Renata B. Hesse, who was head of the Antitrust Division at the Justice Department, is joining Sullivan & Cromwell as a partner in its Washington office, the law firm announced on Monday.
The hiring of Ms. Hesse, 52, is unusual because premier firms like Sullivan & Cromwell rarely hire partners from outside. Typically, they engage newly graduated lawyers who are trained and promoted inside the firm rather than outside its confines.
The hiring comes as many major firms gear up for an increase in complex, cross-border mergers, which are a specialty of Sullivan & Cromwell. Such firms are seeking to become “one-stop shops” for every aspect of mergers in a wide range of industries, including health care, technology, energy, and banking and financial services.
“Renata brings to S.&C. deep and highly relevant government experience, further strengthening our world-class antitrust practice,” said Joseph C.Shenker, chairman of the firm, which has 875 lawyers in New York and elsewhere around the globe. Among its clients are Bayer of Germany in its planned $66 billion acquisition of the American agriculture behemoth Monsanto.
Ms. Hesse, considered a pre-eminent high-technology antitrust attorney, was acting assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division until January. She served twice in that position, and she also was deputy assistant attorney general of that division for four years. She was involved in the proposed Comcast and Time Warner Cable merger as well as the merger of US Airways and American Airlines. She also had oversight of the Antitrust Division’s criminal program.
Full Content: Wall Street Journal
Want more news? Subscribe to CPI’s free daily newsletter for more headlines and updates on antitrust developments around the world.
Featured News
Judge Appoints Law Firms to Lead Consumer Antitrust Litigation Against Apple
Dec 22, 2024 by
CPI
Epic Health Systems Seeks Dismissal of Antitrust Suit Filed by Particle Health
Dec 22, 2024 by
CPI
Qualcomm Secures Partial Victory in Licensing Dispute with Arm, Jury Splits on Key Issues
Dec 22, 2024 by
CPI
Google Proposes Revised Revenue-Sharing Limits Amid Antitrust Battle
Dec 22, 2024 by
CPI
Japan’s Antitrust Authority Expected to Sanction Google Over Monopoly Practices
Dec 22, 2024 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – CRESSE Insights
Dec 19, 2024 by
CPI
Effective Interoperability in Mobile Ecosystems: EU Competition Law Versus Regulation
Dec 19, 2024 by
Giuseppe Colangelo
The Use of Empirical Evidence in Antitrust: Trends, Challenges, and a Path Forward
Dec 19, 2024 by
Eliana Garces
Some Empirical Evidence on the Role of Presumptions and Evidentiary Standards on Antitrust (Under)Enforcement: Is the EC’s New Communication on Art.102 in the Right Direction?
Dec 19, 2024 by
Yannis Katsoulacos
The EC’s Draft Guidelines on the Application of Article 102 TFEU: An Economic Perspective
Dec 19, 2024 by
Benoit Durand