Hogan & Hartson‘s chairman, J. Warren Gorrell Jr., has never sounded like a fan of big law firm mergers.
Three years ago, he told The American Lawyer they’re hard to pull off, and even said the firm has a bias against them.
Hogan & Hartson chairman J. Warren Gorrell Jr. has never sounded like a fan of big law firm mergers, but he seems to have overcome his reservations. Hogan, the century-old Washington, D.C., stalwart, is talking merger with London-based Lovells. It's exactly the kind of high-stakes merger Gorrell, and his firm, have shied away from in the past. Combined, the merged firm would boast 2,532 lawyers and would have posted $1.9 billion in gross revenue in 2008, moving it up to No. 8 on the Am Law Global 100 list.
October 08, 2009 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
Hogan & Hartson‘s chairman, J. Warren Gorrell Jr., has never sounded like a fan of big law firm mergers.
Three years ago, he told The American Lawyer they’re hard to pull off, and even said the firm has a bias against them.
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