Law360 got a shout-out last week in the pages of The New Yorker. The magazine’s feature on the 2012 demise of Dewey & LeBoeuf highlights Law360’s reporting on the crisis and excerpts our breaking coverage of its imperiled leader.
The feature documents the firm’s tailspin and the plight of its former chairman Steven H. Davis, who learned of a criminal probe against him from Law360. It recounts how a colleague in Riyadh made an urgent call to Davis and forwarded him the Law360 article, which revealed potential criminal charges over the firm’s mismanagement.
“It’s exciting anytime our work is publicized, but in this case it’s particularly sweet,” Law360 managing editor Cat Fredenburgh said. “Nobody covered Dewey’s collapse as closely as Law360 or examined the fallout more rigorously, so it’s nice to get the acknowledgment.”
The article at the heart of The New Yorker piece is just one of the roughly 300 news stories Law360 published on Dewey’s turmoil and ensuing bankruptcy. And the coverage continues. We recently reported, for instance, on a lawsuit the defunct firm’s landlord filed against 450 former partners for millions in unpaid rent, and its recovery of $11 million in business proceeds.
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