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Servants of the Damned

Giant Law Firms, Donald Trump, and the Corruption of Justice

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

National Bestseller

"A powerful and important picture of how mega law firms distort justice."David Cay Johnston, Washington Post

The NYT's Business Investigations Editor reveals the dark side of American law: Delivering a "devastating" (Carol Leonnig) exposé of the astonishing yet shadowy power wielded by the world's largest law firms, David Enrich traces how one firm shielded opioid makers, gun companies, big tobacco, Russian oligarchs, Fox News, the Catholic Church, and much of the Fortune 500; helped Donald Trump get elected, govern, and evade investigation; masterminded the conservative remaking of the courts . . . and make a killing along the way.

In his acclaimed #1 bestseller Dark Towers, David Enrich presented the never-before-told saga of how Deutsche Bank became the global face of financial recklessness and criminality. Now Enrich turns his eye towards the world of "Big Law" and the nearly unchecked influence these firms wield to shield the wealthy and powerful—and bury their secrets. To tell this story, Enrich focuses on Jones Day, one of the world's largest law firms. Jones Day's narrative arc—founded in Cleveland in 1893, it became the first law firm to expand nationally and is now a global juggernaut with deep ties to corporate interests and conservative politics—is a powerful encapsulation of the changes that have swept the legal industry in recent decades.

Since 2016, Jones Day has been in the spotlight for representing Donald Trump and his campaigns (and now his PACs)—and for the fleet of Jones Day attorneys who joined his administration, including White House Counsel Don McGahn. Jones Day helped Trump fend off the Mueller investigation and challenged Obamacare. Its once and future lawyers defended Trump's Muslim ban and border policies and handled his judicial nominations. Jones Day even laid some of the legal groundwork for Trump to challenge the legitimacy of the 2020 election.

But the Trump work is but one chapter in the firm's checkered history. Jones Day, like many of its peers, have become highly effective enablers of the business world's worst misbehavior. The firm has for decades represented Big Tobacco in its fight to avoid liability for its products. Jones Day worked tirelessly for the Catholic Church as it tried to minimize its sexual-abuse scandals. And for Purdue Pharma, the maker of OxyContin, as it sought to protect its right to make and market its dangerously addictive drug. And for Fox News as it waged war against employees who were the victims of sexual harassment and retaliation. And for Russian oligarchs as their companies sought to expand internationally.

In this gripping and revealing new work of narrative nonfiction, Enrich makes the compelling central argument that law firms like Jones Day play a crucial yet largely hidden role in enabling and protecting powerful bad actors in our society, housing their darkest secrets, and earning billions in revenue for themselves.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 8, 2022
      The legal industry has sold its soul to deep-pocketed corporations and polarizing politicians, according to this impassioned indictment of international law firm Jones Day and its peers. New York Times reporter Enrich (Dark Towers) deplores Jones Day’s role in defeating lawsuits against tobacco company R.J. Reynolds and defending Abbott Laboratories from a claim that bacterial contamination in its Similac infant formula caused meningitis and brain damage in a newborn. He also rehashes the firm’s entanglement with Donald Trump: Jones Day alumnus Don McGahn became Trump’s White House counsel, vetting all judicial appointments; other alumni in the Justice Department tried to quash federal investigations into the opioid-selling practices of Jones Day client Walmart; and the firm represented Trump in lawsuits to overturn the 2020 election results in Pennsylvania. Enrich’s history of Jones Day probes the corrosion of ethics after the advent of law firm ads in the 1970s touched off a spiral of money-grubbing, and sketches engrossing vignettes of the predatory culture that resulted. Enrich’s condemnations of corporations and their lawyers aren’t always ironclad—he brushes aside testing results that found no contamination in Abbott’s formula—but he delivers a vivid, crackling account of the law at its most bullying. Readers will be outraged. Agent: Dan Mandel, Sanford J. Greenburger Assoc.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from August 1, 2022
      Why isn't Donald Trump in prison? Perhaps because he has one of the country's foremost law firms at his back. Longtime Trump-watcher Enrich, the New York Times business investigations editor and author of Dark Towers: Deutsche Bank, Donald Trump, and an Epic Trail of Destruction, moves from finance to law in this account of Jones Day, a legal firm that expanded in D.C. over the last few decades in order to weave itself into "the fabric of the capital's conservative firmament." Founded in the 1890s in Cleveland, the company had always been conservative. However, under the guidance of principal Steve Brogan, it has turned increasingly hard right, "a champion of right-wing politics, organizing legal challenges to Obama's health care program, white-collar prosecutions, government regulations, and voting rights laws." Much of this turn involved Don McGahn, who was Trump's in-house counsel for a couple of years until falling out over the Mueller Report. McGahn and his mentor, Ben Ginsberg, had not expected Trump to win, and they believed that Trump would convert his campaign into "an influence-buying PAC" that Jones Day would manage. "More than five years later," when Trump lost decisively in the 2020 election, "the PACs were all that was left, and Jones Day was their law firm," still exercising tremendous influence over Republican politics. The firm bought into Trump's claims of electoral fraud, though not without some internal dissent. As the author shows, Jones Day--which had previously represented massive pharmaceutical and tobacco companies and the sex scandal-ridden Catholic Church--was vigorous in "trying to stop votes from being counted--not because they thought there was something improper underway (there was zero evidence of that), but because they detected an opportunity to use the law to give their side a political edge." There are plenty of other shameful episodes, and Enrich is unblinking in reporting them, yielding a fast-moving, damning book. Essential reading for students of the Trump corruption machine.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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