Here is something I just came across... a little fall out from the United Airlines bankruptcy..... <br><br>Given the fact that a good portion of these attorney fees will go so that Kirkland and Ellis can figure out the best way to cut pay under labor contracts, and in fact to force the busting of the
U.A. unions, one can only wonder at the way the bankruptcy system transfers money from workers, to among others, law firms. In fact, the amusing thing is that a detailed look at the fee petition will reveal how much time the law firm expended finding ways to takeback wages and benefits from workers... Jerry Monaco
<br><br><a href="http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2006/03/08/how-to-politely-ask-for-99-million-ask-kirkland-ellis/">http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2006/03/08/how-to-politely-ask-for-99-million-ask-kirkland-ellis/</a><br clear="all"><div class="post-date">
March 8, 2006, 3:35 pm</div>
<h2 class="post-title">
How To Politely Ask for $99 Million? Ask Kirkland & Ellis</h2>
<div class="post-info">
Posted by Peter Lattman
</div>
<div class="post-content">
                <p>On Monday Chicago law firm Kirkland
& Ellis filed its final fee application for its three years of
toiling away on the United Airlines bankruptcy matter. The final tally:
a discount-store worthy $99,807,894.10 in fees and expenses ($93.7
million in fees; $6.1 million in expenses). </p>
        <p>Click <a href="http://online.wsj.com/documents/WSJ_KE-FeeApplication.pdf" target="_blank">here</a> to peruse the 88-page fee application, which contains some interesting (and not-so interesting) details:</p>
        <ul><li>The Iron Horse Gold Medal: Partner David Seligman billed 10,231
hours on the matter, generating roughly $5.5 million in fees. By the
Law Blog's fuzzy math, that means Seligman worked roughly 9 hours per
day, 7 days per week for the duration of the three-year bankruptcy.</li><li>The
Iron Horse Silver Medal: Associate Jeffrey Gettleman billed 9,968 hours
on the matter, generating about $3.1 million in fees. </li><li>The Iron Horse Bronze Medal: Paralegal Gary Vogt billed over 6,300 hours on the matter, generating about $1.4 million in fees. </li><li>The Rob "Makin' Copies" Schneider Award: the entire team. K&E tallied over $3.6 million in copying expenses.
</li><li>The
I'm-a-Really-Really-Expensive-Lawyer Award: Lead partner Jamie
Sprayregen billed over 4,000 hours on the case, charging roughly $3.45
million, which works out to a handsome $780 per hour.</li></ul>
        <p>When we <a href="http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2006/01/23/the-ual-bankruptcy-bad-for-baggage-handlers-good-for-lawyers/" target="_blank">posted</a>
on the K&E's princely fees last month, we noted that a Chicago
Sun-Times article had quoted University of Chicago law professor
Douglas Baird defending the fees. While Baird conceded that it was
probably unfair "that Jamie Sprayregen gets paid $700 an hour, while
the poor flight attendants are really taking it on the chin, that's the
result of living in a market economy." </p>
</div><br>-- <br>Jerry Monaco's Philosophy, Politics, Culture Weblog is<br>Shandean Postscripts to Politics, Philosophy, and Culture<br><a href="http://monacojerry.livejournal.com/">http://monacojerry.livejournal.com/</a>
<br><br>His fiction, poetry, weblog is<br>Hopeful Monsters: Fiction, Poetry, Memories<br><a href="http://www.livejournal.com/users/jerrymonaco/">http://www.livejournal.com/users/jerrymonaco/</a> <br><br>Notes, Quotes, Images - From some of my reading and browsing
<br><a href="http://www.livejournal.com/community/jerry_quotes/">http://www.livejournal.com/community/jerry_quotes/</a>