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2000s Class Notes

2000

Chris Converse is included in D Magazine’s list of best lawyers in Dallas in 2015 in the area of corporate law: general and in Best Lawyers 2016 in corporate law. He is a partner with Gardere Wynne Sewell, where he chairs the securities and corporate governance team and is a member of the private equity industry team.

E. Perry HicksE. Perry Hicks has joined Hunton & Williams as partner in the lending services practice in Charlotte, N.C. He was previously a partner with Mayer Brown.

 

Kristine Dunne Maher is the chair of this year’s Red Mass Committee in Washington, D.C. Hosted by the John Carroll Society, the Red Mass is held each year on the Sunday before the first Monday in October to coincide with the new Supreme Court term. Judges, lawyers, diplomats, government officials, and people of all faiths attend the Mass to invoke God’s blessing and guidance on the administration of justice. This year the Red Mass was celebrated on October 4 at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle in Washington, D.C. The John Carroll Society’s chaplain is Rev. Msgr. Peter J. Vaghi ’74.


Phil NeiswenderPhil Neiswender
was named president of the Center for Board Excellence (CBE), the leading provider of compliance and governance solutions. He will also remain a member of CBE’s board of directors, which he joined in 2013. Prior to CBE, Neiswender held roles as chief legal officer and executive vice president for operations & corporate development at UIEvolution; chief operating officer at Garagiste; and general counsel, vice president of legal at BSQUARE Corporation. He also held both legal and business roles at Getty Images and practiced at Graham & James, and Riddell Williams, in Seattle. Neiswender also currently advises several early-stage startups and is on the board of Vinzar.

Founded in 2010 by attorneys and technologists, the Center for Board Excellence has built an innovative governance platform for board assessment, directors’ and officers’ questionnaires and other compliance processes.

Dan Pasquarello and Scott Fink ’02 partnered to form Pasquarello Fink LLC. The litigation boutique, which is located in Boston’s financial district, focuses on business disputes, employment matters, and real estate and land use litigation. The firm also advises clients on a host of business issues and acts as outside general counsel for privately held companies.

Michelle Colleen Roberts died on August 13. She was senior counsel in the division of investment management at the Securities and Exchange Commission.

2001

Andy BoutrosAndrew S. Boutros, an Assistant U.S. Attorney in Chicago, serving mostly in the financial crimes and special prosecution section, departed the U.S. Attorney's Office in October after nearly eight years of decorated federal service. Andrew has joined Seyfarth Shaw as a litigation partner and national co-chair of its white collar group, where he will have offices in Chicago and D.C.

Before his departure, Andrew was selected in 2015 as the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association (FLEOA) national prosecutor of the year. One year earlier, the American Bar Association awarded Andrew the criminal justice section’s Norm Maleng Minister of Justice Award, which is presented to one federal, state, or local prosecutor in the country a year for exemplifying the principle that the “duty of the prosecutor is to seek justice, not merely to convict.”

The FLEOA National Prosecutorial Award is presented to the nation’s federal prosecutor who, working with federal law enforcement officers, “secured the conviction of a notorious criminal in the face of formidable obstacles through untiring effort.” The honor stems from Andrew’s extensive work in helping take down the Darknet website “Silk Road” and his successful investigation, prosecution, and conviction of the world’s largest drug trafficker on the site. Silk Road has been described as the most sophisticated and extensive criminal marketplace of its kind on the Internet.

As a federal prosecutor, Andrew led some of the nation's largest and most complex international fraud and cybercrime investigations and prosecutions of corporate executives, businesses, and others. He was elected to the American Law Institute in April, where he will contribute to new projects on corporate compliance and police investigations among other projects. He was featured in ALI’s summer newsletter, The ALI Reporter, in a Q&A. The following excerpt is from that interview.
 
Think back to your days as a student at the University of Virginia School of Law. Who was your favorite professor and why?
 “UVA Law is chock-full of dynamic professors, who are as caring as they are accomplished. That said, I really enjoyed learning from Professor Jeffrey O’Connell, who until he passed away in 2013, was one of the leading lights of the insurance and tort bars. Having created the theoretical underpinnings for no-fault insurance, Professor O’Connell was able to import the challenges of the real world into the classroom, where we discussed both problems and solutions. In doing so, he offered wonderfully practical insights, while simultaneously maintaining a demanding academic setting. I not only took Professor O’Connell’s advanced torts course, but I later became his research assistant. And, together, we authored a comprehensive article on certain aspects of tort reform that was published by the Notre Dame Law Review—an experience that was both rigorous and educational. All these years later, I am very grateful for the time and energy Professor O’Connell invested in me. I believe I am a better lawyer for having studied under his care.”
 
