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Marc Elliot Kasowitz (/ˈkæzəwɪts/; born June 28, 1952) is an American trial lawyer and partner of the New York–based law firm Kasowitz, which he co-founded in 1993. He has represented companies such as TPG, Douglas Elliman Realty, Teva Pharmaceuticals, Pilgrim's Pride, Fairfax Financial Holdings, Liggett, MBIA, Woodstock 50, and Hoechst Celanese.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7] He was a personal outside attorney for U.S. President Donald Trump.[8][9] On May 24, 2017, Kasowitz was retained to represent Trump personally in connection with investigations into the role of Trump's presidential campaign in Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections.[10][11] He later resigned on July 20, 2017.[12] Kasowitz also represents two Russian clients with close ties to Vladimir Putin.[13]

Key Information

Early life

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Kasowitz was born in New Haven, Connecticut, to Jewish parents, late Robert (1923–2015) and late Felice (née Molaver; 1930–2004) Kasowitz.[14] He has a fraternal twin brother, Stephen, and a younger sister, Susan.[15][16][17] His father ran a scrap metal business. Kasowitz's fraternal grandparents, Samuel and Rose Kasowitz, emigrated from Poland to Connecticut.[18]

Education

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He went to the Hopkins School in New Haven. He graduated from Yale University with a B.A. in American history[19] and from Cornell Law School with a J.D. in 1977.[20]

Career

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Kasowitz worked for the law firm Mayer Brown until 1993, when Kasowitz, 18 other lawyers, and two clients left Mayer Brown to establish the Kasowitz Benson Torres law firm.[10][21]

After the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, Kasowitz defended the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey in a lawsuit filed by victims of the attack. In 2005, the Port Authority was ruled to be negligent.[22] He has also defended Bill O'Reilly from allegations of sexual harassment,[23] who was ultimately forced out at Fox News in April 2017.[24]

Early wins for Kasowitz included obtaining a $300 million settlement on behalf of 3,500 Alabama residents who were allegedly poisoned by seepage from a Monsanto Company plant manufacturing PCBs.[5] On the defense side, Kasowitz has represented cigarette manufacturer Liggett Group for over 20 years, and in the late 1990s broke ranks with Big Tobacco in negotiated historic settlements of smoking and health litigation, which led to industry-wide settlements.[25][26]

Donald Trump

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According to a May 23, 2017, article in The Forward, Kasowitz, Benson, Torres, and Friedman has been a "go-to source" for Donald Trump for decades.[16] He has represented Donald Trump in his divorce proceedings, bankruptcy cases,[19] Trump University lawsuits,[27] during the 2016 presidential campaign regarding sexual misconduct allegations,[28] and during the Trump presidency in the investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections.[11][29][30][31][32]

In Spring 2017, Kasowitz told associates that he had been personally responsible for the abrupt dismissal of U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara on March 11, 2017, having previously warned Trump, "This guy is going to get you".[33]

Kasowitz departed Trump's White House legal team on July 20, 2017 (see below).[12]

Kasowitz represented Trump's former medical adviser Scott Atlas, and threatened to sue a number of Stanford University-affiliated doctors and researchers who signed a letter which criticized Atlas and raised questions about his qualifications.[34]

Russian clients

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According to U.S. court records, Kasowitz's clients include the Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, a close associate of Vladimir Putin and a business partner of Trump's former campaign manager Paul Manafort. Kasowitz also represents the Russian state-owned bank Sberbank,[13][35] a bank under sanctions by the EU[36] and the United States[37][38] after Russia's 2014 annexation of Ukraine's Crimea region.[39][40]

2017 threats against emailer

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In 2017, ProPublica reported that Kasowitz may be ineligible for a federal security clearance due to his alcohol abuse.[41] After reading the articles, a currently unidentified individual sent an email to Kasowitz urging him to "resign now." Kasowitz replied with a series of profanity-laced emails, some of which took a threatening tone, writing, "I'm on you now. You are fucking with me now Let's see who you are Watch your back, bitch," as well as "Call me. Don't be afraid, you piece of shit. Stand up. If you don't call, you're just afraid." And later: "I already know where you live, I'm on you. You might as well call me. You will see me. I promise. Bro."[42]

