Illustration by Otto Steininger
Dewey & LeBoeuf may be gone, but in the lateral market, its legacy lives on. In the 12-month period ending September 30, 280 Dewey partners flooded the market, helping drive the total number of Am Law 200 lateral partner moves to its highest point in three years. The American Lawyer's latest lateral survey found that 2,691 partners left or joined Am Law 200 firms during the 12-month period. That was a 9.7 percent increase from the previous year, when 2,454 partners switched firms, and a 33.6 percent increase from 2010. (The numbers for 2011 were boosted in part by another big-firm failure, Howrey, which sent 208 partners into the lateral market.) All told, 2012 marks the highest number of moves since the 12-month period ending September 2009, when a record 2,775 partners changed jobs, largely because of the failure of four big firms: Thacher Proffitt & Wood, Heller Ehrman, Thelen, and WolfBlock.
Previous Lateral Report coverage :: 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008
THE FEATURES
By Victor LiLateral activity at Am Law 200 firms reached a three-year high in 2012blame it on Dewey.
By Amy KolzFirms have made plenty of changes to their lateral hiring process in recent yearsbut the results remain lackluster.
By William Henderson and Christopher ZornFor 12 years we've tracked partner moves. A look at the data shows how hard it is to win the lateral hiring game.
By Susan BeckSkadden snagged ex-prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald, but only after the firm agreed to a few conditions.
By Victor Li and Drew CombsThe Am Law 200's most high-profile partner moves in 2012.













