Photo of Kateryna Bakhnak

Kateryna is an Associate in the firm’s Private Client Services Department in the New York office. Kateryna focuses on estate planning for individuals and trust and estate administrative services for individual and corporate fiduciaries.

Prior to joining Wiggin and Dana, Kateryna was a Trust Senior Associate at a private bank where she provided fiduciary and administrative services to high net-worth and ultra-high net-worth clients. She has worked as a legal intern at multiple firms gaining experience in trust and estate administration.

Kateryna graduated cum laude from CUNY Bernard M. Baruch College and received her J.D. from Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law where she served as an Executive Board Member for the Moot Court Honor Society.

Kateryna is fluent in Ukrainian and Russian.

Clients often ask us how to plan for educational expenses for their children or grandchildren.

According to the College Savings Plans Network, at an inflation rate of 6%, it will cost about $276,954.00 to send a child who is currently a toddler to an in-state, public college for four years, inclusive of tuition, fees, room

Highlighted by Lyden v. Lyden (In re E. Earl Lyden Trust)

In early April, the Michigan Court of Appeals issued an opinion in the case of In re E. Earl Lyden Trust, which highlights the importance of a comprehensive review of the estate plan during the pendency of a divorce.

Background of Case

Denice

Like individuals, trusts are subject to income tax by the federal government and a majority of states. If a trust is characterized as a “grantor” trust, then its income is reported by the grantor thereof, who is usually the trust creator, and taxed as if earned by the grantor individually. If the trust is characterized

Highlighted by In re Marriage of Daon and Stewart

With educational expenses on the rise, planning for your children’s education while they are still young is usually advisable. Many families find that a “section 529 education savings plan,” or more commonly known as a “529 plan,” works well for this purpose, but there are potential