 | Seth P. Waxman WilmerHale 2400 N Street, N.W. Washington, DC 20037 202-663-6800 (direct) 202-663-6000 (firm) 202-663-6363 (fax) Contact this attorney | |
EDITORIAL REVIEW
Acclaimed as the nation’s top Supreme Court advocate, this former
Solicitor General almost wins ‘em all, taking Boumediene v. Bush>/i>,
though coming up short on FDA preemption in Wyeth v. Levine.
—2008 Lawdragon 500 Leading Lawyers in America
President Clinton’s solicitor general keeps an unparalleled Supreme Court caseload, which includes his representation of the Guantanamo detainees in Boumediene v. Bush.
— Lawdragon,
January 2008
Waxman wins: no death penalty for juvenile defendants
and Canada’s reimbursement for billions in softwood
import taxes.
— Lawdragon,
October 2006
Considered by colleagues to be in a class all his own, litigator Seth Waxman is "extraordinarily accomplished; he deserves to be thought of at the very apex of the profession." A former solicitor general, Waxman has delivered more than 45 oral arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court. He successfully represented Sens. John McCain and Russell Feingold in defending the constitutionality of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, including an historic four-hour argument in a special Supreme Court session. In 2005, Waxman won a landmark ruling in Roper v. Simmons, in which the Supreme Court declared unconstitutional the death penalty for juvenile offenders.
— Lawdragon,
October 2005
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Universally considered to be among the country's premier Supreme Court and appellate advocates, Seth Waxman served as
Solicitor General of the United States from 1997 through January 2001. In addition to leading the firm's appellate practice,
Mr. Waxman engages in a broad litigation and counseling practice, with particular emphasis on complex challenges involving
governments or public policy issues. A Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers, he also is a widely respected
business trial litigator—one of only three litigators in Washington, DC, accorded both "star" rating by Chambers USA and
"leading lawyer" ranking in PLC's Global Counsel Handbook. He also has been ranked among Washingtonian magazine's "Top 30
Lawyers" and listed for "Bet-the-Company-Litigation" (among other categories) in The Best Lawyers in America.
Practice
Mr. Waxman's practice spans both federal and state trial and appellate courts. He has delivered over 45 oral arguments in
the United States Supreme Court—16 in the past four Terms—making him, as The American Lawyer recently reported, "the
dominant force in the Supreme Court bar, without question." Mr. Waxman's clients range from financial institutions to
consumer, industrial and media companies. He also represents a number of local, state and national governments. The
recipient of numerous professional awards and honors, Mr. Waxman is among only a handful of practicing attorneys ever
elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He also holds the Jefferson Medal in Law, an honor awarded once a year
and only rarely to an attorney in private practice. In recognition of his exceptional service to law enforcement, Mr. Waxman
holds the extraordinary status of permanent honorary Special Agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Recent Highlights
Mr. Waxman recently won a complete victory for the Government of Canada in a multi-billion-dollar trade dispute involving
softwood lumber imports before a NAFTA Extraordinary Challenge Committee proceeding.
Mr. Waxman won a landmark ruling this year in Roper v. Simmons, in which the Supreme Court declared unconstitutional the
death penalty for juvenile offenders. He won three other cases in the Supreme Court this year, including long-running
property-rights disputes in California (in which he represented the City of San Francisco) and Hawaii (in which he
represented the State of Hawaii).
Mr. Waxman successfully represented Senators John McCain and Russell Feingold and other congressional sponsors of the
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act in landmark litigation defending the constitutionality of the legislation, including an
historic four-hour argument in a special Supreme Court session.
Mr. Waxman has won successive 9-0 victories in the Supreme Court on behalf of financial institutions, and over the past
three Terms, has also argued Supreme Court cases involving class actions, telecommunications, environmental regulation,
international litigation, mass torts, racial bias and criminal procedure.
Mr. Waxman represents a major financial institution in tackling the multi-dimensional problems caused by claims associated
with exposure to asbestos. Under his leadership, our representation includes litigation in insurance coverage and bankruptcy
proceedings and strategic advice on constitutional and other issues associated with the current effort to achieve a
legislative solution to the national asbestos liability crisis.
Mr. Waxman's clients constitute a broad range of public as well as corporate institutions. By special appointment, Mr.
Waxman advised the Office of the Governor of the State of Connecticut in connection with the state legislature's landmark
proceedings to consider impeachment of a sitting governor. He served as counsel to the Commission to Review the United
States Olympic Committee, a blue-ribbon commission created by the United States Senate to review and recommend changes to
the structure and operations of the USOC. He represents the United Nations in litigation concerning the Oil for Food
investigation and several state regulatory agencies in First Amendment and environmental matters.
Mr. Waxman currently represents a range of business clients in patent, trade-secret and other intellectual property
litigation in both trial and appellate courts. He has won multiple consecutive cases in the Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit involving complex issues of patent licensing and infringement.
Professional Activities
Mr. Waxman serves on the faculty of the Georgetown University Law Center and as chairman of Legal Affairs magazine. He is a director and fellow of several professional, educational and cultural institutions, including the American College of Trial Lawyers, the American Academy of Appellate Lawyers, the American Bar Foundation, the American Law Institute, the Supreme Court Institute and the Supreme Court Historical Society. He lectures and writes frequently on topics related to litigation, constitutional history and doctrine, the First Amendment, intellectual property and the Supreme Court.
Honors and Awards
- Recognized as a leader in appellate litigation in the 2007 edition of Chambers USA: America's Leading Lawyers for Business
- Selected by peers for inclusion in the 2007 and 2008 editions of The Best Lawyers in America, in the areas of appellate law, bet-the-company litigation, commercial litigation, First Amendment law and white-collar criminal defense
- Named one of the "The 100 Most Influential Lawyers in America" by The National Law Journal, 2006
- Elected to the prestigious American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2006
- Listed in the PLC Which Lawyer? Yearbook 2006 as one of Washington, DC's leading lawyers in the dispute resolution category
- Recognized for exceptional standing in the legal community for his appellate litigation practice in
Chambers USA: America's Leading Lawyers for Business 2006
- Selected as one of Lawyers Weekly USA’s
"Lawyers of the Year" for 2005; highlighted for his recent Supreme Court win barring the death penalty for juveniles
- Named Washington, DC's "Leading Lawyer" in the area of appellate litigation by the
Legal Times, December 2004
- Listed in Washingtonian magazine's "Top 30 Lawyers in Washington," 2004
- Judge Learned Hand Award, American Jewish Committee, 2007
- Exceptional Service Award, National Coalition Against the Death Penalty, 2005
- Frederick Douglass Human Rights Award, Southern Center for Human Rights, 2005
- Thomas Jefferson Medal in Law, University of Virginia, 2002
- Permanent Honorary Special Agent, Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2001
- Edmund J. Randolph Award for Exceptional Service, US Department of Justice, 2001
- Pursuit of Justice Award, International Association of Jewish Lawyers and Jurists, 1999
- Pro Bono Publico Award, American Bar Association, 1988
- Benjamin J. Cardozo Certificate of Merit, Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, 1987
Articles & Publications
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