Venable LLP: Difference between revisions

From wikilawschool.net. Wiki Law School does not provide legal advice. For educational purposes only.
m (1 revision imported: Mass import from wikipedia.org)
m (Lost Student moved page Venable to Venable LLP: Corrected name of law firm)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Venable''' is a surname shared by several notable people:
{{Infobox Law Firm
|logo=[[Image:Venable_logo.gif|200px]]
|headquarters=Venable; MO
|num_attorneys=676
}}
{{Law Firm Pay Scale
|year=2017
|salary_1st_year=180
}}
{{advertisement|date=March 2018}}


* [[Venable Brothers]], rock quarry business of Samuel and William Venable that included Stone Mountain, Georgia.
'''Venable LLP''' is a law firm formerly known as Venable, Baetjer & Howard LLP. The firm is ranked 66th in the 2016 ''AmLaw'' 100 survey.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.venable.com/venable-climbs-higher-up-the-amlaw-100-04-25-2016/|title=Press Releases - Venable climbs higher up the AmLaw 100|website=www.venable.com|accessdate=2016-05-20}}</ref> It was founded in [[Baltimore]] in 1900. Today the firm maintains 8 offices throughout the country<ref>[http://www.Venable.com/offices]</ref> and includes more than 675 attorneys practicing in over 70 practice and industry areas covering corporate and business law, complex litigation, intellectual property and regulatory and government affairs.
* [[Abraham B. Venable]] (1758&ndash;1811), American state and national politician
* [[Abraham Watkins Venable]] (1799&ndash;1876), American state and national politician
* [[Charles S. Venable]] (1827&ndash;1900), American mathematician, astronomer, academic, Civil War officer
* [[Edward Carrington Venable]] (1853&ndash;1908), American national politician
* [[William Henry Venable]] (1836&ndash;1920), American author and educator
* [[Francis Preston Venable]] (1856&ndash;1934), American chemist and academic
* [[William W. Venable]] (1880&ndash;1948), American lawyer and national politician
* [[Evelyn Venable]] (1913&ndash;1993), American actress
* [[Richard Venable]] (born 1944), American state politician
* [[Max Venable]] (born 1957), former American professional baseball player
* [[Noe Venable]] (born 1976), American singer-songwriter
* [[James L. Venable]] (fl. c. 2000), American composer for film and television
* [[Robert Venable]] (born 1981), American music recording engineer and producer
* [[Will Venable]] (born 1982), American baseball player


==Other==
==Rankings==
* [[Venable, Missouri]], a community in the United States
* [[Venable LLP]], a U.S. law firm
* [[Venables (surname)]]
* Venable, a hotel that became the [[Hamilton Hotel (Portland, Oregon)]]
* [[Venable Mound]], an archaeological site in Louisiana, USA


