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Egan, Fitzpatrick & Malsch
(formerly Egan & Associates, PLLC) has represented corporate
and government clients, public utilities, and individuals
from 19 nations and many U.S. states on matters arising
before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the Department of
Energy,
the State and Commerce Departments, the Environmental Protection
Agency, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, the U.S. Congress,
various state agencies and public utility commissions, and in federal
and state courts. The firm has also worked closely with the
European
Community and the International Atomic Energy Agency on foreign
projects.
The firm's substantive focus on highly scientific
transactions and disputes allows it to handle the full range of
issues, transactions, and services required in the nuclear energy,
environmental, and other scientific fields, including corporate
and contracting issues, litigation and arbitration, regulatory matters,
government and media relations, legislation, public utility commission
proceedings, restructuring, lobbying, and environmental compliance.
The firm has managed some of the highest-profile
nuclear litigation in the world in recent years. In addition, it
has served as special litigation counsel to other firms, in both
federal and state settings, and in complex arbitration.
Egan, Fitzpatrick & Malsch has achieved major victories
for clients at markedly reduced cost, combining the low overhead
of a small law office with the sophistication and skills required
in what is perhaps the most complex field of law. The firm's attorneys
include engineers and scientists with significant prior work experience,
giving them the technical background needed to work cost-effectively
and without time-consuming learning curves.
Where the broad services and personnel of a larger
firm are required for certain matters, Egan, Fitzpatrick & Malsch
teams with numerous major firms in over a dozen cities and
with clients’
traditional counsel. In such arrangements, the firm
has worked as project manager subcontracting work to the larger
firm, or as subcontractor to or co-counsel with the larger firm,
as the client chooses.
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