Jenner & Block Elevates Windy City Litigator to Firm Chair

Photo: Diego M. Radzinschi/ALM

Craig Martin will be the next chair of Jenner & Block, becoming the fourth lawyer to hold the title in Jenner's 105-year history, the firm was expected to announce Wednesday.

Martin in 2016 was named chair of the Chicago-founded firm’s litigation department, whose roughly 400 members account for about two-thirds of the firm's lawyers. The firm chair position was vacated in April last year, when Anton “Tony” Valukas stepped out of the role he had held since 2007.

The firm’s managing partner, Terrence “Terry” Truax, has been in that role since 2014, and he will continue to handle the firm’s management responsibilities.

Craig Martin. (Courtesy photo)

“In appointing Craig as chair of our firm, our partners at Jenner & Block are looking to Craig for his energy, focus and very importantly, the strategic and client-centric approach to the marketplace he has applied to his work over many years,” Truax said in a statement.

Known for his courtroom advocacy as well as his boardroom counseling, Chicago-based Martin has been a go-to lawyer for a long list of the firm’s largest and longest-running clients, including General Dynamics, Chicago’s Crown family, insurer Aon, United Airlines, Northern Trust Bank and others.

“Jenner has always been considered top-of-class, but I think what you get in Craig is somebody who can personify what that firm is,” said Steve Cohen, general counsel of MacAndrews & Forbes Inc. “And at the most successful and best firms, having someone in a leadership role that can really represent what that firm can offer makes a huge difference.”

A Harvard Law School graduate, Martin has practiced at Jenner his entire 30-year career. He said he viewed the role of firm chair as setting the long-term strategy for the firm. On that front, he said the firm would focus on providing clients with the highest level of advice in three broad practice areas: litigation, investigations and transactions.

From a financial perspective, Jenner has had a volatile five-year stretch. The firm’s revenue and profits per equity partner peaked in fiscal 2015 to $465 million and $1.7 million, respectively. Those figures last year came in at $449 million and about $1.4 million, according to The American Lawyer. The firm expects its 2018 top-line revenue figure to rise about 5 to 7 percent.

“Our focus is on serving our clients in their most important matters, and it is all about professional excellence,” Martin said. “When you are focused on those things, the other things follow that from that are the economic performance of the law firm; the professional development of our people; and the protecting of our clients’ reputations.”