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Bingham’s Rough Month: The Firm Responds

Bingham McCutchen new logo Abovethelaw Above the Law blog.jpgMay 2008 is almost over, and it’s a month that Bingham McCutchen will probably be happy to put in the past. The month kicked off with Roofiegate. Then came this benchslap, reported by Legal Pad (in a post titled “Bingham Busted By Its Own Website”):

Almost every big law firm uses its website to tout its commitment to diversity and its global reach. For Bingham McCutchen, it may have cost the firm a bid for sanctions.

A Bingham employment law team including partner Wendy Lazerson and associates Jacqueline Bronson and Kristen Pezone was set to take a deposition in the wrongful termination case of Kim v. Poonsang Microtec Corp. on April 17. The day before the deposition, plaintiff’s attorney Frank Mayo of Los Altos served additional discovery, including some documents that were in Korean.

Bingham’s team insisted on postponing the deposition, saying they could not get the Korean documents translated in time. Mayo objected, saying his client had already flown up from Southern California. Things turned nasty and both sides moved for sanctions.

In a tentative order filed Thursday (see Page 31 of this pdf) , Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Socrates “Pete” Manoukian rejected both sides’ request for sanctions.

“This court finds it difficult to believe that no one in the office of [Bingham] is able to speak Korean, given that the Bingham web[site] has many referrals to its commitment to diversity and its ability to service, among others, Korean clients,” Manoukian wrote. [See, e.g., here (PDF).]

Ouch. As our tipster snarkily observed, “Live by the sword, die by the sword. For a firm that runs as much as this one does on pure PR, this is quite fitting.”

Funny — but fair? We contacted Bingham — which we’re not sure Legal Pad did, despite being an MSM blog — and received this statement, from firm spokesperson Claire Papanastasiou:

To use this tentative ruling to question Bingham’s commitment to diversity is misleading and false. Bingham has continuously been recognized as a leader in championing diversity in the workforce. More than 440 people at Bingham speak 51 foreign languages (including Korean), but this was not a simple matter of getting documents translated. This case involved the authentication of documents — which would have required a court-certified translator — and with a 16-hour time difference, the Bingham legal team wanted to confer with the client, who was in Korea, to determine the documents’ authenticity and discuss next steps. Bingham informed opposing counsel of the decision not to go forward as a courtesy. And finally, Bingham offered to take the deposition in Orange County and ended up with an order that simply provides what our lawyers were already willing to do. Efforts to transform this relatively minor discovery dispute into something more profound simply are unjustified.

Interesting. As noted by a Legal Pad commenter, the ruling “[s]eems more like a political dig against diversity efforts by Judge Manoukian.”

Speaking of diversity, Bingham has been honored as one of the best law firms for gays and lesbians, by Human Rights Campaign (Aaron Charney, holla); for Asian American lawyers, by Multicultural Law (Shinyung Oh, holla); and women, by Working Mother (pre-Roofiegate).

Alas, even if Korean Translation-gate was overblown, it wasn’t the end of Bingham’s unflattering media mentions in the month of May. Check out this National Law Journal article, which depicts Bingham as hemorrhaging talent and “troubled.”

Was this piece evenhanded journalism? Bingham thinks not. They’ve issued a lengthy and detailed response, blasting reporter Sheri Qualters’s article as “outrageous,” “poorly reported,” and “factually inaccurate by any objective measure.”

It’s kinda delicious. Read the whole thing, after the jump.

Here is the statement, from firm spokesperson Claire Papanastasiou. Emphases added.

BINGHAM MCCUTCHEN — RESPONSE TO NATIONAL LAW JOURNAL ARTICLE

In a year of record financial performance and consistent recognition as one of the best places to work, Bingham McCutchen is stronger than ever. For the National Law Journal to suggest “Troubled Times at Bingham” is outrageous. The article is poorly reported and factually inaccurate by any objective measure, and here’s why:

* We provided on-the-record interviews with several key lateral and legacy-firm partners who spoke about their positive experiences at Bingham on the integration, management and practice-building fronts. In the interest of full disclosure, the partners were Geoff Howard, a legacy McCutchen lawyer and current managing partner of the San Francisco office; Bill Abrams, who joined from Pillsbury and is now managing partner of our Silicon Valley office and co-leader of our IP group; and Rick Welch, former managing partner of Riordan & McKinzie and current managing partner of the Los Angeles office.

They were not quoted in the article and information they provided was largely ignored. Also, had the reporter expressed interest in speaking with any of the 49 lateral partners who joined Bingham in 2007, the five who have joined thus far in 2008, or the hundreds of other partners in the firm, we would have connected her so that her story would not have been based on the opinions of a small group of former Bingham lawyers who previously comprised less than 5 percent of the Bingham partnership.

* With respect to the implication of the partner departures being bad for business, we provided our 2007 financials, a record year. Gross revenue — $743.5 million (up 8.4 percent from 2006); Profits per partner — $1.33 million (up 9.4 percent from 2006); and Revenue per lawyer — $900,000 (up 8.2 percent from 2006). We also noted that the first quarter of 2008 was our strongest ever.

