Dinsmore & Shohl
Headquarters | Cincinnati, Ohio |
---|---|
No. of offices | 21 |
No. of attorneys | 625+ (2015) |
Major practice areas | General practice |
Key people | George H. Vincent, Managing Partner and Chairman of the Board of Directors[1] |
Date founded | 1908 |
Founder | Frank Dinsmore & Walter Shohl |
Company type | Limited liability partnership |
Website | www.dinsmore.com |
Dinsmore is a large U.S. law firm headquartered in Cincinnati, Ohio. It is an AmLaw 200 and National Law Journal 250 firm, and has been named to the U.S. News & World Report and Best Lawyers Best Law Firm lists. The firm consists of more than 625 attorneys practicing in 21 cities throughout Ohio, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Washington D.C.
History
Dinsmore & Shohl LLP was founded in 1908 by Frank Dinsmore, a graduate of Cincinnati Law School (now known as University of Cincinnati College of Law). In 1912, he invited Walter Shohl, a graduate of Harvard Law School to join the firm.[2]
The partners took a leading role in two of the most sensational trials in Cincinnati history[citation needed]: the criminal trials of George B. Cox for violation of state banking laws. In the country's notorious era of "bossism," Cox controlled 25,000 votes in Cincinnati, one of America's largest cities at the time. Historians [who?] claim that "no one in Cincinnati could hope to hold office without Cox's approval - even presidents vied for his approval."[citation needed] The state of Ohio charged Cox and 10 other former directors and officials of Cox's defunct bank, the Cincinnati Trust Co., with willful misapplication of bank funds and other charges. In two trials during the summer of 1913, Dinsmore and Shohl won acquittals for Cox on all charges.
Ironically, 73 years after the Cox trials, the firm ended up on the other side of Ohio's misapplication of bank funds statute. The firm's lawyers took the lead in prosecuting the criminal trial following the collapse of Home State Savings Bank of Cincinnati in the great savings and loan crisis. Ohio Attorney General Anthony Celebrezze, Jr. appointed Lawrence Kane as Special Prosecutor to convene a grand jury and investigate the Home State collapse. Kane and a team of the firm's lawyers successfully prosecuted the criminal charges in what was, at that time, the longest criminal trial in Hamilton County history,[citation needed] stretching from November 1986 to March 1987. Local financier Marvin Warner, a former Ambassador to Switzerland, was among those found guilty and sent to prison.
Just prior to World War II, the firm handled a top-secret matter for the government: the siting of the Wright Aeronautical Plant on what is now General Electric in Evendale. This facility would employ 20,000 by 1942 and manufacture the aircraft engines responsible for much of the bombing during the war.[citation needed] Dinsmore & Shohl attorneys handled the massive title work involving hundreds of parcels, all in total secrecy.
After the war, the firm expanded in a number of areas, including litigation and liability. Massive wage hour litigation was handled in Milan, Tennessee, for the Procter & Gamble Defense Corporation. The firm managed National Labor Relations Act cases for Procter & Gamble, as well as early product liability cases.
Dinsmore & Shohl also broadened its reach as Procter & Gamble expanded into foreign markets. Attorneys formed companies throughout the world, providing an essential support to the establishment of Procter & Gamble’s vast international business in the 1950s through the 1970s. As legal practices became increasingly specialized during this same period, the firm's experience with Procter & Gamble helped its own business, transactional, tax and real estate practice areas. In 2006, for example, the firm represented long-time client Bob Castellini in his acquisition of the Cincinnati Reds from financier Carl Lindner.
In the 1980s, the firm expanded into tort litigation, starting with the Rely (brand) tampons, Toxic Shock Syndrome cases for Procter & Gamble and the Bendectin birth defect cases for Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals[citation needed]. During this period, the firm also handled insurance coverage work for Liberty Mutual Insurance Company. Additional work involved Dow Corning breast implants, the diet drug Fen-phen, Brown & Williamson tobacco and popcorn flavoring.
The firm continues to serve a large number of companies, from Fortune 500 international conglomerates to small businesses, non-profit organizations and entrepreneurs.
Growth
The firm first ventured beyond Cincinnati when it opened an office in the neighboring Clermont County in 1979. In the 1980s, offices were opened in Dayton and Columbus, Ohio. In the late 1990s, Dinsmore & Shohl expanded into Louisville and Lexington, Kentucky. In 2002, offices were established in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and Charleston, West Virginia. Two more West Virginia locations, Morgantown and Wheeling, were added in 2007. In 2009, a third office was opened in Kentucky in the state capital of Frankfort. On July 22, 2011, Dinsmore & Shohl announced the opening of an office in Washington, D.C. [3] In late January 2012, the firm opened an office in Philadelphia, becoming their 14th office and second location in Pennsylvania.[4]
Several mergers have helped fuel Dinsmore & Shohl's growth. In 2003, the law firm of Killworth, Gottman, Hagan & Schaeff LLP,[5] headquartered in Dayton, Ohio was merged with Dinsmore & Shohl, significantly expanding the firm's intellectual property practice. In 2008, Dinsmore & Shohl added to its corporate and tax practices through a merger with Chernesky, Heyman & Kress, P.L.L., also located in Dayton. In 2009, Woodward, Hobson & Fulton, L.L.P.[6] merged with Dinsmore & Shohl, expanding the firm's presence in Kentucky. In 2014, Dinsmore completed a merger with Peck Shaffer & Williams LLP, a nationally-recognized bond counsel firm, to add 35 attorneys and office locations in Chicago, Denver and Covington, Kentucky. [7] On Feb. 1 2015, the firm completed a merger with Huddleston Bolen, a West Virginia-based firm with approximately 40 attorneys in West Virginia and Kentucky. The merger also enabled the firm to open an office in Huntington, West Virginia. [8] Later in 2015, the firm completed additional mergers with Gifford, Krass, Sprinkle, Anderson & Citkowski, P.C. [9] and Leventhal Law [10] to open four additional offices, including locations in Detroit, Michigan and San Diego, California.
Practice areas
The firm has more than 55 law practices including corporate regulations surrounding labor, employment, securities and immigration, telecom and media, criminal law, and financial law services relating to estates and taxes. It also provides lobbying services via its Washington, DC office. [11]
Notable lawyers and alumni
- Charles W. Sawyer, United States Secretary of Commerce under the Truman administration
- Potter Stewart, former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
- Karen K. Caldwell, judge on the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky
- Donald Alexander, Commissioner of Internal Revenue by President Richard Nixon
- Mike Crites, former U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio
Offices
- Cincinnati, Ohio
- Columbus, Ohio
- Dayton, Ohio
- San Diego, California
- Denver, Colorado
- Mystic, Connecticut
- Chicago, Illinois
- Covington, Kentucky
- Frankfort, Kentucky
- Lexington, Kentucky
- Louisville, Kentucky
- Ann Arbor, Michigan
- Detroit, Michigan
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- Charleston, West Virginia
- Huntington, West Virginia
- Morgantown, West Virginia
- Wheeling, West Virginia
- Lewisburg, West Virginia
- Washington, District of Columbia
References
- ^ Vincent's firm profile
- ^ http://www.dinsmore.com/aboutus/uniGC.aspx?xpST=AboutUs
- ^ Dinsmore Opens Washington, D.C. Office
- ^ [1]
- ^ Killworth, Gottman merges with Cincy law firm
- ^ Woodward to become part of Dinsmore & Shohl law firm
- ^ [2]
- ^ [3]
- ^ [4]
- ^ [5]
- ^ "Organizational Profile of Dinsmore & Shohl". The National Law Review.