O'Melveny's loss is Loeb's wealth management gain.Wealth managers Stu Tobisman and Leah Bishop, partners at the law firm of O'Melveny & Myers LLP LLP - Lower Layer Protocol for a combined 60 years, are leaving to head up the estate planning Estate Planning The overall planning of a person's wealth, including the preparation of a will and the planning of taxes after the individual's death. Notes: Contrary to popular belief, estate planning involves much more than preparing a will, and it is not only for the department at Loeb & Loeb LLP at the end of the month. "A number of our partners have known them for quite some time and they have an impeccable im·pec·ca·ble adj. 1. Having no flaws; perfect. See Synonyms at perfect. 2. Incapable of sin or wrongdoing. [Latin impecc reputation in the community," said John T. Frankenheimer, Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. chair of Loeb & Loeb. The parties were in talks for several months. The duo works for high net worth individuals-those with substantially more than $20 million in personal holdings--and closely held corporations Noun 1. closely held corporation - stock is publicly traded but most is held by a few shareholders who have no plans to sell corp, corporation - a business firm whose articles of incorporation have been approved in some state . Tobisman said the team had long talks with O'Melveny about ways to stay with the firm but ultimately it became clear to both sides that it wouldn't work. He describes the split as extremely amicable am·i·ca·ble adj. Characterized by or exhibiting friendliness or goodwill; friendly. [Middle English, from Late Latin am . We felt that to provide the continuity and consistency we need for our clients, we needed to be at a firm that had a significant commitment to the private client practice," Bishop said. "Although O'Melvney is a great firm, and I had significant misgivings about leaving, it's not a priority area for O'Melveny." The partners plan to move their entire team to Loeb & Loeb, including associates Linda N. Deitch, Laura B. Berger, Deborah J. Korney, Alyse N. Pelavin and Tarin Gary Bross along with four paralegals, an administrative assistant and up to six secretaries. The addition of Tobisman's and Bishop's team will bring to 22 the number of attorneys in Loeb & Loeb's tax and wealth services practice in Los Angeles, a 47 percent increase. The shift likely means the end of the estate planning practice at O'Melveny, which at 120 years old, is the city's oldest law firm and among its largest with more than 1,000 attorneys. Partner Dan Petrocelli has kept O'Melveny in the headlines recently, representing former Enron Enron A U.S. energy-trading and utilities company that housed one of the biggest accounting frauds in history. Enron's executives employed accounting practices that falsely inflated the company's revenues, which, at the height of the scandal, made the firm become the seventh executive Jeff Skilling in his trial for alleged fraud and insider trading. Loeb & Loeb is nearly as old as O'Melveny, but much smaller, with a total of about 200 attorneys. |
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