Trump’s B.S. ‘Efficiency’ Efforts Take Jobs From Real J.D.s – Above the Law

(Photo
by
ANGELA
WEISS/AFP
via
Getty
Images)

Elon
Musk’s
cost-cutting
efforts
are
mostly
a
farce
to

sell
chintzy
merchandise

to
America’s
most
gullible
marks.
The
“Department
of
Government
Efficiency”
is
not
an
actual
cabinet
department,
but
rather
rebrand
of
the
existing
US
Digital
Service,
an
organization
that

despite
Musk’s
self-branding

cannot
actually
do
much
but

break
the
White
House
website
.

Not
that
his
lack
of
actual
authority
matters
much.
Musk
is
still
boasting
about
bringing
the
same
energy
to
America
that
Javier
Milei
brought
to
Argentina
where
he
haphazardly
slashed
government
departments
to
deliver
a
government
surplus.
He’s
also
doubled
the
poverty
rate.
Here
in
America
we
actually
know
how
to
deliver
a
budget
surplus
because
the
Democrats
did
it
in
the
90s
and
every
Democratic
president
curtails
the
budget
deficit
year
after
year
only
to
watch
it
explode
under
every
Republican
president
since
Nixon
has
left
office
having
thrown
the
country
into
deeper
budget
shortfalls
than
when
they
arrived.

But
that
would
require
“rich
people
paying
taxes”
so
instead
Musk
and
Trump
will
engage
in
the
kayfabe
that
there’s
a
magical,
untapped
reserve
of
government
“waste”
that
can
just
be
eliminated
to
cover
the

couple
trillion
dollar

hole
in
the
deficit
that
Trump’s
tax
cuts
create.

Somehow
I
don’t
think
they’re
going
to
get
there
by
firing
a
handful
of
public
service
attorneys
but
that’s
not
really
the
point.

When
the
new
administration
took
office,
it
trumpeted
a
Federal
Civilian
Hiring
Freeze.
Like
most
of
the
administration’s
efforts,
many
assumed
this
would
be
a
slipshod
publicity
stunt
from
the
gang
that
couldn’t
shoot
straight.
But
now
we’ve
heard
from
young
lawyers
expected
to
start
work
with
multiple
government
agencies
finding
out
that
their
jobs
have
been
cut
as
part
of
the
farcical
efficiency
experiment.

The
annual
Attorney
Honors
Programs
run
by
the
DOJ
and
other
executive
agencies.
These
are
the
jobs
that
recent
law
school
graduates
can
do
while
maintaining
their
eligibility
for
a
competitive
job
offer
while
they
are
not
yet
ready
to
start
full-time
employment.

It’s
a
uniquely
harsh
knee
to
the
genitals
because
the
Attorney
Honors
Program
attracts
a
lot
of
candidates
who
have
now
missed
out
on
last
fall’s
interview
cycle
and
have
now
learned

a
few
months
from
graduation

that
the
solid
service
jobs
they’d
opted
to
take
are
just
gone.
Some
tipsters
who
reached
out
to
us
confirmed
that
they
turned
down
returning
offers
for
Biglaw
firms
to
accept
the
DOJ
position.

Hours
before
inauguration,
the
IRS
seemingly
expected
to
go
forward
as
usual,
probably
expecting
any
hiring
freeze
to
come
with
the
usual
carve
outs
for
positions
like
these.
Often
highly
credentialed
positions
are
excluded
from
freezes
because
the
government
requires
some
key
competencies.
But
competency
is
not
a
priority
for
DOGEheads
and
so

by
the
end
of

that
very
evening

the
IRS
was
already
sending
out
offer
retractions.

Obviously
the
IRS
is
an
agency
that
this
administration
holds
in
particularly
low
regard,
but
it’s
not
the
only
one
facing
cuts.
We’ve
heard
but
haven’t
been
able
to
hear
back
about
the
CFPB,
a
perennial
GOP
hobby
horse.
Nor
have
we
locked
down
reports
of
this
is
happening
at
DHS,
which
one
would
think
is
the
agency
Trump
most
needs
staffed
up
to
deal
with
the
bazillion
lawsuits
he’s
about
to
get
for
trying
to
start
a
mass
deportation
including
a
bunch
of
American
citizens.

One
might
have
thought
main
Justice
would
avoid
staffing
hiccups,
but
apparently
not.
The
DOJ
Civil
Division
blasted
its
Honors
lawyers
with
an
automated
email
from
the
Office
of
Attorney
Recruitment
and
Management
informing
them
that
their
jobs
were
gone.
We
already
know
the
administration
is
straight
up

shuttering
the
civil
rights
division
for
retooling
,
so
it’s
hard
to
imagine
anyone
got
to
keep
their
jobs
over
there
either.

The
bleeding
may
not
be
limited
to
the
incoming
Honors
folks.
Above
the
Law
is
hearing
unconfirmed
reports
that
other
term
employees
at
DOJ
have
been
affected
as
well.
Online
boards
include
reports
of
DOJ
SLIP
(2L
summer
internships)
having
offers
revoked
and
that’s
almost
certainly
spilling
over
to
other
agencies.

Now
might
be
a
good
time
to
make
a
run
on
your
bank
like
an
extra
from

It’s
A
Wonderful
Life
,
because
the
FDIC
is
sending
out
messages
revoking
job
offers
to
lawyers.
One
tipster
reports
that
people
who’ve
had
their
jobs
lined
up

for
months

are
getting
dropped
with
little
more
than
a
“We
wish
you
success
in
your
future
employment
endeavors.”