Tillman J. Breckenridge joined Bailey & Glasser as a partner in Washington, D.C., where he concentrates his practice on appellate litigation. He is listed in Washington, D.C. Super Lawyers and is on Virginia Business magazine’s legal elite list for appellate practice.

Adam M. Gershowitz is associate dean for research and faculty development at the William & Mary Law School. He has been on the faculty since 2012 and is a nationally known scholar of criminal law and criminal procedure. Gershowitz is the Herbert V. Kelly, Sr., Professor of Teaching Excellence for 2014-16. In May he received the Walter L. Williams, Jr. Memorial Teaching Award, given by the class of 2015.

Lathrop NelsonLathrop B. Nelson III has been elected to the board of directors of the Committee of Seventy, a nonpartisan government watchdog group that works to promote clean and effective government, fair elections, and informed citizens. He is a partner in the litigation department at Montgomery McCracken Walker & Rhoads in Philadelphia, Pa., where he focuses his practice on complex commercial litigation, white-collar crime, and government investigations.

Usha R. Rodrigues has been appointed associate dean for faculty development at the University of Georgia School of Law. Rodrigues joined the school's faculty in the fall of 2005 and was named the holder of the M.E. Kilpatrick Chair of Corporate Finance and Securities Law in 2014. Currently, she leads courses in contracts and business ethics, and business associations.

Michael J. Schwartz has been elected partner in the corporate finance group with Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom in New York City. He represents U.S. and international issuers, private equity sponsors, REITs, and underwriters in a wide variety of public and private finance transactions.

David Stuckey is co-founder and executive editor of CEE Legal Matters magazine, the leading publication for and about lawyers across Europe’s emerging markets. He was one of the hosts and organizers of the 2015 General Counsel Summit, held in Budapest in September. The conference, attended by more than 100 senior in-house counsel from across Central and Eastern Europe, was the first of its kind for general counsel and heads of legal in the region.

Jason TrujilloJason Trujillo and his wife, Lauren, welcomed a son into the world in June. Dominic Augustine joins his big sister, Maria (7). Tom Valente is godfather to both children. Jason continues to serve as the Law School Foundation’s chief development officer and resides in Charlottesville.

 

2002

Dedicated to the Idea of Servant Leadership

Howard HoegeThis spring Howard Hoege ’02 launched his own consulting firm, 3H3 Leadership, with an ambitious goal—partner with businesses and communities to create a culture of servant leadership, a discipline he believes every leader should possess.

“Servant leaders recognize they are part of something bigger than themselves, and they serve that larger purpose,” says Hoege. “For them, job one is empowering and developing people. In that sense, leaders serve those they lead.”

Hoege’s own leadership experience is broad and deep. He graduated from West Point in 1994 as first captain of the Corps of Cadets, having gone through training as an Army Ranger, a grueling 72-day-long program he aced, in part, because he and three other soldiers made a pact to support each other. Committing to someone else first, he says, helped each of them succeed.

He was a platoon leader at Fort Hood, Tex., before leaving to attend Law School through an Army program.

After passing the Virginia Bar he went to the Army’s Judge Advocate General’s School for the officer basic course. Following graduation he joined the 101st Airborne Division and deployed to Iraq during the initial invasion in 2003. By the time Hoege returned to the United States from his 11-month tour of duty, his experience in war had sharpened his interest and ideas regarding public policy and the need for better leadership.

“I believe to my core,” he said, “that even though we are more connected than ever before through social media and the like, we are actually increasingly disengaged from one another.” He’s committed to finding ways to inspire and support the instincts in people that value and respect others, including those who are different from them. “To do that you have to stop, connect, and be present and vulnerable.”

