Bingham, Dana & Gould was founded in Boston in 1891. From 1997, the company experienced sharp growth in the number of attorneys, offices, and revenues by absorbing other law firms. In 1997, Bingham Dana acquired the 30-lawyer Japanese practice group of Marks & Murase, giving the firm offices in New York and Los Angeles and a strong base of Japanese institutional clients. The next outpost was established in
Hartford through a merger with 55-lawyer Hebb & Gitlin, a firm that concentrated on international
bankruptcy work. In 2001, Bingham Dana bulked up in New York City through a merger with Richards & O'Neil, a boutique law firm of 55 attorneys known for its
litigation and corporate groups. The next year, in 2002, Bingham Dana merged with
San Francisco–based law firm
McCutchen, Doyle, Brown & Enersen to form 800-lawyer Bingham McCutchen. McCutchen Doyle brought five offices and a litigation and
intellectual property focus. In 2003, the firm expanded in
Southern California by merging with corporate boutique Riordan & McKinzie. 2006 saw a merger between Bingham McCutchen and
Swidler Berlin Shereff Friedman, a
Washington, D.C.–based firm which brought greater capabilities in the nation's capital as well as a regulatory group. Bingham also launched in
Hong Kong that same year. In 2007, the firm acquired Los Angeles litigation shop Alschuler Grossman. In July 2009, Bingham McCutchen acquired
McKee Nelson, a midsize law firm specializing in
tax law and
structured finance. A team of Bingham attorneys and staff, led by
Susan Baker Manning and
Sabin Willett, represented pro bono a dozen
Uighur men held in
extrajudicial detention in the United States
Guantanamo Bay detention camps, in Cuba. Bingham litigated a number of habeas corpus cases on behalf of the Uighur clients, as well as cases under the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005 that brought to light evidentiary and procedural flaws in the 2004–05
Combatant Status Review Tribunals that were used to justify the Uighurs' ongoing imprisonment. All Bingham clients were subsequently released. The Tokyo office of Bingham McCutchen became one of the largest law firms in Japan by its 2007 merger with a domestic law firm headed by Hideyuki Sakai, an insolvency specialist. Unlike most foreign firms in Japan which have minimal domestic practices, Bingham's Tokyo office was predominantly staffed by Japanese attorneys and handled domestic matters such as the restructuring of
Olympus Corporation, though it hired a number of foreign attorneys since 2012 in an attempt to strengthen its outbound and cross-border practice and to expand in other legal fields such as intellectual property and investment funds. Despite a deep recession which hurt law firms nationwide, the Boston Globe reported that Bingham performed very well financially. In 2009, Bingham's gross revenues increased 12% and profits per partner increased 2%. Chairman Jay Zimmerman was quoted as saying "We’ve had our best year ever." However, despite an increase in revenues, Bingham froze salaries, and in March 2009 laid off 16 attorneys and 29 support staff.
Collapse Bingham experienced internal tensions following the 2002 McCutchen merger, and again following the 2009 McKee merger. Both transactions were viewed as "mergers of equals" among some insiders, and as unequal acquisitions among others. The McKee transaction involved large compensation guarantees to several key McKee partners which were not immediately disclosed to other Bingham partners. The legacy McKee partners continued to earn relatively high compensation following the acquisition due to the fact that they charged higher hourly rates than the legacy Bingham partners; the legacy Bingham partners nonetheless demanded salary matching, which strained the profits of the firm. Bingham experienced a massive downsizing from 2012 to 2014, during which time it cut 225 lawyers and saw more than 50 partners leave the firm. Two major cases—the
Deepwater Horizon litigation and an IP dispute involving
Oracle Corporation—ended abruptly, reducing the firm's revenue. After Bingham's collapse, it was revealed that
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance stopped working with Bingham due to the low level of racial diversity among its partners in its Boston and Hartford offices. In November 2014, 227 of around 300 partners and a similar number of associates joined the Philadelphia-based firm of
Morgan Lewis & Bockius. Morgan Lewis paid off Bingham's debt as part of the deal, and shut down Bingham's Kentucky operations center, relocating some employees to Philadelphia. 50 of Bingham's 60 lawyers in Tokyo moved to the Japanese law firm of
Anderson Mori & Tomotsune, with the remainder joining Morgan Lewis. ==Offices==