Yes,
they’re
making
cuts
at
the
“people
who
make
sure
your
bank
doesn’t
lose
your
money”
agency.

The
real
damage
from
this
assault
on
young
lawyers
will
be
felt
down
the
road.
A
whole
crop
of
attorneys
will
not
now
enter
public
service
and
future
law
students
will
look
askance
at
federal
jobs.
At
least
if
they’re
applying
in
an
election
year.
For
positions
that
rely
on
quality
applicants
willing
to
trade
compensation
for
prestige
and
job
security,
the
government’s
talent
pool
could
take
a
measurable
hit
going
forward.

But
Elon
will
report
that
he
managed
to
claw
back
$100,000
here
and
there.
I’m
sure
that
will
take
care
of
that
deficit
once
he
finds…
let’s
see
here…
30
million
federal
government
lawyers.




HeadshotJoe
Patrice
 is
a
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editor
at
Above
the
Law
and
co-host
of

Thinking
Like
A
Lawyer
.
Feel
free
to email
any
tips,
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or
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Follow
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Joe
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Executive
Search
.

VC Firm Foresite Capital Dishes on Biotech Innovation in China, Opportunities in Immunology – MedCity News

Look
at
recent
big
pharma
asset
acquisitions
and
new
biotech
company
launches,
and
you
might
spot
a
common
theme:
The
drugs
at
the
heart
of
these
deals
were
originally
developed
in
China.
The
portfolio
of
venture
capital
firm
Foresite
Capital
has
several
such
drugs,
the
product
of
regular
trips
it
has
made
to
the
country
since
2019.
One
key
difference
between
then
and
now:
Getting
these
assets
is
a
lot
more
competitive.

China
is
teeming
with
promising
science
in
areas
such
as
oncology
and
immunology,
said
Foresite
Managing
Director
Michael
Rome.
But
these
days,
the
competition
for
these
assets
comes
not
only
from
other
VC
firms
or
even
biotech
companies.
It’s
coming
from
big
pharma,
he
said.

Foresite
has
made
Chinese
innovation
a
key
part
of
its
investment
and
company
formation
strategy.
China-sourced
science
is
brought
into
Foresite’s
to
mature
in
the
firm’s
incubator.
There,
an
artificial
intelligence
technology
platform
analyzes
genomic
data
to
identify
drug
targets
and
guide
indication
selection.

Foresite
last
year
closed
its

sixth
fund
with
$900
million

to
invest
in
startups
at
all
stages
of
development.
Rome
sat
down
with
MedCity
News
during
the
annual
J.P.
Morgan
Healthcare
Conference
in
San
Francisco
last
week
to
discuss
the
firm’s
investment
strategy,
the
wave
of
innovation
from
China,
and
the
areas
he
sees
as
promising
for
research
and
investment.
The
Q&A
has
been
lightly
edited
for
length
and
clarity.


MedCity
News:
Tell
me
about
Foresite
Capital.


Michael
Rome:

We’re
50%
early
stage,
50%
later
stage,
[and]
for
that,
78-80%
of
our
investments
are
in
private
companies.
The
rest
we
do
in
public
companies.
We
have
an
incubator
called
Foresite
Labs
where
we
incubate
companies
and
new
concepts,
and
if
those
work,
they’re
going
to
graduate
to
a
main
fund
investment
syndicate
round.

Therapeutic
area,
we
do
everything.
We
do
a
lot
of
oncology,
autoimmune.
We
have
investments
in
neuroscience.
We
also
do
platform
companies.
And
then
again,
our
team
actually
is
the
same
team
that
does
the
early
stage
and
the
later
stage.
So
our
team
members
could
be
starting
companies,
we
could
be
investing
in
syndicated
Series
As.
On
top
of
that,
we
do
a
fair
amount
of
later
stage
Series
Bs,
the
crossover
rounds,
and
we’ll
support
our
companies
into
IPOs
and
when
they’re
public
as
well.
That’s
a
high
level
of
who
we
are.


MCN:
I’m
wondering
about
the
company
creation.
I’m
seeing
more
VC
firms
doing
that.
Are
there
certain
areas
you’re
looking
at
or
are
certain
kinds
of
companies
you’re
looking
to
create,
and
where
does
the
science
come
from?


MR:

There’s
three
flavors
of
companies
we’re
incubating
at
Foresite
Labs.
One
are
larger
platform
companies
and
we
use
kind
of
an
AI/ML-driven
approach
built
on
a
platform.
An
example
of
that
is
a
company
called
Xaira
[Therapeutics].
Last
year,
they

raised
a
billion
dollars

in
capital.
It’s
a
drug
discovery
company,
but
really
using
AI
as
their
primary
toolkit
for
discovering
drugs.
We’re
doing
more
in
that
category,
it’s
an
area
of
interest
at
Foresite
Labs,
this
kind
of
an
AI/ML-enabled
approach
in
platform
companies.

Something
else
we’re
very
active
in
are
asset-centric
plays.
We
started
looking
at
China
going
back
to
2019.
We’ve
been
doing
deals
in
China.
That’s
a
major
trend
of
ours
and
what
we’ve
been
doing
is
basically
licensing
assets
in
China
or
doing
essentially
like
an
M&A
deal
to
secure
an
asset.
Then
we’ll
incubate
that
in
a
Foresite
Labs
company.
And
sometimes
we’ve
identified
the
entrepreneur
that
we’re
working
with
and
we
find
the
asset,
or
vice
versa.