Servant leadership, Hoege explains, is an effective way to build a culture in an organization that supports ownership of core values and a common mission so members work as an effective team. He works with organizations to create project-based opportunities for rising leaders to practice their skills, and provides coaching to ensure that the organization supports the newly learned leadership skills.

Hoege’s clients include the Hampton Roads Community Foundation, the Mariners’ Museum in Newport News, The Virginian-Pilot, and the Jefferson Scholars Foundation at UVA, for which he’s designed a year-long leadership development program for second-year scholars. He is also a lecturer at the Batten School where, until recently, he was a full-time dean. —Rebecca Barns

2002

In January Mark Crooks said farewell to 13 years of service as a state and federal prosecutor and joined Maryland’s new governor as deputy legal counsel. Mark now works in Annapolis in the Shaw House (built in 1720), from which he bustles back and forth to the State House and Government House to provide counsel to Governor Larry Hogan and his cabinet.

Kendall Day and Danielle Baussan live in Washington, D.C., with their toddler, Gavin. In March Kendall was appointed chief of the asset forfeiture and money laundering section in the Criminal Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. Danielle is the managing director of energy policy at the Center for American Progress.

Scott Fink and Dan Pasquarello ’00 partnered to form Pasquarello Fink LLC. The litigation boutique, located in Boston’s financial district, focuses on business disputes, employment matters, and real estate and land use litigation. The firm also advises clients on a host of business issues and acts as outside general counsel for privately held companies.

Bernd HartmannBernd J. Hartmann LL.M. is dean of the University of Osnabrueck School of Law. With an enrollment of about 1,500 students, the school is internationally recognized, especially for its European legal studies.

 

Afi Johnson-ParrisAfi Johnson-Parris is president of the Greensboro Bar Association for the 2015-16 term. She also presides over the GBA Foundation and the 18th Judicial District Bar, which covers all lawyers in Guilford County as an entity of the North Carolina State Bar. Johnson-Parris is with Ward Black Law in Greensboro, where she practices family law and veterans’ disability law.
Johnson-Parris was editor and contributing author for the ABA book Marketing Success: How Did She Do That? Women Lawyers Show You How to Move Beyond Tips to Implementation (see In Print).

Ryan Malone joined the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia as an assistant U.S. attorney handling criminal cases. He was previously a member with Ropes & Gray in the government enforcement and appellant and Supreme Court practices.

Dan Nelson has worked as a white-collar assistant U.S. attorney in Kansas City for the past 11 years. Last year Nelson received the Lon O. Hocker Award, which is presented annually by state and federal judges to the top three Missouri trial attorneys under 40. Nelson married Katherine Baker on October 10. “I would love it if any Lawhoos passing through town would look me up for some outrageously good KC BBQ,” he writes.

Elena Parent is serving her first term in the Georgia State Senate, representing a DeKalb County-based district. She previously served in the Georgia House of Representatives in 2011 and 2012. Elena and her husband, Briley Brisendine, and their sons, Brooks (5) and Reid (2), live in Atlanta.

Billy Poynter recently left his partnership at Williams Mullen to join Kaleo Legal with two colleagues, Tina Payne Bingham ’00 and Brian Wainger (College ’91). The firm provides both legal and business consulting services to startups, mid-size growth companies, and Fortune 500 clients based on a flat fee monthly retainer or per project billing, with no billing by the hour. Billy continues to focus on intellectual property law in the software, entertainment, manufacturing, health care, hospitality and technology industries. Cameron Reeves Poynter is the author of the blog www.luckyorangepants.com, and her work has been published on various Web sites. Billy and Cameron live in Norfolk, Va., with their two children, Jack (8) and Will (6).

Antony Sayess was elected chair of the tax section of the New Hampshire State Bar. He continues to serve as chair of the board of trustees of New Hampshire Audubon.

Jennifer Kaufman Stillman lives in Ridgewood, N.J., with her husband and their two children, Jackson (8) and Charlotte (6). After 12 years working as a trusts and estates associate at Debevoise & Plimpton, she has joined Noble Black ’01 at Douglas Elliman in New York, working as an associate real estate broker in Manhattan.

Jennifer Swize was married September 19 to David Montes, a graduate of Stanford Law School. The wedding took place in Washington, D.C., where Jennifer and David reside. They honeymooned in Sicily. Jennifer is a partner in the issues and appeals practice of Jones Day, and David is chief of staff for U.S. Congressman Ruben Gallego of Arizona.