{{surname}}
Venable is  nationally ranked by a number of legal and business journals.<ref>{{Cite web|title = About Venable - Rankings|url = http://www.Venable.com/about/rankings/|website = www.venable.com|accessdate = 2015-09-22}}</ref> It ranked 66th in the 2016 ''AmLaw 100'' list,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.venable.com/venable-climbs-higher-up-the-amlaw-100-04-25-2016/|title=Venable climbs higher up the AmLaw 100|website=Venable.com|publisher=Venable LLP|accessdate=2016-05-20}}</ref> and 84th on the ''National Law Journal's'' top 250 law firms list. Regionally, the ''Washington Post'' listed Venable among the 10 largest D.C. law firms in 2012. In 2013, the ''Baltimore Business Journal'' listed Venable as the largest law firm in the Baltimore, MD area<ref>{{cite web|title=Venable ranks first in Baltimore Business Journal’s list of "Largest law firms in the Baltimore area"|url=https://www.venable.com/venable-ranks-first-in-baltimore-business-journals-list-of-largest-law-firms-in-the-baltimore-area-01-29-2013/|website=Venable.com|publisher=Venable LLP|accessdate=18 February 2016}}</ref> and the ''Los Angeles Business Journal'' listed Venable as the 69th largest firm in Los Angeles County.<ref>{{cite web|title=Los Angeles Business Journal ranks Venable among the top 100 law firms|url=https://www.venable.com/los-angeles-business-journal-ranks-venable-among-the-top-100-law-firms-03-14-2012/|website=Venable.com|publisher=Venable LLP|accessdate=18 February 2016}}</ref>
A number of Venable practices have garnered national recognition. ''U.S. News and World Report’s'' Best Law Firms 2016 survey ranked  Venable Tier 1 nationally in 19 categories, with rankings in 104 total national and regional categories.<ref>{{cite web|title=Venable Ranked in Over a Hundred Categories in 2016 Edition of U.S. News – Best Lawyers® "Best Law Firms"|url=https://www.venable.com/NEP/pressreleases/NewsDetail.aspx?news=c2356e5b-cbb1-46a6-b703-eb0163d8dbe8|website=Venable.com|publisher=Venable LLP|accessdate=18 February 2016}}</ref> ''The Best Lawyers in America'' recognized 93 Venable attorneys in their 2016 rankings, including a record eight attorneys who were named "Lawyer of the Year" in Baltimore and Washington, DC.<ref>{{cite web|title=The Best Lawyers in America© 2016 Recognizes 93 Venable Attorneys|url=https://www.venable.com/NEP/pressreleases/NewsDetail.aspx?news=8c0248ef-4007-42ad-94cb-f0a5425bfad7|website=Venable.com|publisher=Venable LLP|accessdate=18 February 2016}}</ref> ''Chambers USA'' ranked 32 Venable practices and 69 attorneys in 2016, including a coveted Client Services Award for the Product Liability and Mass Torts Practice.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.venable.com/NEP/pressreleases/NewsDetail.aspx?news=40fa89fe-4784-4f09-a826-219a34820498|title=Venable LLP {{!}} News & Insights {{!}} Press Releases  {{!}} Venable Maintains Strong Showing in 2016 Chambers USA Rankings|website=www.venable.com|access-date=2016-06-13}}</ref> ''Chambers'' has previously presented its Award for Excellence to Venable's Privacy and Data Security (2009) and Advertising, Marketing and New Media (2010 and 2011) practices. Fourteen of the firm's practices also received high rankings in ''Legal 500's'' 2015 edition with the firm named to Tier 1 for M&A: Middle-Market (sub-$500m), Marketing and Advertising, Not-for-Profit (Nonprofit and Tax Exempt Organizations), and Technology: Transactions.<ref>{{cite web|title=Venable Named a Top Tier Firm in Multiple Categories in 2015 Legal 500 Rankings|url=https://www.venable.com/NEP/pressreleases/NewsDetail.aspx?news=2e3fc63d-129a-4b80-a3ec-1c51c5b4f773|website=Venable.com|publisher=Venable LLP|accessdate=18 February 2016}}</ref> Venable was listed in the  2014 BTI Client Services A-Team report as one of the top 30 firms worldwide for client service.<ref>{{cite web|title=Venable named a top 30 firm for client service by BTI Consulting|url=https://www.venable.com/venable-named-a-top-30-firm-for-client-service-by-bti-consulting-11-19-2013/|website=Venable.com|publisher=Venable LLP|accessdate=18 February 2016}}</ref> In 2013, Vault’s rating of summer associate program named Venable first for Best Overall Summer Associate Program and Summer Associate Program that Best Prepares for Practice.<ref>{{cite web|title=Venable's Summer Associate Program Named Best in the Country by Vault|url=https://www.venable.com/NEP/pressreleases/NewsDetail.aspx?news=7a8ac1a6-cc56-47f5-a168-b2298a372c61|website=Venable.com|publisher=Venable LLP|accessdate=18 February 2016}}</ref>
The ''Washington Business Journal'' honored Venable in 2014 with an award for Corporate Philanthropy by Giving.<ref>{{cite web|title=Washington Business Journal honors Venable with Corporate Philanthropy award|url=https://www.venable.com/washington-business-journal-honors-venable-with-corporate-philanthropy-award-06-20-2014/|website=Venable.com|publisher=Venable LLP|accessdate=18 February 2016}}</ref> In 2015, ''Law360'' released a survey which ranked Venable among the top five most charitable law firms in the country.<ref>{{cite web|title=Venable among top five firms nationally in charitable donations|url=https://www.venable.com/venable-among-top-five-firms-nationally-in-charitable-donations-10-02-2015/|website=Venable.com|publisher=Venable LLP|accessdate=18 February 2016}}</ref>
 
