logo
The fight against Trump's 'unprecedented' attack on Big Law is on

The fight against Trump's 'unprecedented' attack on Big Law is on

Yahoo24-03-2025
Donald Trump is targeting law firms that have crossed him.
So far, he's won $40 million in free work from one firm, and a high-profile associate has resigned.
Legal scholars warn the unprecedented attacks are a threat to the industry — and the Constitution.
President Donald Trump's game of hardball against Big Law has the legal industry in an uproar, with some firms vowing to fight back.
A lawyer at a top 20 firm told Business Insider they helped draft papers to file in court in case their firm is targeted by the administration.
"We very quickly put together a set of briefing and papers that could be filed," the lawyer said. "We're ready to go to court and challenge the order."
Trump's pressure campaign — which lawyers and scholars say is an unprecedented threat to the legal community and a blow to the First Amendment — shows no sign of letting up.
"The legal industry is under attack. Trump pushes the limits of everything: the legal boundaries, picking fights with massive law firms. He's calling for the impeachment of federal judges," Neama Rahmani, a former federal prosecutor and president of West Coast Trial Lawyers, told Business Insider.
"So look, say what you want about him, but he seems to be winning — or at least putting a lot of pressure on folks throughout the legal industry to capitulate and bend to his will."
In recent weeks, Trump has targeted major law firms — like Paul Weiss, Perkins Coie, and Covington & Burling — ordering reviews of their government contracts, stripping the firm's lawyers of their security clearances, and preventing employees of the firms from entering federal buildings.
Trump has described the firms as "dishonest and dangerous," accusing each of weaponizing the judicial process and threatening national security by representing his opponents or participating in investigations into his finances and behavior.
Large law firms' clients tend to hire them not just for their knowledge, but for their connections with the government, so Trump's threats to destroy those connections are a powerful cudgel.
Trump announced Thursday that he had rescinded his executive order targeting Paul Weiss after the firm agreed to reevaluate its hiring practices in alignment with Trump's anti-DEI initiatives and provide the administration with $40 million in pro bono legal work.
"I couldn't sleep last night," a former Paul Weiss employee told Business Insider. "The firm that prepped Kamala, sent its leaders to Ukraine, defended state abortion rights, and championed DE&I in law has made a deal with the devil. I'm sure many at the firm are feeling betrayed."
Rachel Cohen, an associate from the high-profile firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, publicly resigned over what she said was her firm's resistance to challenging the president's orders.
"Paul Weiss' decision to cave to the Trump administration on DEI, representation, and staffing has forced my hand," Cohen wrote in a resignation email, which she said she sent to her entire firm. "We do not have time. It is now, or it is never, and if it is never, I will not continue to work here."
In an email to his staff on Sunday, Paul Weiss Chairman Brad Karp called Trump's order "unprecedented" in the firm's 150-year history and an "existential threat."
"The executive order could easily have destroyed our firm. It brought the full weight of the government down on our firm, our people, and our clients," Karp wrote.
Perkins Coie, which was also targeted by an executive order from Trump that would revoke its lawyers' security clearances and cancel government contracts, has chosen to fight back. The major Seattle-based law firm filed a legal challenge earlier this month.
Other law firms have begun to rally around Perkins Coie. The law firm Munger Tolles Olsen, which has about 200 attorneys in three offices, said Saturday it would file an amicus brief supporting Perkins Coie. Keker, Van Nest, & Peters, a highly respected San Francisco-based firm with more than 100 attorneys, said in a social media post it would also sign the amicus brief.
"We encourage law firm leaders to sign on to an amicus effort in support of Perkins Coie's challenge to the Administration's executive order targeting the firm, and to resist the Administration's erosion of the rule of law," Keker, Van Nest, & Peters wrote in its post.
Selendy Gay, a New York-based firm with 80 attorneys, updated its homepage with a statement in support of Perkins Coie, saying it "rejects the notion that the government can punish lawyers for their choice of clients or threaten judges for presiding over cases adverse to the administration."
"We stand with the brave lawyers who will oppose any attempts by the government to intimidate members of the bar or judiciary for doing their jobs."
On Friday, Trump moved to disqualify the judge presiding over the Perkins Coie suit, citing bias.
The president also on Friday sent a memo to Attorney General Pam Bondi ordering her to identify "frivolous" lawsuits against his administration and flag the law firms associated with the cases so they can be targeted for punitive actions like those levied against Paul Weiss and Perkins Coie.
"That was another shot across the bow. People really have to now think, are they going to tolerate this kind of behavior?" asked Alex Kristofcak, a former assistant US attorney in the Southern District of New York, who was put on leave after criticizing Trump's DEI policies. He has since resigned.
"The federal government is extremely powerful. I am frankly pretty scared about what else they could do. I'm very happy that I'm a citizen, so I guess, at least in theory, they can't deport me. It sounds like such a hysterical thing to say, but I don't think that it is, given what's happening."
Walter Olson, a Cato Institute fellow who writes about the legal profession, told Business Insider he's "not aware of any precedent" similar to Trump's attacks on law firms.
"There's nothing on this scale," Olson said. "There's nothing involving this kind of retaliation using presidential powers that rarely get used in any context."
Katie Fallow, deputy litigation director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, told BI that the government, in the late 1940s, targeted writers, lawyers, and professors for perceived disloyalty during the period known as the Second Red Scare, led by then-Senator Joseph McCarthy — but that the episode has long been considered "a shameful part of our history in terms of free speech."
"This level of it is unprecedented," Fallow said. "Of course, firms have always played the game, and they've always been cognizant of which party is in power and have tried to — for example, when Republicans are in power — hire Republican attorneys. So it's not that that hasn't been happening, but this kind of stark bullying and capitulation is just really shocking."
Very few people are inclined to pity a multimillion-dollar law firm, but Trump's attacks on the legal field have implications beyond those firms themselves.
Rahmani said the Trump administration's attacks on Big Law violate both the First Amendment, since lawyers should represent who they want without penalty, and the Fifth Amendment, because the moves can make it harder for average citizens to secure legal counsel from firms that the Trump administration hasn't approved.
"Something like this has never happened, or maybe hasn't happened since the time of Andrew Jackson. I mean, this is really a kind of a constitutional crisis," Rahmani said. "I think our legal system is under attack, and it's a question of who's going to step up and defend it."
Read the original article on Business Insider
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