MCN:
Do
you
have
anybody
on
the
ground
in
China,
or
do
you
just
travel
a
lot?


MR:

(Laughs)
We
do
travel
a
lot.
We
have
two
full-time
consultants
that
we
use
in
China.
We
were
in
Shanghai
four
months
ago.
We
have
members
of
our
team
that
are
fluent
in
Chinese.
So
we
have
a
really
good
concentration
of
efforts
in
China.

Those
are
probably
our
two
biggest
areas
at
Foresite
Labs,
doing
AI-enabled
drug
discovery
companies,
then
doing
asset-centric
plays
with
entrepreneurs.
The
third
kind
of
companies
we’re
putting
together
are
basically
just
finding
the
right
entrepreneurs
we
work
with
and
who
are
experienced,
and
essentially
starting
companies
there.
Numerous
companies
we’ve
done
now
are
built
around
someone
we
work
with,
putting
a
company
together
from
the
ground
up.
Our
team
is
very
active
in
building
these
companies.
We
bring
our
knowledge
of
the
industry,
we’re
following
every
conference,
we’re
following
all
the
news
trends,
we
document
therapeutic
areas,
and
we
use
that
to
enable
our
platform
companies
at
Labs.


MCN:
I’m
seeing
a
lot
of
companies
doing
artificial
intelligence
or
talking
about
it.
Is
there
a
certain
flavor
of
AI
or
machine
learning
(ML)
that
would
be
emblematic
of
a
Foresite
company?


MR:

Sure,
probably
two
ways.
One
is
using
large-scale
genomic
data
to
hunt
and
find
targets.
There
is
a
classic
example
in
the
drug
discovery
industry
with
a
target
called
PCSK9.
And
a
PCSK9
inhibitor
is
very
effective
at
lowering
your
LDL
[cholesterol].
It
also
lowers
an
important
protein
called
LP(a).
All
of
these
are
implicated
in
heart
disease.
That
was
actually
discovered
using
large-scale
genomics.

There’s
another
example,
another
one
of
our
portfolio
companies
called
Latigo
[Biotherapeutics].
They
have
a
NAV1.8
inhibitor.
I
bring
it
up
because
it’s
the
same
thing.
Population
genetics
show
that
you
can
knock
out
NAV1.8
and
what’s
really
interesting
is
people
didn’t
experience
pain
the
same
way.
It’s
an
ion
channel
in
the
periphery,
and
essentially
your
pain
response
goes
down.
You
can
take
these
drugs
and
you
can
put
your
hand
in
cold
water,
it’s
called
a
cold
pressor
test,
and
it
suppresses
your
response
to
cold.
Anyway,
we’re
doing
stuff
exactly
like
that.
We’re
mining
large-scale
genomic
data.
That’s
a
platform
we’ve
built
out
over
Labs
for
a
while
now,
and
that
is
informing
new
target
direction.

Another
thing
we’ll
do
is,
a
portfolio
company
might
come
in
and
say,
‘Hey,
we’re
thinking
about
target
XY
and
Z
and
XY
and
Z
indication.
What
is
the
Labs
platform
showing,
telling
us
about
that?
Can
that
advance
drug
discovery
sooner?’
So
those
are
how
we’re
building
things
out.


MCN:
So
in
terms
of
therapeutic
areas,
are
there
areas
that
you’re
really
interested
in?


MR:

We
do
a
lot
of
oncology
and
autoimmunity,
probably
our
two
biggest
categories.
We
also
have
a
lot
of
targets
that
were
enabled,
through
the
Labs
platform
again,
in
autoimmunity
for
selecting
autoimmune
indications.
An
indication
like
lupus
is
a
very
complicated
disorder
and
it’s
basically
a
spectrum
of
problems.
So
we’re
actually
doing
things
like
looking
for
certain
genetic
signatures
that
might
respond
to
certain
drugs.


MCN:
Existing,
already
available
therapies?


MR:

Yes.


MCN:
So
this
would
be
like
a
repurposing
of
a
drug?


MR:

Yeah,
you
can
think
of
it
as
repurposing.
There’s
fair
amount
of
interest
in
an
area
called
T
cell
engagers.
Those
are
being
repurposed
from
oncology
to
autoimmunity,
and
there
actually
is
a
fairly
big
kind
of
genetic
component
of
finding
the
right
patient
population.
I
think
we
can
talk
about
Candid
[Therapeutics].
Candid
is
a
company
we
founded
in
collaboration
with
entrepreneur
Ken
Song.

Ken
sold
his
company,
RayzeBio,
last
year
.

We
saw
the
autoimmune
area
started
out
in
cell
therapy
on
exciting

data
from
Georg
Schett

in
Germany,
showing
complete
remissions
in
lupus
and
other
autoimmune
conditions.
Cell
therapy
is
a
really
tough
business
model
to
personalize
therapy.
T
cell
engagers
actually
do
a
very
similar
thing.
They
bind
to
a
target
and
they
have
another
arm
that
binds
T
cells
to
direct
the
T
cells
to
its
target.
Those
were
getting
repurposed
for
autoimmune.
We
were
really
early
in
that
trend.
We
basically
found
two
assets
in
China.
And
then
we
collaborated
with
another
group
that
was
led
by
Third
Rock
[Ventures],
they
found
an
asset.
We
put
it
all
together
and
we
have
three
different
T
cell
engagers.
Ken

raised
$370
million

last
year,
one
of
the
biggest
financings.
We
have
two
products
in
the
clinic
right
now.
And
I
should
mention
all
the
assets
were
sourced
in
China.


