Greenberg Traurig

Greenberg Traurig, LLP and Greenberg Traurig, PA
(trading as Greenberg Traurig)
No. of offices 37
No. of attorneys Approximately 1,800
Major practice areas Business Reorganization and Bankruptcy
Litigation
Corporate and Securities
Intellectual Property and Information Technology
Entertainment
Real Estate
Tax, Trusts and Estates
Global
Trade
Governmental Affairs
Public Finance
Environmental and Land Development
Gaming
Key people --Richard A. Rosenbaum, CEO
--Cesar L. Alvarez, Co-Chairman
--Matthew Gorson, Co-Chairman
--Hilarie Bass and Brian Duffy, Co-President
--Larry J. Hoffman, Founding Chair
--Robert J. Ivanhoe Chairman of Real Estate practice[1]
Date founded 1967
Website
gtlaw.com

Greenberg Traurig (officially Greenberg Traurig, LLP and Greenberg Traurig, PA) is an international law firm founded in Miami, Florida, United States in 1967 by Larry J. Hoffman, Mel Greenberg and Robert Traurig. It has 37 offices in the United States, Latin America, Europe, the Middle East and Asia.[2] It is the 3rd largest law firm in the United States with 1,608 attorneys in the US[3] and 1,800 attorneys worldwide.[4] Their largest office is in New York City. In the UK, the firm operates as Greenberg Traurig Maher LLP and in Warsaw, Poland, it operates as Greenberg Traurig Grzesiak sp.k. Additionally, Greenberg Traurig, LLP has a strategic alliance with independent law firm Studio Santa Maria in Milan and Rome, Italy.

Greenberg Traurig is managed by CEO Richard A. Rosenbaum; Co-Chairmen Cesar L. Alvarez and Matthew Gorson; and founding chairman Lawrence J. Hoffman.

History

Greenberg, Traurig and Hoffman was founded in Miami, Florida, in 1967 by attorneys Larry J. Hoffman, Mel Greenberg, and Robert H. Traurig. The founding partners were Jewish and modeled their firm after Jewish-run transactional practices in New York City, during a time when it was difficult for Jews to fit in at "white shoe firms." Traurig became well known for real estate development work in the Miami area, and the firm focused on hiring Jewish and Hispanic attorneys for much of its early history. Until the early 1990s, Greenberg was exclusively a South Florida law firm.[5] In the 1970s, Greenberg, Traurig and Hoffman became Greenberg, Traurig, Hoffman, Lipoff, and Quentel with the addition of attorneys Norman H. Lipoff and Albert D. Quentel as named shareholders.[6] Former Florida governor Reubin Askew was a named shareholder in the early 1980s while he also sought the Democratic nomination for president.

Larry Hoffman became managing partner of the firm in 1991, at which point the firm began to expand nationwide, beginning with the opening of an office in New York City.[7] In July 2009, Greenberg Traurig entered the London market, forming a new UK firm, operating as Greenberg Traurig Maher LLP.[8][9] Greenberg expanded to Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles and Wilmington (Delaware) in 1999; in 2000, the firm doubled the size of its New York City office by acquiring the local office of the defunct Graham & James.[5]

The firm was named USA Law Firm of the Year by Chambers and Partners in 2007.[10]

In 2013 the firm launched a residency program to hire associates who are not recruited in traditional on-campus interviews by allowing them to spend up to a third of their billable hours in training for a one-year trial period.[11][12][13]

Greenberg entered merger talks with UK-based Berwin Leighton Paisner in early 2016, but the firms ultimately decided not to merge.[14]

Offices

Greenberg Traurig has 37 offices worldwide.

Corporate social responsibility

Since its launch in 2009, Greenberg Traurig has participated in the American Bar Association’s National Pro Bono Week.[15]

The Greenberg Traurig Holly Skolnick Fellowship Foundation was established in 1999. The Foundation supports Equal Justice Works public interest lawyers.[16] Previously named the Greenberg Traurig Fellowship Foundation, the program was renamed in 2013 in honor of the late Holly Skolnick, a Greenberg Traurig shareholder who helped establish the foundation and served as its president.[17]

Controversies

Lobbying and Jack Abramoff scandal

In January 2001, lobbyist Jack Abramoff left Preston Gates & Ellis to join Greenberg Traurig. Abramoff brought a book of business then worth more than $6 million annually to Greenberg Traurig, according to his own estimates. At the firm he assembled "Team Abramoff", a lobbying team that was involved in the Jack Abramoff Indian lobbying scandal and the monetary influence of Jack Abramoff. A Greenberg spokesman said that its federal lobbying revenue in 2005 was 1% of its total revenues of $860 million.