2003

Becky BrownBecky Brown has been an attorney with the Department of Homeland Security since graduation, and for the past eight years has advised Homeland Security investigations special agents on their criminal investigations and policy matters. This fall, Becky was selected to serve as the acting principal director for law enforcement policy for the Department of Homeland Security.

In her free time, Becky is usually out and about in Washington, D.C. with her dog, Tazewell, or working on a food-related project. Becky's cooking blog, My Utensil Crock (www.myutensilcrock.com), has turned into more of a venture than planned; this summer, Becky's blog led to her first series of cooking classes, designed for the practical professional. The classes were taught at Prequel, a new crowd-funded restaurant pop-up incubator in the heart of downtown D.C.

Sheryl GarkoSheryl Koval Garko has been named a 2015 top women of law honoree by Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly and joins an elite group of women who are educators, trailblazers, pioneers, and role models. Garko is a principal with Fish & Richardson in Boston, where she focuses her practice on intellectual property litigation with emphasis on patent, trademark, copyright, trade secret, and false advertising litigation.

Adam Green is co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee (BoldProgressives.org), a national electoral and issue advocacy organization with nearly one million members. This year the PCCC successfully helped move issues like debt-free college, expanding Social Security, and Wall Street reform and criminal accountability to the center of the 2016 presidential conversation.

2004

Jeff Barnes has joined Fisher & Phillips as a partner in Houston, Tex., where he represents employers before state and federal courts and administrative agencies in a variety of labor and employment matters. He has been listed as a rising star in Texas Super Lawyers every year since 2007.

Ann Cabell Baskervill writes that she’s honored to serve as commonwealth’s attorney for Dinwiddie County in Virginia. Baskervill has held the position since 2014.

Chris Richardson was recognized in Legal500’sGC Powerlistfor the Middle East. He serves as the general counsel of Mubadala Petroleum, an international oil and gas company based in Abu Dhabi. Chris, Andi (Nursing ’04), Campbell (9), and William (4) would welcome a visit by any UVA alumni who happen to be passing through the UAE.

Edmund SauerEdmund S. Sauer has been elected chair of the Tennessee Bar Association’s appellate practice section for a one-year term. In conjunction with his leadership role, he presented at the section’s Tennessee Supreme Court Academy CLE on oral argument in October. Sauer is a partner with Bradley Arant Boult Cummings in Nashville, concentrating his practice on handling appeals and drafting trial and post-trial motions on a wide range of legal issues.

2005

Caroline Greene has left the law to launch a coaching business to help well-educated moms find work that matters. Her new book, Matter: How to Find Meaningful Work That’s Right for You and Your Family, was released this fall (see In Print). More information is available at www.carolinegreenecoaching.com.

2006

Jennifer Attrep was appointed by the governor, after being recommended by a bipartisan nominating commission, to serve as district court judge in the First Judicial District Court, State of New Mexico. She has a general jurisdiction docket that covers three counties in Northern New Mexico and is running in the 2016 election to retain her seat as judge. See www.keepjudgeattrep.com.

Brad Barlow married Heather Henderson in Destin, Fla., on May 10. They met in Northern Virginia and currently live in Charlottesville. Heather is from Tuscaloosa, Ala., attended the University of Alabama, and worked as an accountant for several years in D.C.

Chad Bell joined Korein Tillery in Chicago, Ill., where his practice focuses on plaintiffs’ securities, antitrust, and complex civil litigation, including current work on behalf of the National Credit Union Administration against major banks in connection with the sale of residential mortgage-backed securities. He and his wife, Susan, live in Chicago, where Susan works as an executive assistant to architect Jeanne Gang of Studio Gang Architects. In September 2014 they welcomed their first son, Ethan Anderson Bell.

Andrea C. Dvorak, a professional cyclist, participated in the 2015 UCI World Cycling Championships in Richmond, Va., in September. The nine-day event, which is often referred to as the Super Bowl of cycling, features 12 championship races in three different disciplines: a traditional road race, individual time trial, and team time trial. More than 1,000 athletes compete. Andrea’s passion for the sport took off during Law School.

