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Flow of Legal Talent Through a Pipeline from Balch & Bingham to Bradley Picks up Steam, as One Firm Flourishes While Another Wilts in the Summer Heat

Posted on the 04 August 2023 by Rogershuler @RogerShuler

Flow of legal talent through a pipeline from Balch & Bingham to Bradley picks up steam, as one firm flourishes while another wilts in the summer heat

Bradley law firm: A popular destination for former Balch & Bingham talent

Several top minority attorneys have left Birmingham's overwhelmingly White Balch & Bingham law firm, according to a report at the banbalch.com blog.

K.B. Forbes, blog publisher and CEO of its parent organization -- the CDLU public charity and advocacy group -- writes under the headline "Ugly Summer! Top Minorities Flee Balch & Bingham; Houston Office Crumbles; Legacy Partner Exits":

Embattled law firm Balch & Bingham’s managing partner Stan Blanton has been severely kicked in the gut.

Less than 18 months as a partner, Cyrus Chin, a person of color who was heavily promoted as the face of Balch’s diversity and inclusion efforts, has left Balch.

Also fleeing Balch is attorney Rodrigo Martinez Cabello, one of Balch’s few Hispanic attorneys.

Joining Chin and Martinez at the exits is Philip A. Dunlap, Balch’s Houston managing partner.

All three are based in Houston. All three jumped ship to the Birmingham-based Bradley this summer, an incredible blow as Balch’s Houston Office appears to have crumbled overnight.

Bradley promoted the trio in a news release:

“We are thrilled to be joining Bradley’s team and to be a part of the firm’s tremendous growth in Texas and nationally,” said Mr. Dunlap. “It is an exciting time to be at Bradley, particularly given its significant growth in Texas over the past few years. We look forward to the expanded opportunities that being at Bradley will present for us and our clients.”

With the arrival of Mr. Chin, Mr. Dunlap and Mr. Martinez, Bradley’s Houston office has added more than 15 attorneys in the past 12 months.

 The flow of talent from Balch to Bradley does not stop there, Forbes reports:

 W. Brad Neighbors, a 17-year legacy partner at Balch recently left the firm for Bradley as well.

Neighbors was a member of the Financial Services and Transactions section at Balch. His practice focused on representation of financial institutions ranging from community banks to large regional institutions. Neighbors regularly provided counsel on compliance with federal and state banking, and consumer finance statutes and regulations.

The Balch firm has seen a mass exodus of experienced and money-making partners in the past several years, and Neighbors is just another example.

The crew left behind appears to be a collection of “green behind the ears” attorneys who lack experience and quality of work product. As we reported in 2021, Balch has seen a decline of 27% of its local attorneys and has allegedly been plagued by inexperience.

As we foreshadowed, the death spiral caused by less revenue and more inexperience appears to help Balch & Bingham’s competitors, competitors like Bradley.


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