The emailer forwarded the emails to the Federal Bureau of Investigation to report the threats, and Kasowitz subsequently issued a statement saying "The person sending that email is entitled to his opinion, and I should not have responded in that inappropriate manner...This is one of those times where one wishes he could reverse the clock, but of course I can't."[43]

Personal life

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Kasowitz is married to Lori Kasowitz, whom he met while she was working as a manager at Mayer Brown.[15] In 2001, they created the Marc E. and Lori A. Kasowitz Scholarship at Cornell Law School. In 2007, they pledged an additional $250,000 to the law school's endowment.[44] He and his twin brother, Stephen established a scholarship at Hopkins School, which they attended growing up.[15]

In recent years, Marc and Lori Kasowitz have donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to Republican causes and to Donald Trump's presidential campaign. They have also donated to Democratic politicians in the past, including President Barack Obama, President Joe Biden, and Senators Chuck Schumer, and Harry Reid.[28]

References

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from Grokipedia
Marc Elliot Kasowitz (born June 28, 1952) is an American trial lawyer and the founding managing partner of Kasowitz LLP, a New York-based firm focused on complex commercial litigation that he established in 1993.[1][2] Educated at Yale University (BA) and Cornell Law School (JD, 1977), Kasowitz has built a reputation for handling high-stakes disputes in areas such as antitrust, securities, banking, product liability, and white-collar defense, often serving as national trial counsel.[3][4] Among his notable achievements are leading path-breaking tobacco litigation settlements and securing a $600 million recovery for clients in residential mortgage-backed securities put-back litigation against Credit Suisse after a decade-long battle, as well as representing clients like Teva Pharmaceuticals and Pilgrim's Pride in antitrust matters.[2][5][6] Kasowitz has received accolades including designation as one of Benchmark Litigation's top 100 U.S. trial lawyers, a National Law Journal Litigation Trailblazer, and Band 3 ranking by Chambers USA in general commercial litigation in New York.[2][4] In 2023–2025, he spearheaded civil rights lawsuits under Title VI against universities including Harvard, NYU, and Columbia, representing Jewish students who alleged institutional failures to curb antisemitic harassment and a hostile educational environment following the October 7, 2023, attacks by Hamas on Israel; these efforts yielded settlements with Harvard in January 2025 and NYU in July 2024, prompting policy changes to combat discrimination.[7][8][9] The firm rebranded as Kasowitz LLP in June 2025 amid partner departures, with Kasowitz expressing confidence in its ongoing strength as a litigation powerhouse.[10][11]

Early Life and Education

Upbringing and Formative Influences

Marc Kasowitz was born on June 28, 1952, in New Haven, Connecticut, to Jewish parents Robert Kasowitz (1923–2015) and Felice Kasowitz (née Molaver; 1930–2004).[12][13] He has a fraternal twin brother, Stephen.[12][13] Kasowitz grew up in a middle-class family in New Haven, where his father operated a scrap metal business, providing an environment rooted in entrepreneurial self-reliance amid post-World War II economic realities for many Jewish-American families.[1] This close-knit household dynamic emphasized practical problem-solving and family support, shaping Kasowitz's early outlook toward becoming a figure others could rely on for assistance, as he later described aspiring to be "someone to whom people would turn for help."[1][14] The cultural context of Jewish heritage in a modest industrial setting further reinforced resilience and a results-driven approach, evident in biographical accounts of his formative years fostering determination without inherited privilege.[14][1]

Academic Background and Early Professional Aspirations

Kasowitz earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in American History from Yale University in 1974, graduating cum laude. He then attended Cornell Law School, where he served as an editor of the Cornell Law Review and received his Juris Doctor in 1977.[2][3] The practical orientation of Cornell's legal training, including coursework and opportunities in trial simulation and advocacy, equipped Kasowitz with skills suited to real-world dispute resolution, distinguishing it from more theoretically focused programs. His academic record, marked by editorial responsibilities on a leading law review, demonstrated analytical rigor applied to case law and statutory interpretation relevant to commercial practice.[2][1] Upon obtaining his J.D., Kasowitz pursued admission to the New York Bar and entered private practice at Rosenman & Colin, a firm emphasizing complex commercial matters, before transitioning to Mayer Brown in 1988. This immediate shift to firm-based litigation, bypassing extended academic or governmental roles, underscored an early orientation toward empirical, outcome-driven representation in high-value disputes over doctrinal scholarship or public policy advocacy.[15][14]

