New Hires and Recognition in the Treasure Valley

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(From the Idaho Business Review)

Hawley Troxell Hires Attorney Bret Busacker

Bret Busacker

Bret Busacker

Bret Busacker has joined Hawley Troxell as Of Counsel. Busacker is a tax lawyer specializing in employee benefits, ERISA, executive compensation and related tax areas.

He joins the law firm’s Tax Practice Group.

He is a former partner at Thompson, Hine, LLP in Cincinnati, Ohio, where he designed, drafted and amended benefit plans and executive arrangements; advised plan sponsors and plan service providers; counseled benefit plan fiduciaries on tax and ERISA compliance requirements; advised on compensation and benefits aspects of mergers, acquisitions, and bankruptcies; counseled publicly-traded employers and nonprofit/charitable organizations.


Kluksdal Honored for Service to Bar, Foundation

Paula Kluksdal
Paula Kluksdal

The board of commissioners of the Idaho State Bar will honor Hawley Troxell partner Paula Landholm Kluksdal with a special service award on July 14 during the Idaho State Bar’s Annual Meeting in Sun Valley.

The award recognizes Kluksdal’s contributions to the improvement of the legal profession, particularly to the Fourth District Bar Association and the Partners Against Domestic Violence Project.

Kluksdal focuses her practice in the areas of real estate and finance. She represents a wide variety of lenders and borrowers in the documentation and due diligence necessary for securitized lending, compliance with Idaho’s commercial lending regulations, loan documentation, and collection.

In addition to extensive experience in the negotiation and drafting of legal opinions on commercial lending laws, she actively represents various municipalities and 501c(3) borrowers in negotiation, documentation and compliance in connection with public finance transactions.

The Latest Tip From Merilee Marsh

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MEDIA RESOURCE LIST: MILLER JOHNSON


Miller Johnson, a Michigan law firm with more than 90 attorneys in Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo, lists 68 issues/topics on its media resource list. The attorneys who handle the respective issue/topic are listed under each category. Along with obvious resource areas there are also specialized mentions (Church Law, Embezzlement, Life Sciences—Development, Office Furniture Industry, Vacation Home Planning).

The firm’s tag line is Down to earth. Down to business. An example of the tag line in action is the media resource list, which makes it easy for journalists to find Miller Johnson resources available through individual topics and attorneys.

How does your firm get down to business?

Legal Hiring Picks Up

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(By Tom Huddleston Jr. of Am Law Daily)

Earlier this month we reported that legal employment finally took a turn for the better in April. Will the news again be good when the May jobs numbers come out next week? Based on various reports in the past week that point to greater opportunities for lawyers, we’d argue that the upward trend might continue.

Am Law Daily sibling publication The National Law Journal reported on Tuesday that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has multiple attorney openings, and has turned to a headhunter, Futurestep, to help fill the jobs. The NLJ notes that turning to outside help to manage the hiring process is less common for federal agencies than for private law firms. But given the number of openings, the job of filling them is a big one.

Overall, the SEC will soon be hiring anywhere from entry-level attorney advisers to division chief counsel positions. The agency has seen an increase in work since the Dodd-Frank Act went into effect last July, and is looking to put to use a $70 million funding injection earmarked for new talent that must be used before the end of the fiscal year, according to the NLJ.

Meanwhile, the Dallas Business Journal reported on Friday that many Texas firms are looking to expand their ranks by adding new partners, associates, summer interns, and support staff.

Among those firms is Hunton & Williams. The firm’s administrative partner in Dallas, Curtis Carlson, told the DBJ that Hunton plans to add as many as 30 lawyers in Dallas over the next two years, which would bring the total attorney headcount in the office closer to pre-recession levels. (According to the latest NLJ 250 ranking of the largest law firms by headcount, Hunton’s Dallas office has 95 attorneys–it’s the firm’s third-largest office.)

Legal hiring boosts also can be found north of the U.S. border, as Canadian publication The Lawyers Weekly reports. The improved employment numbers for the legal profession in the U.S. should carry over to Canada, the report notes. Lawyers Weekly spoke to Warren Bongard, of ZSA Legal Recruitment in Toronto, who said that the last six months in particular have seen a flurry of hiring activity. John Ohnjec, of Robert Half Legal, told the publication that the field is finally seeing growth after two or three tight years.

According to Lawyers Weekly, hiring statistics in Canada are difficult to track down, so U.S. numbers help drive speculation. The publication cites a recent Robert Half Legal Hiring Index as being among the reasons for U.S. and Canadian lawyers alike to be optimistic. The index predicts that U.S. legal hiring will remain strong in this year’s second quarter as 29 percent of lawyers interviewed said they would add staff in the next three months and none planned job cuts.

Supreme Court Throws Out Suit Against Bush Administration

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(From George Prentice of Boise Weekly)

The Supreme Court has dismissed a lawsuit brought by a former University of Idaho student who was held in jail for 16 days by the federal government as a so-called “material witness” in a terror investigation.

Lavoni Kidd was a football player for the U of I when he converted to Islam, changing his name to Abdullah al-Kidd. He began volunteering at an Islamic charity led by a person being investigated for possible terrorism ties. In 2003, al-Kidd was pulled from a plane headed for Saudi Arabia and held in prisons in Virginia, Oklahoma and Idaho. He was released after surrendering his passport and agreeing to restricted travel conditions.

In a lawsuit, al-Kidd held Bush administration officials personally liable for what he called wrongful arrest and detention. Represented by the American Civil Liberties Union, his lawyers said the government had “warped the law” to allow open-ended arrests and confinement.

But in a unanimous vote, the Supreme Court said al-Kidd could not hold Bush officials, and in particular former Attorney General John Ashcroft, liable.

In the opinion, Justice Antonin Saclia wrote, “The constitutional question in this case falls far short of that threshold.”

al-Kidd currently teaches English to college students in Saudi Arabia. He still has claims pending against the FBI.