Biglaw Firm Tells Associates They Have to Take Vacation Time to Attend Firm Event

Above the Law reports it was tipped off by insiders at Biglaw firm Quinn Emanuel about a policy at the firm that has left some associates hoodwinked over losing some of their vacation time.

“According to our tipsters, in previous years the firm has allowed associates that attend the [firm’s annual hike] to bill the time to a non-billable client number,” explains Above the Law senior editor Kathryn Rubino. “When associates attempted to repeat the practice this year however, they were told that time should, instead, be charged to their vacation time.”

She adds that the firm defended the policy because it subsidizes the travel costs associated with the trip, which took place in Interlaken, Switzerland this year.

Read the Above the Law article.

 

 




HBO’s “The Future of Work” Featuring LawGeex

LawGeexVice News recently reported on the technological revolution overtaking the world in transportation, distribution, food service, health – and legal.

The HBO VICE News special features LawGeex in its report on “The Future of Work.”

In a repeat of the AI vs. Lawyer competition — this time officiated by HBO’s Vice News — the LawGeex AI came out ahead again.

On its website, LawGeex displays a short clip showing how LawGeex performed better in both speed and accuracy.

Read more about the competition.

 

 




The Lawyer’s Guide to Publishing LinkedIn Articles

LinkedInHaving a robust LinkedIn profile is critical to anybody who wants to improve their online presence, but  a LinkedIn profile is fairly static, however, only changing when there’s a new job or award, etc.

Amy Boardman Hunt of Muse Communications points out that publishing an article – quarterly, monthly, or even weekly – is a solid way to keep your profile updated and maintain your presence on LinkedIn.

After explaining the difference between a LinkedIn article and a post, Hunt gives some pointers on how to write an article.

The post covers how to select subjects for articles, how long they should be, writing headlines, avoiding jargon or legalese, formatting, sharing the content beyond LinkedIn, and then checking on LindedIn analytics.

Read the article.

 

 




Firm Settles Suit Alleging It Solicited Fake Online Reviews That Tricked Woman Into Becoming Client

Counterfeit - fakeKraemer Manes & Associates has settled a lawsuit claiming that a client got bad legal advice after she was tricked into hiring the Pennsylvania law firm because of fake online reviews, reports the  ABA Journal.

The Journal‘s Debra Cassens Weiss explains:

“The lawsuit claimed that Kraemer Manes had ‘orchestrated a scheme of soliciting positive online reviews’ from people who had never used the law firm’s services. Nonlawyer employees were encouraged to solicit friends and family to write the reviews and given time off for each positive review they secured, the suit alleged.”

Read the ABA Journal article.

 

 




Lawyers’ Wages Grew Slower Than Inflation, ABA Profile Reveals

The American Bar Association’s first annual profile of the legal profession shows that lawyers’ income grew slower than inflation from 2017 to 2018.

The average lawyer’s salary rose 1.6 percent, which is a little lower than the 2.1 percent rate of inflation for the same period, reports Bloomberg Law in a summary of the ABA profile.

The report found that the average lawyer earned $144,230 last year, making less than dentists, who earned $180,590 on average, but more than physicists, who made $125,280, according to the Bloomberg summary by Melissa Heelan Stanzione.

The study also revealed the pervasiveness of stress, anxiety, and substance abuse in the profession. “Recent studies show that lawyers struggle with these problems at levels substantially higher than the general population and other highly educated professionals,” the ABA report said.

Read the Bloomberg Law article.

 

 




Law Firm’s Nasty Split Sparks Novel Questions on Derivative Suits

Reuters’ Alison Frankel tells the story of the split between the partners of a personal injury juggernaut and how their feud turned into an unusual and creative use of a derivative suit.

Cellino & Barnes used ubiquitous advertising on television, radio and billboards in New York to generate more than $10 million in profits each year since 2015 for its only two shareholders, Ross Cellino and Stephen Barnes.

Their split and the subsequent fight have resulted in a derivative suit that has provoked apparently novel questions about the intersection of shareholder derivative litigation and the dissolution of a privately-held corporation, Frankel writes.

Read the Reuters article.

 

 




Biglaw Firms Expanding Parental Paid Leave Policy – Up to 20 Weeks

More and more law firms are responding to peer competition by offering generous paid parental leave for their lawyers who become new parents, reports Above the Law.

Staci Zaretsky, a senior editor at Above the Law, writes about the reportedly industry-leading paid leave announced by Benesch.

