• October 2, 2008 |

    Baker Mac secures Premier IP role

    Baker & McKenzie's London arm has scored a role advising The Premier League on anti-counterfeiting issues. The law firm has been named as the football league's preferred adviser on its anti-counterfeiting programme (ACP).Intellectual property (IP) senior associate Peter O'Byrne will lead the relationship alongside Bakers' global IP head Paul Rawlinson.The mandate will be seen as a significant win for the firm which landed the instruction through its previous work advising the Premier League's Cheshire-based IP crimes unit, which manages the ACP. The firm expects the team set up to deal with the Premier League will be expanded to include lawyers in Bakers' international offices - particularly across Asia.Rawlinson said: "We are excited to be assisting the Premier League and its ACP to ensure it is equipped to fight counterfeiting worldwide. The global set-up of our IP team puts us in the perfect position to provide the right advice where help is needed to halt the fakes trade."Baker's UK IP team advises clients including Unilever, McLaren and L'Oreal

    1 minute read

  • October 2, 2008 |

    Lovells expands Vietnam practice with Hanoi launch

    Lovells is set to open a second office in Vietnam, launching in Hanoi.The top 10 City law firm already has an office in Ho Chi Minh City but is now hoping to be up and running in Hanoi by the end of the year. The office will be led by of counsel Gregory Buhyoff, who previously worked in Baker & McKenzie's Ho Chi Minh City branch until relocating to his native US. Most recently he ran his own practice in the US.The Hanoi office will advise on mergers and acquisitions, infrastructure projects and intellectual property and will ultimately have two to three lawyers.The strategy mirrors that of Lovells' Ho Chi Minh office, which was launched in 1994 and is expanding with the hire of corporate lawyer Nasir Abdul from local firm Ngo Migueres & Associes as counsel. The hire takes the office to around eight lawyers - none of whom are partners.Lovells Asia head Crispin Rapinet told Legal Week: "We are looking to establish our presence and invest in Vietnam. It is a very strong manufacturing centre and we get a lot of anti-counterfeiting instructions from our clients. We do a lot of raids and brand protection. On the corporate side there are a lot of major corporations and financial institutions that have business there."The Vietnamese market has been open for international firms to practise local law and hire local lawyers since a law change in 2003. Other international firms with a presence in the country include Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer - which has offices in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City - and French independent Gide Loyrette Nouel.

    1 minute read

  • October 1, 2008 |

    Thinking inside the box

    Management gurus at Baker & McKenzie have recently hit upon a brand new motivational tool to help their partners brush up on their client relationship skills. The firm has introduced the legal equivalent of Supernanny's famed naughty step, in the shape of a giant Perspex box emblazoned with what appears to be a giant target, presumably to encourage passing lawyers to pelt the unfortunate captive with rotten veg. Bakers managing partner Gary Senior definitely didn't say: "After a three-month consultation we decided that this was the most efficient way to ensure billable hours targets were hit. It reminds me of prep school." In reality, those caring types at Bakers were actually raising money for Richard House Children's Hospice by sitting in a box phoning up clients for donations - and in just two hours, the Boss in a Box initiative racked up an impressive total of £14,000.

    1 minute read

  • September 26, 2008 |

    Heller Ehrman announces dissolution

    After 118 years, San Francisco law firm Heller Ehrman will dissolve in a partnership vote today, writes The Recorder. In a firm-wide 'all hands' videoconference on Thursday afternoon, chairman Matthew Larrabee said the partnership had concluded that dissolution was unavoidable. Larrabee described the dissolution of the firm as a tragedy for the entire legal industry and, after about 10 minutes, turned the meeting over to partners in each of the firm's offices for in-person question-and-answer sessions.

    1 minute read

  • September 26, 2008 |

    US firms eye Heller talent after firm's collapse

    In the wake of Heller Ehrman's dissolution, attention will now turn to where various practice groups and offices of the San Francisco firm will end up, reports The Recorder. Two legal recruiters said they had heard that Los Angeles office managing partner Nancy Cohen, a rainmaker in Heller's insurance recovery practice, will move to Proskauer Rose. One legal consultant close to the situation said that Heller's insurance recovery group, which includes 40 lawyers, will make the move with Cohen.

    1 minute read

  • September 25, 2008 |

    Eversheds set for Hong Kong office launch

    Eversheds is launching an office in Hong Kong after hiring Heller Ehrman head of Asia Nick Seddon. Seddon, who previously headed DLA Piper's Asian practice until the end of 2007, will join Eversheds next week (1 October) and will start building the office immediately.It will be Eversheds' second base in the region as the law firm already has an 18-lawyer practice in Shanghai. Seddon's move comes only seven months after he joined Heller in March this year and as California-based Heller seemingly heads closer to dissolution following the collapse of a series of US merger talks. The law firm has held failed talks with both Baker & McKenzie and Mayer Brown in recent months and has lost rafts of partners in the US and Asia. Seddon told Legal Week that his decision to leave Heller stems from a difficulty to do his job during the current circumstances.He commented: "In reality the problem has been that with the merger discussions it did not make sense for me to do what I do, which is to grow the practice."He added: "My ambition would be to have a practice of around 50 lawyers in about three years time. If we got up to 50 we would have the critical mass to support Eversheds' client base."Eversheds has no other imminent hires in Hong Kong and does not yet have any office space but intends to build a full service office. Seddon cannot talk to other potential recruits from Heller until he formally leaves the partnership.Eversheds incoming UK managing partner Bryan Hughes said: "Hong Kong is a key jurisdiction. It will integrate effectively with the Shanghai office and be another piece of the jigsaw for Eversheds."

    1 minute read

  • September 24, 2008 |

    Heller's familiar fate

    They may not be quite as flaky as their banking counterparts, but news this week of Heller Ehrman's dissolution is a reminder that US law firms…

    1 minute read

  • September 22, 2008 |

    Former merger candidates eye up Heller teams

    Failed merger partners of Heller Ehrman could be set to pick up large parts of the firm, as the troubled West Coast giant moves closer to dissolution, writes The Recorder. In a partner conference call on Thursday (18 September), firm management said they expected to hear whether former merger candidates Winston & Strawn, Baker & McKenzie and Mayer Brown would be interested in picking up large chunks of Heller's offices, practice groups or both. Management told the partners that they expected to hear back from the firms over "the next few days."

    1 minute read

  • September 18, 2008 |

    West Coast giant Heller ponders dissolution

    Heller Ehrman appeared on the brink of dissolution this week, with some partners already looking to move with what amounted to tacit approval from firm management, writes The Recorder.In office meetings on Wednesday (17 September), partners were told that dissolution is one of several options facing the 119-year-old law firm, a Heller partner said. As a result, management said it was understood that partners would begin talking to other firms, and several individuals and groups have already begun talks, sources said.

    1 minute read

  • September 16, 2008 |

    15 partners quit Heller as Mayer Brown talks end

    At least 15 intellectual property (IP) partners are leaving Heller Ehrman to join US rival Covington & Burlington, as merger talks between Heller and Mayer Brown reach a conclusion, reports The Recorder. The end of the talks was announced in an email to the partnership from Mayer Brown chairman James Holzhauer on Monday morning, in which he praised Heller as a firm.News of the 15 partners leaving Heller had come in over the weekend and into Monday, according to one source who would not elaborate on whether the announcements precipitated the end of the merger talks or vice versa.

    1 minute read