In a way, it’s fitting that the Dewey & LeBoeuf trial ended with a hung jury.
You take a group of people, throw them together, ask them to work for a common purpose—and they fail to reach consensus when it counts.
All the partners of this dysfunctional firm were unindicted co-conspirators in its demise. Because it wasn't really a partnership.
October 19, 2015 at 05:15 PM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
In a way, it’s fitting that the Dewey & LeBoeuf trial ended with a hung jury.
You take a group of people, throw them together, ask them to work for a common purpose—and they fail to reach consensus when it counts.
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