He Walked Away From 10 Booming Properties At The Peak Of The Market. 'People Tell Me I'm An Idiot,' Says The Real Estate Investor
He Walked Away From 10 Booming Properties At The Peak Of The Market. 'People Tell Me I'm An Idiot,' Says The Real Estate Investor

Yahoo

time10 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

He Walked Away From 10 Booming Properties At The Peak Of The Market. 'People Tell Me I'm An Idiot,' Says The Real Estate Investor

Benzinga and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue on some items through the links below. Seth Jones spent nearly a decade building a 10-property real estate portfolio across Florida and South Carolina. He sold every one of them. The Rule Guided His Investments—And His Exit Jones, a former mortgage broker in Port Orange, Florida, followed a simple but strict rule: if a property couldn't rent for at least 1% of its purchase price each month, it wasn't worth buying. "It's very simple, back-of-the-napkin math," Jones, 36, told Business Insider. "On a $100,000 property, am I able to rent it out for $1,000 per month? On a $200,000 property, am I able to rent it out for $2,000 per month?" Shop Top Mortgage Rates A quicker path to financial freedom Your Path to Homeownership Personalized rates in minutes Don't Miss: 'Scrolling To UBI' — Deloitte's #1 fastest-growing software company allows users to earn money on their phones. Accredited Investors: Grab Pre-IPO Shares of the AI Company Powering Hasbro, Sephora & MGM— He and his wife lived extremely frugally, relying solely on her teacher's salary while using all of his income to save for properties. "We hardly ever ate out and never went to bars," Jones said. After starting with two small homes in 2014, he gradually expanded. By 2019, he owned higher-quality properties in strong school districts, including one out-of-state investment in Lexington, South Carolina, purchased for $138,000. But as the COVID-era housing boom began, Jones started to feel uneasy. "I watched things take off," he told Business Insider. "The fundamentals started to change." He noticed the industry shift away from cash flow toward speculation and appreciation. That didn't sit right with him. "That's just never how I've looked at underwriting deals," he said. Trending: $100k+ in investable assets? – no cost, no obligation. From Landlord To ETF Investor Between 2019 and 2023, Jones sold all 10 properties. One of them, purchased for $190,000, sold for $500,000. Instead of buying more real estate, he moved everything into a diversified exchange-traded-fund portfolio that includes stocks, gold, and both short- and long-term treasuries. "I have no regrets," Jones said. "I think I'll be vindicated once we have some type of correction." Not everyone agrees with his decision. "I have people who tell me I'm an idiot for selling off my properties," he told Business Insider. "They think they could've made 10 times what I did." Even so, Jones said the relief has been worth it. 'From a liability perspective, I have no external worries. No one's going to get hurt. I'm not dealing with late-night phone calls.' He added that while there is still stress in stock investing, life is 'way simpler' now. , The 1% Rule Still Has Value The 1% rule isn't perfect, but it's a common starting point for real estate investors. If monthly rent meets or exceeds 1% of a property's purchase plus rehab cost, it's often seen as having the potential for positive cash flow. For example, if a home costs $170,000 total, an investor should be able to rent it for at least $1,700 per month to meet the rule. While easy to calculate, it doesn't account for factors like mortgage rates, homeowners association fees, or maintenance costs. Other methods, like the 2% rule or the 50% rule, which reserves half of rental income for expenses, offer different perspectives. But for Jones, the 1% rule offered the clarity and discipline he needed to make confident decisions. Read Next: With Point, you can This article He Walked Away From 10 Booming Properties At The Peak Of The Market. 'People Tell Me I'm An Idiot,' Says The Real Estate Investor originally appeared on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Trump demurs on pardoning disgraced former Rep. George Santos: ‘He lied like hell'
Trump demurs on pardoning disgraced former Rep. George Santos: ‘He lied like hell'

