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Sullivan & Cromwell

 
Company History: Sullivan & Cromwell
 

Type: Private Company
Address: 125 Broad Street, New York, New York 10004-2498, U.S.A.
Telephone: (212) 558-4000
Fax: (212) 558-3588
Web: http://www.sullcrom.com
Employees: 1,265
Gross Billings: $395 million (1997 est.)
Founded: 1879
SIC: 8111 Legal Services

Sullivan & Cromwell is one of the nation's elite law firms. For more than a century it has been closely involved in the affairs of some of the largest industrial and commercial enterprises in the United States. Sullivan & Cromwell also has been closely involved in the formulation and execution of U.S. foreign policy and the development and growth of global capital markets. It was tied, in terms of gross revenue, for fifth position among U.S. law firms in 1996.

Sullivan & Cromwell was founded in 1879 by Algernon Sydney Sullivan and William Nelson Cromwell. The middle-aged Sullivan was senior partner; he had enabled the youthful Cromwell, formerly a bookkeeper, to attend law school. The firm established offices at the corner of Broad and Wall Streets, opposite the New York Stock Exchange. It earned about $22,500 in its first year. Law clerks were unpaid, and the payroll came to only $950.

Sullivan was a trial lawyer who thought corporations should be outlawed, but the firm increasingly turned from litigation (charging $950 for a criminal case and, if it lost the case, $250 for the appeal) to counseling clients on purely business problems. The major work involved rescuing companies stricken by reverses, forming new companies and merging existing ones into larger units, and obtaining financing, primarily from the foreign sources whose capital was then essential to the American economy. Among the earliest companies Sullivan & Cromwell helped organize was the Edison General Electric Co. in 1882. The firm also helped rescue Henry Villard's Northern Pacific Railroad from bankruptcy in this decade.

After Sullivan died in 1887, Cromwell chose William J. Curtis as junior partner. Curtis was instrumental in persuading New Jersey's legislature to pass an act making the state a haven for corporation filings. In addition to lowering fees, the act made it legally possible for one corporation to own stock in another one, which led to the formation of holding companies. Holding companies replaced the trusts that had been broken up by legislation and court decisions. The first companies to incorporate under New Jersey's new corporation law were Sullivan & Cromwell clients.

By 1900 Sullivan & Cromwell had 14 lawyers, working four to a room in bullpens surrounding the library. The firm was involved in the creation of the U.S. Steel Corp. in 1901, for which Cromwell received $2 million worth of stock in return for $250,000 in cash. By this time utilities were replacing railroads as the most powerful force in the U.S. economy. Sullivan & Cromwell helped them form holding companies with a trail of subsidiaries; in the case of Union Electric Co., the firm created more than 1,000 subsidiaries. The firm also added to its reputation for saving troubled corporations by means of the "Cromwell Plan," which involved an orderly liquidation and reorganization of companies such as American Water Works, Decker, Howell & Co., and Price, McCormick & Co. Essentially, the plan aimed at holding off creditors as long as possible in times of market panic while awaiting economic recovery.

Sullivan & Cromwell also represented foreign clients, including the French interests that had tried and failed to build a canal in Panama linking the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Cromwell's task was to bail out the French company by arranging the sale of its property--which included a railroad--to the U.S. government. Cromwell launched a successful lobbying campaign to convince senators and other powerful insiders that Panama rather than Nicaragua was the right place for a canal. After the Colombian Senate rejected the treaty needed to proceed, Cromwell became a behind-the-scenes agent for the revolution that resulted in Panama's independence from Colombia. The firm's French client then was able to collect $40 million from the United States for its property. Sullivan & Cromwell billed the company $800,000 for its services but had to settle for an arbitration award of $167,500 and expenses.

Cromwell increasingly absented himself from the firm's quarters, and Alfred Jaretzki became managing partner of Sullivan & Cromwell about 1900. By 1915, when Royall Victor succeeded Jaretzki, Cromwell was living in Paris, where the firm had established an office in 1911. He spent most of World War I and considerable time after the war, until 1937, in France. Even when in New York, he rarely came to Sullivan & Cromwell's offices, becoming a semirecluse residing in a midtown mansion crowded with tapestries, paintings, and statuettes. He survived until 1948, after which Rockefeller Center pulled down his residence to erect a high-rise office building.

