Senior practitioners who carry substantial first-chair responsibility across the chambers’ fourteen disciplines.
Financial-crime programmes that withstand the long examination, not just the first one.
The trustee-room questions that modern universities increasingly bring to outside counsel.
Compliance work that anticipates the examination two cycles ahead, not one.
American, British, and European enforcement co-ordinated under a single set of instructions.
Financial-crime defence where every transaction is, by design, cross-border.
Forensic work that produces a single output, presentable to every regulator at once.
Defence where digital risk and criminal exposure cannot be argued in separate breaths.
Defence for institutions and individuals under sustained, multi-forum enforcement scrutiny.
Senior defence at the moment the matter is opened, when the first week shapes the next eighteen months.
Cross-border tax architecture for the structures that span three continents and several decades.