Tuesday, August 8, 2023

With Balch's banking sector imploding under a wave of defections, a buyout by Bradley firm looms, marking a major alteration in Alabama's legal landscape

Burt Newsome and family

Balch & Bingham has been losing talent to the Bradley law firm, a Birmingham-based competitor. With all of the defections, Balch's banking practice appears to be imploding, and Bradley might attempt to buy out the decimated Balch firm, according to a report at the banbalch.com blog, which is led by K.B. Forbes, who is the blog publisher and CEO of its parent organization -- the CDLU public charity and advocacy group. Under the headline "Bradley Buyout of Balch? Balch’s Banking Practice Implodes," Forbes writes:

The hot 🔥 rumor on the street is that the ever growing Bradley law firm may buy out embattled law firm Balch & Bingham.

Bradley swallowed up the majority of Balch’s Houston team this summer, including the Managing Partner of the Houston office, and picked off 17-year legacy partner W. Brad Neighbors.

In a news article posted at the Birmingham Business Journal Website, Bradley welcomed Neighbors to the firm to “enhance our robust banking and financial services offerings to our clients.”

Robust indeed.

Neighbors hardly is alone in hitting the exits at Balch in recent years, Forbes writes:

The stunning move comes after 31-year Balch legacy partner Jesse S. Vogtle, Randolph H. Lanier, Eric T. Ray, and Paul H. Greenwood, all in the banking and financial-services practice, left Balch in 2020.

In 2021, another Balch legacy partner,Jennifer Powell Decker, dumped Balch after 15 years. She was involved in commercial lending and was one of the most senior female partners at Balch.

Over the past three years, Balch’s banking practice has imploded.

The irony is that Clark A. Cooper, a Balch partner who was the alleged mastermind of the Newsome Conspiracy Case, reportedly was trying to steal Burt Newsome’s banking and financial services practice in 2013.

Now a decade later Balch appears to be at the verge of collapse in the banking sector, imploding.

A Bradley buyout of Balch would be a blockbuster story in Alabama's legal-services industry -- and beyond. Meanwhile, Burt Newsome and his solo practice are rocking right along. Writes Forbes:

Cooper was fired in 2017 and is now selling mattresses. He even let his law license lapse.

His father was a founding member of Maynard Cooper, now called Maynard Nexsen. He is Chairman Emeritus.

Maynard Nexsen and Bradley have made millions over Balch’s failures and damaged reputation.

In the meantime, Burt Newsome, like Bradley, continues to stand strong, growing his business month to month, and on financially sound footing.

Who would have thunk? The irony.

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