MCN:
Why
is
China
so
hot?
I
keep
hearing
deals
happening
in
oncology
and
in
autoimmune
where
the
assets
are
coming
from
companies
in
China.


MR:

There’s
a
few
reasons.
One
is
that
they
have
an
incredible
amount
of
funding
in
the
country
going
back
the
last
decade
now,
and
even
the
Chinese
government,
believe
it
or
not,
helped
start
biotechs.
They
subsidized
a
lot
of
early-stage
research.
So
they
had
a
very
good
ground
for
entrepreneurship.

Another
thing
that
was
happening,
you
started
just
getting
really
good
scientists
who
were
starting
companies
in
China,
brilliant
people
who
were
leveraging
all
the
innovation
in
the
field
and
starting
companies.
Also,
it’s
a
lot
cheaper
to
run
a
biotech
in
China
than
it
is
in
the
U.S.,
so
you
just
saw
this
explosion
of
innovation
in
the
last
five
years.

Don’t
quote
me
on
the
year,
but
I
want
to
say
it’s
maybe
21
or
20,
the
[Chinese]
IPO
market
was
almost
flat
for
early-stage
biotech
companies.
This
was
like
a
seismic
event
because
it
meant
that
you
had
a
lot
of
companies
that
were
relying
on
public
markets
to
get
financing
that
were
sort
of
in
a
holding
pattern.
What
you
have
is
this
bolus
of
assets
and
that
opened
up
the
ground
for
a
lot
of
business
development.

We
were
there
2019,
we
sourced
a
company
that
ended
up

the
asset
at
a
public
company
called
Alumis
,
which
is
a
very
early
deal
for
us.
We’ve
done
numerous
deals
in
China
since
then.
We’ve
done
asset
purchases,
we’ve
done
equity
investments
in
companies.


MCN:
Is
doing
a
deal
in
China
significantly
different
than
it
is
doing
a
deal
In
the
U.S.
or
Europe?


MR:

There
are
definitely
differences.
A
lot
of
them
are
idiosyncratic
to
China.
Their
tax
structures
are
different.
A
lot
of
times
companies
are
being
restructured
from
China
to
Cayman
[Islands]
entities.
That’s
another
nuance
in
deals.
You’re
also
getting
assets
cheaper
in
China,
and
the
science
is
great,
so
you’re
getting
fairly
good
deals.
We
were
early
in
that
trend,
and
then
pharma
started
getting
really
interested
in
China.
We
were
just
at
a
meeting
with
a
top
M&A
firm,
and
they
were
saying
pharma
is
now
making
quarterly
trips
out
to
China
looking
at
assets.
The
other
thing
that’s
interesting
is
as
it’s
gotten
more
competitive,
we
usually
lose
out
to
deals,
not
from
other
[VC]
firms,
but
from
pharmaceutical
companies
coming
in
and
bidding
up
assets.


MCN:
With
the
changing
of
presidential
administration,
President
Trump
has
made
anti-China
comments.
What
might
that
mean
for
dealmaking
in
the
future?


MR:

I
don’t
think
I
have
a
prediction
of
what
will
happen.
If
Trump
is
more
focused
on
tariffs
at
first,
that
probably
wouldn’t
impact
our
industry.
If
there
was
more
regulation
of
looking
at
deals
more
closely,
that
can
certainly
slow
the
closing
time
on
a
transaction.
But
I
haven’t
heard
anything
specific
yet.
Because
we’re
so
active
there,
we’re
following
it
really
closely.
It
would
be
a
shame,
because
there’s
a
ton
of
innovation
going
on
now
between
the
two
countries,
a
lot
of
synergies,
you
see
a
lot
of
companies
working
together.
It’s
an
exciting
time.


MCN:
In
the
bigger
picture,
apart
from
Foresite,
are
there
therapeutic
areas
you
see
that
are
hot?
I
see
a
ton
of
obesity
drug
deals,
and
I’m
just
wondering
what
your
thoughts
are
on
this
market.
Is
it
too
crowded?


MR:

Obviously
GLP-1
have
sort
of
taken
over.
What
you’re
seeing
now
is
next
generation
GLP-1
drugs
starting
to
come
on
the
market.
First
we
had
drugs
like
[Novo
Nordisk
drug]
Ozempic,
which
were
the
breakthrough
and
you
were
seeing
substantial
single
digit
weight
loss
fairly
quickly.
The
next
wave
were
drugs
targeting
other
receptors
in
the
same
family,
like
GIP.
[Eli
Lilly’s]
Mounjaro
is
a
next-generation
drug.
The
next
generation
almost
doubles
the
efficacy,
in
some
cases,
for
percentage
of
weight
loss,
and
they’re
better
tolerated.

