Lincoln Knauer is a member of the General Business Litigation Practice Group in the Springfield, Missouri office of Husch & Eppenberger, LLC.
Link has extensive trial and appellate experience in: business and commercial litigation of contract and employment law issues; equitable matters including constructive trusts, unjust enrichment and injunctions; business torts; defamation, privacy, and media issues; and lender liability. He maintains familiarity with all areas of employment law. He has a wide appellate practice in the state and federal courts.
Following two years in military service, Link became Law Clerk to U.S. District Judge William R. Collinson and served in that position until joining the Farrington & Curtis firm in Springfield in 1970. He was made partner there in 1973 and was the senior litigation partner at the time of the 1997 merger which brought him to Husch, where he is head of litigation in the Springfield office. He is a frequent speaker at CLE seminars and trade group meetings. He greatly enjoys unusual cases in developing fields of law.
Practice Areas:
General Business Litigation, Labor & Employment
Education:
J.D., University of Missouri - Columbia (1966).
B.S., Business Administration, University of Missouri (1964); Phi Delta Phi.
Admissions:
Missouri (1966); U.S. Supreme Court; Missouri Supreme Court.
Legal Associations:
American Bar Association; The Missouri Bar; Springfield Metropolitan Bar Association.
Civic Organizations:
Boy Scouts of America (President of the Ozarks Council); Human Rights Commission of the City of Springfield; Little Theatre Productions (Member); Springfield's Brownfields Committee; Upper White River Basin Foundation; Urban Districts Alliance (President).
Publications:
"The Media's Perception on Open Records and Public Meetings" for a Lorman seminar, 2002;
"Personnel and the Law" for the American Banking Association, 1988;
Author and Reviewer, "Malicious Prosecution," Chapter for Missouri Bar Association's Continuing Legal Education Deskbook.
Speaking Engagements:
Numerous and various CLE's, most recently "Effective Appellate Advocacy," and the Missouri Open Records law.
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