Here are the other two amicus briefs in support of the petitioner in River Center LLC v. Dormitory Auth. of the State of New York, No. 11-922 (cert. petition filed Jan. 23, 2012).
That's the case in which a Manhattan property owner and developer is challenging the compensation awarded by New York courts for a taking near Lincoln Center. The Appellate Division denied the owner the right to present and have considered evidence about the valuation of the property because the court held that in order to be admissible, the property owner must be able to show the use it claims is the highest and best use is "established as reasonably probable and not a 'speculative or hypothetical arrangement in the mind of the claimant,'" and that these plans will "come to fruition" in the near future.
The property owner, represented in the Supreme Court by Harvard lawprof Laurence Tribe, argues in its cert petition that the Fifth Amendment does not require a property owner show that the development plans will come to fruition soon.
We filed an amicus brief supporting the property owner on behalf of Owners' Counsel of America, posted here.
Here are the other two briefs supporting the petitioner:
The cert petition is posted here. The Court's docket entry is here.