You’re
going
to
see
now
a
third
generation
of
drugs
that
are
targeting
a
receptor
called
the
amylin
receptor,
and
now
you’re
seeing
dual
GLP-1/amylin
[targeting
drugs].
The
next
wave
will
be
drugs
that
preserve
or
enhance
muscle.
One
of
the
big
issues
with
GLP-1s
is
they
reduce
all
your
mass.
They
take
away
not
only
your
fat
mass,
but
your
muscle
mass.
There’s
a
new
generation
of
drugs
in
the
TGF-beta
space
where
you’re
seeing
muscle
preservation
or
even
muscle
enhancement.
I
think
you’re
going
to
find
people
taking
those
potentially
for
cosmetic
reasons
that
want
more
muscle,
but
also
as
you
get
older,
muscle
loss
is
big
problem.
I
think
you’re
going
to
see
dual
GLP-1
agents
that
give
you
[muscle]
preservation
or
enhancement.


MCN:
What
about
orals?


MR:

Orals
right
now
are
a
little
bit
tricky
in
that
you
just
have
oral
GLP-1s.
Those
will
come
on
the
market
soon.
If
I’m
a
patient,
I
might
want
to
go
for
the
most
weight
loss,
so
I
might
be
more
inclined
to
take
a
Mounjaro
that
is
going
to
give
you
more
[weight
loss]
than
an
oral.
But
patients
continually
have
preference
for
oral
drugs.
Those
will
be
big
market
players.
From
our
perspective
as
VCs,
we
want
to
find
the
next
dual
combos
of
orals

oral
GLP-1/GIP,
agonist
or
antagonist,
oral
GLP-1/amylin,
all
these
different
targets
together.


MCN:
I
do
see
a
ton
of
activity
in
metabolic/obesity,
but
at
the
same
time,
it’s
so
crowded
that
I’m
wondering
how
investable
is
such
a
crowded
space?
If
it
is
investable,
what
are
you
looking
for?


MR:

We’ve
been
looking
at
a
lot
of
opportunities,
particularly
in
China,
where
they’re
like
the
same
drug
over
and
over
again.
We
are
staying
away
from
those.
No
‘me
toos’
in
obesity
because
it’s
so
expensive
to
run
these
trials,
and
unless
you
have
a
natural
acquirer,
it’s
going
to
be
tough.
A
lot
of
pharmas
have
made
their
bets
on
their
initial
GLP-1s,
a
few
haven’t.
But
it
has
to
it
has
to
be
differentiated
for
us
to
make
a
bet.


MCN:
Differentiation
is
oral
or
superior
weight
loss?


MR:

All
of
the
above.
Orals,
superior
weight
loss,
better
tolerability,
next
generation
for
muscle
preservation.
Those
are
the
spaces
that
we’re
trying
to
get
into.


MCN:
I’m
also
seeing
a
lot
of
immunology
deals.


MR:

Yeah.
Immunology,
we’re
very
focused
right
now.
Part
of
the
reasons
is
the
innovation
in
the
past
five
years.
In
oncology,
you
had
a
wave
of
precision
oncology,
which
is
targeting
the
right
patient
population
specific
to
the
mutation
that
causes
cancer.
There
was
a
lot
of
genetics
and
the
field
took
off.
The
field
kind
of
moved,
using
that
approach
in
immunology.
If
you
have
an
indication
like
lupus,
that
could
be
a
manifestation
of
a
lot
of
different
mutations.
So
to
treat
lupus
now,
find
the
right
drug
that
is
specific
for
a
certain
patient
population.
And
that
kind
of
thesis
has
emerged
in
a
lot
of
autoimmune
mechanisms.
So
finding
the
right
cytokine
inhibitor
for
patients
who
have
dysregulation
of
whatever
cytokine
or
whatever
the
autoantibody
is.


MCN:
So
in
the
way
that
in
oncology,
knowing
the
right
patient
population
for
a
drug
is
important,
it
will
be
the
same
in
immunology
as
these
therapies
expand
from
oncology
to
immunology?


MR:

That’s
right.
Said
another
way,
we
just
started
understanding
immunology,
all
the
underlying
mechanisms,
better.
There’s
been
a
lot
of
trial
and
error,
what
drugs
work,
what
drugs
don’t
work.
That’s
one
of
the
reasons
it’s
gotten
bigger.
And
the
patient
populations
are
huge.
Humira
is
the
largest
selling
drug
right
now,
and
it’s
an
immunology
drug.
It’s
a
little
different
[than
oncology].
Immunology,
your
patients
are
on
drug
for
a
long
time,
so
the
market
opportunity
becomes
bigger.


MCN:
But
the
safety
profile
is
also
different
when
you
compare
oncology
to
immunology.


MR:

Your
margin
for
error
there
is
a
lot
tighter.
I
would
rank/order
it,
[first]
cardiovascular,
you
need
to
have
the
safest
profile
because
that’s
going
to
be
the
largest
patient
population.
Statins
or
other
mechanisms
have
to
be
exquisitely
clean.
Then
I
would
go
autoimmune.
Autoimmune
can
be
devastating
conditions,
so
you
have
a
little
more
leeway,
you
can
say,
O.K.,
I
can
get
away
with
a
little
less
safety
profile.
In
oncology,
you
know,
these
are
going
to
be
grave
indications
you
might
be
able
to
tolerate
a
drug
that’s
fairly
toxic
if
it’s
going
to
be
efficacious.


MCN:
Is
there
anything
else
we
didn’t
talk
about
that
we
should
talk
about?


MR:

If
there’s
one
thing,
right
now,
we’re
seeing
is
a
lot
of
people
developing
the
same
drug.
We’re
very
cautious
about
that.


