Parr Brown Gee & Loveless is pleased to announce that Robert Wing, Tom Melton, and Joni Ostler have joined the firm, and, in connection with these hires, Parr Brown has formed a Receivership Practice Group. “We are thrilled to add Joni, Tom and Robert to our firm and to formalize our Receivership Practice Group. These actions will greatly enhance what already are deep and capable receivership, securities, and commercial litigation practice areas,” said D. Craig Parry, firm President. “No Utah firm, and few firms nationally, have the expertise and experience of Parr Brown in the receivership area.” “With these hires,
Parr Brown is pleased to announce that Terry E. Welch will be returning to the firm as a shareholder and board member on July 8, 2022. Terry worked at Parr Brown from 1990 to 2019 when he left to serve as a mission president for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. He is a past President and longtime shareholder. He remained affiliated as “of counsel” during his 3-year absence. Craig Parry, President of Parr Brown stated: “We are pleased to welcome Terry back to the firm. For nearly three decades he has been an invaluable member of this
Parr Brown Gee & Loveless is pleased to announce that Martin Banks, Rick Rose, and Chaunceton Bird have joined the firm. Marty Banks joins Parr Brown as a shareholder and is a member of the firm’s Environmental Law practice group and Litigation practice group. His environmental practice includes counseling clients in cost-effective regulatory compliance and permitting strategies. He has broad experience with issues involving the Clean Air Act, the National Environmental Policy Act, the Endangered Species Act, the Clean Water Act, the Administrative Procedures Act and the clean-up and transfer of contaminated properties. Marty’s business litigation practice includes environmental and
Parr Brown Gee & Loveless is pleased to announce that D. Craig Parry has been selected as President of the firm. “Since returning from law school and a federal clerkship in Boston, Parr Brown has been my home for over 25 years. While over that time, and particularly the past two years, the legal market – and even the way of practicing law – has changed significantly, Parr Brown has stayed moored to the principles upon which it was founded 47 years ago by a handful of partners dissatisfied with their firms’ top-down management and economic incentives for attorneys that