During the 1920s Sullivan & Cromwell's basic business was "green goods": drafting the indenture agreements under which financial institutions advanced money to corporations and foreign governments. It was active in restoring the international commercial links broken by World War I; between 1924 and 1931 the firm handled 94 securities issues involving more than $1 billion in loans to European parties, especially in Germany. Many of these loans fell into default during the world economic depression of the 1930s. By the end of 1928 Sullivan & Cromwell had offices in Paris, Berlin, and Buenos Aires. John Foster Dulles succeeded Victor as managing partner in 1926.

When the firm moved to larger quarters at 48 Wall Street in 1929, there were 63 lawyers, of whom 14 were partners and 37 were associates. Four women lawyers--the firm's first--were hired in 1930. During the 1920s and 1930s Sullivan & Cromwell revived its trial practice under the leadership of Harlan Fiske Stone, who later became U.S. attorney general and chief justice of the United States.

During the 1930s and most of the 1940s Sullivan & Cromwell was the largest law firm in the world. Through the Depression years Dulles established a litigation group to fight a New Deal measure designed to break up public utility holding companies. After the firm's legal challenge failed in the courts, the firm stayed busy dissolving the holding companies it had once helped put together. It also was very active in the legal work made necessary by stringent new federal regulations in the securities field. Overseas, Sullivan & Cromwell closed its Berlin office in 1935, but Dulles was criticized--both at the time and after World War II--for trying to maintain good relations with the Nazi regime to serve its clients. Among these clients was General Aniline & Film Corp., the biggest subsidiary in the Western Hemisphere of the notorious German cartel I.G. Farben, which employed slave labor during the war.

Dulles resigned as Sullivan & Cromwell's chairman in 1949 and was succeeded by Arthur H. Dean. The firm's influence on foreign policy reached its zenith in 1953, when Dulles became secretary of state and his brother Allen (also a Sullivan & Cromwell partner) became director of the Central Intelligence Agency. Dean took leave to serve the government in a number of posts, including as negotiator in the talks that ended the Korean War in 1953.

During the 1950s Sullivan & Cromwell's most lucrative work was in the area of antitrust defenses. It successfully defended five of the largest investment banking firms in the nation against antitrust charges filed by the federal government. The general practice division dealt with the complexities of increasingly large public stock offerings. In 1956 it handled Ford Motor Co.'s $643 million initial public offering, the largest ever to that time. Sullivan & Cromwell reopened its Paris office--closed during World War II--in 1962 and opened a London office in 1972. The firm also opened a Park Avenue office in midtown Manhattan in 1971 to handle estates and personal affairs and one in Washington, D.C., in 1977. It moved headquarters to 125 Broad Street, overlooking New York Harbor, in 1979.

William Ward Foshay succeeded Dean as chairman in 1972. Sullivan & Cromwell now consisted of litigation, general practice, and tax groups, plus a group for the administration of estates and trusts. A mergers and acquisition group was formed in 1980. The firm opened offices in Melbourne in 1983, Los Angeles in 1984, and Tokyo in 1987.

To settle a class action suit Sullivan & Cromwell agreed in 1977 to recruit, hire, and pay women lawyers on the same basis as men. The firm at that time had 59 partners, all men, and 116 associates, of whom 26 were women. The first woman partner was appointed in 1982, and by the summer of 1987 there were four, but no blacks. The firm was continuing its quaint practice--unique among major law firms--of simply charging its clients a fee it considered "appropriate" rather than submitting hourly billing. A management committee of ten partners was in charge of setting Sullivan & Cromwell's policies, and a smaller committee of seven decided on how the firm would distribute more than half of its annual profits. The firm had a mandatory three-year phaseout retirement plan that went into effect when the partners reached age 67.

John R. Stevenson, who like his predecessors had considerable diplomatic experience, became chairman and senior partner of Sullivan & Cromwell in 1979. He retired in 1987 and was succeeded by John E. Merow. Merow took the helm during one of the most tempestuous periods in the firm's history. George C. Kern, Jr., head of the mergers and acquisitions unit, was accused by the Securities and Exchange Commission of violating disclosure rules while defending a company against a hostile bid. In addition, a court-supervised disciplinary panel was investigating charges that a partner had bribed and bullied witnesses in the court battle over the estate of the pharmaceuticals heir J. Seward Johnson, and an investor group accused the firm of improperly withholding vital information while fighting the group's lawsuit against a corporate client of Sullivan & Cromwell.