MCN:
You
mean
in
the
same
indication,
like
everybody
is
doing
obesity
drugs?


MR:

You
could
say
obesity,
but
there
are
targets
in
autoimmune
where
you
have
six
companies
going
out
after
the
same
target.
There
might
be
nuances
and
maybe
one
is
a
longer-acting
version
of
another
one.
Those
are
safe
plays
because
investors
know
it’s
going
to
work.
But
how
much
innovation
is
that
providing
having
the
fifth
drug
or
the
sixth
drug?
We’re
aiming
to
find
things
that
have
evidence
they
are
biologically
validated,
but
might
be
a
first-in-class
mechanism.
Those
are
things
we’re
spending
a
lot
of
time
on.


Photo:
VCG,
Getty
Images

Morning Docket: 01.23.25 – Above the Law

(Photo
by
Mike
Stobe/Getty
Images)

*
Trump
administration
halts
the
entire
DOJ
civil
rights
division,
freezing
all
pending
cases
pending
inevitable
about
face
as
“reverse
discrimination
division.”
[

ABA
Journal
]

*
Elephants
denied
right
to
sue
to
get
out
of
the
zoo.
They’ll
remember
this.
[Reuters]

*
Am
Law
100
firm
leans
into
generative
AI.
[American
Lawyer
]

*
Lateral
hiring
off
to
a
slow
start
in
2025.
[Bloomberg
Law
News
]

*
January
6
judge
explains
that
pardons
end
the
cases
against
a
mob
of
violent
cop
assaulting
defendants
but
won’t
erase
the
historical
record.
A
marked
contrast
to
the
Hunter
Biden
judge
throwing
a
temper
tantrum
that
a
pardon
meant
he
couldn’t
sentence
“non-violent
guy
who
used
to
take
drugs.”
[Law360]

*
Well,
that’s
a
headline:
“Justin
Baldoni’s
Lawyer
Once
Sued
Him
for
Allegedly
Stealing
a
Script
From
a
Man
With
Cystic
Fibrosis”
[Hollywood
Reporter
]

*
Trump
administration
threatens
consequences
for
federal
employees
who
don’t
snitch
on
DEI
initiatives.
[Politico]

Trump Gets Rid Of Anti-Rape Protections To Own The Libs – See Also – Above the Law




<br /> Trump<br /> Gets<br /> Rid<br /> Of<br /> Anti-Rape<br /> Protections<br /> To<br /> Own<br /> The<br /> Libs<br /> –<br /> See<br /> Also<br /> –<br /> Above<br /> the<br /> Law


























Senior Biglaw Associates Are Billing HOW Much Per Hour?! – Above the Law



Ed.
note
:
Welcome
to
our
daily
feature,

Quote
of
the
Day
.


You’re
getting
some
associate
rates
cresting
to
over
$1,000
an
hour,
as
much
as
some
junior
partners.
Those
more
senior
associates

that’s
where
you
saw
the
biggest
level
of
change.




Jennifer
McIver,
director
of
legal
operations
and
industry
insights
for
Wolters
Kluwer
ELM
Solutions,
in
comments
given
to
the

American
Lawyer
,
on
one
of
the
major
findings
from
the
recently
released
ELM
Solutions
2024
Real
Rate
Report.
As
noted
in
the
report,
senior
associates
saw
the
biggest
rate
hikes
between
2023
and
2024,
with
the
top
third
quartile
of
associates’
rates
climbing
from
$735
to
$795
year
to
year.
On
average,
the
rate
for
all
associates
jumped
from
$579
to
$597
between
2023
and
2024.



Staci ZaretskyStaci
Zaretsky
 is
a
senior
editor
at
Above
the
Law,
where
she’s
worked
since
2011.
She’d
love
to
hear
from
you,
so
please
feel
free
to

email

her
with
any
tips,
questions,
comments,
or
critiques.
You
can
follow
her
on BlueskyX/Twitter,
and Threads, or
connect
with
her
on LinkedIn.

Supreme Court Asks Appeals Court To Determine If Prosecutorial Slut Shaming And Panty Waiving Makes Murder Trials Unfair – Above the Law

(Photographer:
Samuel
Corum/Bloomberg)

The
Supreme
Court’s
recent
Death
Penalty
jurisprudence
has
been
pretty
dark:
their
decision
to
deny
a
stay
of
execution
for
Marcellus
Williams
is
and
will
be
a
mark
of
shame
on
this
country’s
history.
But,
in
an
unexpected
break
from
the
Court’s
live
and
let
die
approach
to
death
row,
they
are
giving
an
Oklahoma
inmate
a
second
bite
at
due
process.

EJI

has
coverage:

The
U.S.
Supreme
Court
on
Tuesday
granted
relief
to
Brenda
Andrew,
who
was
sentenced
to
death
in
Oklahoma
after
prosecutors
introduced
evidence
about
her
sex
life
and
her
failings
as
a
wife
and
mother.
The
Court
ordered
the
federal
appeals
court
to
assess
whether
this
“irrelevant
evidence
about
[her]
demeanor
as
a
woman

deprive[d]
her
of
a
fundamentally
fair
trial.”

The
State
accused
Ms.
Andrew
of
conspiring
with
Mr.
Pavatt
to
murder
her
husband.
At
trial,
according
to
the
Court’s
per
curiam
decision,
the
prosecution
“elicited
testimony
about
Andrew’s
sexual
partners
reaching
back
two
decades;
about
the
outfits
she
wore
to
dinner
or
during
grocery
runs;
about
the
underwear
she
packed
for
vacation;
and
about
how
often
she
had
sex
in
her
car.”
The
prosecutor
also
displayed
her
thong
underwear
to
jurors
while
urging
them
to
convict
her
of
capital
murder.

