Until a more comprehensive solution is reached, building owners would be wise to pay attention to the storage and charging of e-bikes inside their facilities, and some have even decided to ban e-bikes or their batteries within residential and commercial buildings. The New York City Public Housing Authority initially proposed a complete ban on battery-powered bikes because of the fire risk, but reconsidered after residents who use the devices for work and as a method of transportation complained.

To strike a balance between these competing interests, Mayor Eric Adams and U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer secured a $25 million grant to install electric charging hubs at several housing facilities.

An estimated 112 million Americans reported using food delivery in 2020, and the industry is still going strong today, with food delivery expected to be a $32 billion industry by 2024. Those deliveries in a metropolitan region like our own will happen using e-bikes. Landlords and property owners must be aware of this ongoing threat that appears not to be going away.

Larry Luppi is a litigator and a partner at Coffey Modica representing insurers and their insureds.