“The firm’s plan had always been gender neutral, but today it announced its adoption of a reportedly industry-leading 20 weeks of fully paid leave for new parents, up from 12 weeks of paid leave, plus the ability to take an additional six weeks of leave without pay,” she writes, adding that there may be a handful of firms may offer a few more weeks of fully paid, gender-neutral parental leave.

Read the Above the Law article.

 

 




Texas Businessman Lost $6 Million Investing in BP Litigation. Now He’s Blaming His Ex-Lawyers

Texas businessman Mas Duncan lost the nearly $6 million that he invested in a docket of claims against BP after the Deepwater Horizon spill. The money, as Reuters’ Alison Frankel explains, evaporated into an allegedly fraudulent scheme to manufacture tens of thousands of plaintiffs.

“Then when Duncan and his litigation finance company, Duncan Litigation Investments, tried to recoup the lost millions by suing the plaintiffs’ firms that allegedly benefited from his investment, he ran into timeliness problems,” according to the Reuters report.

Now DLI has filed a complaint blaming Duncan’s own former lawyers at Baker Donelson Bearman Caldwell & Berkowitz for failing to procure a tolling agreement that would have extended the statute of limitations on Duncan’s claims against the plaintiffs’ firm.

Read the Reuters article.

 

 




NRA May Be Shooting Itself in the Foot With Out-Of-Control Legal Bills

Above the Law reviews the financial problems plaguing the National Rifle Association, as ProPublica reports on the legal bills charged by the organization’s outside counsel, Bill Brewer.

Internal NRA documents posted anonymou8sly online indicated that Brewer’s firm charged the organization more than $97,000 per day. The law firm defended Brewer’s work and called his legal fees standard.

According to ProPublica’s report:

Brewer has been a central behind-the-scenes force in the internal struggle that broke out between the NRA’s top executive Wayne LaPierre and ousted president Oliver North. LaPierre has entrusted the future of his organization to Brewer, and in a statement this week said the organization has “full confidence in Bill Brewer and his law firm.”

Read the Above the Law and ProPublica articles.

 

 

 

 

 




Jones Day Sued for Alleged Malpractice by Pro Bono Clients Who Say Eviction Deal Left Them Homeless

The ABA Journal reports that two former mobile home owners have filed a malpractice suit against Jones Day that claims that the law firm’s work on their eviction case was a “fiasco.”

Two California residents allege that Jones Day pressured them to accept a “burdensome settlement” without asserting legitimate defenses and then dropped them as clients a few weeks after the deal was signed, writes the Journal‘s Debra Cassens Weiss. The two say they couldn’t navigate the deal themselves, and they became “permanently homeless” after being evicted.

Read the ABA Journal article.

 

 




Becoming an Expert Legal Source Can Help Build Your Law Practice

The key to becoming one of those lawyers who seemingly turn up in every media report involving a legal issue is knowing how to deliver what the media wants, which is making complicated legal issues understandable for the masses, advises Bruce Vincent of Muse Communications.

“Not unlike presenting a case to a jury, the goal of any legal commentator is to prove to the audience that they know what they’re talking about,” he explains.

In a post on the Muse website, Vincent discusses some examples of how an attorney can build successful media relationships and promote their role as an expert source to best benefit their practice. Getting in front of reporters and demonstrating an ability to effectively break down complex legal issues are the first steps on the road to being one of the lawyers that media always seem to call on.

Read the article.

 

 

 




Decision-Makers Speak Out: Content Works Best When It’s Actionable

In the age of information overload, in-house counsel and C-suite executives are resolute in valuing utility above other content attributes. That these busy decision-makers prioritize actionable information and insights is understandable – but how the two groups define utility is quite different, according to the 2019 State of Digital & Content Marketing Survey.

The survey, by strategic communications firm Greentarget and consulting firm Zeughauser Group, compares the two groups’ information consumption preferences. This yielded important takeaways in an era when C-suite executives can be as engaged in hiring a law firm as in-house legal officers, who can wield heavy influence in hiring consulting, accounting and other professional services firms.

At a high level, the two groups are in lockstep – but there are significant differences. They prefer different types of content, have varying thoughts on why content misses the mark and diverge about how they can be effectively targeted on social or other digital media. The survey – in its ninth edition since its initial release in 2010 – is the first to offer such an in-depth, side-by-side comparison.

