Employment at PI firms/plaintiffs' lawyer boutiques
Posted: Fri Nov 15, 2013 11:31 pm
I'm diving into this subject carefully, since I'll go ahead and guess there's a fair amount of haughtiness on this board when it comes to personal injury firms. Still ... while I had absolutely no intention when I started law school of working for one, I ended up interviewing for a part-time clerk job at one this week.
My question, then, is if anyone here has experience working for a good PI firm, one well-known in the region, as opposed to a solo-practitioner ambulance-chaser sleazebag kind of place. Without naming names, I interviewed this week at a mid- to upper-tier firm -- in contrast with other PI firms, that is -- and was generally impressed with what I saw. They have some seriously swank offices, for starters, along with at least a half-dozen attorneys working there in addition to the founder for whom the firm is named (I have no clue whether they're associates or equity partners, however). I did some checking on the founder, and the dude is basically swimming in money (and I know he grew up poor, so it's not inherited or anything): he's not even 40 and has a $5 mil house in the 'burbs, plus he and his wife are on the board of trustees for some of the most upscale arts organizations in the city (symphony, several art museums, etc. - and I know an annual "contribution" of around $100K is required to obtain a board seat with the local symphony). The work he described his clerks as doing sounds really intriguing in terms of developing a skill set that will actually be useful outside of law school: drafting motions and filings, taking depositions, extensive research into certain claims, etc.
So: what do you guys think? Advice from anyone who's taken a similar position while in law school would be particularly appreciated (I'm a 2L btw).
My question, then, is if anyone here has experience working for a good PI firm, one well-known in the region, as opposed to a solo-practitioner ambulance-chaser sleazebag kind of place. Without naming names, I interviewed this week at a mid- to upper-tier firm -- in contrast with other PI firms, that is -- and was generally impressed with what I saw. They have some seriously swank offices, for starters, along with at least a half-dozen attorneys working there in addition to the founder for whom the firm is named (I have no clue whether they're associates or equity partners, however). I did some checking on the founder, and the dude is basically swimming in money (and I know he grew up poor, so it's not inherited or anything): he's not even 40 and has a $5 mil house in the 'burbs, plus he and his wife are on the board of trustees for some of the most upscale arts organizations in the city (symphony, several art museums, etc. - and I know an annual "contribution" of around $100K is required to obtain a board seat with the local symphony). The work he described his clerks as doing sounds really intriguing in terms of developing a skill set that will actually be useful outside of law school: drafting motions and filings, taking depositions, extensive research into certain claims, etc.
So: what do you guys think? Advice from anyone who's taken a similar position while in law school would be particularly appreciated (I'm a 2L btw).