Paul Hastings has added to its New York finance bench with its hire of high-profile partner duo Corey Wright and Lisa Collier (pictured) from Latham & Watkins.
Wright is a Legal 500 leading partner for capital markets: debt offerings and high-yield debt offerings, as well as for commercial lending advice to banks.
Before moving to Latham in January 2023, the duo worked together at Cahill, where Wright made partner in 2007 and Collier in 2011.
They have a track record of work for banks and other financial institutions on a range of major leveraged finance transactions, with notable recent work including advising on the $17.5bn leveraged bridge loan agreement relating to Warner Bros. Discovery’s separation into two entities, as well as acting on a $4bn high-yield loan relating to Rocket Companies’ acquisition of home loan servicing company Mr. Cooper.
Paul Hastings chair Frank Lopez said in a statement: ‘We’re thrilled to welcome Corey and Lisa. Their longstanding relationships serving top-tier financial institutions are highly synergistic with many of our core practices. Corey’s reputation is stellar as one of a handful, if not the leading, finance practitioner of his generation. Corey and Lisa’s arrival will further elevate our position as the go-to firm for complex, high-stakes financings and create significant opportunities to gain even more market share at the top of the market.’
The firm also made a pair of hires from Paul Weiss, including hiring M&A partner Kristiina Leskinen in New York, as well as bringing antitrust litigator Joshua Soven into its Washington DC office, in one of a number of ongoing litigation exits from Paul Weiss.
Soven joined Paul Weiss in 2022 after four years at Wilson Sonsini and five years at Gibson Dunn. Before that he spent nearly a decade at the Department of Justice (DOJ), including as chief of the litigation 1 section of the antitrust division. He joins Paul Hastings with a wealth of experience advising on antitrust matters relating to high-profile M&A, including for major tech clients such as LinkedIn on its $26bn sale to Microsoft in 2016.
Paul Weiss has also seen two more partners leave to join Dunn Isaacson Rhee, the DC litigation boutique established by four partners who left Paul Weiss in June.
The hires see the new firm expand beyond the US capital, with Erin Morgan joining in New York and Meredith Dearborn in San Francisco. Dearborn joined Paul Weiss from Boies Schiller Flexner in 2020, at the same time as Bill Isaacson and Jessica Phillips – two of the four partners who left to form Dunn Isaacson Rhee. Morgan, meanwhile, is a Paul Weiss lifer, who spent almost 12 years at the firm and made partner there in 2023.
Also in the capital, Latham has hired former deputy assistant attorney general Andrew Forman as a partner in its antitrust and competition practice.
Forman served as deputy assistant attorney general in the DOJ antitrust division from May 2022 to this January, after leaving Paul Weiss in 2021, before which he spent nine years at Cadwalader.
At the DOJ, Forman led a range of antitrust enforcement matters relating to both merger and non-merger conduct, covering a range of industries including technology, healthcare and life sciences, pharmaceuticals, insurance, and finance.
Mandy Reeves, managing partner of Latham’s DC office, said in a statement: ‘It’s wonderful to welcome Andy to our team here in the nation’s capital. His deep history of leadership in managing complex civil enforcement programs and special competition initiatives, honed through his experience at both the DOJ and FTC as well as private practice, will be a tremendous asset in providing our clients with best-in-class advice and counsel.’
Also on the move is Silicon Valley tech litigator and trial lawyer Neel Chatterjee, who has left Goodwin for King & Spalding, where he will co-lead the firm’s intellectual property practice.
In April, Chatterjee cofounded Law Firm Partners United (LFPU) with fellow Goodwin trial lawyer David Cross, who is based in Washington DC. Now with more than 870 members on LinkedIn, LFPU is a forum for partners at top 200 US firms to discuss and organise on matters relating to the rule of law, in particular in response to the Trump administration’s ongoing battles with law firms.
In a LinkedIn post announcing his move, Chatterjee said that he intended to continue his work on LFPU as well as his pro bono cases and his roles with nonprofits and legal organisations.
On his plans for his time at King & Spalding, he said: ‘Simple and ambitious – we plan to build the best, most inclusive, next generation IP litigation trial practice in the Bay Area and the Country.’
In New York, Linklaters has expanded its corporate offering with its hire of capital markets and M&A partner Kristina Trauger. Trauger joins from Proskauer where she was a partner for three years and co-headed the firm’s capital markets group. She was previously a partner at legacy Shearman & Sterling, where she worked with George Casey and Heiko Schiwek, who both joined Linklaters in January 2024.
In June, Linklaters named Casey as its first chairman of the Americas, at the same time reappointing Tom McGrath as Americas managing partner. Later last month, the firm also announced that it had extended to 2029 the terms of both senior partner Aedamar Comiskey and firmwide managing partner Paul Lewis, with a statement that reiterated the firm’s commitment to growth in the US.
Other firms making notable recruits in New York include Simpson Thacher, which has brought Fried Frank M&A partner Lawrence Natke into its fund transactions practice and Milbank M&A partner Kyle Smit into its energy and infrastructure practice, and Ashurst, which has boosted its New York finance bench with its hire of partner Joe Giannini from Norton Rose Fulbright.
Also in New York, Willkie has brought over A&O Shearman debt finance partner Gus Atiyah. Atiyah co-headed the global debt finance group at A&O Shearman, and has expertise across a range of private finance transactions.
Elsewhere, Weil has hired entertainment, sports and media partner David Markman into its Los Angeles office. Markman joins from DLA Piper, where he co-chaired the firm’s entertainment transactions practice.
Vinson & Elkins has made a trio of partner hires across its US offices, bringing over investment management partners Samuel Francis in New York and Reed Schuster in Austin, as well as project finance partner Caitlin Lawrence in Houston.
Francis and Schuster join from Kirkland & Ellis, and bring expertise in a broad range of fund formation and operation matters, with Francis specialising in regulatory guidance and investment support and Schuster specialising in Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) examinations and investigations.
Lawrence, meanwhile, rejoins the firm from Baker Botts, where she made partner in 2023 after leaving V&E as a counsel in 2022.
In Chicago, Jenner & Block has hired a five-strong mass tort team from Mayer Brown led by partners Richard Bulger and Daniel Ring. Ring was co-lead of both the litigation and dispute resolution practice and the product liability and mass torts practice at Mayer Brown, while Bulger co-led the firm’s environmental action group.
At Jenner they will co-chair the firm’s expanded mass tort practice alongside current Jenner partners, and special counsels Tyler Alfermann and Daniel Rottenberg.
Jenner co-managing partners Ishan Bhabha and Rany Mehrberg said in a statement: ‘Adding leaders of Rich and Dan’s calibre, along with their experienced team of litigators, builds upon our already strong foundation and further expands Jenner & Block’s ability to fully serve clients at the highest levels in mass tort and product liability litigation. Their leadership adds to our existing capabilities to defend, litigate, try, and resolve matters. Combined with Dean and Joanna’s tremendous experience and track record of success, and our well-established litigation bench, we have a comprehensive offering that can handle these matters from first filing through final resolution.’
In addition to its New York moves, Simpson Thacher has also hired Bryce Kaufman into its banking and credit practice in Houston. Kaufman was a counsel at Latham, and brings expertise across a range of energy and infrastructure financing matters.
Finally, regulatory insurance partner Steven Davis has rejoined Philadelphia-headquartered firm Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young after leaving in 2023 for Duane Morris, where he headed the firm’s insurance and reinsurance industry group.

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