* Regarding the heavy-handed characterization of our chairman’s “top-down-management” style, all of the Bingham commentators noted the importance of holding partners in large law firms to higher standards and the challenge of making tough long-term business decisions while maintaining the quality of the working environment. We know of no other firms of Bingham’s size and scope that have achieved the same combination of business success and workplace quality as we have in recent years. In addition to our record revenue figures noted above, Bingham has received repeated accolades as a best place to work — namely the Fortune 100 Best Companies to Work For honor for four straight years, as well as multiple recognitions for our offices in Boston, San Francisco, Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles.

* Our chairman spent 45 minutes with the reporter discussing Bingham’s priority practices, management structure and strategy; he also explained large law firm economics to her in detail so that she could present a full picture and place the 16 partner departures about which she was inquiring in reasonable and appropriate perspective for a nearly 1,000-lawyer global firm. None of that information made it into the article.

* In addition, the reporter failed to mention that Bingham had a record 2007, successfully integrating three law firms, one in California and two in Tokyo. We are the second largest foreign law firm in Tokyo, and our priority practices are booming. We have also moved into a new state-of-the-art, expanded office in Boston to support Bingham’s global platform. During the last four years, Bingham has built or renovated 920,000 square feet of space, investing substantially in our work environment in offices across the firm, including Washington, D.C., San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, London and Tokyo. The reality is that Bingham is a dynamic firm with great morale: demonstrating record performance, continually achieving recognitions for the quality of our workplace, and offering tremendous career opportunities for both lawyers and staff.

Bingham Busted by Its Own Website [Legal Pad / Cal Law]
Year of departing partners for Bingham McCutchen [National Law Journal]

Comments

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1 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 2:33 PM

WHY O WHY AM I SO DAMN FIRSTY???!!!!

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2 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 2:35 PM

It's not delicious at all. It's boring and lame.

Look, I found a peanut on the floor. Can we report on that, too? Call it peanutgate?

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3 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 2:42 PM

Bingham' s absolutely right. Just because an attorney is of Korean background and can read Korean does not mean that that attorney is qualified to translate documents. Moreover, Bingham should not have to pull a Korean-American attorney off of his or her other assignments to serve as a translator. Indeed, it would be offensive and discriminatory for Bingham to make its Korean-American attorneys the "go to" people for Korean related issues.

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4 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 2:49 PM

Further note that the firm's spokesperson used "speak" - one can "speak" a foreign language (to greatly varying degress) but be clueless re: written items, especially docs with legal value. Also, in my experience, firm's tend to be lax re: foreign language abilities - IMO, a person's professional profile shouldn't include anything below proficient. Anything else is misleading for work purposes.

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5 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 2:52 PM

Also, somebody needs to tell the firm's spokesperson that Korea-Cali time difference is only 9 hours (12 hrs if NY). Geez...

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6 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 2:56 PM

Wow this really must be a slow day at ATL.

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7 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 2:56 PM

Bingham's right. Translation is not the same as just having somebody in the office who grew up speaking Korean in the home. It's a different skill set entirely.

In fact, the judge's comments show why diversity initiatives are necessary. It shows a complete lack of comprehension as to language acquisition, understanding, and true fluency.

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8 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 2:57 PM

This judge is an idiot

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9 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 2:57 PM

Doesn't Roger Lou speak Korean? Maybe he can help out in this situation.

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10 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 2:58 PM

Don't hate the playa hate the game

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11 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 2:59 PM

Yawn, nothing to see here

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12 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:02 PM

I don't know, 2:56. In addition to firm's claim to diversity, judge pointed out that Bingham's website proclaimed its ability to service Korean clients. That implies proficiency in client's native tongue. Servicing Korean clients solely in English is no biggie.

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13 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:09 PM

ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ

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14 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:14 PM

You know who speaks Korean? George's father. He once talked to the Rev. Sun-Myung Moon.

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15 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:14 PM

Bingham's rough month? Hey Lat why don't you mention the law.com article noting their partner defections on both coasts; the stealth layoffs; and overall uncertainty at the firm.

yeah, it is sexy to talk about a website/diversity sanctions issue, but the bleeding at the partner ranks is much much more fundamental.

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16 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:21 PM

Yeah hire George's father

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17 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:22 PM

Roger Lou where r u?

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18 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:22 PM

I want to take a summer Friday but I am stuck in the office. Please give us something interesting to read!

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19 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:23 PM

ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ

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20 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:24 PM

This story was on Legal Pad over a week ago why the reporting now?

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21 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:25 PM

The plaintiff's lawyer is a huge douchebag.

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22 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:30 PM

Aren't plaintiff's lawyers usually douchbags?

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23 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:41 PM

You likey starchy starchy..me translate docomants

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24 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:47 PM

LOL 3:41

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25 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:47 PM

It's not delicious at all. It's boring and lame.

Look, I found a peanut on the floor. Can we report on that, too? Call it peanutgate?