In 2000, before Abramoff joined the firm, Greenberg had $3.3 million in lobbying fees. After he joined in 2001, the firm took in $16.2 million in fees. By 2002, that number jumped to $17.7 million, and $25.5 million by 2003.[18] The firm became one of the top 10 of Washington lobbying firms, moving from 16th place to fourth, according to the National Journal.[19]

In early 2004 Greenberg Traurig fired Abramoff and subsequently received praise from federal investigators and members of Congress for its cooperation in the Abramoff investigation, according to the ABA Journal.[20]

On July 12, 2006, the Alabama-Coushatta tribe filed a federal racketeering lawsuit against now-convicted Abramoff and his cohorts. Greenberg Traurig was not a named defendant. Its lawsuit states that "There was a nexus between Greenberg, the enterprise and the pattern of racketeering". According to the suit, internal Greenberg e-mails showed that Abramoff associate Michael Scanlon, although not a member of the firm, "billed hours to tribal clients through Greenberg and that members of the law firm, including attorneys Kevin Ring, Shawn Vasell, Stephanie Leger, Todd Boulanger and others, fabricated hours and time entries for Scanlon". The suit also says the firm allowed checks sent by the tribe to a bogus Abramoff-linked think tank to be funneled and cashed through Greenberg Traurig.[18]

In March 2008, prosecutors in Guam indicted Greenberg Traurig on felony counts of allegedly making improper billings to Guam's superior court under the guise of charging for lobbying services by Jack Abramoff.[21] In April 2008, the charges of deception, theft and conspiracy were dismissed by Guam prosecutors after Greenberg Traurig agreed to refund $324,000 in lobbying fees to the Guam judiciary.[22]

Other

In December 2005, Leonard Ross, an attorney formerly with Greenberg Traurig's Philadelphia office, was charged with fraud and corruption as part of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation into city government. Ross was a friend and former law partner of Philadelphia Mayor John F. Street: Federal prosecutors alleged that Ross's employment at Greenberg was "entirely dependent on his relationship with Mayor Street" and "a motive for selling his office as a PLC [Penns Landing Corporation] board member".[24]

In May 2005, Philadelphia partner Robert S. Grossman plead guilty to charges that he had lied in a 1996 bankruptcy case to cover up his improper diversion of over $100,000 to his personal account when he worked as a real estate developer in Virginia. Greenberg Traurig professed surprise at Grossman's arrest the following November for failing to report to prison, and stated that Grossman hadn't disclosed the criminal proceeding to the firm. Greenberg has stated that it now does background checks on all new employees.[24] In June 2006, Greenberg Traurig agreed to pay the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation $7.6 million for its role as a legal adviser to the now-defunct Hamilton Bank of Miami, to settle allegations that it had helped to cover up bank officers' financial misconduct. The firm paid an additional $750,000 fine to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency for allegedly protecting the bank's officers "by making materially false and misleading assertions and by suppressing material evidence".[24]

In November 2006, Jay I. Gordon, the former chairman of Greenberg Traurig's tax practice, resigned from the New York bar and was disbarred for taking over $1.2 million in kickbacks on tax shelters that he had recommended to wealthy clients of the firm.[25]

In November 2008, a New York State court refused to dismiss a suit alleging that Robert J. Ivanhoe, chairman of Greenberg Traurig's New York City office and head of its real estate group, disregarded his "legal and fiduciary duties" by taking a personal financial stake in a competitor to a client that had invested in a multibillion-dollar real estate venture.[26] The former client had sued Ivanhoe and Greenberg Traurig in April 2008 for breach of fiduciary duty, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, tortious interference with prospective economic damages, and malpractice. Greenberg Traurig responded that the allegations were "without merit" and that it would appeal the ruling.[27]

