10 Indian American lawyers make it to NLJs Minority 40 Under 40 list | Bar and Bench

10 Indian American lawyers make it to NLJs Minority 40 Under 40 list

The National Law Journal has published the list titled “Minority 40 Under 40” and has recognized 10 Indian American Attorneys. The list recognizes minority lawyers under the age of 40 who have demonstrated national influence in their practice areas, reports IndiaWest. 

The National Law Journal has published the list titled “Minority 40 Under 40” and has recognized 10 Indian American Attorneys. The list recognizes minority lawyers under the age of 40 who have demonstrated national influence in their practice areas, reports IndiaWest

 

According to the Journal, “The lawyers profiled here were all born in the 1970s, a decade when law schools and law firms were just beginning to welcome minorities in significant numbers. The thriving careers of these lawyers — at law firms and in government, academia and public interest — attest to the greater opportunities available to them, as well as to their talents”.

The 10 Indians on the list are Vanita Gupta of the American Civil Liberties Union; Kannon Shanmugam, Partner at Williams & Connolly; Sarang V Damle of the US Department of Justice; Amit Mehta, Partner at Zuckerman Spaeder; Indranil Mukerji, Partner at Fish and Richardson; Nahla Rajan, of Mitchell Silberberg; Archis Parasharami, of Mayer Brown; Shima Roy, Partner at Baker and McKenzie; Manisha Sheth of Quinn Emanuel and Amandeep Sidhu of McDermott Will.

One well-known name on the list is Vanita Gupta (pictured), 36, of the American Civil Liberties Union, who when she was a Soros Justice fellow at the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund uncovered inconsistencies in a case involving the arrests of 38 African Americans in Tulia, Texas, on drug charges.

Gupta coordinated a pro bono effort along with major law firms that two years later resulted in Texas Governor Rick Perry pardoning 36 of those convicted in the case.

Gupta at the ACLU fought against US Immigration and Customs Enforcement's detainment of families, including children, in prison-like conditions for civil immigration violations. ICE in 2007 settled a complaint, ending the pilot program creating family detention centers.

Another high-profile Indian American attorney on the list is Kannon Shanmugam (pictured left), 38, a partner at Williams & Connolly since 2008 and a former assistant to the U.S. solicitor general. The Law Journal said Shanmugam's appearance before the Supreme Court arguing pro bono for a Louisiana death row inmate in Smith v. Cain Nov. 8 was his "third argument there in three years."

 

Sarang Vijay Damle (pictured right), 34, supervises the appellate staff's internship program in the civil division at the U.S. Department of Justice. He rated mention in the Law Journal partly because he has argued 20 appellate cases in U.S. courts and is handling First Amendment suits involving state and local governments' attempts to regulate protest activity near funerals. From constitutional challenges to federal statutes to Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, detainee litigation, Damle’s caseload stretches across a variety of practices.

Amit Mehta (pictured left), a partner at Zuckerman Spaeder, has been involved in many big cases, including helping former IMF president Dominique Strauss-Kahn successfully get dismissed criminal assault charges in New York state court. Mehta, 39, is also a board member of the Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project, which seeks to reverse and prevent wrongful convictions in D.C., Maryland and Virginia.

Indranil "Indy" Mukerji (pictured right), 37, a partner at Fish & Richardson in Washington, D.C., represented about a third of the 150 defendants sued by Parallel Networks LLC in a recent patent infringement case in Texas. He was co-lead lawyer for Google and Amazon.com and represented 46 other defendants in the case. The defendants won by summary judgment in August.

Co-chairman of Mayer Brown's consumer litigation and class action practice, Archis Parasharami (pictured left), the Law Journal pointed out, "laid the early groundwork for the business community's major victory last term in the U.S. Supreme Court - defeating a challenge to an arbitration agreement's class action waiver provision in AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion."

Nahla Rajan (pictured right), 36, who joined Los Angeles, Calif.-based Mitchell Silberberg & Knupp as a litigation associate in 2006, has represented the heirs of actor Burt Lancaster and the grandchildren of Walt Disney in trust and estates disputes. A former deputy public defender and federal prosecutor, she plans to start a Muslim bar association in Los Angeles next year, the Law Journal said.

Shima Roy (pictured left), 37, a partner at Baker & McKenzie in Chicago, "has made a name for herself" as a "go-to partner to handle complex international litigation," the Law Journal said. She is developing an India litigation practice and currently represents a girl, 16, who allegedly confessed to murder charges after being held in a Chicago police interrogation room for about 60 hours.

Manisha Sheth(pictured right), 37, a former federal prosecutor and a partner at Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, is on the team representing the Federal Housing Finance Agency in lawsuits against 18 of the largest financial institutions who sold sub-par mortgage-backed securities to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. She is also working on cases against Merrill Lynch, Barclays and Citigroup.

Amandeep Sidhu(pictured left), 33, of McDermott Will & Emery, "has built a reputation as a strong litigator with a solid commitment to pro bono cases," the Law Journal said. A founding member of The Sikh Coalition, he has fought a pro bono battle on behalf of three Sikh men who wanted to serve in the U.S. Army.

He was able to successfully show that the men were able to meet uniform requirements by using Army-issued cloth for the turbans and that even with a beard, the men could not only use a gas mask effectively, but surpass their clean-shaven comrades in field tests. Eventually the men were allowed to join the service, but Sidhu said that he would settle for nothing less than a policy change.

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Comments

Anand

November 23, 2011 - 6:33pm

I seriously doubt even one of the mentioned ten Indian origin lawyers, is a graduate from an Indian Law School or Law Faculty..Imagine the efforts required on the part of Indian law graduates to become a part of global list of top lawyers!

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Aman

November 24, 2011 - 12:16am

This is pretty impressive. Indian Americans are highly regarded in legal profession these days. More and more are getting into law. Gone are the days of just medicine and engineering.

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aadil

November 27, 2011 - 3:09pm

nice compilation

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niranjan poudel

June 21, 2012 - 8:15pm

excellent job and proud of India u all are.. pls any 1 of u contact me.

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niranjan poudel

June 21, 2012 - 9:07pm

excellent job and proud of India u all are.. pl s any 1 of u contact me.

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