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Plantiff Law
Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2011 4:27 am
by Godfather
What is the usual path to being a successful plantiff lawyer, possibly starting a solo practice? Can you practice Personal Injury at a biglaw firm?
Re: Plantiff Law
Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2011 4:30 am
by Holly Golightly
Knowing how to spell "plaintiff" is usually a good start.
Re: Plantiff Law
Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2011 5:01 am
by ArchRoark
http://www.lawyernursery.com/
They are the best in plantiff work.
Re: Plantiff Law
Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2011 6:42 am
by AtlasNYC
Lol ok that was pretty funny, but seriously, how do you go about being a "plaintiff" attorney
Re: Plantiff Law
Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2011 6:49 am
by Eugenie Danglars
John Grisham's King of Torts says you need to work for five years at the Office of Public Defenders, then get really, really lucky.
Re: Plantiff Law
Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2011 2:00 pm
by A'nold
Eugenie Danglars wrote:John Grisham's King of Torts says you need to work for five years at the Office of Public Defenders, then get really, really lucky.
Credited.
Seriously, plaintiff's firms are abundant and you can probably land some internships before you graduate. I worked for a boutique PI/Civil Rights firm last summer and it was a blast. If I didn't need IBR so badly I'd almost certainly be working in PI out of law school.
P.S.- I've talked about this quite a bit over the past year or so on here. If you can resurrect some of my old threads you will definitely find some useful info. It's a great field that is unjustifiably crapped on for various reasons.
Re: Plantiff Law
Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2011 8:08 pm
by SteelReserve
Do your best to secure plaintiff-firm clerkships during law school; go for a trial level civil clerkship post-grad; do all kinds of networking events; let everyone know you are a plaintiff lawyer.
The plaintiff field is overcrowded like most of law, and it's very difficult to get the good cases. The way most plaintiff attorneys generate business is through referrals from other attorneys, not through advertising or relying on your own personal network of friends/family.
So the best thing to do is to network with other attorneys, go to bar functions etc. Going solo after law school is NOT a good way to become a plaintiff attorney because you will never drum up enough business and you will end up doing the vast majority of work where the business is, which is principally family law.
Also, a lot of plaintiff attorneys start in insurance defense since the salary is often better than entry-level personal injury (think 50-70k vs. 45-60k in Plaintiff work), and then ultimately after a handful of years they flip to a good plaintiff firm if they demonstrate they can bring in business. Top level plaintiff attorneys can indeed clear 500k to millions per year, but they are literally at the top of the game and it will take at least a decade to get that level.
Finally, realize civil cases rarely go to trial, so the real way to get good is through settlement negotiation skills and intelligent motion practice.