2006 Section BIn July, 2006 Section B members (left to right) John Mark Goodman, Jim Pinna, Rhett Kier, and Jason Brege hiked, camped, and fished the Gunnison River in Colorado for their seventh annual fishing trip. “A good time was had by all.”

 

Tiffany M. Graves, executive director of the Mississippi Access to Justice Commission, was selected as a fellow of the American Bar Foundation. Graves is an adjunct professor with the Pro Bono Initiative of the University of Mississippi School of Law.

Trevor McFaddenTrevor McFadden was elected to the partnership of Baker & McKenzie in Washington, D.C., where he is a white-collar litigator. He and his wife, Kelly (Lynch) McFadden ’08, live in Northern Virginia and have two children, Katie (3) and Will (1).

 

Matthew H. Meyers was elected partner with Drinker Biddle & Reath in Philadelphia, Pa. He represents both public and private companies in a variety of corporate and securities matters, focusing on mergers and acquisitions, private equity investments, joint ventures, corporate governance, capital-raising transactions in public and private markets, public company reporting obligations, and general business matters.

Stephen Ng lives in Dunn Loring, Va., with his wife and two daughters. Last December he left Baker Botts after six years to join the office of the general counsel at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, where he works in the legal policy group. Stephen is a songwriter, singer, and guitarist for The Restless, which recently released its first EP (therestless.net).

David Reed and his wife, Sara, welcomed their first child, Anne Moseley Reed, in February. The Reeds live in Atlanta, Ga., where David is a patent attorney with Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton. David, Sara, and Annie will visit family in northern Tuscany this fall on Annie’s first overseas trip.

Martin Totaro left the partnership of litigation boutique MoloLamken to join the Securities & Exchange Commission’s appellate litigation group.

2007

In July Jason Beaton accepted an appointment as an assistant U.S. attorney in Gainesville, Fla., after having served in the same capacity in Tallahassee.

Vanessa Kolbe Eisenmann lives in Milwaukee, Wisc., with her husband, Erik, who is a shareholder at Whyte Hirschboeck Dudek, and their two daughters, Cora (4) and Elsa (1). After five years as a federal law clerk, Vanessa has returned to private practice at Biskupic & Jacobs. She concentrates her practice mainly on complex civil litigation and appellate work, including criminal appeals in the Seventh Circuit.

Kaleb Froehlich has joined the government relations firm Cassidy & Associates, where he focuses on energy, natural resources, and arctic-related policy issues. He previously worked for the U.S. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee. He lives in Washington, D.C., with his wife, Annie ’06, and their two sons, Graham and Elias.

Stephanie Ullman Grau, together with her husband, Eric and their daughter, Willow, proudly welcomed baby boy Holden W. Grau on September 15, 2014. Stephanie is a full-time mom and part-time attorney practicing in the field of estate planning.

Christopher Jackson has joined the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., as a trial attorney in the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section. He prosecutes white-collar crime and other federal criminal offenses.

Josh Kaplowitz joined the U.S. Department of Interior in April as an attorney-advisor in the solicitor office’s division of mineral resources. He advises the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management regarding its offshore renewable energy (wind, marine hydrokinetic) program. Kaplowitz lives in Arlington, Va., with his wife, Andrea, who recently started her own landscaping business, and their three children.

In January John F. LaSalle was promoted to partner at Boies, Schiller & Flexner, where he also serves as the firm’s deputy general counsel. John and his wife, Emera, live in New York City with their two children, Eleanora (4) and Raphael (1).

Allix Magaziner joined Clean Energy Collective (CEC) as corporate counsel in April. CEC develops community-owned renewable energy solutions for electric utilities and their customers. She lives in Boulder, Colo., with her husband, Nate Hunt, and son, Townes.

Alex Patterson left Tough Mudder, where he held positions of in-house counsel, chief marketing officer, and VP of brand, to create a new company in the adventure activities space, called Task Force Zero (www.taskforce-zero.com), headquartered in Brooklyn, NYC. TFØ will “turn your weekend into a mission” with one-day and two-day adventure missions comprising activities such as white water rafting, mixed–martial arts lessons, rock climbing, sky diving, stand-up paddle boarding, CrossFit classes, and more. Participants don't know the itinerary until they are on the mission itself. “Good luck to everyone on life’s adventures,” Alex writes, “and please connect if you’re in NYC. E-mail me at alex.patterson@taskforce-zero.com!