==Notable alumni and current attorneys==
 
*[[John Banghart]], former [[United States National Security Council|National Security Council]]'s Director for Federal Cybersecurity
*[[Birch Bayh]], former [[U.S. Senator]] of [[Indiana]]
*[[James H. Burnley IV]], former [[United States Secretary of Transportation|U.S. Secretary of Transportation]]
*[[John Marshall Butler]], former [[United States Senate|U.S. Senator]] from [[Maryland]]
*[[Benjamin Civiletti]], former [[United States Attorney General]]
*[[Asa Hutchinson]], [[List of Governors of Arkansas|Governor of Arkansas]], former [[Undersecretary]] of [[Homeland Security]] and former head of the [[Drug Enforcement Administration]], former [[U.S. Representative]] for the [[Arkansas]]' 3rd congressional district
*[[Amy Berman Jackson]],  [[United States District Judge|District Judge]] on the [[United States District Court for the District of Columbia]]
*[[L. Paige Marvel]], [[Article I tribunal|Article I]] [[Federal Judge|federal judge]] for the [[United States Tax Court]]
*[[Powell Moore]], former White House Legislative staff member and U.S. Department of State and Department of Defense official
*[[J. Frederick Motz]], [[Senior Status|Senior Judge]] of the [[United States District Court for the District of Maryland]]
*[[Francis D. Murnaghan, Jr.|Francis D. Murnaghan]], Jr., former federal judge on the [[United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit]]
*[[Mark Pryor]], former [[U.S. Senator]] of [[Arkansas]]
*[[Karl Racine]], the first elected [[Attorney General of the District of Columbia]]
*[[James E. Rogan]], former [[U.S. Representative]] of [[California]] and current judge of the [[Superior Court of California]]
*[[John Sarbanes]], [[U.S. Representative]], [[Maryland's 3rd congressional district]]
*[[Paul Sarbanes]], former [[United States House of Representatives|U.S. Representative]] from Maryland and former [[United States Senate|U.S. Senator]] from Maryland
*[[Ari Schwartz]], former member of the [[White House National Security Council]] where he served as Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Cybersecurity
*[[Bart Stupak]], former [[United States House of Representatives|U.S. Representative]] from [[Michigan's 1st congressional district]]
*[[Roger Titus|Roger W. Titus]], federal judge on the [[United States District Court for the District of Maryland]]
*[[Robert L. Wilkins]], [[United States federal judge|United States Circuit Judge]] of the [[United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit]]
*[[Justin Fairfax]], 41st [[Lieutenant Governor of Virginia]]
 
