Contact:
Lorri Montgomery
Communications Manager
The National Center for State Courts
757.259.1525 or lmontgomery@ncsc.dni.us
Theodore
Mirvis Joins Lawyers Committee
of National Court Reform Organization
Williamsburg, VA
(March 18, 2004) – Theodore Mirvis, partner with Wachtell, Lipton,
Rosen & Katz, has joined the National Center for State Courts’
Lawyers Committee, which involves prominent practicing attorneys in the
National Center’s work and programs. Committee members serve in a
leadership role with a commitment to support the National Center’s
mission to actively participate in outreach to the bench, bar and the
legal community, and to encourage support for the National Center’s
programs and initiatives. Inaugural meetings were held recently in
Washington, D.C. and in San Francisco in conjunction with the midyear
meeting of the Conference of Chief Justices.
Mirvis, serving in
Wachtell’s Litigation Department, specializes in corporate governance,
mergers and acquisitions, securities, and stockholders rights litigation
and is considered an expert on corporate defense. Mirvis graduated magna
cum laude from Harvard Law School. He is currently a member of the
American Law Institute and of the Planning Committee of the Tulane
Corporate Law Institute.
The
National Center for State Courts, headquartered in Williamsburg, Va., is
a non-profit court reform organization dedicated to improving the
administration of justice by providing leadership and service to the
state courts. The National Center, founded in 1971 by the Conference of
Chief Justices and former Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, provides
education, training, and technology, management, and research services
to the nation’s state courts. The National Center also is taking the
lead on several key issues facing the justice system. For example, it
has established a major civil justice initiative, a multi-year project
that is examining best practices in civil case management and how
complex litigation procedures can be improved. Other national
initiatives being driven by the National Center include judicial
selection reform and increasing citizen participation in jury service.
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