New York Post

time11 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Trump demurs on pardoning disgraced former Rep. George Santos: ‘He lied like hell'

President Trump demurred on whether he'll pardon disgraced former Long Island Rep. George Santos, who kicked off a seven-year prison sentence for fraud last week. Despite Santos' claims he had been privately lobbying for a pardon, Trump indicated the push to give the fabulist some sort of clemency was news to him. 'He lied like hell, I have to tell you. And I didn't know him, but he was 100% for Trump. I might have met him, maybe, maybe not, I don't know,' Trump told Newsmax host Rob Finnerty on Friday. 'Nobody has talked to me about it,' Trump said of a Santos pardon, before taking note of the former Congressman's prison sentence. 'It's a long time.' Advertisement Santos, 37, pleaded guilty in August 2024 to aggravated identity theft charges and wire fraud for swindling donors to bankroll his campaign for Congress. 3 George Santos is serving out a seven-year sentence for wire fraud and identity theft. Bloomberg via Getty Images 3 President Trump was amused by George Santos' lies but didn't rule out a pardon. Advertisement Prosecutors accused Santos of falsely claiming he had $250,000 in donations to qualify for the National Republican Congressional Committee's 'Young Guns' program. Santos also preyed upon elderly donors and charged credit cards without authorization for frivolous expenses, authorities said. Some of the charges billed to donors include Botox treatments, OnlyFans purchases, jaunts to Atlantic City casinos, French fashion attire, and more, prosecutors said. Santos denied some of the accusations made by prosecutors and blamed others on his former treasurer Nancy Marks, who cooperated with authorities. 'But he was a congressman and his vote was solid; it sounds like a lot. You know, you could blame the other side for not checking him out,' Trump added. Advertisement 'You could say the media misses. Everybody missed it. They found out about it after the election was won.' Trump was referencing the series of scandals against Santos after he was caught lying about vast swaths of his personal backstory, including falsely claiming he was a star volleyball player at New York University even though he never attended the school; that he worked for Citigroup and Goldman Sachs and that his Jewish grandparents fled prosecution in Europe. In reality, his grandparents were born in Brazil, and he has since described himself as 'Jew-ish.' Santos, who was ousted in a late 2023 bipartisan vote, was the sixth House lawmaker to be expelled from the lower chamber. Advertisement 3 George Santos had to report to prison after turning 37. Dennis A. Clark Since then, he's launched a podcast, titled 'Pants on Fire,' and revealed he had been pressing behind the scenes for some form of clemency from Trump, though in May, Santos said he dropped that pursuit. 'Even though I initially considered the prospect of petitioning the president with a pardon application I have seized that approach as I will not spend the last 61 days I have of life scrambling on how to get past a bunch of guard dogs,' he said. In his remaining weeks before reporting to prison, Santos made several media appearances including on the 'Tucker Carlson Show,' in which he admitted to being terrified of winding up behind bars. 'I'm not suicidal. I'm not depressed. I have no intentions of harming myself, and I will not willingly engage in any sexual activity while I'm in there,' Santos wrote on X earlier this month. Trump also acknowledged that Sean 'Diddy' Combs' allies have pushed for a pardon, but was noncommittal about pardoning him or Jeffrey Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.

