Friday, January 22, 2010

"You Made A Fool Out of Him!"

"In the fall of 1984, while enrolled in the LL.M. program at American University, I took a course in international trade taught by Mr. Patrick Macrory, at that time a partner with Arnold and Porter, and Ms. Jeannie Anderson, an attorney employed by the U.S. Department of Commerce. In about November 1984 students gave oral presentations on a previously-assigned international trade problem. I had solved the problem in a somewhat unusual manner, relying on an obscure, though arguably applicable, statute. It was my perception that Mr. Macrory was perturbed by my presentation. After the presentation I asked a fellow student what she thought of my presentation and of Mr. Macrory's reaction. The fellow student, also in the LL.M. program, was a practicing attorney in the international trade field. (I do not recall her name; she had a streak of white hair above her forehead.) The student (attorney) said, "You didn't do anything wrong. It was him [Mr. Macrory]. He didn't know what you were talking about. You made a fxxx out of him." Mr. Patrick Macrory is a nationally recognized and highly respected practitioner in the international trade field, and is currently a partner at Akin Gump."

The above statement is page 72 of my document submission to the U.S. Social Security Administration, June 1993 (Paul Yessler, M.D.). I submitted this statement to Social Security to establish that I was unemployable. Yes, I guess I am unemployable because I have a longstanding habit of embarrassing Akin Gump attorneys!

4 comments:

My Daily Struggles said...

Patrick F.J. Macrory, Esq. joined Akin Gump in the summer of 1990, while I worked at the firm. Bob Strauss used to be U.S. Trade Representative in the Carter Administration.

My Daily Struggles said...

WEIL, GOTSHAL & MANGES LLP

Jean Anderson
Litigation Partner
International Trade

Washington DC

Tel: +1 202 682 7217
Fax: +1 202 857 0940
E-mail: jean.anderson@weil.com

Jean Anderson, a senior partner in the firm’s Washington DC-based International Trade group, is an international trade strategist and litigator for companies and governments around the world. Together with a team of highly experienced attorneys specializing in trade in goods and services, investment, and public policy, she provides strategic and substantive advice in international trade negotiations, litigates antidumping and subsidies cases, and advises and represents clients in WTO and other trade agreement disputes, on trade legislation, and on market access, economic sanctions, export controls, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and other trade and regulatory issues in the US and abroad. Her focus is on helping clients create the international business and trade policy environment in which they will operate most successfully.

Ms. Anderson is counsel to the Government of Canada and lead respondents’ counsel in the largest countervailing duty and antidumping cases in history, on softwood lumber. She and her colleagues have litigated antidumping, countervailing duty, safeguard, section 301, and section 337 intellectual property cases involving steel, semiconductors, telecommunications equipment, consumer electronics, film, chemicals, industrial equipment, metals, and food and agricultural products.

Ms. Anderson and the firm’s International Trade group have counseled Canada, Chile, Ecuador and a number of companies on WTO disputes involving softwood lumber, aircraft trade, liquor taxes, bananas, autos and telecoms services. They have successfully represented companies in Europe, Asia, Latin America, Canada, and the US, a variety of banks and other financial institutions, and agricultural producers, exporters, and associations on matters ranging from trade remedy proceedings to international negotiations and market access. They have been principal legal advisors to the Government of Canada on NAFTA and the negotiation and implementation of the WTO agreements; the Government of Chile on NAFTA accession, the Chile-Canada FTA, and the Chile-US FTA; El Salvador and Australia on FTA negotiations with the US and several governments on Helms-Burton and other economic sanctions, bilateral trade agreements, and a variety of other trade policy issues. Working with Weil Gotshal’s offices around the world, they have worked effectively for clients on trade issues vis-à-vis the US, EU, and other governments. They have appeared frequently before WTO and NAFTA panels and in US courts.

Before joining Weil Gotshal in 1989, Ms. Anderson was chief counsel for International Trade at the US Department of Commerce. In that position, she was a principal negotiator of the US-Canada FTA and a primary architect of the Chapter 19 dispute settlement system. Heading an office of some 50 attorneys, her responsibilities included trade policy formulation, subsidies/antidumping and other trade remedy actions, GATT/WTO and bilateral trade negotiations, international intellectual property and competition law issues, investment, economic sanctions and export controls, and trade legislation. In prior government and private positions, Ms. Anderson was a chief US negotiator on steel trade and an international business consultant on Asia.

Ms. Anderson has been a member of the Council of the International Law Section of the American Bar Association, has chaired the Section’s International Trade and Canada Committees, and has chaired or been a member of task forces on trade and competition law, NAFTA, and the EU. A frequent lecturer, she has taught international trade law at Georgetown University Law Center, and served on the Board of the Canadian American Business Council.

My Daily Struggles said...

Page 72 of the U.S. Social Security Document Submission is at the following site:

http://dailstrug.blogspot.com/2010/03/social-security-document-submission_09.html

My Daily Struggles said...

http://dailstrug.blogspot.com/2011/11/american-university-law-school-mystery.html