PDA

View Full Version : Racist law firm - same one! Dewey Ballantine


lethal
02-02-2004, 02:25 PM
Last year the law firm of Dewey Ballantine held an annual dinner where some Associated mocked Asian people. They apologized, but just recently, they had another gaffe against Asians. When will this ever stop? Here's a link (http://www6.law.com/lawcom/displayid.cfm?statename=NY&docnum=189247&table=news&flag=full) to the original event last year and then a link to the new incident.

http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1075219819760

Dewey Partner's E-Mail Causes Upset Over Racial Insensitivity

Anthony Lin
New York Law Journal
01-29-2004

Nearly one year after lawyers at Dewey Ballantine infuriated members of the Asian-American community by performing a stereotype-laden parody song at their annual dinner, the law firm is again dealing with allegations of racial insensitivity, this time stemming from a partner's joke that was e-mailed to all of the firm's New York employees.

On Monday, an employee sent a firmwide e-mail advertising the availability of some puppies for adoption. Douglas Getter, a London-based American who heads Dewey Ballantine's European mergers and acquisitions practice then sent a firmwide reply.

"Please don't let these puppies go to a Chinese restaurant!" Getter wrote in his e-mail.

His joke, derived from stereotypes about Asian predilections for consuming animals Westerners consider pets, drew immediate criticism from others at the firm, and Getter sent out an apology. The firm's co-chairs, Sanford Morhouse and Morton Pierce, also issued a response.

"This afternoon an offensive e-mail was circulated by a partner," Morhouse and Pierce wrote. "Comments of this nature are inconsistent with the values of this firm and will not be tolerated. We extend our immediate apologies to the entire Dewey Ballantine community."

Dewey has 582 lawyers worldwide, with almost 350 in New York.

In an interview Tuesday, Morhouse said the firm's executive committee would be meeting shortly to determine what further action should be taken. Getter could not be reached for comment.

Last March, the firm issued an apology after the Law Journal reported that at a Jan. 31, 2003, annual dinner, the firm had parodied the closing of its Hong Kong office with a version of "Hello Dolly" retitled "The Dirge of Long Duck Dong," an apparent reference to the stereotyped Chinese exchange student in the movie "Sixteen Candles."

The song said the seven-lawyer office, which closed at the end of March 2003, was "chow mein" and was getting "the gong."

"You were the firm's folly," the song continued, "and now we so solly to be cutting off your source of livelihood."

The black-tie annual dinner and its anonymously penned parodies were a longstanding tradition at the firm. Morhouse and Pierce discontinued the dinner shortly after becoming the firm's co-chairs in October.

"It was a party culture that had outlived its usefulness," Morhouse said Tuesday.

But he stressed that neither the dinner nor Monday's incident should be taken as representative of the firm's character. He said Asian and Asian-American lawyers were "tremendously well-regarded" and "highly valued" at the firm.

"For us to be tagged with this kind of prejudice is truly unfortunate and ironic," said Morhouse.

Grace Yoo, executive director of the National Asian Pacific American Bar Association, applauded Monday's swift response by Dewey, but said she was troubled that a partner felt comfortable enough to send such an e-mail.

The sentiment expressed in Getter's joke, she said, reinforced notions that Asians were "perpetual foreigners" and "were not within the norm of acceptability in American society."

Monday's incident also provides yet another example of a workplace gaffe magnified by an e-mail "reply all" command.

Last year, a summer associate at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom garnered media attention when he mistakenly sent an e-mail describing his sushi lunch and light workload to several partners at the firm.

But Morhouse said Getter's e-mail would have been offensive even if it had not been so widely circulated.

"It's not who we are," he said. "We apologize and we are sincere in that."

yoMAMA
02-02-2004, 06:00 PM
Wow, that is really SAD.

Class Action anyone?

Being lawyers themselves, i thought they are smarter than that.

Chris
02-02-2004, 06:10 PM
just check thier partners working for them.