Trump's Decision to Fire BLS Chief Echoes Putin's Strategies
Trump's Decision to Fire BLS Chief Echoes Putin's Strategies

Time​ Magazine

time12 minutes ago

  • Time​ Magazine

Trump's Decision to Fire BLS Chief Echoes Putin's Strategies

President Donald Trump's firing of the Commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) on Friday afternoon just after she delivered a negative jobs report echoes the impulse of many leaders to shoot the messenger. Trump declared, 'I've had issues with the numbers for a long time. We're doing so well. I believe the numbers were phony like they were before the election and there were other times. So I fired her, and I did the right thing.' While Trump may or may not be friends with Vladimir Putin, he is clearly following the Russian President's HR staffing guidelines to eliminate lieutenants who bring bad news. As we've documented before, the Federal State Statistics Service (Rosstat) has a long history of manipulating official economic statistics to please Putin, 'bending over backward to correct bad numbers and burying unflattering statistics' under the pressure the Kremlin has exerted to corrupt statistical integrity, especially since Putin's invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The reliability of official statistics from China has also been brought into question, leading analysts to rely on a wide range of unofficial or proxy indicators to gauge the true state of the Chinese economy. Even China's former Premier, the late Li Keqiang, reportedly confided that he didn't trust official GDP numbers. Read More: What to Know About the Jobs Report That Led Trump to Fire the Labor Statistics Chief Like other strongmen, Trump has repeatedly shown a pattern of manipulating data to suit his preferred narrative. Trump's surprise firing of BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer has quickly caught the attention of technical market analysts and economists on both sides of the political spectrum. One side cheers the push to disrupt a slow, bureaucratic federal agency. The other side shouts in dismay over concerns about yet another example of Trump politicizing an apolitical institution. Both responses are warranted. The accuracy of BLS data has long been questioned as major revisions only come in months later. To their credit, the BLS, in addition to other statistical agencies, has publicly recognized a need to modernize its methodology. Unfortunately, though, the severity of job revisions has worsened since the COVID-19 era, with no successful program to address the issue. The downward revision on Friday of more than 250,000 jobs marked the most significant adjustment since the depths of the pandemic. However, Trump's accusations against the BLS of rigging the job numbers to make him and the Republican base look bad, and his subsequent firing of McEntarfer based on a belief that BLS revisions were politically motivated, are yet another step closer to authoritarianism. Introducing his latest conspiracy theory, the President went even further by suggesting McEntarfer, whose career spans two decades across Republican and Democratic Administrations, rigged the numbers 'around the 2024 presidential election' in then-Vice President Kamala Harris' favor. Trump conveniently fails to mention that his definition of 'around' was back in August 2024. Recall, the 2024 presidential election was a full three months later in November. Revisions are not unusual behavior by the BLS. They are a critical part of the natural process for developing an accurate picture of the largest, most dynamic economy in the world. The average size of job revisions since 2003 is not insignificant at 51,000 jobs. And, despite what Trump may want Americans to believe, his tariff policies have created an unprecedented level of uncertainty in the U.S. economy, comparable only to that of 2020, with many economists expecting a recession to follow as a result. Bloomberg reporting has pointed to a possible connection between the severity of negative job revisions and recessionary economic environments. The BLS has also been subjected to DOGE-led hiring constraints and other resource rescissions. In addition, the Trump Administration's disbanding of the Federal Statistics Advisory Committee in March both eliminated one of the main engines for enhancing agency performance and, perhaps, in what should have been a concerning harbinger, abolished the canary in the data integrity coal mine. Complaints about BLS methods are legitimate, like the reliance on enumerators over scanner data, and deserve attention, but this is not how to fix it. Read More: What Trump's Win Means for the Economy This is far from the first time Trump has subordinated statistical integrity to political theater. From crowd sizes to weather forecasts, vote counts to tariff formulas, Trump has discarded facts for fictions that play to his political favor. Trump doesn't just bend the truth—he twists the numbers until they resemble propaganda and then silences those who disagree. As CBS News titan Edward R. Murrow warned 65 years ago: 'To be persuasive, we must be believable. To be believable, we must be credible. To be credible, we must be truthful.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store