Some of the lawyers working for Sullivan & Cromwell's competitors suggested that the blue-chip firm's troubles stemmed from an air of arrogance. One likened opposing Sullivan & Cromwell to "having a thousand-pound tuna on the line." "They know the rules," another told a reporter, "but sometimes they act as if the rules just don't apply to them." All the above matters, however, apparently were disposed of without penalty to the firm. Kern continued to be Sullivan & Cromwell's star because his mergers and acquisitions unit was the firm's most profitable group, bringing in as much as one-third of all billings. In 1986 alone the unit was involved in more than $50 billion worth of acquisitions.

Before 1968 Sullivan & Cromwell's banking practice consisted of a couple of partners in estates and trusts performing routine work such as rolling over term loans. A separate banking practice was established in 1968. Within Sullivan & Cromwell's lucrative mergers and acquisitions group, bank mergers emerged in the 1980s as a major source of activity and profit for Sullivan & Cromwell. The firm helped structure more than 60 major banking mergers in the United States, valued at more than $40.2 billion, during this decade.

In 1991 Sullivan & Cromwell played a part in nearly every major banking deal, including the merger of Manufacturers Hanover Corp. and Chemical Banking Corp. and the acquisition of C&S/Sovran Corp. by NCNB Corp. to form NationsBank Corp. There were seven Sullivan & Cromwell partners and 25 staffers in all engaged in this field at the time.

By the mid-1990s Sullivan & Cromwell partner H. Rodgin Cohen was presiding over the firm's banking practice area, supervising nine partners and ten to 12 associates. The caseload was heavier than ever because of the increasing globalization of banking and the worldwide convergence of financial services. Cohen was recognized as "king of the bank lawyers"--"Mount Everest surrounded by the Appalachians," according to one mergers and acquisitions banker. Either he or one other lawyer represented one of the principals in 18 of the top 25 bank deals in the United States in 1997. Cohen was one of the partners serving on the executive committee charged with overseeing the firm.

In mergers and acquisitions, Sullivan & Cromwell was ranked fourth among law firms in 1997, acting as legal adviser in $91.5 billion worth of announced deals through October. The firm ranked third among underwriting legal advisers during this period, involved in domestic new issues totaling $14.6 billion in proceeds. New offices were established in Hong Kong in 1992 and in Frankfurt, Germany, in 1995.

In 1996 Sullivan & Cromwell had four divisions. General practice (corporate and financial work) was the largest and included mergers and acquisitions as one of its many units. The other divisions were litigation, tax, and estates and personal. (A fifth, practice development, had been added by 1998.) Securities work accounted for 25 percent of the firm's activity, mergers and acquisitions, 22 percent, and litigation, 21 percent. Half of the firm's clients were outside of the United States. Sullivan & Cromwell had 484 lawyers, including 114 partners, in November 1997. It has maintained a longstanding policy of not recruiting its partners from other firms.

Principal Operating Units

Departments: Estates and Personal Practice Group; General Practice Group; Litigation Practice Group; Practice Development Group; Tax Practice Group. Practice Areas: Asset-Based Finance; Broker/Dealer Regulation; Commercial Banking; Commercial Real Estate; Commodities, Futures and Derivatives; Corporate Reorganization/Bankruptcy; Environmental Law; Insurance and Tort Liability; Intellectual Property; International Trade and Investment; Investment Management; Labor and Employment; Mergers and Acquisitions; Project Finance.

Further Reading

Brill, Steven, The American Lawyer Guide to Law Firms, 1981-1982, New York: n.p., 1982, pp. 738-43.

Geyelin, Milo, "Big Law Firm's Gaffe Over Sealed Records Raises Troubling Issues," Wall Street Journal, October 4, 1995, pp. A1, A6.

Gray, Patricia Bellow, "Legal Nightmare: Multiple Allegation of Impropriety Beset Sullivan & Cromwell," Wall Street Journal, August 3, 1987, pp. 1, 14.

Lisagor, Nancy, and Lipsius, Frank, A Law Unto Itself, New York: William Morrow, 1988.

Lubasch, Arnold H., "Top Law Firm Bans Sex Discrimination," New York Times, May 8, 1977, p. A13.

Matthews, Gordon, "Sullivan & Cromwell Rides Merger Wave," American Banker, January 10, 1992, pp. 1, 10.

McCullough, David, The Path Between the Seas, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1977.

