Firm Profiles
IN-DEPTH RESEARCH REPORT
on Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP
- - Financial Information
- - Compensation
- - Billing Rates
- - Lateral Partner Moves
- - Pro bono
- - Key Contacts
Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison
- Designation: New York
- Head Count: 803
- Gross Revenues: $877,000,000
- Revenue Per Lawyer: $1,090,000
- Profits Per Partner: $3,350,000
- Year Over Year Change: 5
Law firm boasts more often fall under wishful thinking than fact, but when chair Brad Karp proclaimed Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison “the go–to firm for Wall Street litigation,” he may have been onto something.
Based in New York, the firm has won prestige, accolades, and—most importantly—cases for its work for the banking industry’s best known names. Chief among them: Citigroup Inc., the litigation practice’s biggest client.
Paul, Weiss was named The American Lawyer’s Litigation Department of the Year in 2006, was a finalist for that prize in 2010, and earned an honorable mention in 2012 largely for its work representing Citigroup—and helping it step through minefields in various credit crisis and subprime–related litigations. Citi is in good company, too: Other corporate titans that have reached out to Paul, Weiss trial lawyers include Pfizer Inc.; JPMorgan Chase & Co.; Bank of America Corporation; Wells Fargo & Company; Morgan Stanley; HSBC Holdings plc; The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.; and The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation.
While there are larger firms around, few are as profitable. Indeed, on the 2011 profitability index, Paul Weiss came in second, and ranked fourth for average partner compensation and seventh in profits per partner. More important, Paul Weiss has appeared on The American Lawyer’s A–List since it was first published in 2003. The A–List ranks big law firms on a formula that measures revenue per lawyer, pro bono activity, and their scores on the magazine’s associate and diversity surveys. The top twenty firms in the Am Law 200 comprise the A–List.
Paul Weiss has eight offices but about 85 percent of its lawyers are in New York. Only Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom has a bigger New York presence.
Paul Weiss is famous for its litigation department and pro bono record. But it also has strong lawyers in bankruptcy, employee benefits, executive compensation, real estate, and tax law. The firm brought in six lateral partners from O’Melveny & Myers to boost its private equity practice. And it remains a fixture in the music business and in the Broadway theatre, a practice that dates back to protecting Cole Porter’s copyrights.
—Updated as of 1/1/12
Firm Rankings
| Survey | Rank | Year Over Year Change | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Am Law 100 | 25 | 5 | Gross revenue |
| Am Law 200 | 25 | 5 | Gross revenue |
| NLJ 250 | 49 | 1 | Lawyer head count |
| The A-List | 14 | 5 | Overall excellence |
| Pro Bono Scorecard | 43 | 11 | Pro-bono commitment |
| Diversity Scorecard | 14 | 3 | Minority head count |
| Midlevel Associates Survey | 46 | 19 | Job satisfaction |
| Summer Associates Survey | 101 | 10 | Summer programs |
In the News
Zhong Lun Opens New York Office
Jessica Seah : The Asian Lawyer : April 30, 2013
The Beijing firm has launched in the U.S. with two local partners.
Morrison & Foerster Adds Hong Kong Private Equity Partner
Tom Brennan : The Asian Lawyer : April 30, 2013
Morrison & Foerster has added Marcia Ellis as a private equity partner to its Hong Kong office. Ellis rejoins MoFo after working as a partner in the Hong Kong office of Ropes & Gray, where she was part of a team that advised Bain Capital Partners on its $1 billion investment in Indian business process management company Genpact Ltd.
At the Supreme Court, A Waiting Game for Decisions
Marcia Coyle : The National Law Journal : April 29, 2013
On April 24, just two minutes after 11 a.m., Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. announced in a voice tinged with satisfaction, "Our last case of the year," and opened arguments in a Title VII retaliation challenge.
Am Law 100 2013: Spring Awakening
Robin Sparkman : The American Lawyer : April 25, 2013
The Am Law 100's modest gains hint that a fundamental recovery is taking root.
Contract Lawyers
Andrew Ramonas : The American Lawyer : April 25, 2013
Federal spending is a big source of revenue for many Am Law 200 firms, a new analysis finds.