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26 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:48 PM

ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ

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27 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:49 PM

"for Asian American lawyers, by Multicultural Law (Shinyung Oh, holla)"

I didn't see anything in the Oh story that would have indicated that Paul Hastings mistreated her because she was Asian. (In fact, she even seemed to disclaim any kind of sex/pregnancy discrimination as well, and just pointed out the universally offensive nature of their actions.) It's kind of unfair to lump her in with the Charney thing, where the allegation was that S&C discriminated against him b/c of his homosexuality.

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28 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 3:50 PM

jeeez just take a joke

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29 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 4:59 PM

I thought the whole benefit of having "diversity" is for the different perspectives and skills that "diverse" people can provide. Now it turns out it is "offensive and discriminatory for Bingham to make its Korean-American attorneys the "go to" people for Korean related issues"? How is it beneficial to have Korean attorneys if you can't go to them for "Korean related issues"?

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30 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 4:59 PM

I thought the whole benefit of having "diversity" is for the different perspectives and skills that "diverse" people can provide. Now it turns out it is "offensive and discriminatory for Bingham to make its Korean-American attorneys the "go to" people for Korean related issues"? How is it beneficial to have Korean attorneys if you can't go to them for "Korean related issues"?

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31 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 4:59 PM

What's Bingham?

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32 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 5:29 PM

A VP of a Korean multi-national conglomerate with tons of experience doing business in the US once told me that he thought most (but not all) Korean lawyers in big firms were like " bananas"--yellow outside but white inside--with no clue as to Korean culture or customs and poor Korean language skills. He named few Korean partners in big law firms that he thought were excellent but none were with Bingham.

Just food for thought.

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33 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 5:44 PM

WE GAVE YOU SO MUCH KOOL-AID, AND YOU DON'T SEEM TO HAVE DRUNK ANY OF IT!!!! Why?

Sounds like Bingham is doing ok.

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34 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 5:48 PM

Who are they kidding? They DREAM in Korean--just look at their website.

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35 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 6:09 PM

Anecdote by 5:29pm is correct in that most Korean lawyers in big firms were like " bananas" (I'm honest enough to admit that I certainly am), which may go hand in hand with poor Korean language skills. However, I wouldn't go so far as to say "no clue as to Korean culture or customs". Rarely does that particular area come up within context of work matters - unless that VP felt slighted because someone didn't pour his drink with both hands.

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36 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 6:12 PM

I feel for Bingham here. Its a good idea to avoid Manoukian at all costs.

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37 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 6:26 PM

Kimchee anyone?

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38 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 7:50 PM

Someone needs to tell 2:52p how to tell time. California is 14 hours behind Korea during the summer; New York is 11 hours behind.
The West Coast of the U.S. is always farther behind the Far East on the clock than the East Coast.

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39 Posted by guest | Permalink Friday, May 30, 2008 10:03 PM

Accord, 2:57(2) and 3:02, and 4:59.

Bingham sucks hard around the clock, so the time thing really isn't an issue.

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40 Posted by guest | Permalink Saturday, May 31, 2008 8:04 AM

3:25 " Plaintiff's lawyer is a douchebag" - actually lawyers that do "immigrant rights" are always douchebags.

It's ambulance-chasing in foreign languages. And immigrants wonder why America has become so anti-immigrant.

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41 Posted by guest | Permalink Saturday, May 31, 2008 11:22 AM

It's not delicious at all. It's boring and lame.

Look, I found a peanut on the floor. Can we report on that, too? Call it peanutgate?

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42 Posted by guest | Permalink Saturday, May 31, 2008 11:24 AM

ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ

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43 Posted by guest | Permalink Saturday, May 31, 2008 11:28 AM

Bingham is doing just fine -Jay Z.

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44 Posted by guest | Permalink Monday, June 2, 2008 12:06 AM

Let's be honest. None of the Koreans in BigLaw know any Korean, that's why they were hired in the first place. The Koreans that actually are Korean and not white-washed 'bananas' would never get a chance at getting hired at BigLaw, even if they graduated from a T-14.

All this 'diversity' crap that the firms spout out is bs. They might want a yellow or brown face, maybe with an ethnic name like Sunghi Oh or something, but the firms expect Koreans at the firm not to be kimchee-eating, garlic-loving, but rather a drone that just HAS to be environmentally friendly, liberal, and eats vegetarian sandwiches from the nearest organic hotspot. A 'Korean' whose friends are exclusively white, a 'Korean' who would be furious if you called him something other than Korean or Korean-American, even though he/she knows nothing about Korea, culturally or linguistically, unless it is through the lens of an American.

The 'token' minority is what they want for diversity. It is NO surprise that nobody at Bingham speaks Korean.

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45 Posted by guest | Permalink Monday, June 2, 2008 3:28 PM

some people at Bingham speak Korean

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46 Posted by guest | Permalink Wednesday, January 7, 2009 1:02 PM

the top firm for gays and lesbians in texas is haynes and boone - their houston office boasts at least 4-5 partners and an equal number of associates - including at least one partner on the firm management committee

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