In December 2008, the firm and several current and former firm attorneys (Harley Lewin and Steven Wadyka) were sued in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia by Catherine and Richard Snyder of Herndon, Virginia. Also named in the suit, Greenberg Traurig's client, Diane Von Furstenberg Studios, Conde Nast Publications, The New Yorker and New Yorker staff reporter, Larissa MacFarquhar. The Snyders' suit stems from a suit filed in the same court by Diane Von Furstenberg Studios against Catherine Snyder in December 2006 for trademark infringement, which resulted in an award of damages to DVF Studios. The Snyders' complaint alleges, among other things, that the Greenberg attorneys made false statements to the court when applying for a search warrant and that one (Wadyka) impersonated a federal officer by flashing a badge and stating that he was with the office of the U.S. Attorney. The suit also alleges that the attorneys failed to post a required bond and that the search of the Snyders' home exceeded the scope of the warrant and resulted in the seizure of many personal items. The suit also alleges that the firm's attorneys improperly brought New Yorker staff reporter MacFarquhar, who was profiling Lewin for a forthcoming article, into the Snyders' home while conducting their raid in December 2006 pursuant to the search warrant.[28]

In 2014, the Securities and Exchange Commission looked into insider trader allegations between United States House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health staff director Brian Sutter and Mark Hayes, a lobbyist at Greenberg Traurig.[29]

References

  1. New York Times: "Hochfelder’s Fast Rise and Fall in Real Estate" by CHRISTINE HAUGHNEY February 28, 2010
  2. "Locations". Greenberg Traurig. Retrieved 20 February 2015.
  3. Law360: "Law360 Reveals 400 Largest US Law Firms" By Jake Simpson retrieved November 5, 2015
  4. Greenberg Traurig: "Greenberg Traurig, one of the largest law firms in the U.S., to Enter German Market with more than 50 Lawyers" July 14, 2015
  5. 1 2 "Greenberg Traurig, LLP History". Fundinguniverse.com. International Directory of Company Histories, Vol. 65. St. James Press. 2004.
  6. "Home - Greenberg Traurig LLP". gtlaw.com.
  7. Greenberg Traurig Endows the Larry J. Hoffman Greenberg Traurig Distinguished Professorship
  8. Focus: Greenberg Traurig Maher, The Lawyer
  9. Thelawyer.com
  10. "Greenberg Traurig Selected by Chambers and Partners as USA Law Firm of the Year". BusinessWire. November 20, 2007. Retrieved 2014-03-27.
  11. "‘Residency program’ associates at this BigLaw firm will get more training and less pay". ABA Journal. October 22, 2013. Retrieved 2014-03-27.
  12. "Law school grads trade top pay for job experience". Sun Sentinel. November 19, 2013. Retrieved 2014-03-27.
  13. "A Firm Leader's Guide to Survival of the Biggest". The National Law Journal. February 24, 2014. Retrieved 2014-03-27.
  14. Meyer, Dani (March 16, 2016). "Greenberg Traurig Halts Plans For BLP Merger". Law360.
  15. "Celebration Supporters". National Pro Bono Week.
  16. "Equal Justice Works"
  17. "Greenberg Traurig Announces New 2014 Public Interest Fellows". Greenberg Traurig. February 19, 2014. Retrieved 2014-03-27.
  18. 1 2 "Routine Maintenance". law.com.
  19. Bizforward.com
  20. "Latest News". abajournal.com.
  21. "Greenberg Traurig Indicted in Guam", ABA Journal
  22. "Routine Maintenance". law.com.
  23. "Feds link close pal of Daley to hiring", Chicago Tribune
  24. 1 2 3 4 "Routine Maintenance". law.com.
  25. "Matter of Gordon (2006 NY Slip Op 08075)". state.ny.us.
  26. Nama Holdings, LLC v. Greenberg Traurig LLP, Index No. 601054/08 (Sup. Ct. N.Y. Cty. Nov. 18, 2008)
  27. "Routine Maintenance". law.com.
  28. "Couple Sues New Yorker & Greenberg Traurig", from Court House News Service
  29. Lopez, Luciana; Raymond, Nate (4 July 2014). "House panel opposes giving SEC documents for insider trading probe". Reuters. Retrieved 4 July 2014.

External links

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