Initial Positions and Development as a Litigator

After graduating from Cornell Law School with a J.D. in 1977, Marc Kasowitz joined the law firm Mayer Brown, where he began building his litigation practice.[1] He focused on complex commercial disputes, including product liability matters, starting with limited initial clientele but expanding significantly over time.[16] By the early 1990s, Kasowitz had developed a substantial portfolio of cases at the firm, leading teams on major product liability litigation that contributed to his growing expertise in high-stakes trials.[15] Kasowitz's tenure at Mayer Brown honed his approach to litigation, emphasizing aggressive advocacy and client-centric strategies in areas such as antitrust, securities, and banking disputes, where he served in roles involving national trial counsel responsibilities.[2] This period allowed him to accumulate experience managing multifaceted cases, including those with elements of mass torts, fostering a reputation for tenacity in courtroom battles.[17] His work laid the groundwork for handling disputes involving significant financial interests, preparing him for independent representation of sophisticated clients without reliance on larger firm structures. By the early 1990s, Kasowitz's track record at Mayer Brown had positioned him as a skilled New York litigator, evidenced by his ability to attract and retain business in competitive practice areas, culminating in his decision to depart in 1993 alongside colleagues to pursue greater autonomy in his practice.[15][14] This phase marked the solidification of his client-loyal style, prioritizing empirical case preparation and strategic aggression over institutional constraints.[18]

Establishment and Evolution of Kasowitz LLP

In 1993, Marc Kasowitz departed from Mayer Brown, taking 18 lawyers and select clients to co-found Kasowitz Benson Torres LLP with partners Dan Benson and Hector Torres, establishing a boutique firm dedicated to high-stakes commercial litigation with an emphasis on operational efficiency and results-oriented practice over bureaucratic overhead.[16][19] This entrepreneurial move reflected Kasowitz's business acumen in prioritizing lean structures and talent-driven execution, fostering a culture that minimized egos and personal agendas to enhance collaborative decision-making and client service.[20] The firm expanded rapidly from its New York origins, growing to approximately 250 lawyers across 10 U.S. offices, including locations in Atlanta, Los Angeles, and others, while maintaining a core focus on commercial litigation to deliver substantial verdicts and settlements as evidenced by consistent rankings in legal directories.[21][22] Strategic retention of top talent through merit-based incentives and a results-focused environment supported this scaling, positioning the firm as a national litigation powerhouse without diluting its foundational commitment to agile, client-centric operations.[16] In June 2025, following the departure of founding partner Dan Benson to launch his own venture, the firm rebranded as Kasowitz LLP effective June 25, streamlining its identity while Hector Torres remained as a key partner, signaling adaptive leadership and enduring confidence in its viability amid partner transitions.[10][23] This evolution aligned with broader industry trends toward simplified naming conventions and underscored the firm's resilience, with managing partner Kasowitz emphasizing sustained momentum in talent and practice strength.[24][25]