==Notable transactions and representations==
 
*Secured a precedent-setting victory on behalf of nearly 5,000 abused and neglected children in a nearly three decade-long case involving the long-troubled Baltimore, Maryland foster care system.  The defendants in the case, both Maryland state agencies, had argued that, as a result of a 2009 Supreme Court decision, foster care children had no rights to enforce federal child welfare laws.  In the first ruling by an appellate court on this issue, Circuit Judge Allyson K. Duncan disagreed and found that the state agencies were misinterpreting the Supreme Court decision.  Judge Duncan's decision ensures that federal child welfare laws will be enforced in the state of Maryland, meaning that a Baltimore federal court will be allowed to enter a decree negotiated between Venable's attorneys and two Maryland state agencies to compel needed reforms to the foster care system.  As a result of the decision, Maryland must comply with 28 separate outcomes for the foster children, which are measured by over 100 performance measures.
*On behalf of Hornbeck Offshore Services, helped secure a series of victories rebuffing the government's efforts to implement a moratorium on offshore drilling in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010 in response to the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig. Venable obtained a preliminary injunction against the moratorium in the U.S. District Court of the Eastern District of Louisiana on June 22, 2010, when U.S. District Judge Martin Feldman found that the moratorium had been implemented without any factual justification and would irreparably harm Hornbeck and other plaintiffs whose businesses were dependent on deepwater drilling.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/feedarticle/9139134|title=Removed: news agency feed article|date=9 December 2015|publisher=|via=The Guardian}}</ref>  The decision was upheld by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals on July 9, 2010, which found that Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar had "failed to demonstrate a likelihood of irreparable injury if the stay is not granted; he has made no showing that there is any likelihood that drilling activities will be resumed pending appeal." The Obama Administration subsequently instituted<ref>{{cite web|url=http://plattsenergyweektv.com/story.aspx?storyid=103582&catid=293|title=Latest Oil, Energy & Metals News, Market Data and Analysis - Platts|publisher=}}</ref> a second moratorium and argued that the lawsuit challenging the first moratorium had become moot.  However, the political damage to the moratorium from the Hornbeck lawsuit was significant and shortly thereafter the Administration quietly cancelled the second moratorium, and offshore drilling resumed.<ref>[http://articles.cnn.com/2010-09-01/us/deepwater.drilling.ban_1_drilling-ban-drilling-rig-deepwater-horizon?_s=PM:US U.S. District Court Judge Martin Feldman denied the Administration's request].</ref>
*Won a unanimous Supreme Court decision on behalf of Wal-Mart Stores in a case that had significant intellectual property ramifications.  In the case, a jury found that Wal-Mart had infringed Samara's copyrights and "inherently distinctive" designs for a product line of children's clothing.  The Second Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the jury's verdict on appeal, relying not upon any "factors" or "tests," but rather upon the testimony of a Samara executive who claimed that the consistent design elements were "inherently distinctive" because Samara intended for them to be identified with the company and build brand loyalty.  The Supreme Court overturned the Second Circuit's decision,<ref>{{Cite web|title = Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP - Protection of Product Configurations: Supreme Court to Review Samara Brothers|url = http://www.kilstock.com/en/Knowledge_Center/Publications/Articles/2000/01/ProtectionofProductConfigurationsSupremeCourttoReviewISamaraBrothersI.aspx|website = www.kilstock.com|accessdate = 2015-09-22}}</ref> and in doing so further established the circumstances under which a design is protectable under the Lanham Act.  The Court found that product design and product color, by themselves, are insufficient attributes for meeting the threshold of being "inherently distinctive."  As a result of this decision, in order to gain trademark protection for a product design, the manufacturer must prove that consumers believe that the look of a product automatically identifies its creator.<ref>[http://www.friedfrank.com/siteFiles/Publications/F49CEB9710ABEBC3F670D31935BB15A3.pdf]</ref>
*Secured a reversal of a lower court ruling in the case of Lockshin v. Semsker.<ref>[http://www.courts.state.md.us/opinions/coa/2010/78a09.pdf]</ref>  In this particular case, a jury had awarded the plaintiffs over $5.8 million in damages, including $3 million in noneconomic damages, in a medical-malpractice case.  The defendants, a group of doctors, asked the trial court to apply Maryland's long-standing statutory cap on noneconomic damages, which would limit those damages to $812,500.  The trial court, however, ruled in favor of the plaintiffs.  Venable, representing the doctors on appeal, argued that the trial court had misread Maryland's Health Care Malpractice Claims statute.  Maryland's highest court agreed, holding that the cap on noneconomic damages applied to all health care malpractice claims, whether or not arbitrated.
*Represented [[Perot Systems]] in its $250 million acquisition of the QSS Group in 2007.
*Represented CWCapital Asset Management in litigation related to the foreclosure of the Stuyvesant Town – Peter Cooper Village in New York City.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2010-10-27/ackman-s-group-exits-stuyvesant-town-investment-with-45-million-intact|title=Ackman Group Exits StuyTown With $45 Million Intact|first=Oshrat|last=Carmiel|date=27 October 2010|publisher=|via=www.bloomberg.com}}</ref>  After months of litigation, the case was resolved when junior debt holders Pershing Square Capital Management LP and Winthrop Realty Trust agreed to sell their debt to CWCapital for $45 million.  The deal gave CWCapital additional options to recoup the $3.7 billion it was owed on the property.
*Represented Perdue Farms, Inc. in successfully dismissing a class action lawsuit for failure to plead with sufficient specificity.<ref>{{Cite web|title = Perdue Beats Action Over Chickens With Extra Giblets - Law360|url = http://www.law360.com/web/articles/156596|website = www.law360.com|accessdate = 2015-09-22}}</ref>
*Venable Partner and former U.S. Attorney General Benjamin R. Civiletti served as Special Compliance Counsel and successfully negotiated settlement for  [[Publishers Clearing House]] with 26 state Attorneys General.<ref name="BizWire2001">{{cite news|title=Publishers Clearing House Reaches Comprehensive Agreement With State Attorneys General.|url=http://www.thefreelibrary.com/-a075894084|accessdate=20 September 2016|work=Business Wire|date=26 June 2001|via=The Free Library}}</ref>
*Drafted Self-Regulatory Principles for Online Behavioral Advertising, and currently serves as counsel to coalition of marketing and trade associations.
 
