Latham & Watkins global real estate practice head Michelle Kelban has left the firm for Kirkland & Ellis, where she will join as a partner in the New York office.
A Legal 500 leading partner for real estate, Kelban has spent more than 25 years at Latham, with expertise spanning the range of transactions, from private capital raising and financing to acquisitions and joint ventures and through to restructurings and workouts.
Her recent experience includes advising Ares Management Corporation on its acquisition of real estate advisory firm GCP International in March, valued at $3.7bn. Kelban co-led on the transaction alongside global M&A and private equity practice group co-chair Alex Kelly and asset management M&A partners Owen Alexander and Daniel Breslin.
Kirkland executive committee chair Jon Ballis said: ‘Michelle is widely recognized as one of the preeminent lawyers in the real estate sector, representing leading private equity sponsors in the full range of transactions involving real assets.
‘We’re very excited to welcome her to Kirkland as we continue to grow in strategically important practice areas like real assets.’
Kelban added: ‘I am thrilled to join Kirkland and its outstanding real assets team. The firm has an incredibly diverse platform for the type of transactions I handle and the clients with whom I work. I look forward to contributing my experience and working collaboratively with the team to help further grow and strengthen the real assets capabilities at Kirkland.’
For its part, Latham too has been active on the hiring front, bringing over restructuring partners, Ryan Dahl, Benjamin Rhode, and Natasha Hwangpo from Ropes & Gray to the firm’s offices in New York and Chicago.
The three bring deep experience advising on complex restructurings, liability management transactions, and distressed M&A.
The hires see Latham continue to build up its restructuring capabilities following the addition of John Sobolewski from Wachtell in January, as well as Ray Schrock, Candace Arthur, and Alexander Welch from Weil and Andrew Parlen from Paul Weiss last November.
A&O Shearman’s US head of sanctions Maura Rezendes has left the firm to join Sidley Austin‘s global arbitration, trade and advocacy practice. Rezendes joined legacy Allen & Overy in 2014 after three and a half years as chief of the enforcement division at the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control.
Two A&O Shearman associates from her team also left to join Sidley.
Commenting on Rezendes’ arrival, the managing partner of Sidley’s Washington DC office, Kristin Graham Koehler, said: ‘Maura’s deep experience and impressive market profile in economic sanctions will help us serve some of the most urgent needs of our clients.’
Rezendes’ departure is the latest in a string of exits from A&O Shearman, which has seen more than 130 partners leave since the merger between legacy Allen & Overy and legacy Shearman & Sterling went live on 1 May 2024.
Of these, 55 were in the United States, with Rezendes the 18th partner to leave the firm’s Washington DC office. Last month, global antitrust head David Higbee left the office for Paul Weiss, along with partners Ben Gris and Djordje Petkoski.
Texas-founded national firm Jackson Walker has hired Phil Kim into its healthcare and life sciences group in Dallas. Kim joins from Sheppard Mullin, where he spent more than four years as a partner, and brings experience advising on a range of transactional and regulatory matters in the sector.
Meanwhile, Blank Rome has strengthened its international trade and national security capabilities with the addition of Kenneth Nunnenkamp as a partner in Washington DC.
Nunnenkamp joins from Morgan Lewis, where he led the firm’s CFIUS working group, and brings expertise in national security, export controls, economic sanctions, trade enforcement investigations, and anti-money laundering matters.
Blank Rome chair and managing partner Grant Palmer said: ‘Ken’s experience in national security and international trade, particularly his nationally recognized leadership in CFIUS reviews and trade enforcement matters, will be invaluable to our clients as they navigate the complexities of foreign investment in today’s global marketplace.’
International trade practice group co-chair Anthony Rapa added: ‘Ken brings invaluable experience across the full range of national security disciplines, including two areas at the heart of shifting geopolitics and trade policy: CFIUS review and trade enforcement.’







Pinsent Masons saw revenue rise by 4.7% to a new record high of £680m over the year, a result senior partner Andrew Masraf (pictured) described as cause for celebration – while also acknowledging the scope for improvement.
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