Core Practice Areas and Litigation Achievements

Kasowitz Benson Torres LLP, under Marc Kasowitz's founding leadership, maintains a core focus on commercial litigation, encompassing antitrust, securities, banking disputes, product liability, and mass tort cases.[26][22] The firm routinely serves as national trial counsel for Fortune 500 companies and investment firms in high-stakes adversarial proceedings, leveraging rigorous evidence-based strategies to achieve multimillion-dollar recoveries and defenses against unwarranted claims.[27][28] In antitrust matters, partners including Kasowitz have prosecuted Sherman Act violations and unfair competition claims, resulting in confidential settlements that vindicate client interests through targeted factual advocacy.[29] The firm's product liability and mass tort practice demonstrates expertise in defending industrial clients such as Southern Union and Celanese against large-scale environmental and tort claims, emphasizing causal analysis of liability to secure favorable resolutions.[30] In securities and banking litigation, Kasowitz Benson Torres has handled complex financial products disputes, including a decade-long residential mortgage-backed securities put-back action against Credit Suisse that yielded a $600 million recovery for defrauded bondholders.[5] Overall, the firm has secured billions in awards and settlements across commercial domains, underscoring efficient management of bet-the-company matters via first-trial preparation and opponent outmaneuvering.[28][31] External evaluations affirm this track record, with Chambers USA 2025 ranking Kasowitz as an elite general practice firm excelling in litigation breadth, including antitrust and commercial disputes.[32] Benchmark Litigation similarly recommends the firm as highly recommended in commercial litigation, antitrust, securities, and bankruptcy, reflecting client feedback on strategic effectiveness in protracted, evidence-driven contests.[33] The Legal 500 US endorses its capabilities in antitrust litigation and general commercial disputes, prioritizing outcomes grounded in verifiable merits over procedural delays.[34]

Long-Term Representation of Donald Trump

Marc Kasowitz and his firm, Kasowitz Benson Torres & Friedman LLP, began representing Donald Trump in the early 2000s, handling a range of business disputes, real estate litigation, and efforts to protect reputational interests amid claims challenging Trump's financial statements and operations.[35][36] This included restructuring more than $1 billion in debt associated with Trump's Atlantic City casino properties, which facilitated operational continuity without liquidation of core assets.[36] In real estate matters, the firm defended Trump in a 2005 dispute with Hong Kong-based partners over the $1.76 billion sale of the Riverside South development in Manhattan, where Trump alleged breaches of fiduciary duty in the transaction process and sought $500 million in damages; although courts rejected some claims, the litigation underscored defenses against partner actions that Trump viewed as undermining joint interests.[37][38] Kasowitz also represented Trump in the 2006 libel lawsuit against author Timothy L. O'Brien and publishers, stemming from O'Brien's book TrumpNation: The Art of Being The Donald, which estimated Trump's net worth at $150 million to $250 million; Trump sought $5 billion, arguing the figures falsely deflated his wealth and invited skepticism about his business acumen, but the case was dismissed in 2009 on grounds that the statements constituted non-actionable opinion under New Jersey law, with no findings of factual inaccuracy or malice.[39][40] The firm provided ongoing support in reputational defenses tied to net worth assertions, countering allegations that Trump's public financial claims constituted fraud by emphasizing verifiable asset values and market-based valuations over subjective critiques, often resolving without admissions of liability.[40] In 2016, Kasowitz handled the appeal of New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman's fraud action against Trump University, which alleged misleading marketing of real estate seminars; the Appellate Division reinstated the statutory fraud claim, but the matter settled for $25 million shortly after the presidential election, with Trump neither admitting wrongdoing nor paying personally, averting prolonged scrutiny over operational representations.[37][41] Additionally, Kasowitz successfully opposed media efforts to unseal records from Trump's 1990 divorce from Ivana Trump, arguing against "special circumstances" under New York law despite claims of public interest due to his candidacy; a state judge ruled in September 2016 that no compelling need outweighed privacy protections, maintaining the seal on financial and personal details.[42][43] These representations consistently prioritized empirical defenses of Trump's business practices and asset positions, yielding outcomes that avoided judicial validations of challenger narratives. In May 2017, following the dismissal of FBI Director James Comey on May 9 and the appointment of Robert Mueller as special counsel on May 17 to investigate Russian election interference, President Donald Trump retained Marc Kasowitz as his lead private attorney for personal representation in the matter.[44][45] Kasowitz, a civil litigator with over 15 years of prior service to Trump in business disputes, focused on coordinating responses to inquiries related to Comey interactions and broader FBI scrutiny, operating without government security clearance typical of external counsel.[46][47] Kasowitz's strategy emphasized minimizing Trump's direct exposure amid media leaks alleging obstruction—claims later unsubstantiated by Mueller's findings of insufficient evidence for conspiracy or coordination with Russia—while advising restraint on public statements about the probe.[48][49] He collaborated with emerging team members to deflect interview requests and manage document productions, prioritizing defense against what timelines revealed as inquiries originating from unverified opposition research rather than concrete evidence of wrongdoing by Trump.[50] The Mueller investigation, concluding in March 2019 without indictments against Trump for collusion or related core allegations, underscored the absence of prosecutable links, aligning with Kasowitz's efforts to contain a process later critiqued for its reliance on flawed predicates.[51] By July 20, 2017, amid team restructuring, Kasowitz transitioned to a diminished role, ceding lead coordination on Russia matters to John Dowd while retaining advisory input, reflecting the probe's expansion and internal adjustments to counter perceived overreach.[52][53] This shift allowed focus on Trump's personal defenses without full immersion in prolonged special counsel engagements, consistent with empirical outcomes showing no basis for charges on the investigation's primary Russian interference claims against the president.[51]