“Over the past decade, we’ve unearthed important insights about the content preferences of decision-makers, and the 2019 study offers our most compelling findings to date that professional services marketers can’t afford to ignore,” said John Corey, founding partner of Greentarget. “This year, by comparing the likes and dislikes of in-house counsel and C-suite executives, we’re providing greater context for marketers along with actionable guidance on the ever-elusive pursuit of bringing the right content to the right audiences on the right platforms at the right time.”

Comparing In-House Counsel and C-Suite Executives

• Traditional Media Still Highly Trusted – and Accessed: Both in-house counsel and C-suite executives highly value traditional media, even in the age of so-called “fake news.” C-suite executives placed the highest value on traditional media at 82 percent (up from 74 percent in the 2018 survey). Additionally, 79 percent of in-house counsel said traditional media is most valuable, about the same as the 80 percent who responded that way last year. The findings speak to this audience’s continued desire for curation and the role professional editors play in determining what stories and topics are most important.

• In-House Counsel Like Articles, but the C-Suite Prefers Interactive Charts:

In a revealing comparison about both the personalities and job responsibilities of the two groups surveyed, in-house counsel said their preferred content type was articles and C-suite executives picked interactive charts. Relatedly, in-house counsel picked educational as their most valued content attribute while C-suite executives chose relevance and ease of access. This makes sense as lawyers tend to take in longer-form information, and interactive charts enable C-level executives to quickly absorb complex information.

• What Makes Content Miss: The two groups also differed on why content can miss the mark. Fifty-one percent of in-house counsel said content misses most often because it’s “too salesy” while the same percentage of C-suite executives chose “not sufficiently relevant.

• LinkedIn Lessons: Fifty-three percent of in-house counsel said they find value in LinkedIn as a platform, but just 29 percent agree that it is effectively used by outside law firms. C-suite executives were more satisfied with LinkedIn’s content targeting, with 63 percent saying it is effective.

• Do Law Firms Overemphasize Rankings? CMOs say peer-driven rankings or listing services command more resources than any category of firm content aside from trade publications and traditional media. But just 9 percent of in-house counsel find the rankings “very important” when researching firms for potential hire. Forty-one percent say the rankings are “somewhat important,” which may suggest that such rankings are limited to a validation effect, an important consideration for CMOs allocating resources.

A Continued Lack of Documented Content Strategy

This year’s survey, which queried 100 in-house counsel and 100 C-suite executives, was also the first since 2017 to query law firm chief marketing officers (30 in total) about, among other things, their approaches to content strategy and marketing resource allocation, among other topics. While firms need strategic roadmaps to guide their content development and distribution efforts more than ever, just 25 percent of the law firm marketing officers said they had documented content strategies. That’s slightly down from two years ago.

“Law firms, just like all professional service organizations, understand how content can help build their brands and differentiate their organizations – but many are creating more content without documented strategies,” said Mary K. Young, a partner with Zeughauser Group. “Their reliance on implicit strategy is likely a response to the complexities of prioritizing certain practices or sectors within firms. Though it may be difficult for marketers to publicly prioritize certain practices, we encourage them to emphasize the types of content and distribution preferences that best meet the needs of audiences most critical to the firm’s success.”

 

 




Bad News Keeps Coming for Biglaw Firm LeClairRyan

The Biglaw firm of LeClairRyan, already in the news after issuing WARN Act notices to staff warning about possible mass layoffs, has lost founding partner Gary LeClair, according to Above the Law.

The report says LeClair will be taking two other partners with him to Williams Mullen as of August 5.

“For over a year now the firm has seen a flood of partners and senior attorneys exit,” writes Above the Law senior editor Kathryn Rubino. “Almost 10 percent of LeClair’s headcount departed in 2018, and the trend has continued in 2019. Indeed, just earlier this week a 15-attorney group from LeClairRyan — the aviation group led by Mark Dombroff — departed.”

Read the Above the Law article.

 

 

 




Equifax Data-Breach Settlement: Get Up to $20,000 If You Can Prove Harm

Cybersecurity - hacking - hackerTwo years after a major data breach exposed the personal information of around 147 million Americans, the credit bureau Equifax has agreed to pay at least $650 million to resolve consumer claims and multiple state and federal investigations stemming from the episode, according to The New York Times.

At least $300 million of that amount will go to consumers, with an additional $125 million available if the initial fund is exhausted.

Times reporter David Yaffe-Bellany writes that individual victims may be able to claim as much as $20,000 in compensation for losses resulting from the breach if they can prove they were harmed.

