Miguel Zaldivar (LLM ’88), Hogan Lovells CEO, to deliver 2025 Convocation address

The University of Illinois College of Law is pleased to announce that Miguel Zaldivar (LLM ’88) will deliver the convocation address to the Class of 2025. The College of Law Convocation Ceremony will take place Saturday, May 17, at 4:30 p.m. in the Great Hall of Krannert Center for the Performing Arts. 

Miguel Zaldivar is a partner and the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) for Hogan Lovells, responsible for the firm’s overall global direction and strategic leadership. He became CEO in July 2020 and is one of only a handful of Latino leaders of any major global law firm.

Under Miguel’s leadership, Hogan Lovells has achieved record financial results. In 2025, the firm achieved nearly US$3 billion in global revenue, charting steady growth year-on-year. In recent years, Hogan Lovells has also strengthened its investments in top-tier legal talent, sector leadership, and critical advancements in AI.

As a practicing lawyer, Miguel is widely recognized as a leading lawyer in complex international cross-border transactions and has facilitated multi-billion dollar investments and transactions totaling in excess of US$75 billion across the world. Successful negotiation and execution of deals in highly-regulated markets continues to be a core practice for the firm and a key driver of growth

Miguel taught the “Project Development and Finance in Latin America” course at the University of Miami School of Law from 2003 to 2010, was a professor of law at Universidad Católica in Venezuela from 1991 to 1993 and has been a frequent lecturer at legal seminars.

Miguel is committed to the firm’s philanthropic activities, including leading on the firm’s work with not-for-profit charity Santa Marta Group, which is focused on eradicating human trafficking and modern-day slavery. Under Miguel’s leadership, Hogan Lovells also joined forced with the international charity WaterAid in a three-year partnership to support water, sanitation, and hygiene projects across the world.

He is passionate about collaboration, actively listening to clients’ needs, and mentoring lawyers to build enduring relationships. Pro bono work, community engagement, and fostering an inclusive workplace culture where all lawyers can thrive are among Miguel’s top priorities. He has championed efforts to support the development and advancement of the firm’s lawyers from all backgrounds.

Before becoming CEO, he served as Regional Chief Executive for the Asia, Pacific Middle East region. He had been a member of the Global Board of Directors, served as Co-leader of the Infrastructure, Energy, Resources and Projects practice area and co-founded Hogan Lovells’ Latin American Practice.

Miguel earned his LLM at the University of Illinois College of Law and his JD at University of Miami School of Law.

For more information about Convocation for the Class of 2025, please visit our website.

Illinois LawCast: Teaching Black History with Juan Thomas

Juan Thomas has found great success in the legal world and in politics since graduating from Illinois Law in 1996, and now he is taking the time to give back by teaching The History of the African-American Lawyer in the United States. We talked about his path to the law and why he is passionate about sharing Black history with a new generation of students.

If you have comments or suggestions for the podcast, please contact podcast@illinois.edu.

Markus ’86 discusses Russian sanctions with Kyiv Independent

“If Putin doesn’t do what Trump wants, Trump can sanction more. Under existing authority, there is a lot more a President can do in terms of imposing sanctions or enforcement without going to Congress,” adjunct professor Taisa Markus ’86 told the Kyiv Independent in an article on how the president might deal with Russia. With the war in Ukraine nearing its third year, sanctions are still a powerful tool, and how the president could alter or deploy them remains a question.

Markus ’86 discusses Russia sanctions with News Bureau

“Much depends on our leaders and whether a judicious long-term approach to easing sanctions is taken. A president should also be cognizant of responses from our allies in a changing world order,” Taisa Markus ’86 told the Illinois News Bureau. She spoke at length about the sanctions the United States has placed on Russia in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine and how those might change under a new administration.

College of Law names 57 employers to 2023-2024 Employer Honor Roll

Today, the University of Illinois College of Law published its 2023-2024 Employer Honor Roll. The Honor Roll recognizes employers who have regularly hired recent College of Law graduates. The Honor Roll contains a wide variety of employers, including, for example, law firms of many sizes, accounting firms, a wide variety of government agencies, public interest employers, and courts. Combined, Honor Roll employers have hired approximately 180 recent College of Law graduates in the Classes of 2021, 2022, 2023. The Honor Roll was first created in 2014. With the support of Honor Roll members, and hundreds of additional employers, the College of Law has continued to deliver a strong array of opportunities for its graduates.

“The 2023-2024 Employer Honor Roll is an impressive and diverse collection of employers,” noted Greg Miarecki, the College’s Executive Assistant Dean for Career Planning and Professional Development. “We are excited to continue working with our Honor Roll employers and all of our employer partners in this dynamic and challenging recruiting environment,” Miarecki added.