Representation of Diverse and International Clients

Kasowitz Benson Torres LLP has maintained a robust international practice, handling cross-border litigation for clients spanning multiple continents, including Europe, Asia, and the Americas, as part of standard engagements for New York-based firms involved in global commerce.[54] This includes representation in complex disputes arising from international trade, where such work is commonplace among litigators dealing with multinational transactions predating heightened geopolitical tensions.[47] Prior to 2016, the firm represented entities tied to Russian banking and industry sectors in routine civil matters, such as defending OJSC Sberbank—Russia's largest state-owned bank—in a 2016 New York lawsuit alleging fraud related to a granite-mining venture, with Kasowitz serving as lead counsel by March 2017.[55][47] Similarly, for several years leading up to 2017, the firm handled a civil lawsuit in New York for a company affiliated with Oleg Deripaska, a Russian industrialist with interests in energy and metals, involving standard commercial claims without any documented evidence of illicit activities or violations of U.S. law.[55][56] These engagements reflect typical defensive work in sanctions-adjacent commercial contexts, where firms advocate for clients' lawful interests amid regulatory frameworks, countering narratives in certain media outlets that frame such routine practices as inherently suspect absent proof of wrongdoing.[57] Beyond Russian clients, Kasowitz LLP's portfolio encompasses securities litigation for multinational corporations and financial institutions, defending against claims of misrepresentation and pursuing recovery in high-stakes disputes.[58] The firm also advises on antitrust matters, including cases involving alleged price-fixing, monopolization attempts, and conspiracies across industries, serving Fortune 500 companies and private equity firms in results-driven, jurisdiction-spanning representations that underscore a non-partisan focus on commercial outcomes rather than political alignment.[29][59]

Controversies and Criticisms

2017 Response to Critical Email

In July 2017, amid intense public scrutiny of President Trump's legal team during the Russia investigations, Marc Kasowitz received an unsolicited email from a retired public relations specialist in the western United States urging him to resign from representing Trump.[60] The email, sent on July 12 after the recipient heard a segment on MSNBC's The Rachel Maddow Show discussing Kasowitz's firm's clients linked to the probe, stated simply "Resign now" in the subject line and criticized Kasowitz's involvement.[60] [61] Kasowitz replied with a series of four profanity-laced emails over the next hour, identifying the sender through basic online searches and threatening personal repercussions, including: "Watch your back, bitch," "I'm on you," promises to "bury" the individual through investigation and litigation to "ruin" him financially, and a suggestion to "come see you" after locating his residence.[60] [62] These messages reflected Kasowitz's frustration, as his firm had been inundated with thousands of similar critical or harassing communications since Trump's election, contributing to a climate of heightened personal attacks on the president's associates.[63] The exchange, obtained and published by ProPublica on July 13, prompted widespread media coverage and calls for bar association scrutiny, with some outlets questioning whether the responses violated ethical rules against threats or harassment.[60] [64] Kasowitz issued a statement the same day acknowledging the replies as "inappropriate" and announcing his intent to apologize directly to the sender, whom he described as entitled to his opinion.[61] [65] Despite complaints filed with the New York State Bar, no formal disciplinary action resulted, as legal experts noted the emails, while aggressive, fell short of constituting actionable threats under professional conduct rules or criminal law, given the absence of specific intent to harm and protections for robust speech outside formal proceedings.[64] [66] Kasowitz's combative tone aligned with his reputation as a hard-nosed litigator, where such tenacity has yielded courtroom successes, though critics contended the personal response blurred professional boundaries and risked escalating anonymous criticism into perceived intimidation.[67] Supporters framed it as a defensible reaction to unfiltered vitriol in an era of doxxing and threats against Trump allies, emphasizing that no laws were broken and that bar inaction underscored the limits of regulating off-duty expression.[64] [67] The incident highlighted tensions between legal ethics and free speech amid polarized political discourse, without evidence of broader patterns of misconduct.[64]

