Mayer Brown has a dedicated tax controversy and litigation team that consists entirely of tax specialists. This level of in-depth expertise sees the firm involved in cutting-edge cases, ongoing examples of which include achieving the first taxpayer win under New York’s new manufacturer tax incentive for E. & J. Gallo Winery. Leah Robinson in New York, who leads the increasingly active SALT practice, led on that matter. The practice has four outstanding leaders, namely Brian Kittle in New York, Thomas Kittle-Kamp and Joel Williamson in Chicago, and Gary Wilcox in  Washington DC. Kittle-Kamp, whose recent work spans major cases involving transfer pricing, partnership and corporate transactions, is currently acting for Abbott Labs before the US Tax Court in a challenge to regulations implementing the global intangible low-tax income (GILTI) rules. Williamson’s track record includes the trial of seven major transfer pricing cases. Kittle recently won an issue of first impression concerning an IRS substance-over-form and step-transaction challenge. In Chicago, John Hildy is lauded for his work on federal tax disputes for multi-national corporations, and Jenny Austin has a broad practice that encompasses transfer pricing and other international issues.
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Anwält*innen

Hall of Fame

Die Anwält*innen an der Spitze ihres Berufsstands, die aufgrund ihres langjährigen Engagements in marktführender Arbeit von Wettbewerbern und Mandanten gleichermaßen geschätzt und anerkannt werden.

Leading partners

Die stärksten Partner*innen ihres Praxisbereichs, die eine führende Rolle in signifikanten Mandaten einnehmen und weitreichende Anerkennung unter Wettbewerbern und Mandanten genießen.

Praxisleitung

Brian Kittle; Tom Kittle-Kemp; Joel Williamson; Gary Wilcox

Weitere Kernanwält*innen

John Hildy; Leah Robinson; Jenny Austin

L500 | Mayer Brown > US taxes: contentious > United States | The Legal 500-Kanzleiprofile