It
would
have
been
bad
enough
if
the
prosecution

just

referred
to
Ms.
Andrew
as
a
“slut
puppy”
throughout
the
trial
(which
they
did),
but
parading
around
her
underwear?
How
did
that
even
play
out
in
closing
argument?
“Were
her
finger
prints
on
the
murder
weapon?
No.
But
we
did
find
these
revealing
Victoria’s
Secret
panties
in
one
of
her
drawers.
What
other
secrets
might
she
be
hiding?!”

Justices
Thomas
and
Gorsuch
were
the
only
two
Justices
that
dissented
from
the
order.
The
bar
is
in
hell,
but
a
pat
on
the
back
for
Kavanaugh
not
making
that
duo
a
trio.


Supreme
Court
Grants
Relief
in
Oklahoma
Death
Penalty
Case

[EJI]



Chris
Williams
became
a
social
media
manager
and
assistant
editor
for
Above
the
Law
in
June
2021.
Prior
to
joining
the
staff,
he
moonlighted
as
a
minor
Memelord™
in
the
Facebook
group Law
School
Memes
for
Edgy
T14s
.
 He
endured
Missouri
long
enough
to
graduate
from
Washington
University
in
St.
Louis
School
of
Law.
He
is
a
former
boatbuilder
who
cannot
swim, a
published
author
on
critical
race
theory,
philosophy,
and
humor
,
and
has
a
love
for
cycling
that
occasionally
annoys
his
peers.
You
can
reach
him
by
email
at [email protected] and
by
tweet
at @WritesForRent.

Top 20 Biglaw Firm Combines With Well-Known Firm In Saudi Arabia – Above the Law

Biglaw
firms
are
continuing
to
expand
their
offerings
all
over
the
world,
and
at
least
one
top
firm
is
busy
taking
care
of
expansion
in
the
Middle
East.

Earlier
this
week,
King
&
Spalding

a
firm
that
brought
in
$2,137,941,000
gross
revenue
in
2023,
putting
it
at
No.
17
on
the
most
recent
Am
Law
100
ranking

announced
that
it
had
acquired
Saudi
Arabian
law
firm
Al
Fahad
&
Partners
in
Riyadh.
The
merged
firm
will
operate
under
the
name
King
&
Spalding
Al
Fahad.
The

Global
Legal
Post

has
additional
details
on
the
tie-up:

The
combination
brings
the
US
firm
17
mostly
fee
earners
in
Riyadh,
including
Al
Fahad
&
Partners’
founder
and
managing
partner,
Abdulaziz
Al
Fahad,
and
three
other
partners:
Fahad
Alarfaj,
Ibrahim
Alkhudair
and
English-qualified
lawyer
Phil
Loynes.

Alarfaj
has
been
named
managing
partner
of
the
combined
office,
while
Al
Fahad
will
serve
as
chairman
of
King
&
Spalding’s
Saudi
Arabia
practice.

K&S
chairman
Robert
Hays
said
the
combination
would
give
clients
a
“differentiated
offering,”
while
Al
Fahad
said
that
merging
with
the
larger
U.S.-based
firm
was
a
“perfect
fit.”

Congratulations
to
King
&
Spalding
on
its
latest
business
acquisition
in
Saudi
Arabia.


King
&
Spalding
merges
with
Saudi
firm

[Global
Legal
Post]



Staci ZaretskyStaci
Zaretsky
 is
a
senior
editor
at
Above
the
Law,
where
she’s
worked
since
2011.
She’d
love
to
hear
from
you,
so
please
feel
free
to

email

her
with
any
tips,
questions,
comments,
or
critiques.
You
can
follow
her
on BlueskyX/Twitter,
and Threads, or
connect
with
her
on LinkedIn.

Judge Slams ‘Outdated Precedent,’ Awards Big Payday To Plaintiff’s Attorneys – Above the Law

HSBC
settled
a
case
with
plaintiff
David
Rubin
over
claims
it
improperly
denied
disputed
charges
on
a
credit
card
for
$250,000
plus
attorney
fees
and
costs.
Trying
to
determine
those
attorney
fees
resulted
in
Eastern
District
of
New
York
Judge
Frederic
Block
railing
against
the
district’s
“blind
adherence
to
outdated
precedent”
(and
using

poetry
to
make
his
point
).

Block
wrote
that
how
the
standard
for
attorney
fees
were
derived
was
a
“mystery”
lacking
a
“well-articulated
rationale.”
Noting
that
trying
to
determine
what
a
“reasonable
client”
would
pay
is
“a
lofty
standard,
but
it
is
fantastical.”
And
he
wondered,
“How
is
anyone
able
to
calculate
what
that
mystical
reasonable
paying
client
was
willing
to
pay?”

As

reported
by

Law.com,
Rubin’s
attorneys
request
$728,998
in
fees,
with
hourly
rates
for
the
attorneys
of
$1,185,
$795,
$760,
and
$445;
$325
for
a
law
clerk;
and
$125
for
a
paralegal.
HSBC’s
attorneys
cited

Zaslavsky
v.
Weltman,
Weinberg
&
Reiss,

which
set
the
rates
at
$300-$450
per
hour
for
partners,
$200-$300
per
hour
for
senior
associates,
$100-$200
per
hour
for
junior
associates,
and
$70-$100
per
hour
for
paralegals.
But
those
“rates
have
no
currency”
according
to
Block.

