Jackson Kelly (law firm)

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No.ofoffices12
No.ofattorneysOver 160
Major practice areasGeneral Practice
Key peopleBob Tweel, Managing Member
James A. Lowen, Executive Director
Jackson Kelly PLLC
No. of offices12
No. of attorneysOver 160
Major practice areasGeneral Practice
Key peopleBob Tweel, Managing Member
James A. Lowen, Executive Director
Date founded1822 (Benjamin H. Smith)
1865 (Smith & Knight)
1892 (Brown, Jackson & Knight)
1955 (Jackson, Kelly, Holt & O'Farrell)
2002 (Jackson Kelly)
Company typeProfessional limited liability company
WebsiteJacksonKelly.com

Jackson Kelly PLLC, known as Jackson Kelly, is a full service law firm and one of the 250 largest law firms headquartered in the United States.[1] The firm, which has a strong presence in Appalachia and the Midwestern United States, was formed in 1822 when Benjamin H. Smith began practicing law in what was then Charleston, Virginia. U.S. News & World Report ranks the firm as the nation's best in mining and mineral law, but as a full-service law firm, Jackson Kelly provides legal counseling and litigation to a wide range of clients across many practice areas. The firm employs more than 160 lawyers in offices throughout West Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Washington, D.C., and Colorado.

Benjamin H. Smith began practicing law in 1822 in what was then Charleston, Virginia. When West Virginia was created out of the Civil War, Smith participated in its Constitutional Convention and was appointed United States District Attorney for West Virginia by President Abraham Lincoln. Smith practiced with two other lawyers, James H. Brown and Edward B. Knight, and in 1892 they formed Brown, Jackson & Knight. It went through a number of name changes until adopting Jackson Kelly in 2002. From its earliest days the firm devoted much of its service to the coal industry, although it has since diversified into a full-service law firm.[2] In 1985, the firm opened its first office beyond West Virginia, in Lexington, Kentucky.[3] It continued to expand throughout the Midwest and as far west as Colorado.

Jackson Kelly was the subject of controversy due to its representation of coal companies in black lung cases. The investigative journalist Chris Hamby alleges that Jackson Kelly has a decades-long history of "orchestrating sophisticated legal strategies to defeat claims [...] locking sick miners out of the benefits system."[4] Some judges interviewed by Hamby condemned the firm for its tactics to win such cases at all costs.[4] The firm's conduct was defended by West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin to journalists.[5]

Practice areas

Laidley Tower, headquarters of the firm's Charleston office
Eagles Home, headquarters of the firm's Evansville office

Jackson Kelly serves a wide variety of corporate and public clients in the following areas:[6]

The firm is considered "the go-to place" for legal representation in the mining and coal industry.[2]

Notable awards and rankings

Notable attorneys and alumni

References

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