"Raoul Lionel Felder" is an United States/American lawyer and matrimonial attorney. Felder has written eight books and has published numerous articles related to matrimonial law, politics and social issues. Felder is listed in New York Law Journal's 100 Most Powerful Lawyers in America and in all editions of Who's Who in America and Who's Who in American Law and was profiled in the cover article of the May, 2008 issue of The New Yorker Magazine.

More Raoul Felder on Wikipedia.

This isn't Little Big Horn, and I'm not General Custer. I guess I didn't get the smoke signal.

The usual fraud in American law is when the wife claims the husband said they were going to have children, and now he won't.

For it to be admissible, it's got to be a court-approved laboratory and you have to show a chain of evidence, like in a criminal case. But just to know if your husband is making whoopee, it's fine.

I guess she went to a different law school than the rest of the lawyers in America. People don't just throw that term about.

If a client's soon-to-be ex-spouse wants to move on with his life.

The basic advantage [to an annulment] is that at a cocktail party when the guy asks if you were ever married, you can say no.

People start screaming at each other, and it becomes a fiasco. Suddenly you're arguing about personalities rather than issues.

The usual fraud is a refusal to have children. Or you see it if somebody is homosexual, or has some kind of disease, or claims they're from nobility when they're not.