Lawyers, accountants and consultants are needed to help firms owed money by
failing banks and to represent executives being blamed for the mess on Wall
Street.
Similar to the cleanup crews descending on Texas in the aftermath of
Hurricane Ike, financial cleanup crews are mobilizing around the wreckage of
Lehman Brothers. Just minutes after Monday’s bankruptcy announcement, the cell
phones of hundreds of lawyers, accountants and consultants started chirping.
“The BlackBerrys of bankruptcy attorneys have been going off for days,” said
Denis Cronin, a partner at law firm Vinson & Elkins.
He represents a bank that was just elected to the seven-member Creditors’
Committee overseeing Lehman’s bankruptcy. The bank is one of Lehman’s largest
unsecured creditors.
“There will be additional hiring by firms, you can be sure of it,” he added.
Vinson & Elkins has added five new bankruptcy associates to its 25-lawyer
practice in as many months, and is looking to hire several more by year’s
end.
In addition to bankruptcy, other areas that are beefing up include
white-collar and securities-practice groups at law firms, as well as forensic
accountants and legal/financial software companies.
Davis Polk & Wardwell, for example, has several departments that have
kept the lights on for the past two consecutive weeks. The firm’s transactional
lawyers are lead counsel to the U.S. Treasury Department of the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York in the $85 billion AIG rescue, and various financial groups are
advising Citi as one of the largest creditors to Lehman. The firm is also lead
counsel to Freddie Mac, which was recently taken over by the Fed.
“I’ve barely left the office and I’m not even a lawyer,” said a firm
spokesman.
Lawyers rarely travel alone—often they have accountants in tow.
“When there’s business change and big losses, people scramble to try and
recover as much as they can,” says Sam Rosenfarb, managing director of M&K
Rosenfarb, the forensic accounting division of accounting firm Marcum &
Kliegman. “Most of litigation is about money, and whenever you're fighting about
money, people need forensic accountants.”
Rosenfarb’s group has 90 forensic and investigative accountants—the folks who
delve into laptop computers’ hard drives and BlackBerry messages to find out who
knew what, when. Rosenfarb is hiring at a fast clip, with plans to add 60 more
staffers by next summer.
Other related industries are also seeing growth. Online education firm
Lawline.com reported this week that a record number of lawyers had signed up for
the company’s bankruptcy courses, making it the busiest time in the past decade,
president David Schnurman said.
“In the 10 years that we’ve been providing [these courses], I cannot recall
another time when the events of the real world crossed over into [ours],” he
said.
With so many financial institutions in compromised positions, now is the time
when investors and regulators start looking to point fingers. Historically
speaking, blame often gets cast on the leaders of those institutions, who will
presumably be in need of legal representation.
“I feel like Derek Jeter standing at shortstop,” said Marc Mukasey, head of
white-collar criminal defense at Bracewell & Giuliani, which is actively
hiring attorneys to handle all of the inquiries coming its way. “You’re ready
for the ball to come, and it will be either this batter or the next one.
“If you even think you might need a lawyer, you probably needed one two weeks
ago,” Mukasey said.
Filed by Hillary Potkewitz of Crain’s New York Business, a sister publication
of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.
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