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Firm News 2 results
Firm News | 8 min read | 01.03.22
Crowell & Moring Elects 13 New Partners, Promotes Seven to Senior Counsel, and 19 to Counsel
Washington – January 3, 2022: Crowell & Moring elected 13 lawyers to the firm’s partnership, effective January 1, 2022. The firm also promoted seven to the position of senior counsel and 19 associates to the position of counsel. The new partners have been promoted from within the ranks of the firm’s London, New York, and Washington, D.C. offices and from across several practice groups, including Advertising & Media; Antitrust & Competition; Corporate; Energy; Environment & Natural Resources; Government Contracts; Health Care; Technology & Intellectual Property; International Dispute Resolution; Litigation; Mass Tort, Product, and Consumer Litigation; and Privacy & Cybersecurity.
Firm News | 5 min read | 04.01.21
Crowell & Moring and Kibbe & Orbe Join Forces
New York – April 1, 2021: Crowell & Moring and Kibbe & Orbe have joined forces effective today to provide expanded service offerings to clients in the financial services industry. Twenty-four lawyers from the storied financial law firm are now part of Crowell & Moring’s New York, London, and Washington, D.C. offices, including Jennifer Grady, managing partner and chair of the firm’s executive committee, who will co-chair Crowell & Moring’s Corporate practice; three founding partners, Jonathan Kibbe, William Orbe, and Michael D. Mann, and the managing partner of the London office, Andrew M. Martin.
Client Alerts 1 result
Client Alert | 5 min read | 06.26.23
On June 6, 2023, The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and the Department of the Treasury’s Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) issued final joint guidance for banking organizations on managing risks associated with third-party relationships. Previously, the Board (2013), FDIC (2008) and OCC (2013 and 2020) had all issued their own separate guidance for their respective supervised banking organizations. After extensive review and analysis of comments provided from July-October 2021 on proposed interagency guidance, the prior issuances by separate regulators were rescinded and replaced by the final joint interagency guidance[1]. The guidance was over ten years in the making, and corresponds with an observed increase in the number and types of third-party relationships used by banks. The use by banks of fintech companies is a prime example; there has been an explosion in the variety of services offered to banks by such companies. The guidance is intended to promote a consistent message on risk management from the agencies, and to more clearly articulate risk-based principles for third-party risk management.
Blog Posts 1 result
Blog Post | 02.08.22
Plan Support Covenants Survive Attack in Aeromexico’s Bankruptcy Proceeding
Crowell & Moring’s Restructuring Matters