In the End, Bankruptcy Star Sprayregen Choses Law over Banking
This is a discussion on In the End, Bankruptcy Star Sprayregen Choses Law over Banking within the Law News forum, part of the FORUM INFORMATION category; The debate is over: the practice of law beats investment banking. How else to explain James Sprayregen. The Kirkland partner, ...
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Rate Thread | Display Modes |
|
|
#1 |
|
News
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 1,438
|
![]() The debate is over: the practice of law beats investment banking. How else to explain James Sprayregen. The Kirkland partner, easily among the dozen most prominent bankruptcy lawyers in the country, left two years ago for Goldman Sachs. Well, the prodigal son has returned. Sprayregen has rejoined Kirkland and will become a partner effective Dec. 12. Here’s a Times piece on the Sprayregen move. “I missed the law,” the 48 year-old attorney told the Law Blog. “I think I can add the most value as a lawyer. The ability to be deeply involved from a legal end in the major restructurings coming down the pipe was too attractive to pass up.” No doubt Sprayregen wanted to ride some of the big waves crashing at the shores of law firms these days No doubt Sprayregen wanted to ride some of the big waves crashing at the shores of law firms these days. Kirkland, the Times reports, has already handled 10 major bankruptcy filings this year, including Tropicana Entertainment and Tousa Inc., the Florida home builder. Sprayregen handled some major cases in his stint at Kirkland, including the United Airlines bankruptcy, in which his firm billed nearly $100 million in fees. “I’m thrilled Jamie’s coming back,” Rick Cieri, head of Kirkland’s restructuring team told the Law Blog. “This helps us in deailng with some tough competition out there” to land big Chapter 11 assignments. If this wasn’t proof enough of the law’s superiority, readers will surely recall that bankruptcy eminence grise Harvey Miller pulled the same move last year, returning to Weil Gotshal after a five-year stint at investment bank Greenhill & Co. And what does Miller have to show for this move? The lead counsel assignment in the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy, the biggest of all time. Meanwhile, Paul Aronzon, a longtime Milbank bankruptcy lawyer left a few years back for Imperial Capital, an Ibank, before returning in September to the law firm, where he is now co-head of restructuring. In fairness, though, investment banking has long paid better than law, and many legal converts have not seen the error of their ways. Here’s a Law Blog post on James Millstein, who spent nearly 20 years at Cleary Gottlieb before switching to investment banking at Lazard in 2000. And finally, here’s a 2006 Blog post that leans towards the view that banking beats the law. Photo: Reuters |
|
|
|
![]() |
| Bookmark & Share |
«
Judge in Kuehne Case Finds Feds Charge Disturbing
|
Setting the Standards: Fed. Cir. Upholds Big Broadcom-Qualcomm Ruling
»
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | Rate This Thread |
|
|
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| I am looking to end my business. What are bankruptcy options from my C corp? | Unregistered | Business Bankruptcy | 1 | Feb 5th, 2009 11:12 PM |
| Canadian Banking Law? | GopherGrad | Other Business & Finance Law Issues | 0 | Dec 16th, 2008 01:13 PM |
| banking law error?? | Unregistered | Debt Collection | 1 | Nov 28th, 2006 01:26 PM |
Forming an off-shore company? We can assist you in forming your company in 40 countries worldwide.
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 09:02 AM.









Linear Mode

