Young Lawyers Are Hitting the Exits at Balch & Bingham as Scandal Continues to Engulf Law Firm That Now Seems to Offer Turmoil Instead of Prestige and Opportunity

Posted on the 02 November 2021 by Rogershuler @RogerShuler

Katlyn S. Caldwell and Addison Watson


What does it mean when new arrivals are bailing out at a once-prestigious law firm? It's likely not a good sign. Specifically, it probably means the newbies see the firm as headed in the wrong direction, one that means the firm might not serve as a solid long-term home for a young lawyer.

That is one of many issues swirling around Birmingham's scandal-plauged Balch & Bingham law firm, according to a report at banbalch.com. Writes Publisher K.B. Forbes:

In August, after only two years at Balch & Bingham, Addison Watson departed to the private sector.

This week, after four years as a Balch attorney, Katlyn S. Caldwell looks like she has left the embattled firm abruptly.

With an ex-Balch attorney who allegedly solicited a child for sex online and another ex-Balch partner sitting in the federal penitentiary, young attorneys at Balch are exiting just like the exodus of legacy and money-making partners in the recent past.

Balch, it appears, continues to have problems with its few attorneys of color:

As the alleged racist law firm saw an African-American attorney depart after only eight short months, the embattled firm has hired three African-American attorneys in recent weeks.

Demonstrating alleged racial tokenism, Balch has placed each of them in a different office (Birmingham, Jackson and Atlanta).

Even with these diverse hires, about 95 percent of Balch attorneys are white, while 99 percent of partners are white.

Only 1 percent of Balch partners are people of color.

It all presents an image of a law firm in disarray. Writes Forbes:

Young people running to the exits and not dedicating decades with the firm appears to show turmoil, unsettling turmoil in what was Alabama’s once most respected and feared silk-stocking law firms.

And no matter the amount of window dressing Balch engages in, who can believe a law firm that refuses to apologize for the criminal and alleged racist misconduct in North Birmingham?

And sadly, now not even the freshmen appear to have confidence in Balch.