Starting at the Top
Victor Li : The American Lawyer : April 25, 2013
When she argued on behalf of an octogenarian widow challenging the constitutionality of the Defense of Marriage Act before the U.S. Supreme Court in March, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison partner Roberta Kaplan joined the ranks of Am Law lawyers who made their high court debut in landmark cases.
Circuit Refuses En Banc Review of Habeas Grant Over In-Court I.D.
Mark Hamblett : New York Law Journal : April 25, 2013
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has refused to hear en banc a 2012 decision affirming a grant of habeas corpus where the panel referenced scientific literature submitted by amicus curiae, The Innocence Project, on ways in which in-court identifications can be tainted by the facts of the crime, prior identification procedures and other factors.
MoFo Adds Hong Kong Private Equity Partner
Tom Brennan : The Asian Lawyer : April 24, 2013
Marcia Ellis, most recently a partner in the Hong Kong office of Ropes & Gray, was also previously Asia legal head for the D. E. Shaw hedge fund group.
Court Holds Environmental Group Has Standing to Challenge FDA's Inaction
Martin Flumenbaum and Brad S. Karp : New York Law Journal : April 24, 2013
In their Second Circuit Review, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison members Martin Flumenbaum and Brad S. Karp analyze a recent decision that clarified what is required to establish injury-in-fact in the context of consumer food and drug suits when the effects of exposure to a particular drug are still undetermined, and that declined to limit standing to plaintiffs who could not avoid potential injury.
IPO Pipeline Pumps Cash Into Coffers for Latham, Other Am Law 200 Firms
Brian Baxter : The Am Law Daily : April 19, 2013
Latham & Watkins, Simpson Thacher, Davis Polk, and Fenwick & West are leading a pack of firms reaping the benefits from a recent round of initial public offerings that includes share sales for such companies as Fairway, SeaWorld, Taminco, and Taylor Morrison.
- Akerman Senterfitt
- Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld
- Allen & Overy
- Arthur Cox
- Ashurst
- Baker & Hostetler
- Baker & McKenzie
- Bingham McCutchen
- Bracewell & Giuliani
- Bradley Arant Boult Cummings
- Brown Rudnick
- Burr & Forman
- Cahill Gordon & Reindel
- Carlton Fields
- Clayton Utz
- Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
- Clifford Chance
- Cooley
- Davis Polk & Wardwell
- Dewey & LeBoeuf
- Diamond McCarthy
- Dickinson Wright
- DLA Piper
- Dorsey & Whitney
- Dreier LLP
- Freehills
- Freshfields
- Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
- Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson
- Greenberg Traurig
- Gross McGinley
- Harris Beach
- Haynes and Boone
- Herbert Smith
- Herrick, Feinstein
- Hogan Lovells
- Howrey
- Hughes Hubbard & Reed
- Jenner & Block
- Jones Day
- Kasowitz, Benson, Torres & Friedman
- Kilpatrick Townsend
- Kirkland & Ellis
- Kutak Rock
- Lane Powell
- Latham & Watkins
- Linklaters
- Lowenstein Sandler
- Margolis Edelstein
- McCarter & English
- McDermott Will & Emery
- McKenna Long & Aldridge
- McKool Smith
- Minter Ellison
- Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo
- Morrison & Foerster
- Moses & Singer
- Nixon Peabody
- Norris, McLaughlin & Marcus
- Norton Rose
- O?Melveny & Myers
- Obermayer Rebmann Maxwell & Hippel
- Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe
- Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker
- Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison
- Perkins Coie
- Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pitman
- Potter Anderson & Corroon
- Proskauer Rose
- Pryor Cashman
- Reed Smith
- Richards, Layton & Finger
- Robinson & Cole
- Ropes & Gray
- Seyfarth Shaw
- Shea & Gould
- Shearman & Sterling
- Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton
- Shipman & Goodwin
- Simmons & Simmons
- Simpson Thacher & Bartlett
- Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young
- Stroock & Stroock & Lavan
- Sullivan & Cromwell
- Sullivan & Worcester
- Weil, Gotshal & Manges
- White & Case
- Wiley Rein
- Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr
- Winston & Strawn
- Young, Conaway, Stargatt & Taylor