Diamond
Kirkland & Ellis LLP

Platinum
Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office 
Deloitte Tax LLP
Heyl Royster Voelker & Allen, P.C.
Jones Day 
Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP
Land of Lincoln Legal Aid
Meyer Capel 
Sidley Austin LLP
Winston & Strawn LLP 

Gold
Barnes & Thornburg LLP
Chapman and Cutler
Circuit Court of Cook County
CNA Insurance
Dykema
Husch Blackwell LLP
Illinois Office of the State’s Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor
Lavelle Law, Ltd.
Locke Lord LLP
McDermott Will & Emery LLP
Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg LLP
Office of Chief Counsel, Internal Revenue Service
Polsinelli PC
Reed Smith LLP
Thompson Coburn LLP
U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois
U.S. District Court, Central District of Illinois
University of Illinois – Office of University Counsel

Silver
Ancel Glink, P.C. *
Army JAG
Benesch
Brennan Burtker LLC *
Burke, Warren, MacKay & Serritella, P.C.
Dickinson Wright PLLC *
Duncan Law Group *
Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP
Ginsberg Jacobs LLC
Hinkhouse Williams Walsh LLP
Hinshaw & Culbertson LLP
Hourglass Legal Consulting
Ice Miller, LLP
Illinois Appellate Court, Fourth District
Jenner & Block LLP
Knobbe Martens Olson & Bear LLP
Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles (LAFLA)
LG Electronics *
Littler Mendelson
Mayer Brown LLP
McGuireWoods LLP
Office of the State Appellate Defender
Seyfarth Shaw LLP
Thomas Mamer, LLP
U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of Illinois
U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana *
Vedder Price P.C.
Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati
Wilson, Elser, Moskowitz, Edelman & Dicker, LLP

Asterisks denote employers that are new or returning to the Employer Honor Roll. The complete list of Honor Roll employers, along with the methodology for selecting employers, can be found at www.law.illinois.edu/careers/employer-honor-roll.

As Leader in Residence, Strautmanis ’94 uses the power of story to inspire students

In his role as the College of Law’s first Leader in Residence, Michael Strautmanis ’94 is ready to embrace the opportunity to inspire students and spark dialogue about the role lawyers play in society. There’s one thing he’s most excited to do, though.

“It gives me a chance to tell a lot of great stories,” he said with a laugh. “I believe that storytelling is the fundamental way to share experiences and lessons learned and, because I’ve seen some exciting and interesting and fun things, I have the opportunity to bring those to life for the students.”

Exciting, interesting, and fun might undersell the experiences that Strautmanis has had in his career. One story he is most excited to share details about is how he was chosen as the lawyer supporting the nascent democracy in Kosovo at the end of the war in that country, just a short five years after graduating from Illinois Law. Strautmanis’ experience also includes campaign work and a prominent role in the Obama White House, a stint as a Vice President within the Walt Disney Company, and his current role as Executive Vice President at the Obama Foundation.

Michael Strautmanis speaks at the College of Law

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“I try to use these stories to humanize myself because I want the students to see that somebody who sat in the chairs that they’re sitting in can do a range of really interesting things,” he added.

The Leader in Residence program is part of the College of Law’s Leadership Project, which is designed to promote leadership education among College of Law students through a variety of lectures, book talks, and classes focused on leadership principles. Students who complete a prescribed number of these activities, and attend a capstone half-day retreat in April, earn the title “Leadership Scholar”; 15 College of Law alumni have earned this distinction thus far.

As Leader in Residence, Strautmanis spent the week of February 19 in Champaign. During his time on campus, he hosted a lunch-and-learn event with the American Constitutional Society, led a Leadership Project book talk on Simon Sinek’s “Start With Why,” taught a session of the College’s required 1L Fundamentals of Legal Practice class, and led a week-long course, Law 792 – “Lawyers as Leaders.” The course provided students with examples of different leadership styles, and how they could develop and apply their skills to claim their own style. With guest speakers such as Eric Holder, former attorney general of the United States, and Sarada Peri, whom Strautmanis called “one of the best speechwriters in the business,” students got to hear the stories that helped shape these high-ranking leaders within their respective fields and beyond.

“I learned here at the University of Illinois that being a lawyer was a noble calling. I learned that we had a responsibility to this society, and I took an oath when I passed the bar that was dedicated to the Constitution and the values that underpin our democratic society,” Strautmanis said. “I believe that lawyers have the opportunity to choose to be intentional about how they use that information, that knowledge, that power. And in making those choices we have the opportunity to be leaders and we should explore what kind of leaders we want to be.”

As an undergraduate student at Illinois, Strautmanis always had an interest in attending law school. However, it wasn’t until he visited the College of Law Building that his interest quickly turned into a real option for him. It was a place where he felt seen by fellow Black students who helped address his questions, and he remembers being warmly welcomed by the faculty and staff. He says Illinois Law found him and, as a result, was the only school he applied to, though perhaps it didn’t hurt that his future wife was also pursuing a graduate degree on campus.

During his time here, Strautmanis says he “wasn’t that great of a student.” Though he made the dean’s list one semester, he left feeling like Illinois was not going to play a large role in his future. As he progressed through his career, however, the ways Illinois had shaped him became clearer.

