| During
his 35-year career, Mr. MacLeod has handled a wide variety of
complex litigation in diverse subject areas such as securities,
minority shareholders rights, antitrust, unfair competition,
medical staff privileges, construction, breach of contract,
employment discrimination, ERISA, franchise disputes, and personal
injury.
Since joining HBD as a partner at its inception in 1995,
Mr. MacLeod has focused primarily on securities litigation
on behalf of buy-side clients including defrauded municipal,
life insurance, mutual fund, and hedge fund investors. Mr.
MacLeod is frequently involved in the initial investigation,
conceptualization and drafting of such cases, which have included
cases on behalf of:
• Orange County against Merrill Lynch and various
government-sponsored entities (Fannie Mae, Sallie Mae, and
the Federal Home Loan Banks),
• Two hedge funds against Gleacher NatWest relating
to investments in the notes of a failed steel plant in Thailand,
• Four life insurers and a distressed debt hedge
fund against Wall Street investment banks relating to investments
in securities issued by Enron and Enron-related special
purpose vehicles,
• Diverse investors (such as a Taft-Hartley pension
fund, a non-profit hospital, and individuals) against investment
advisors/brokers for churning and other forms of portfolio
mismanagement, and
• Five life insurers against Bank of America relating
to private placements of debt sponsored and guaranteed by
Parmalat S.p.A.
All but the last of these securities cases (which is still
pending) settled on terms that were quite favorable to HBD’s
clients, resulting in recoveries well in excess of $1 billion.
Mr. MacLeod has served as trial or co-trial counsel in a
number of notable cases including the following:
Robert Johnson M.D. v. State of
California/Department of Corrections -- 2005 trial
of an age discrimination case on behalf of an 80-year-old
chief medical officer of a California prison. The one-month
trial resulted in a $20 million verdict, which is believed
to be the largest age discrimination verdict and emotional
distress verdict in history on behalf of a single individual,
and also the oldest plaintiff to obtain a verdict for age
discrimination. In response to post-trial motions, the trial
judge reduced the verdict as being excessive to a total award,
including court-awarded attorneys’ fees, of $6.4 million.
Pacific Sun Publishing Company v.
San Francisco Newspaper Printing Company, Inc. –
1981 antitrust trial on behalf of all defendants (the Hearst
Corporation, San Francisco Examiner, San Francisco Chronicle,
and the San Francisco Newspaper Printing Company) in the first
case tried under the Newspaper Preservation Act. The three-month
trial resulted in a defense verdict.
Butler v. Galli Homes, Inc.
-- 1977 trial of a construction defect case on behalf of an
architecture firm involving water infiltration throughout
a residential development. The three-month trial resulted
in a directed verdict for Mr. MacLeod's client at the close
of plaintiffs' case.
Robert Mondavi v. C. Mondavi &
Sons -- 1976 three-month trial of minority shareholder
case on behalf of Robert Mondavi resulting in the court-ordered
involuntarily dissolution of the Charles Krug Winery for persistent
fraud, mismanagement, and abuse of authority by the majority
shareholders (at the time the largest court-ordered involuntary
dissolution in history). Mr. MacLeod's role in the case was
chronicled in the 2007 book, "The House of Mondavi"
by Julia Flynn.
Prior to joining HBD, Mr. MacLeod was an associate (6 years)
and partner (16 years) at the San Francisco law firm of Farella,
Braun & Martel.
Education:
University of Chicago Law School, J.D. 1973,
cum laude and order of the coif
University of Missouri (Columbia), B.S. 1970,
with a major in finance
AV Peer Review Rated
|