Polsinelli

Polsinelli is an AmLaw 100 firm with 900 attorneys in 21 offices nationwide.

Polsinelli
No. of offices21
No. of attorneys900
Major practice areasGeneral practice
Revenue$439 million (2016)
Date founded1972 (Kansas City, Missouri)
Company typeProfessional Corporation
SloganReal challenges. Real answers.
Websitewww.polsinelli.com

History

Polsinelli is an Am Law 100 firm with 900 attorneys in 21 offices nationwide. Recognized by legal research firm BTI Consulting as one of the top firms for excellent client service and client relationships, the firm’s attorneys provide value through practical legal counsel infused with business insight, and focus on health care, financial services, real estate, intellectual property, middle-market corporate, labor and employment and business litigation.

Polsinelli was founded in 1972 by Jim Polsinelli and two other young attorneys[1][2] in a small office to serve business and real estate clients in the historic Country Club District in Kansas City, Missouri.

Throughout the 1980s, Polsinelli represented small businesses and entrepreneurs.

In the mid-1980s, the firm expanded its trial practice by adding a national products liability practice.

In 2000, Polsinelli created a Science and Technology group with patent and business attorneys focused on the emerging biotech industry.

With its June 2004 merger with Suelthaus, PC, a 35-lawyer St. Louis-based entrepreneurial business law firm founded in 1929, the firm doubled the size of its St. Louis office. In July 2005, the firm opened offices in Washington, D.C. and New York.

In January 2006, Nasharr & Shea LLC, a small banking and real estate firm, merged into the firm, giving Polsinelli an office in Chicago.

On February 1, 2009, the 300 attorney Polsinelli firm merged with Shughart Thomson & Kilroy, P.C., a 180 lawyer Kansas City based, regional law firm with a national trial reputation and a business practice

July 1, 2011, Polsinelli expanded into California via its acquisition of the attorneys and staff of Quateman LLP, California’s largest women-owned bond counsel firm and a highly respected boutique transactional law firm founded in 1989 by Lisa Greer Quateman.

In March of 2016, Polsinelli welcomed 44 intellectual property attorneys led by Gregory Novak and Tracy Druce, with all joining from the national boutique firm Novak Druce + Quigg. This team created one of the largest IP practices in the nation and opened offices in Houston, Boston and Silicon Valley, bringing their well recognized high tech and post grant practices to Polsinelli, as well as deepening the existing IP litigation and transactional practices of the firm.

Since 2012, the firm has opened additional offices in San Francisco, Seattle and Miami.

Notable cases

  • Reichle v. Howards - Case decided by the Supreme Court 8-0 in 2012 in which Secret Service detail of Dick Cheney had not infringed on protestor's free speech rights when they arrested him.[3]
  • Coach America bankruptcy and restructuring.[4]

Headquarters

Polsinelli is headquartered in Plaza Vista on the Country Club Plaza. Prior to that, the firm has been headquartered in the Country Club Plaza in the Plaza Steppes building starting in 1991. Earlier it had been located in the Plaza Theatre building in the Plaza. Its attempts to move to a new headquarters in recent years has met with some controversy. In 2010 it proposed moving into a new 8-story glass tower at 47th and Broadway on the east side of the Plaza. That structure would have involved tearing down a vintage 1920s Plaza building in the Plaza's traditional low rise Spanish style and replacing it with a glass highrise. The plan was eventually withdrawn after considerable protests.[5]

In 2012, it announced plans to tear down the bankrupt and unfinished Moshe Safdie-designed West Edge building that had originally been built for Bob Bernstein on the west side of the Plaza and replace it with a 10-story structure designed by 360 Architecture called Plaza Vista. On February 12, 2013, a natural gas explosion in the gas line leading into JJ's Restaurant across the street from the project leveled the restaurant and heavily damaged the Plaza Vista's glass curtain wall. The Plaza Vista's roof also had to be replaced because of embers. Despite setbacks, contractors were able to finish the project and the firm was able to move into their new headquarters on November 1, 2013.[6][7][8]

Notable Attorneys

  • Q. Todd Dickinson, Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office
  • Alan Wheat, former Missouri Congressman
  • John Shadegg, former Arizona Congressman

References

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