Read the NY Times article.

 

 




Philadelphia Lawyer Charged With Diverting Clients From His Firm, Pocketing Fees

A longtime lawyer with Gay Chacker & Mittin of Philadelphia has been charged with diverting clients from the plaintiff personal injury firm for a decade to outside attorneys in exchange for a cut of their fees, reports Philadelphia Business Journal.

Neil I. Mittin, 64, was a name partner with the firm for 38 years. The firm name is called Gay & Chacker.

Prosecutors, who charged him with mail fraud, said Mittin engaged in a 10-year-long scheme to steal cases from his longtime firm by referring them to outside attorneys. Prosecutors said the impacted clients did not know he was referring the cases, nor did they ask for referrals, writes the Journal‘s Jeff Blumenthal.

Read the Business Journal article.

 

 




The 2019 Working Mother 60 Best Law Firms for Women

HR - employees - jobs - hiringResults of a survey by Working Mother show some advance for women in the number of equity partners and in the number of women who rank among their firms’ most highly compensated partners.

Some of the key initiatives the survey examined include paid parental leave, the use of reduced schedules, parent-resource groups, and mentoring and sponsorship of female lawyers.

Working Mother collaborated with the ABA Journal as a knowledge partner in recruiting firms and publicizing results.

Read the Working Mother article.

 

 

 




Trump, Democratic Candidates Lean on Two Biglaw Firms

Donald Trump’s re-election campaign paid his go-to law firm nearly $1 million for consulting in the latest quarter, nearly double the amount spent by Democratic presidential candidates on legal services from their leading firm reports Bloomberg Law.

“Jones Day received nearly $975,000 from Trump’s team in the latest period to raise its fee total this year to more than $2.2 million,” writes Bloomberg’s Roy Strom. “Perkins Coie picked up just over $500,000 in the quarter from Democrats vying for the nomination, Federal Election Commission records reviewed by Bloomberg Law show.”

Some other firms representing Democratic candidates include Covington & Burling; Jenner & Block; Garvey Schubert Barer; Trister, Ross, Schadler & Gold; and Sandler, Reiff, Lamb, Rosenstein & Birkenstock.

Read the Bloomberg Law article.

 

 




Is Your LinkedIn Profile Compliant with State Bar of Texas Rules?

LinkedInAmy Boardman Hunt of Muse Communications offers some advice on how lawyers can stay out of trouble with the State Bar of Texas while maximizing their LinkedIn presence.

The State Bar’s Advertising Review Committee monitors lawyers’ compliance with rules regarding advertising.

Hunt discusses some of the best practices for having a compliant LinkedIn profile, for example: Don’t overstate your role in any results, don’t compare yourself with other lawyers, stick to the facts in your profile, take care when listing practice areas, and review endorsements and recommendations.

Read the article.

 

 




Sidley Still Thinks They Handled Partner’s Suicide Correctly. His Widow Disagrees.

The 2018 death by suicide of Sidley Austin partner Gabe MacConaill has drawn attention again after Financial Times featured his death in an article about mental health issues in the workplace. In that same article, his widow, Joanna Litt, voices her anger at the firm for the events that led up to her husband’s death and for the firm’s lack of a robust response since MacConaill died.

Above the Law tells the story of how MacConaill’s death has become part of a larger conversation.

“The two managing partners of the bankruptcy division did not call me, email me, send me a letter,” she says. “I still haven’t heard from either partner. I also didn’t hear from the slightly senior partner who Gabe was working [on the bankruptcy case] with. None of them.”

Read the article.

 

 




Sidley Among Firms Settling Claims Over Their Work for Client Involved in ‘Ponzi-Like’ Scheme

Law firm Sidley Austin was one of the professional services firms that reached a proposed $234 million settlement July 10 in a class-action case alleging links to Aequitas Securities LLC’s “Ponzi-like” scheme, reports Bloomberg Law.

A plaintiff’s firm said the settlement is the largest ever for a securities lawsuit in Oregon.

The case was brought by investors in Aequitas Securities, which unraveled in early 2016 when the Securities and Exchange Commission said the once high-flying investment management firm was operating “in a Ponzi-like fashion.” Rather than investing clients’ funds in new assets, new clients were found to pay out older ones, the SEC’s complaint said.

Plaintiffs said Sidley provided legal advice for Aequitas’ securities offerings since as early as 2014.

Read the Bloomberg Law article.