<![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, wilson sonsini]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, wilson sonsini]]> http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/wilsonsonsini http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/wilsonsonsini <![CDATA[Lawyers nix champagne amid popped bubble]]> It may be time to put a cork in Silicon Valley's most famous law firm. Wilson Sonsini is no longer celebrating its new attorneys with champagne. That trimmed perk is just the beginning of its woes.

Above the Law notes that Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati has skipped the annual tradition of awarding associates who passed the bar exam a bottle of champagne. At $40 a bottle for 53 associates, $2,120 is hardly a big expense. But it is a powerful symbolic move: The bubbly times are gone for good.

Wilson Sonsini is no mere bill-by-the-hour outfit; the firm and its founders have been key players in establishing Silicon Valley's equity culture, where employees are motivated by stock options that pay off when a company goes public or gets sold. And who handled many of those IPOs and M&A deals? Wilson Sonsini, of course. Larry Sonsini, the firm's best-known founder, has been a consigliere to Apple CEO Steve Jobs and Google CEO Eric Schmidt, among others.

This decade has not been good for Wilson Sonsini. The firm has found itself dragged into every major scandal that drew national attention to the clubby world of the Valley, from HP's illegal pretexting of reporters' phone records to the backdating of stock options in many tech firms. Wilson Sonsini paid $9.5 million to one tech company to avoid involvement in litigation — but there are other backdating lawsuits out there. Observers of the legal profession are waiting to see if one ends up dragging the Valley's most arrogant lawyers into court.

Even if Wilson Sonsini escapes legal trouble, it can't dodge the recession. A cold IPO market has already hobbled its business; with public offerings completely frozen, and acquisitions happening for a fraction of the price they commanded even a few years ago, it's hard to see how the firm will make the kind of money it did in the '90s.

Wilson Sonsini helped build the Valley's sense of itself as a world apart — and its own firm as an even more rarefied sphere within that bubble. No wonder they and their clients ended up testing the law's gray areas in the pursuit of . That's why trimming this year's champagne budget isn't a mere cutting of perks: It's a sign that a gang of lawyers who saw themselves as above the rest have floated down to earth. The descent is only beginning.

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<![CDATA[Wilson Sonsini lawyer erases fraud-ridden Entellium from client list]]> If your company ever gets into serious trouble, wouldn't you like to know your lawyer's standing behind you publicly? Better hope you're not represented by Wilson Sonsini, then. After Seattle software startup Entellium saw its CEO and CFO charged with wire fraud and cooking the company's books, Entellium disappeared from Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati partner Craig Sherman's list of clients. Google's cache shows Entellium was on the list as recently as last Friday. Sherman still represents Ignition Partners, a prominent VC firm which claims Entellium's top execs defrauded it. We'll give Sherman and Wilson Sonsini credit for good financial judgment: Ignition still has money, while authorities are investigating what happened to the $50 million Entellium raised from Ignition and others

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<![CDATA[Wilson Sonsini diversifies into Marissa Mayer's favorite pastry]]> When a history of the decline and fall of Wilson Sonsini, Silicon Valley's preeminent law firm, is written, this will surely deserve a paragraph: The lawyers there are now defending cupcakes. Sprinkles Cupcakes, the Los Angeles bakery made notable by HBO's Entourage, is seeking to defend its trademarked dot patterns against imitators; the concentric circles denote flavors. (Shown here: a red velvet cupcake.) It is, I suppose, a question of intellectual property. And a client is a client. But taking on this case just illustrates how far Wilson Sonsini has fallen since the '90s, when IPO fees fattened its partners' wallets, and before it got wrapped up in stock-options scandals. The silver icing: This may lead to work representing Google executive Marissa Mayer, should an interloper ever trespass on the ideas contained in her spreadsheet of cupcake recipes.

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<![CDATA[Wilson Sonsini lawyers' bonuses slashed by half]]> Wilson Sonsini, the giant law firm which grew fat in the '90s tech boom, has struggled ever since. Its involvement with many companies implicated in stock-options backdating scandals has tarnished its image, even as the faltering market for tech IPOs shrank a once-lucrative business for the firm. So who's paying the price? Wilson Sonsini associates. Above The Law reports that the firm has instituted a new bonus plan. Bonuses awarded for hours billed, the traditional measure, have been cut by half; the rest of the "bonus opportunity," as Wilson Sonsini management puts it, will come from "qualitative performance factors." By "qualitative performance factors," read "subjective judgments one's boss can make at a whim." The Valley has yet to go through an economic downturn, but some of its lawyers are already feeling the pinch.

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<![CDATA[Does your VC have a Democrat in his pocket?]]> BarackandHillary.jpgSenator Clinton polls higher than Senator Obama in Santa Clara County, 43 percent to 27 percent, a Clinton campaign staffer told the Wall Street Journal. But we know what really counts in Silicon Valley: money. And when it comes to raising cash, Barack Obama's winning over the tech crowd. He raised about $500,000 just last weekend at a breakfast in Atherton. Wondering who was there? Here's a list of known Silicon Valley supporters for each candidate.

Not many in the Silicon Valley money crowd support Hillary Clinton. The notable exception is John Doerr, who now counts former VP Al Gore as a colleague at Kleiner Perkins.

The list is lengthier for Barack Obama.

  • David Anderson, managing director, Sutter Hill Ventures
  • John Thompson, Symantec CEO
  • Gordon Eubanks, former Symantec CEO
  • Yahoo exec Brad Garlinghouse
  • Former California gubernatorial candidate, current Steve Jurvetson pal and Tesla Motors board member Steve Westly
  • John Roos, CEO of law firm Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati
  • Google execs David Drummond and Marissa Mayer
  • Google.org director Larry Brilliant
  • YouTube founder Chad Hurley
  • VC Doug Hickey of Hummer Winblad Venture Partners
  • VC Stewart Alsop of Alsop Louie
  • Electronic Arts CEO John Riccitielo
  • Sequoia Capital venture capitalist Michael Moritz
  • Craiglist founder Craig Newmark
  • Netscape and Ning founder Marc Andreessen (who also supports Mitt Romney)

(Photo by azrainman)

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