Instead,
Block
noted
“times
have
changed,”
and
settled
on
the
following
standard
for
fees:
$450-$650
for
partners,
$300-$450
for
senior
associates,
$150-$300
for
junior
associates,
and
$100-$150
for
paralegals.
Block’s
new
standard
netted
Rubin’s
attorneys
$550,506.50.

Read
the
full
decision
below.




Kathryn Rubino HeadshotKathryn
Rubino
is
a
Senior
Editor
at
Above
the
Law,
host
of

The
Jabot
podcast
,
and
co-host
of

Thinking
Like
A
Lawyer
.
AtL
tipsters
are
the
best,
so
please
connect
with
her.
Feel
free
to
email

her

with
any
tips,
questions,
or
comments
and
follow
her
on
Twitter

@Kathryn1
 or
Mastodon

@[email protected].

cv-20-4566-rubin-v-hsbc-bank-usa-memoradum-and-order

Trump Comes Out In Favor Of Prison Rape – Above the Law

(Photo
by
Win
McNamee/Getty
Images)

One
of
the
planks
of
President
Trump’s
campaign
was
bashing
trans
people.
And
he
wasted
no
time
delivering
on
his
vow
to
inflict
maximum
harm
on
minorities.


Promises
(to
be
cruel)
made,
promises
(to
be
cruel)
kept!

Within
hours
of
taking
the
oath
of
office,
he
issued
an

executive
order

“Defending
Women
from
Gender
Ideology
Extremism
and
Restoring
Biological
Truth
to
the
Federal
Government.”

The
order
has
been
widely
mocked
for
being

biologically
illiterate
.
It
defines
“male”
as
“a
person
belonging,
at
conception,
to
the
sex
that
produces
the
small
reproductive
cell,”
despite
the
fact
that
sexual
differentiation
of
zygotes
does
take
place
until
several
weeks
post-conception.

But
it
will
still
cause
major
destruction,
particularly
to
trans
and
non-binary
prisoners.
Specifically,
Trump
instructed
the
Attorney
General
and
Secretary
of
Homeland
Security
to
“ensure
that
males
are
not
detained
in
women’s
prisons
or
housed
in
women’s
detention
centers,
including
through
amendment,
as
necessary,
of
Part
115.41
of
title
28,
Code
of
Federal
Regulations
and
interpretation
guidance
regarding
the
Americans
with
Disabilities
Act.”

Title

28
CFR
115

lays
out
implementation
standards
for
for
the

Prison
Rape
Elimination
Act
of
2003

(PREA).
Section
115.41
provides
that
every
inmate
shall
be
assessed
on
intake
for
“their
risk
of
being
sexually
abused
by
other
inmates
or
sexually
abusive
toward
other
inmates”
including,
among
several
other
criteria
“Whether
the
inmate
is
or
is
perceived
to
be
gay,
lesbian,
bisexual,
transgender,
intersex,
or
gender
nonconforming.”
But
Trump’s
new
order
insists
that
there
is
no
such
thing
as
transgender,
intersex,
or
gender
nonconforming

they’ve
been
defined
out
of
existence
by
executive
fiat.
And
to
make
darn
sure,
he’s
instructed
prisons
to
deny
non-existent
trans
people
medical
care,
forcibly
detransitioning
them
and
ordering
trans
women
to
be
transferred
to
men’s
prisons.

It
should
be
noted
that,
while
America’s
carceral
system
is

plagued

with
sexual
assault
and
abuse,
gender
non-conforming
inmates
are

particularly
likely

to
be
victimized.
And
so,
under
the
guise
of
“defending
women,”
Trump
will
now
send
trans
women
into
settings
where
they
are
in
grave
danger
of
being
sexually
assaulted,
in
direct
defiance
of
the
mandates
of
the
PREA.

As
reporter
Adam
Rhodes
notes
at

The
Appeal
,
while
the
PREA
standards
are
only
binding
on
federal
facilities,
they
provide
a
financial
cudgel
to
force
states
to
implement
their
guidelines:

PREA
standards
are
binding
for
federal
agencies
but
not
for
state
facilities.
However,
in
order
to
receive
federal
grants,
state
carceral
institutions
must
prove
they
comply
with
PREA.
For
those
that
do
not,
the
federal
government
reduces
their
grants
by
5
percent. For
the
2024
fiscal
year, all
but
six
 U.S.
states
and
territories
met
PREA
guidelines.

Rhodes
also
notes
that
the
new
guidelines
will
run
into
multiple
existing
court
orders
and
consent
decrees,
which
oblige
state
and
federal
facilities
to
provide
medical
care
consistent
with
a
prisoner’s
gender
identity.
But
considering
how
successfully
Trump
was
able
to
demonize
Harris
by
accusing
her
of
supporting
gender
reassignment
surgery
for
prisoners,
it’s
likely
the
new
president
would
relish
such
a
fight.

And
meanwhile,
rates
of
prison
rape
are
almost
certain
to
go
up.
But,
as
ever,

the
cruelty
is
the
point
.





Liz
Dye
 lives
in
Baltimore
where
she
produces
the
Law
and
Chaos substack and podcast.