King & Spalding's Latest Lateral Recruit Has Firm Headed to Chicago

Zachary Fardon is headed home after leaving his position as U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois in March. It s just not the private practice perch that many expected him to return.

Fardon will be launching a Chicago office for King & Spalding, the firm announced Wednesday, marking a surprising end to a highly competitive recruiting process that many presumed would end with the former Latham & Watkins partner returning to the firm he left in 2013 to lead the U.S. Department of Justice s outpost in the Windy City.

Instead, Fardon s roots with King & Spalding came calling. He started his career as an associate in the firm s Washington, D.C., office from 1993 to 1997, working under former U.S. Attorney General Griffin Bell, a senior partner at King & Spalding who died in 2009.

Fardon will now take up the challenge that he said motivated him: Building a Chicago office for his new firm from scratch. Lacking even a permanent space until September, Fardon said he will be making hires soon. He will be looking for lawyers that meet two basic criteria: Excellence in the practice of law and those who also possess caring, kindness and civility, important traits for those in public service.

Those couplings are maybe too rare in the Big Law business, Fardon said Wednesday in an interview with The American Lawyer. Lawyers are lawyers, but they re also humans and citizens. And having a focus not only on the excellence and financial success but also community service is what distinguishes King & Spalding.

King & Spalding had gross revenue of $1.06 billion in 2016, with profits per partner of $2.47 million. Latham, the largest firm by revenue in the Am Law 100 by gross revenue, took in a whopping $2.82 billion last year, as profits per partner hit $3.06 million.

Fardon said it was a difficult decision not to return to Latham, where he said he has many dear friends, adding that I have great respect and affection for that place and I always will. (News of Fardon s decision to join King & Spalding was first reported last month by Crain s Chicago Business.)

Sean Berkowitz, a partner in Latham s Chicago office and global co-chair of the firm s complex commercial litigation practice, said the firm was disappointed to not have Fardon re-join its ranks but expressed well-wishes for a friend.

He s a phenomenal lawyer and even better person who has distinguished himself in every endeavor he s ever undertaken, including most recently as the U.S. Attorney, Berkowitz said. We wish him nothing but success.