Claims of Conflicts of Interest in High-Profile Matters

In 2017, media reports raised questions about potential conflicts of interest arising from Kasowitz Benson Torres LLP's representation of clients with ties to Russian entities while Marc Kasowitz personally handled President Donald Trump's legal matters related to the Russia investigations. The firm represented Sberbank, Russia's largest state-owned bank, in U.S. litigation, as well as Oleg Deripaska, a Russian oligarch with close ties to Vladimir Putin, who had prior business dealings with Trump associates.[55][57] Critics, including outlets such as The Washington Post and The Guardian, suggested these connections could imply divided loyalties amid the FBI's probe into Russian election interference, though legal experts noted that such client representations did not automatically constitute conflicts under professional ethics rules, as long as internal safeguards like information barriers were maintained.[68][57] Additional scrutiny focused on the firm's role in a 2015 real estate transaction where Kasowitz Benson Torres advised the sellers—Africa Israel USA and Five Mile Capital—on the $296 million sale of a Manhattan office building to Kushner Companies, owned by Jared Kushner, Trump's son-in-law and advisor.[68] This deal, predating Kasowitz's formal involvement in the Russia probe by two years, drew attention from left-leaning publications questioning whether it created indirect conflicts, particularly if the transaction involved Russian financing or came under review by Special Counsel Robert Mueller.[69] However, no evidence emerged of shared confidential information, ongoing firm involvement post-sale, or any influence on Trump's defense strategy, with ethics analyses emphasizing that completed transactions typically do not trigger ongoing representational conflicts absent specific adversity between clients.[57] Personal allegations against Kasowitz, including reports of intermittent alcohol abuse and a prior stint in rehabilitation, were cited by ProPublica in July 2017 as potential barriers to obtaining a security clearance, which could limit his access to classified materials in the Trump representation.[70] Kasowitz's firm denied these claims, asserting they were unsubstantiated and irrelevant to his professional conduct, while confirming he was not pursuing clearance as his role did not require it.[71] These reports, sourced from anonymous colleagues, did not result in ethics complaints tying them to client conflicts, and standard firm practices—such as segregating matters and adhering to New York Rules of Professional Conduct—were upheld without breach findings from bar authorities.[70][72] Despite complaints filed with the New York bar alleging improper advice to White House staff, no investigations substantiated divided loyalties or impacts on Mueller's inquiry outcomes, which concluded without charges against Trump related to these firm ties.[73] Defenders framed the firm's aggressive, multi-client approach as a constitutional right to zealous advocacy, common in large New York practices, contrasting with criticisms often amplified by outlets perceived as institutionally biased against Trump.[57] No sanctions, disbarments, or client withdrawals ensued from these claims, underscoring their lack of causal relevance to representational integrity or high-profile case results.[71]