==References==
{{Reflist}}
 
==External links==
*[http://www.venable.com Official Site, Venable LLP]
*[https://www.youtube.com/user/VenableNonprofits Venable LLP Nonprofits Organizations and Associations - YouTube]

Latest revision as of 12:46, May 14, 2018

Loading map...
Venable LLP
Venable logo.gif
Headquarters Venable (MO)
Number of attorneys 676
Venable LLP Pay Scale
(all numbers in thousands of dollars)
First year salary180
Second year salary
Third year salary
Fourth year salary
Fifth year salary
Sixth year salary
Seventh year salary
Eighth year salary
Ninth year salary
Tenth year salary
bonus
bonus
bonus
bonus
bonus
bonus
bonus
bonus
bonus
bonus

Template:Advertisement

Venable LLP is a law firm formerly known as Venable, Baetjer & Howard LLP. The firm is ranked 66th in the 2016 AmLaw 100 survey.[1] It was founded in Baltimore in 1900. Today the firm maintains 8 offices throughout the country[2] and includes more than 675 attorneys practicing in over 70 practice and industry areas covering corporate and business law, complex litigation, intellectual property and regulatory and government affairs.

Rankings[edit | edit source]

Venable is nationally ranked by a number of legal and business journals.[3] It ranked 66th in the 2016 AmLaw 100 list,[4] and 84th on the National Law Journal's top 250 law firms list. Regionally, the Washington Post listed Venable among the 10 largest D.C. law firms in 2012. In 2013, the Baltimore Business Journal listed Venable as the largest law firm in the Baltimore, MD area[5] and the Los Angeles Business Journal listed Venable as the 69th largest firm in Los Angeles County.[6]

A number of Venable practices have garnered national recognition. U.S. News and World Report’s Best Law Firms 2016 survey ranked Venable Tier 1 nationally in 19 categories, with rankings in 104 total national and regional categories.[7] The Best Lawyers in America recognized 93 Venable attorneys in their 2016 rankings, including a record eight attorneys who were named "Lawyer of the Year" in Baltimore and Washington, DC.[8] Chambers USA ranked 32 Venable practices and 69 attorneys in 2016, including a coveted Client Services Award for the Product Liability and Mass Torts Practice.[9] Chambers has previously presented its Award for Excellence to Venable's Privacy and Data Security (2009) and Advertising, Marketing and New Media (2010 and 2011) practices. Fourteen of the firm's practices also received high rankings in Legal 500's 2015 edition with the firm named to Tier 1 for M&A: Middle-Market (sub-$500m), Marketing and Advertising, Not-for-Profit (Nonprofit and Tax Exempt Organizations), and Technology: Transactions.[10] Venable was listed in the 2014 BTI Client Services A-Team report as one of the top 30 firms worldwide for client service.[11] In 2013, Vault’s rating of summer associate program named Venable first for Best Overall Summer Associate Program and Summer Associate Program that Best Prepares for Practice.[12]

The Washington Business Journal honored Venable in 2014 with an award for Corporate Philanthropy by Giving.[13] In 2015, Law360 released a survey which ranked Venable among the top five most charitable law firms in the country.[14]

Notable alumni and current attorneys[edit | edit source]

Notable transactions and representations[edit | edit source]