Taylor Phillips became an assistant U.S. attorney in Charlotte, N.C., in February. He joined the U.S. Attorney’s Office after seven years in the litigation and government investigations groups of Bass, Berry & Sims, where he was based in Nashville, Tenn. and Washington, D.C. Taylor and his wife, Meghan, are raising an 18-month-old daughter while trying to explore their relatively new city.

Matt Pinkham joined Hub International Limited (Hub) as mergers and acquisitions counsel in November 2014. He had previously been with Reed Smith in Chicago, Ill., where he focused his practice on mergers and acquisitions for Hub and other clients. Matt lives in Chicago with his wife, Carrie, and son, Jack.

Ben Reeves is a partner at Snell & Wilmer in Phoenix, Ariz., where he focuses his practice on creditor’s rights litigation, real estate litigation, and receivership law. This year he was appointed by Governor Doug Ducey to the Commission on Appellate Court Appointments, a section of the Judicial Nominating Commission, which participates in the process of selecting appellate judges under Arizona’s merit selection system. Ben and his wife, Stacey, expect their fourth child early next year.

Jackie Gharapour Wernz is a partner at Franczek Radelet in Chicago, Ill., where she practices education law. She and her husband, Matt, welcomed their second child, Cecily Zahra, in August 2014. Big brother Isaiah and the family are doing well.

2008

Streamlining Pro Bono Through Technology

Michael HollanderMichael Hollander ’08 is a staff attorney at Community Legal Services of Philadelphia, where he represents low-wage workers in a range of employment issues, including wage-and-hour violations, ex-offender re-entry work, and unemployment compensation claims.

Before entering Law School, Hollander was a computer programmer for a software company. He’s now using those skills to modernize pro bono legal services for low-income clients.

Hollander created an application called the Expungement Generator that converts an electronic version of a criminal record to an editable and ready-to-file expungement petition. The app cuts the petition drafting time by two-thirds.

The Generator is used by Hollander’s office in Community Legal Services and by Philadelphia Lawyers for Social Equity, a legal services provider that Hollander co-founded. It’s also used by a wide variety of other organizations in the state, including the Philadelphia Barristers, the Montgomery County Public Defender, and legal aid offices. Since the Generator’s release in 2011, more than 10,000 petitions have been prepared and filed using it.

“The code for the app is open source and available on GitHub,” says Hollander. “I have consulted with a number of programs around the country about modifying it for their purposes, and I would be happy to talk to anyone else.” He can be contacted athollander@gmail.com.

Hollander’s work was also key to a successful campaign to get Philadelphia courts to forgive older bail judgment debt—some of which was decades old. He met with opposition when he tried to get data from the court, so he developed his own tool to extract the data. Because of this melding of legal and technological work, a September feature in ABA Journal dubbed him a “legal rebel.”

Community Legal Services supports Hollander’s inventiveness by giving him space and time to develop his ideas. With growing caseloads of low-income clients and a shortage of attorneys to serve them, he’s finding ways to streamline procedures and enable a hard-pressed system to do more with less.  —Rebecca Barns

2008

Connie Chilton and Charlie LaPlanteConnie Chilton married Charlie LaPlante on May 9 in Palm Springs, Calif. Cate Dundon, Jeff Albertson, Hamp Nettles, and Tom Wood were in the wedding party and joined many other Law School classmates in attendance. The couple lives in Los Angeles, where Connie is an associate at Sidley Austin and Charlie is senior counsel for Colantuono, Highsmith & Whatley.

Amy FitzHenry lives in Los Angeles, Calif., and is the North American legal counsel for the Movember Foundation, a global men’s health charity. Her first novel, Cold Feet, is out this fall with Berkley/Penguin Random House (see In Print). 

Om Jahagirdar is associate general counsel at Freddie Mac in Tysons, Va., where he focuses on servicing transactions and credit risk transfers.

Walton H. Walker III was sworn in as assistant district attorney for Charlotte-Mecklenburg, N.C. in August.

2009

Patrick McCann joined Chamberlain, Hrdlicka, White, Williams & Aughtry in Atlanta, Ga., as an associate in the tax practice.

 

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