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The firm had offices in New York, Beijing, Hong Kong, London (1989), Los Angeles (1971), San Francisco (1986) and Washington, D.C. (1980) as well as a representative office in Tokyo. In 1986, the firm absorbed Tufo & Zuccotti , the firm of former New York City Deputy Mayor John Zuccotti and Peter Tufo , ex Davis Polk & Wardwell attorneys ...
Sidley Austin is the eleventh-largest U.S.-based corporate law firm, with approximately 2,000 lawyers [3] and annual revenues of approximately three billion dollars. The firm is one of the highest-paying companies in the U.S. [ 17 ] (with a base salary of $225,000 for first year associates and $435,000 for eighth year associates; equity ...
For purposes of the New York State Bar rules, this press release may be considered Attorney Advertising and the headquarters of the firm are Sidley Austin LLP 787 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY ...
This is a list of global law firms ranked by profits per equity partner (PPEP) in 2021. [1] ... Sidley Austin: 330 $3,718,000 27 Goodwin Procter: 259 $3,690,000 28
Zirin was a partner in the law firm of Breed, Abbott & Morgan in New York before he joined Sidley Austin, a firm focused on transactional and litigation matters, in 1993. [5] [8] In 2003, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg appointed Zirin to the New York City Commission to Combat Police Corruption. [9]
Rank Firm Revenue (US$) Lawyers Revenue per lawyer (US$) Profit per partner (US$) [2] Country with the most lawyers; 1: Kirkland & Ellis: $6,042,000,000 3,025
New York City: 4028 2492 1317 $2,634 3 Norton Rose Fulbright: New York City: 3084 1928 1087 $1,958 4 Latham & Watkins: New York City: 3078 2004 821 $3,063 5 Kirkland & Ellis: Chicago: 3025 1772 1158 $3,165 6 Hogan Lovells: Washington, D.C. 2532 1757 793 $2,036 7 White & Case: New York City: 2464 1589 587 $1,804 8 Jones Day: Washington, D.C ...
The Anointed: New York’s White Shoe Law Firms—How They Started, How They Grew, and How They Ran the Country Rowman & Littlefield, 2021. Wald, Eli, "The rise and fall of the WASP and Jewish law firms." Stanford Law Review 60 (2007): 1803-1866 online