Media and Political Scrutiny of Firm Practices

Media coverage of Kasowitz Benson Torres (now Kasowitz LLP) has often highlighted the firm's aggressive litigation tactics, portraying Marc Kasowitz as a "Pit Bull Loyal to The Boss" in Bloomberg reporting and "the Toughest of the Tough Guys" in CNBC analyses during his representation of Donald Trump.[74] [75] These depictions underscore a style emphasizing unrelenting advocacy, which Trump himself praised in 2004 as employing "phenomenal lawyers" capable of high-stakes confrontations.[36] However, such characterizations drew partisan amplification from mainstream outlets during the Trump administration, where scrutiny of firm practices intensified amid Russia-related probes, reflecting systemic left-leaning biases in media institutions that disproportionately targeted counsel aligned with conservative figures.[64] [60] Despite these attacks, the firm's win-at-all-costs approach demonstrated empirical effectiveness in post-2017 litigation, securing outcomes like a $2.25 million jury verdict plus $2.5 million in punitive damages for Douglas Elliman Real Estate in a 2020s real estate dispute and over $2 billion in settlements for the Federal Housing Finance Agency in mortgage-backed securities actions.[76] [77] This success persisted amid biased judicial and media environments favoring opposing narratives, where aggressive tactics countered selective enforcement and procedural hurdles, yielding acquittals and reduced penalties in cases like Southern Union's environmental prosecution, limited to a $500,000 fine against potential $67 million exposure.[78] Critics' emphasis on perceived abrasiveness, often from ideologically driven sources, overlooks these verdict-driven results, revealing selective outrage against firms excelling in adversarial contexts rather than substantive ethical lapses. In 2025, partner departures—including co-founder Dan Benson's exit to launch a new firm—prompted a rebranding to Kasowitz LLP on June 25, aligning with industry trends toward streamlined names seen in other BigLaw entities.[10] [24] Marc Kasowitz expressed confidence in the firm's trajectory, dismissing the changes as routine evolution rather than decline, supported by 2024 revenues of $246.5 million—a marginal increase from 2023—and the addition of a prominent IP litigation team led by Timothy Gilman.[11] [79] [80] Political and media narratives framing these shifts as instability fail to account for sustained financial metrics and recruitment, underscoring how scrutiny often prioritizes association over operational resilience.

Personal Life and Legacy

Family and Private Interests

Marc Kasowitz is married to Lori A. Kasowitz.[36] The couple has endowed scholarships at Cornell Law School since 2001, awarded based on financial need, character, and academic promise.[81] They have also supported prizes for outstanding students there and established a scholarship fund at Hopkins School alongside Kasowitz's fraternal twin brother, Stephen.[82][83] Kasowitz maintains a low-profile personal life in New York, with limited public details available on his children or residences beyond his professional base in the city.[3] He grew up in New Haven, Connecticut, in a family that included his twin brother Stephen and younger sister Susan, reflecting roots in a modest entrepreneurial background—his father operated a scrap-metal business.[3] Philanthropic efforts, such as donations to cultural institutions like the 92nd Street Y, underscore a pattern of targeted giving aligned with educational and community priorities, though Kasowitz avoids publicity in these endeavors.[84] No specific hobbies or recreational pursuits are publicly documented, consistent with his emphasis on professional discretion over personal exposure.

Ongoing Firm Leadership and Recent Developments

As of 2025, Marc Kasowitz continues to serve as the founding and managing partner of Kasowitz LLP, remaining actively involved in complex commercial litigation despite being in his early seventies.[2] [22] The firm, rebranded from Kasowitz Benson Torres LLP in June 2025, maintains its position as a top-tier New York-based practice, with Chambers USA ranking it among elite general practice firms for expertise in disputes including antitrust, securities, and intellectual property matters.[32] [10] In response to partner departures in mid-2025, including co-founder Dan Benson's exit to launch Herschmann Benson Bowen, Kasowitz described the moves as non-disruptive, emphasizing the firm's deep bench of trial-tested younger partners and recent "huge financial wins" for clients in high-stakes cases.[79] [25] The rebranding to Kasowitz LLP aligned with industry trends toward streamlined naming, allowing focus on core litigation strengths without altering operational continuity or client retention.[23] This period also saw strategic growth, such as the July 2025 hire of a four-partner IP litigation team from Schulte Roth & Zabel, bolstering capabilities in patent and technology disputes.[85] Kasowitz's leadership has solidified the firm's reputation for results-driven advocacy, with Law360 profiling him as one of the nation's most innovative managing partners for pioneering efficient trial strategies that prioritize empirical outcomes over protracted processes.[86] This model, evidenced by sustained rankings and client victories, underscores market validation amid competitive pressures, contrasting with narratives of decline by demonstrating adaptability through talent retention and targeted expansions.[87]

References

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