Rosenberg, Geanne, "Bring in the Lawyers," Investment Dealers' Digest, November 3, 1997, pp. 19-20, 23.

Siegel, Matt, "The Bank Merger Masters," Fortune, May 25, 1998, p. 44.

Sullivan & Cromwell, 1879-1979: A Century at Law, New York: privately printed, 1979.

Teitelman, Robert, "King of the Bank Lawyers," Institutional Investor, November 1994, pp. 64-70, 72.

— Robert Halasz


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Wikipedia: Sullivan & Cromwell
 
Sullivan & Cromwell LLP
Sullivan & Cromwell
Headquarters New York City
No. of Offices 12 total, 7 international
No. of Attorneys 825 (2009)
Major Practice Areas General practice
Key People H. Rodgin Cohen, Chairman; Joseph Shenker, Vice Chairman
Revenue USD 985 million [1]
Date Founded 1879
Founder Algernon Sydney Sullivan and William Nelson Cromwell
Company Type Limited liability partnership
Website www.sullcrom.com

Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, an international law firm headquartered in New York, is one of the most prestigious and profitable law firms in the world.[2] The firm has approximately 700 lawyers in 12 offices, located in financial centers in Asia, Australia, Europe and the United States. Sullivan & Cromwell was founded by Algernon Sydney Sullivan and William Nelson Cromwell in 1879. Sullivan & Cromwell is currently ranked as the third most prestigious law firm in the United States by Vault.[3] As of 2006, it was the 15th largest law firm in the world.

Contents

History

Founding

From its earliest involvement in the formation of Edison General Electric Company in 1882 and United States Steel Corporation in 1901, to its present work with leaders of the global economy in the 21st century, the firm has been closely involved in the affairs of some of America's, and now the world's, greatest industrial, commercial and financial enterprises. Sullivan & Cromwell's efforts to bring about the building of the Panama Canal are chronicled in David McCullough's book, The Path Between the Seas. The firm represents the Panama Canal Authority to this day.

1929–1969

The Great Depression and its aftermath reoriented much of Wall Street, and Sullivan & Cromwell was called on to assist clients in confronting a burst of government involvement in business affairs and a new wave of business-related litigation. During this period the firm developed its expertise in defending shareholder derivative litigation and antitrust actions, and was among the first law firms to develop expertise in the field of federal income tax law. A series of new federal statutes, beginning with the Securities Act of 1933, was enacted to regulate the investment industry, and Sullivan & Cromwell prepared the first major registration statement under the Securities Act. The firm's substantial involvement in, and important contributions to, securities offerings and securities regulation have continued since that time. Sullivan & Cromwell partner Rogers Lamont was the first American to die in World War II. Lamont had worked in the firm's Berlin office in the early 1930s and had seen the horrors of Nazi Germany firsthand. Lamont resigned from the firm in 1939 and joined the British Army. Lamont was killed at Dunkirk on May 27, 1940. During and after World War II individual members of the firm, including partners such as John Foster Dulles and Arthur Dean, also played important roles in domestic politics and international affairs. In 1935, Dulles closed Sullivan & Cromwell's Berlin office; later he would cite the closing date as 1934, no doubt in an effort to clear his reputation by shortening his involvement with Nazi Germany. Sullivan & Cromwell's litigation department was led for many years by Harlan Fiske Stone, before he left the firm to become Chief Justice of the United States. Partner Robert MacCrate served as Counsel to New York Governor Nelson D. Rockefeller and as Special Counsel to the Department of the Army for its investigation of the My Lai Massacre.

1970–Present

During the past three and a half decades Sullivan & Cromwell has grown gradually in measured response to the increasing volume and complexity of their clients' affairs, developing leading practices in areas such as mergers and acquisitions, banking regulation, real estate finance, derivatives and private equity. The firm's work in cross-border capital flows has continued, including substantial involvement in foreign direct investment and project finance, the development of the Euro — and other global capital markets, and the financial flows to Asia and Latin America.

As the expansion of the scope and nature of the firm's practice required Sullivan & Cromwell to have lawyers in locations more convenient to clients. Building on the legacy of John Foster Dulles and Arthur Dean, the S&C chairmen during this period, John Stevenson, John Merow and Ricardo Mestres, all aggressively expanded the firm's practice in the United States and around the world. Domestic branches were opened in Washington, D.C. in 1977, Los Angeles in 1984 and Palo Alto in 2000. Overseas, the Paris office, closed during World War II, was reopened in 1962, and offices were opened in London in 1972, Melbourne in 1983, Tokyo in 1987, Hong Kong in 1992, Frankfurt in 1995, Beijing in 1999 and Sydney in 2001. Now a fixture in U.K. legal circles after 35 years in London, Sullivan is widely regarded as a peer of the Magic Circle (law) firms.