  • Secured a precedent-setting victory on behalf of nearly 5,000 abused and neglected children in a nearly three decade-long case involving the long-troubled Baltimore, Maryland foster care system. The defendants in the case, both Maryland state agencies, had argued that, as a result of a 2009 Supreme Court decision, foster care children had no rights to enforce federal child welfare laws. In the first ruling by an appellate court on this issue, Circuit Judge Allyson K. Duncan disagreed and found that the state agencies were misinterpreting the Supreme Court decision. Judge Duncan's decision ensures that federal child welfare laws will be enforced in the state of Maryland, meaning that a Baltimore federal court will be allowed to enter a decree negotiated between Venable's attorneys and two Maryland state agencies to compel needed reforms to the foster care system. As a result of the decision, Maryland must comply with 28 separate outcomes for the foster children, which are measured by over 100 performance measures.
  • On behalf of Hornbeck Offshore Services, helped secure a series of victories rebuffing the government's efforts to implement a moratorium on offshore drilling in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010 in response to the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig. Venable obtained a preliminary injunction against the moratorium in the U.S. District Court of the Eastern District of Louisiana on June 22, 2010, when U.S. District Judge Martin Feldman found that the moratorium had been implemented without any factual justification and would irreparably harm Hornbeck and other plaintiffs whose businesses were dependent on deepwater drilling.[15] The decision was upheld by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals on July 9, 2010, which found that Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar had "failed to demonstrate a likelihood of irreparable injury if the stay is not granted; he has made no showing that there is any likelihood that drilling activities will be resumed pending appeal." The Obama Administration subsequently instituted[16] a second moratorium and argued that the lawsuit challenging the first moratorium had become moot. However, the political damage to the moratorium from the Hornbeck lawsuit was significant and shortly thereafter the Administration quietly cancelled the second moratorium, and offshore drilling resumed.[17]
  • Won a unanimous Supreme Court decision on behalf of Wal-Mart Stores in a case that had significant intellectual property ramifications. In the case, a jury found that Wal-Mart had infringed Samara's copyrights and "inherently distinctive" designs for a product line of children's clothing. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the jury's verdict on appeal, relying not upon any "factors" or "tests," but rather upon the testimony of a Samara executive who claimed that the consistent design elements were "inherently distinctive" because Samara intended for them to be identified with the company and build brand loyalty. The Supreme Court overturned the Second Circuit's decision,[18] and in doing so further established the circumstances under which a design is protectable under the Lanham Act. The Court found that product design and product color, by themselves, are insufficient attributes for meeting the threshold of being "inherently distinctive." As a result of this decision, in order to gain trademark protection for a product design, the manufacturer must prove that consumers believe that the look of a product automatically identifies its creator.[19]
  • Secured a reversal of a lower court ruling in the case of Lockshin v. Semsker.[20] In this particular case, a jury had awarded the plaintiffs over $5.8 million in damages, including $3 million in noneconomic damages, in a medical-malpractice case. The defendants, a group of doctors, asked the trial court to apply Maryland's long-standing statutory cap on noneconomic damages, which would limit those damages to $812,500. The trial court, however, ruled in favor of the plaintiffs. Venable, representing the doctors on appeal, argued that the trial court had misread Maryland's Health Care Malpractice Claims statute. Maryland's highest court agreed, holding that the cap on noneconomic damages applied to all health care malpractice claims, whether or not arbitrated.
  • Represented Perot Systems in its $250 million acquisition of the QSS Group in 2007.
  • Represented CWCapital Asset Management in litigation related to the foreclosure of the Stuyvesant Town – Peter Cooper Village in New York City.[21] After months of litigation, the case was resolved when junior debt holders Pershing Square Capital Management LP and Winthrop Realty Trust agreed to sell their debt to CWCapital for $45 million. The deal gave CWCapital additional options to recoup the $3.7 billion it was owed on the property.
  • Represented Perdue Farms, Inc. in successfully dismissing a class action lawsuit for failure to plead with sufficient specificity.[22]
  • Venable Partner and former U.S. Attorney General Benjamin R. Civiletti served as Special Compliance Counsel and successfully negotiated settlement for Publishers Clearing House with 26 state Attorneys General.[23]
  • Drafted Self-Regulatory Principles for Online Behavioral Advertising, and currently serves as counsel to coalition of marketing and trade associations.

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Press Releases - Venable climbs higher up the AmLaw 100,
  2. [1]
  3. About Venable - Rankings,
  4. Venable climbs higher up the AmLaw 100,
  5. Venable ranks first in Baltimore Business Journal’s list of "Largest law firms in the Baltimore area",
  6. Los Angeles Business Journal ranks Venable among the top 100 law firms,
  7. Venable Ranked in Over a Hundred Categories in 2016 Edition of U.S. News – Best Lawyers® "Best Law Firms",
  8. The Best Lawyers in America© 2016 Recognizes 93 Venable Attorneys,
  9. Venable LLP | News & Insights | Press Releases | Venable Maintains Strong Showing in 2016 Chambers USA Rankings,
  10. Venable Named a Top Tier Firm in Multiple Categories in 2015 Legal 500 Rankings,
  11. Venable named a top 30 firm for client service by BTI Consulting,
  12. Venable's Summer Associate Program Named Best in the Country by Vault,
  13. Washington Business Journal honors Venable with Corporate Philanthropy award,
  14. Venable among top five firms nationally in charitable donations,
  15. Removed: news agency feed article, (9 December 2015)
  16. Latest Oil, Energy & Metals News, Market Data and Analysis - Platts,
  17. U.S. District Court Judge Martin Feldman denied the Administration's request.
  18. Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP - Protection of Product Configurations: Supreme Court to Review Samara Brothers,
  19. [2]
  20. [3]
  21. Carmiel, Oshrat Ackman Group Exits StuyTown With $45 Million Intact, (27 October 2010)
  22. Perdue Beats Action Over Chickens With Extra Giblets - Law360,
  23.  Publishers Clearing House Reaches Comprehensive Agreement With State Attorneys General.Business Wire  (26 June 2001)

External links[edit | edit source]