With the August 2017 addition of our Phoenix office, Wilson Elser has established a strong and legitimate presence in Arizona and contiguous southwestern states. Phoenix’s well-earned status as a commercial hub has stimulated related litigation and transactional activity that align with our firm’s credentials and our clients’ needs. Fully operational and staffed at launch, the office defends local, national and international clients across a broad spectrum of industries. Office attorneys focus their practices on transportation claims and contractual matters associated with the trucking industry in addition to insurance coverage; employment and labor; toxic torts; and general, professional and product liability.
Phoenix tops the United States in population growth, stimulating local/regional commerce and helping to cement its status as a vibrant legal center.
The Phoenix office also offers ready access to virtually any legal service, drawing on the collective experience resident among our own attorneys and our colleagues throughout the broader firm. Wilson Elser’s national practice team structure, leveraging the benefits of technology, make it possible for one point of contact to marshal any or all of the resources our clients require to advance even their most ambitious legal objectives.
To see the full breadth of our firmwide capabilities, visit our Services page.
Wilson Elser is the preeminent defense litigation firm in the United States. At any given time, our more than 1,000 attorneys are engaged in some 100,000 defense and coverage matters, with many defending clients in various local, state and federal courts. Indeed, over more than four decades, our litigation, coverage and trial lawyers have gained a reputation for taking on and prevailing in the most challenging and technical cases, frequently “parachuting in” to assume unresolved matters from other law firms. Our success also derives from winning on our clients’ terms and rigorously adhering to their guidelines. We are ranked 105 in the Am Law 200 and 57th in the National Law Journal’s NLJ 500.