Washington, Perito & Dubuc
Washington, Perito & Dubuc was a United States law firm founded in 1987 as Laxalt, Washington, Perito & Dubuc. It was described by Paul Laxalt in 1987 as "essentially the Washington office" of Finley, Kumble, Wagner, Underberg, Manley, Myerson & Casey, a law firm that went bankrupt that year.[1] Washington, Perito & Dubuc disbanded in August 1991,[2][3] having lost nearly half its 110 lawyers since fall 1990, hit by the recession.[4] Laxalt had left the company in January 1990 after the firm took on the government of Angola as a client.[5] Other clients included Bank of Credit and Commerce International.[6]
References
- Eugene Register-Guard, 26 December 1987, Singer sends Christmas gift to 'the lady in the window'
- The Washington Post, 14 June 1993, Back to D.C. for Washington, Perito's Bankruptcy Case
- The National Law Journal / Legal Times, 15 September 2003, We've Been There, Done That (Part 2)
- Washington Post, 20 July 1991, Washington, Perito Law Firm Losing Additional Attorneys; Name Partner Among Those Leaving
- Washington Post, 6 January 1990, Laxalt Leaves His Law Firm Over Representation of Angola
- Robert Parry, Secrecy and Privilege: The Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq, pp. 155
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