F Lee Bailey’s IRS Jeopardy – And The TV Show Questions In Which He Features

F lee bailey lawfuel

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Famed attorney F Lee Bailey is rightly renowned for his courtroom exploits, but the renown is now more focused on his second bankruptcy as he fights the IRS.

The attorney, best known most recently for his OJ Simpson team membership defense, has also a record of defending and winning some of the toughest cases in recent times.

He has been representing himself in the tax courts and while he enjoyed some success it has been costing him plenty, including 12 per cent interest on his debt, currently figured at around $5 million.

It has also resulted in years of battling the IRS and the current, second bankruptcy is intended to remove some liens from his Yarmouth, Maine home and permit him to enter a payment arrangement with the IRS.

He has since been disbarred in Florida and Maine for “offering false testimony, engaging in ex parte communications, violating a client’s confidences, violating two federal court orders, and trust account violations, including commingling and misappropriation,” as the Florida Supreme Court wrote.

His initial problems with the government stemmed from a case involving French national Claude L. DuBoc, who was convicted in 1994 of international drug smuggling and money laundering.

Bailey’s fees were to be taken from a pharmaceutical company in an unorthodox deal with the government that ultimately lead to a claim that the shares he held were in trust for the government.  No deal, Bailey said and the arguments ensued.

His current IRS issues aside, the attorney’s depth of experience and abilities are undoubted.  So much so that he became a near household name lawyer and his name appeared in television regularly, including ‘Jeopardy’.

Bailey’s Jeopardy Questions

F Lee Bailey’s name has appeared in many cases and television appearances, as well as  “Jeopardy” questions on American TV that the Washington Post outlined where his name featured –

1984: “SCIENCE $400: You might have to put F. Lee Bailey on one to admit he had a show about one. (What are lie detectors?)

1991: “LAWYERS $600: This defender of Albert DeSalvo, Dr. Sam Sheppard & Capt. E. Medina is now a spokesman for Dictaphone.”

1992: “FAMOUS GEMINIS $500: The Boston Strangler Albert DeSalvo had this Gemini man on his case as his lawyer.”

1997: “COURT CASES $1000: F. Lee Bailey took the case of this Ohio doctor & convicted murderer to the Supreme Court in 1966 & won.”

1999: MIDDLE NAME LEE $400: His high-profile clients have included Sam Sheppard, Patty Hearst & O.J. Simpson.”

Bailey filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which provides for the liquidation of assets, with many of them exempt, by a trustee with the funds used as far as they’ll go to repay debts.

Asked how he felt about his misfortunes, Bailey said: “You know when they let me out of prison, the press came around and said ‘don’t you feel humble, don’t you feel sorry for yourself that this judge socked you away?’ I said look ‘I cried because I had no shoes until I met a man who had no feet.’ So I’m in top shape. If you’ve landed an aircraft on an aircraft carrier in the middle of the ocean, there’s very little to fear in life.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]


Vault Rankings – ‘And The Most Prestigious Law Firm in America Is . . . Oh, Again!’

Vault top ranked law firms

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The votes have been counted and the envelope opened – the most prestigious law firm in America is – once again! – Cravath Swaine & Moore.

The Vault.com ranking of the 100 US law firms that rank as the most prestigious, based on a survey of 18,000 law firm associates who handle ranking based on ‘perceived prestige’, which of course is very much in the eye of the beholder.

Those ranking do not rank their own firms, but rather those with which they are familiar.

The Top 10

The top firms rankings were –

  • Cravath, Swaine & Moore.
  • Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz.
  • Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom.
  • Sullivan & Cromwell.
  • Davis Polk & Wardwell.
  • Simpson Thacher & Bartlett.
  • Latham & Watkins.
  • Kirkland & Ellis
  • Gibson Dunn & Crutcher
  • Weil Gotshal & Manges

But – perhaps of greater interest are the firms who are rising in the rankings and those who are dropping.

Among the most stellar risers is Denton which is now the largest firm in the world based on its recent mergers, moving 12 spots to number 68 on the top 100.  But that moves comes atop an equally significant lift the earlier year, thus pushing Dentons rapidly up the scale.

Gibson Dunn have broken into the top 10 after knocking at the door for some time and narrowly beating Weil to the top 10 position with a razor-fine edge.

Latham & Watkins has also cemented its position, with Vault noting –

Meanwhile, Latham & Watkins has completed its own climb this year, matching the firm’s all-time high ranking that it had not seen since before the last recession. Long one of the most prestigious firms in the world, Latham dipped in the Vault rankings—all the way down to No. 17—following much publicized layoffs in 2009.  But the firm has slowly regained its lost prestige and this year made the largest jump in the top 10, moving up three spots to reclaim its No. 7 spot after ranking 10th each of the last four years.

As for Cravath

Cravath’s top position is a credit to the firm which has a quarter of its clients out of the US, with a major office in London.

Cravath’s are also popular because they have lead the associate pay rise increases, never to be overlooked by younger lawyers.  But there’s more than that.  As Vault senior law editor Matt Moody observed, “Cravath invented the business model upon which nearly all large law firms are organized.”

 See the full Vault Law 100 List here
Top firms to work for – 
Among the top firms to work for,  the top 5 were:
> Fried Frank Harris Shriver & Jacobson
> O’Melveney & Myers
> Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe
> Ropes & Gray

>> Latest law jobs on the LawFuel law jobs site here

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