In the late 1980s Sullivan partner Robert MacCrate served as president of both the New York State Bar Association the American Bar Association. MacCrate later chaired the ABA Task Force on Law Schools and the Profession. The Task Force's Report, widely known as the MacCrate Report,[4] was issued in July 1992 and is widely viewed as template for modern legal education in the United States. MacCrate, a former S&C vice chairman, continues to be active as a Senior Counsel of the firm.

Sullivan & Cromwell purchased a portion of its New York headquarters building, 125 Broad Street, in 1992 for a bargain price from the building's bankrupt owner. According to the American Lawyer [5], Sullivan & Cromwell was the 15th largest law firm in the world in 2007 as measured by gross revenue, although it was second only to Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz in revenue per lawyer in the annual AmLaw survey. Sullivan is ranked as the 3rd most prestigious law firm by [6] behind Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, and Cravath, Swaine & Moore.

Following the September 11, 2001 attacks, Sullivan & Cromwell Chairman H. Rodgin Cohen was among the key leaders in the Wall Street community who successfully worked to provide support for small businesses in Lower Manhattan. The firm's post-9/11 efforts included assisting in the formation of Wall Street Rising.

In 2008, Sullivan & Cromwell was recognised at the Australiasian Legal Business Law Awards, in Sydney as being the International Firm of the Year[7].

M&A Practice

As Mergers & Acquisitions became an increasingly important part of the corporate landscape in the 1970s, most of the leading White shoe firms of the day would not work on hostile takeovers, leaving it other now leading, but then new, law firms. Sullivan & Cromwell was therefore the singular exception by working on these hostile takeovers. George Kern led the firm's M&A effort in the 1970s and 1980s. Kern was a colorful figure and was widely viewed as one of the early leading M&A lawyers. As the commercial banking industry began to consolidate in the 1980s, S&C partner and current chairman H. Rodge Cohen became involved in many of the key deals. Joe Frumkin is the managing partner of an M&A department that also boasts star dealmakers Jim Morphy and Frank Aquila, along with elder statesmen Ben Stapleton and Neil Anderson. Morphy has recently been in the news as lead counsel to BCE in their failed buyout; while Aquila has received recognition for his role for InBev in their successful unsolicited bid for Anheuser-Busch. Rodge Cohen continues to be the firms leading financial institutions M&A lawyer, with banking partner Mitch Eitel working on most of the major bank combinations of the last decade. With high-profile assignments from multinationals such as BP, Diageo, Philips, France Telecom, InBev, British Airways, Scottish Power, Endesa, and Vodafone, Sullivan & Cromwell has carved-out an enviable niche in cross-border M&A. Partners Rich Morrissey in London and Chun Wei in Hong Kong lead the firm's non-US mergers practice. The firm has consistently ranked at the top among law firms involved in worldwide M&A transactions. Globally, Sullivan & Cromwell leads the M&A league tables, ranking first by value among law firms representing principals in announced transactions in 2007 (as was also the case in 2006, 2005 and 2004), according to data from Bloomberg and Euromoney Institutional Investor PLC's Dealogic. In 2007, the firm added one of the UK's leading M&A lawyers, Tim Emmerson.

Awards

In 2006, Corporate Board Member Magazine named Sullivan & Cromwell one of the top corporate law firms in America, according to a survey 1,390 directors of publicly traded companies. Several of the firms partners have been awarded the prestigious Burton Award for Legal Achievement[8], including Ted Rogers, Frank Aquila, David Harms, Sergio Galvis and Garrad Beeney. Partner Jim Morphy was recently named as one of "The Best of the Best" in a survey by International Financial Law Review listing the best 25 M&A lawyers in the world. In January 2007, litigation partners Sharon Nelles and Rick Pepperman were named by the American Lawyer[9] as two of "The Fab Fifty", the 50 top litigators in the United States under the age of 45.

