Law Firms
Which firms, legal groups, law profs signed briefs supporting Perkins Coie in challenge to punitive Trump order?
Amicus briefs supporting Perkins Coie are piling up in its challenge to a punitive order against the law firm signed by President Donald Trump. (Image from Shutterstock)
Amicus briefs supporting Perkins Coie are piling up in its challenge to a punitive order against the law firm signed by President Donald Trump.
The briefs have been filed by more than 500 firms, more than 360 law professors, nearly 350 former judges and a “cross-ideological group” that includes the American Civil Liberties Union and the Institute for Justice, a nonprofit public interest firm, report Law.com (here and here); Bloomberg Law; Reuters (here and here); Law360; and press releases by Law Forward, a nonprofit organization, and the ACLU.
The firm brief is mostly signed by smaller and midsize firms. According to Law.com, larger and well-known firms that signed are:
• Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer
• Covington & Burling
• Crowell & Moring
• Davis Wright Tremaine
• Fenwick & West
• Foley Hoag
• Freshfields US
• Hanson Bridgett
• Jenner & Block
• Manatt, Phelps & Phillips
• Munger, Tolles & Olson
• Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler
• Stoel Rives
• Susman Godfrey
• Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr
Perkins Coie sued after Trump issued an executive order that suspended Perkins Coie’s security clearance, limited access to federal buildings by its lawyers, blocked government hiring of firm employees, and required federal agencies to take steps to terminate contracts with the firms and their clients—if the firm provided services in connection with the client contract.
WilmerHale and Jenner & Block also sued after they were targeted with executive orders. Covington & Burling was also targeted in a more limited executive order; it has not filed suit.
As of April 3, four other firms reached deals with Trump to avoid punitive measures. The deals included pledges of pro bono support on issues supported by Trump and the firms.
A Perkins Coie spokesperson told Reuters that the firm was grateful to the firms that signed the amicus brief “in our challenge to the unconstitutional executive order and the threat it poses to the rule of law.”
Above the Law is compiling firms’ reactions to actions by the Trump administration in its “BigLaw Spine Index.” Law.com has published a timeline of the executive orders and firms’ response to them.
The legal advocacy groups that signed the ACLU brief are:
• The ACLU
• The ACLU of the District of Columbia
• The Cato Institute
• The Electronic Frontier Foundation
• The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression
• The Institute for Justice
• The Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University
• The National Coalition Against Censorship
• The Reporters Committee for the Freedom of the Press
• The Rutherford Institute
• The Society for the Rule of Law Institute
Judges who signed an amicus brief include retired state supreme court and appellate justices and former federal judges. Among them are:
• Retired Judge J. Michael Luttig of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals at Richmond, Virginia
• Retired Judge Diana Gribbon Motz of the 4th Circuit at Richmond, Virginia
• Retired Judge Kathleen M. O’Malley of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
• Retired Judge Thomas I. Vanaskie of the 3rd Circuit at Philadelphia
• Retired U.S. District Judge Shira A. Scheindlin of the Southern District of New York
Law professors who signed the professor brief are from law schools that include Harvard Law School, Yale Law School, Stanford Law School, the University of California, the Georgetown University Law Center, the Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law, Cornell Law School, the New York University School of Law, the University of Chicago Law School, Columbia Law School and the University of Michigan Law School.
Professors who signed the brief include Michael C. Dorf of Cornell Law School, Mark A. Lemley of Stanford Law School, Owen Fiss of Yale Law School, Harold Hongju Koh of Yale Law School, Leah Litman of the University of Michigan Law School, Eugene Volokh of the University of California at Los Angeles School of Law and Pamela S. Karlan of Stanford Law School.
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