I think there are only 3 AA partners. for a law firm that big.

lethal
02-02-2004, 08:00 PM
SSDD - Same Shit, Different Day

yoMAMA
02-03-2004, 07:00 AM
Well we should pursue the YW legal consoul to do something about it ;)

lethal
02-05-2004, 11:27 PM
Copyright 2004 The New York Sun, One SL, LLC
All Rights Reserved
The New York Sun

February 5, 2004 Thursday

SECTION: NEW YORK; Pg. 2

LENGTH: 580 words

HEADLINE: Anti-Asian Bias Charge Leveled at Prestigious Law Firm

BYLINE: By DANIELA GERSON Staff Reporter of the Sun

BODY:
Asian-American legal groups are outraged by what they are calling the
second anti-Asian bias incident in two years at the prestigious law firm
Dewey Ballantine LLP.

"Obviously the corporate culture is amiss," said the president of the
Asian American Bar Association, Christopher Chan. "They don't
necessarily perceive it as a problem, but obviously we do."

The offending incident was a firm wide e-mail sent by a partner
inferring the stereotype that Chinese eat domesticated animals. In the
e-mail, responding to another firm-wide e-mail advertising puppies
available for adoption, a London-based American partner wrote, "Please
don't let these puppies go to a Chinese restaurant!" the New York Law
Journal reported last week.

Mr. Chan, on behalf of the Asian American Bar Association, co-authored a
letter endorsed by nine Asian-American legal organizations and 36 law
student groups, demanding the firm take steps to address bias.

"While the e-mail in question may not rise to the level of a racial
slur, there should be no mistaking that the remarks by this partner are
extremely offensive and contain racial overtones," the letter reads.
"Those remarks demean the dignity of a people and segregate them from
the rest of society along racial and ethnic lines."

The firm responded immediately to the e-mail, with the author sending
out an apology and Dewey Ballantine's cochairman sending out an e-mail
that reads, "The author's comments are inconsistent with the values of
the firm and will not be tolerated."

Mr. Chan said anger over the e-mail was intensified by the firm's stated
resolution to become more sensitive to Asian-American concerns following
an offensive skit at a company dinner a little more than a year ago. At
the annual black-tie dinner, lawyers parodied the closing of the firm's
Hong Kong branch with a song in pidgin Chinese.

"Last year there were a lot of Asian organizations that really wanted to
come down on Dewey but I said no, let me handle it," Mr. Chan said.
Following the incident, Mr. Chan, accompanied by other members of the
bar association, met with Dewey's then-managing partner and suggested
they direct more resources toward minority issues.

The firm responded to questions about future actions with a statement
reading, "The firm is committed to diversity. It is working with the
newly established Office for Diversity of the Association of the Bar of
the City of New York to promote programs to foster diversity in the
profession."

But Asian organizations call the pledge insufficient.

"This year I've been fielding calls from organizations from all over the
country," Mr. Chan said. "It's not just Asians; other minority bar
organizations indicated they will be responding in the coming weeks.
It's going to be a continuing outburst of outrage."

"People have read the article in New York Law Journal or have heard from
friends about the e-mail," said Margaret Fung, the executive director of
the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, an endorser of the
letter. "I think it's important that Dewey Ballantine take additional
steps to be sure that all of the members of the firm understand that
racial stereotypes and racial slurs are not acceptable."

Ms. Fung said while she had not heard of other incidents of anti-Asian
bias at other New York-area law firms, she did not think the incident
was unique. "I am hoping it will raise awareness about unacceptable use
of racial stereotypes," Ms. Fung said.

Faithless
02-16-2004, 09:25 PM
From what I've read after the article was posted, here, Dewey Ballantine is a powerful law firm, too, like Disney.

Their contact form web page:

http://www.deweyballantine.com/contact.cfm

If it makes any difference, I sent this:
Dear Dewey Ballantine,

I was dismayed to read that a prestigious law firm such as yours would employee staff like the one mentioned in the following article:

http://washingtontimes.com/upi-breaking/20040207-085010-9451r.htm

Please consider disciplining the offending staff members, and make it known to other staff members that bigotry and racism is not to be tolerated within your law firm.

lethal
02-16-2004, 09:46 PM
FWIW, I'm part of this letter that has been sent out to them.

http://lethalweapon.inefficiency.org/dbpr.pdf

There response letter is here: http://lethalweapon.inefficiency.org/dbrl.pdf

Faithless
02-16-2004, 11:30 PM
You know, I'd like to see some other groups other than Asians that are upset with this stuff.

Sometimes I feel we're just so alone on some of this stuff. And I think the "ire" just doesn't rise up high enough on the media awareness detectometer.