A significant number of the firm's lawyers have received high ratings by the prestigious [10] and more than 75 of its U.S.-based partners are listed in The Best Lawyers in America. The firm itself has received high ratings in a variety of practice areas including: Antitrust, Arbitration, Banking & Finance, Capital Markets, Litigation, Mergers & Acquisitions, and Income Tax. Among its prominent current partners are firm chairman and senior partner H. Rodgin Cohen, vice chairman and heir apparent Joseph Shenker, David Tulchin, John Warden, Benjamin Stapleton, John Mead, Alison Ressler, Michael Wiseman, Sergio Galvis, Jim Morphy, Frank Aquila, Bob Giuffra, Jack Bostelman, Karen Patton Seymour, Vince DiBlasi, Joe Frumkin, Mitch Eitel, David Braff, David Harms, Mark Welshimer, Scott Miller, Sharon Nelles and Rick Pepperman.

On October 10, 2007, Sullivan & Cromwell was included in a ranking of law firms by the national law student group Building a Better Legal Profession, ranking 24th in Manhattan with a grade of C+.[11][12] The organization ranked firms by billable hours, demographic diversity, and pro bono participation. The results can be found on the organization's website, http://www.betterlegalprofession.org.[13]

At the 2008 ALB SE Asia Law Awards[14], Sullivan & Cromwell was crowned:

  • Deal of the Year - Singapore M&A Deal of the Year
  • Deal of the Year - SE Asia M&A Deal of the Year
  • Deal of the Year - Singapore Deal of the Year
  • Deal of the Year - SE Asia Deal of the Year

At the 2008 ALB China Law Awards[15], Sullivan & Cromwell was crowned:

  • Deal of the Year - IT/Telecommunications Deal of the Year
  • Deal of the Year - M&A Deal of the Year
  • Deal of the Year - China Deal of the Year

In 2008 at the 2008 ALB Japan Law Awards[16], Sullivan & Cromwell was awarded:

  • Deal of the Year - Equity Market Deal of the Year
  • Deal of the Year - International Dealmaker of the Year
  • Deal of the Year - International Deal Team of the Year (Capital Markets)

Sullivan & Cromwell was awarded by 2008 ALB Hong Kong Law Awards[17] as the:

  • Deal of the Year - Equity Market Deal of the Year
  • Deal of the Year - M&A Deal of the Year

Layoffs

The firm laid off at least 15-20 associates in the New York office in the spring of 2009, citing performance reasons. Some claim the number is closer to 30 and that the plan is to cut up to 50 New York associates, approximately 10% of New York associates.[18][19]

Associate Compensation

The firm is largely on the standard New York scale, with slightly higher salaries paid at the 7th year ($5,000 over market), 8th year ($10,000 over market) and 9th year ($20,000 over market):[20]

Seniority Base Salary 2008 Bonus
1st year $160,000 $17,500
2nd year $170,000 $20,000
3rd year $185,000 $22,500
4th year $210,000 $25,000
5th year $230,000 $27,500
6th year $250,000 $30,000
7th year $270,000 $30,000
8th year $290,000 $30,000

In March 2007 Sullivan & Cromwell LLP increased the bonus paid to incoming judicial clerks to $50,000 for one year of clerking and $70,000 for two years, with Supreme Court Clerks receiving a bonus of $250,000.[21] In September 2007 Sullivan & Cromwell announced a "Senior Associate Supplemental Compensation Plan," which, according to a member by firm chairman Rodge Cohen, is in additional to bonuses initially paid to fifth year and above associates.[22] The first payments made under this program were made in April 2008 and reportedly ranged from $15,000 for fifth-years to $30,000 for eighth-years.[23] The firm announced that it was expanding the scope of the supplemental bonus plan to cover all associates in Spring 2009.

Work on behalf of Guantanamo captives

Michael A. Cooper of Sullivan & Cromwell is listed as the lead petitioner on behalf of Guantanamo captive Adil Bin Muhammad Al Wirghi in Al Wirghi v. Bush.[24][25]

Further reading

  • VEP: Sullivan & Cromwell. New York: Vault, Inc. 1998. ISBN 1-581-31095-1. 
  • Lisagor, Nancy; Frank Lipsius (1989). A Law Unto Itself: The Untold Story of the Law Firm Sullivan & Cromwell. New York: Paragon House. ISBN 1-557-78239-3. 
  • Morrow, Kieran Batts; Tiffany Anderson; Adrienne Carter; Tracy Richelle High; Tiffany Anderson (2005). FAB. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-51348-8. 

See also

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Company History. International Directory of Company Histories. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sullivan & Cromwell" Read more