“I have often found myself in rooms engaging with people who went to Harvard and other Ivy League schools and I always took that as an opportunity to show them that, you know, a kid who went to law school at the University of Illinois was also fully equipped to go toe-to-toe with them,” Strautmanis said. “I’ve come to realize just how meaningful my experience had been here. So I consider it a bit of a miracle that I’m back with the title of professor.”

Being back on campus, Strautmanis says he sees a level of enthusiasm and passion among the students and faculty that matches or even exceeds what he remembers from his time as a student. In particular, he noted the work done by Professor Suja Thomas as an example of how individual passion—in her case, regarding the right to trial by jury—can be incredibly inspiring. Likewise, he has found the students themselves to be a source of encouragement.

“These students, they know how the world works,” he said. “I’m really impressed how much they’re grappling with the same challenges that I’m faced with.”

The challenges that Strautmanis has faced in his work, in both private companies and in public service, are not exactly what he had in mind while he was studying at Illinois. However, he says the College of Law gave him the tools he needed to excel in areas such as foreign aid, legislation, community organizing, and expanding equity and inclusion. Now, as an adjunct professor, he can share what he’s learned and help shape the next generation of leaders—and they’re already making an impression.

“My time here has been pretty rich and engaging because, frankly, I thought I needed to meet the students where they were and they’re kind of meeting me where I’m at,” Strautmanis said. “I would encourage alumni to take a trip to Champaign and see what the students are doing here.”



Entrepreneurial spirit propels Epstein ’04 to top of sports and entertainment field

Tim Epstein ’04 wanted to be Corbin Bernson in LA Law. Watching television with his mother, he saw the good-looking actor riding around in convertibles and having fun in the courtroom and identified something he’d like to work toward.

“I wanted to be a lion in the courtroom,” he said. “My second summer clerkship, at Corboy & Demetrio, I realized that the lions of the court, the real trial lawyers, they die with their boots on. So, there wasn’t going to be an opportunity for me to rise through the ranks quickly. And I didn’t want to do that. I wanted to rise quickly, and I wanted to be entrepreneurial.”

Epstein was no stranger to cutting his own path, however. As a student at Illinois, he enjoyed the extracurricular offerings, but couldn’t find one that fit him, so he created his own. The Irish Law Students Association was his creation, an outlet for him to do things like service trips to Appalachia and social outings like marching in the Chicago St. Patrick’s Day Parade, where he met and had a beer with a young candidate for Senate named Barack Obama.

Using the same spirit he put into creating the Irish Law Students Association, Epstein bent his will toward carving out a niche in sports and entertainment law where he saw a void. As a 3L, having already had a note selected for publication in the Elder Law Journal, he focused on research that would become a law review article accepted by the University of Virginia on “disappointment lawsuits” in sports. Shortly after graduating, while doing the work and learning how to be a lawyer (“my day job”), he also spent time researching and getting in on the ground floor of the emerging field of sports law.

That independent sports law work at the College of Law and in his early years of practice led to Epstein rising through the ranks to Duggan Bertsch’s sports law practice. There, he does a bit of everything, from Olympic arbitrations to NCAA enforcement cases. But sports wasn’t the only area in which he saw opportunity.

“I got great advice from one of my mentors at Donahue Brown, who told me, ‘If you want to be a partner in a law firm, the fastest path to partnership is to do something that other people are not doing,’” Epstein said.

Major music festivals were in a nascent stage in 2004, when a friend asked Epstein to help him with the legal aspects of organizing a festival in Chicago. He jumped at the chance to help with the Pitchfork Music Festival, which has attracted thousands of music fans to Chicago annually and spawned new iterations around the globe. Working on the early installments, however, helped establish Epstein within the field. His work diligently poring over contracts with artists, vendors, and sponsors earned him a reputation for great work and a foot in the door with the many promoters and festivals that have sprung up in the years since.

Now, along with his role chairing Duggan Bertsch’s Entertainment, Events, and Festivals industry group, he leads a team that provides counsel to nearly all of the independent major festivals in Chicago and many more across North America. He represents over 100 festivals, over 100 live event promoters, and a couple hundred venues.

“I look at myself, really, as an entrepreneur and the majority of my clients are entrepreneurs. We really regard ourselves as part of our client’s team, not just as some fungible piece,” Epstein said. “I have relationships with brands and vendors, I have my own ticketing terms with all the major ticketing platforms. I have terms in place with all the major music agencies. And so, what it does is it provides my clients not just substantive expertise, but it gives them leverage that they wouldn’t otherwise have unless they were a Live Nation or AEG.”

Building those relationships and becoming an asset for clients required Epstein to use his innate will and determination, skills he honed at the College of Law. The challenge of earning a degree at Illinois remains vivid to Epstein and an important factor in helping him on the path to becoming one of Billboard’s top music lawyers.

“The academic rigors, quality of the fellow classmates, and the quality of the faculty and dedication to teaching,” he explained. “You have so many people fully dedicated just to the art of teaching…not only are you more focused on the academic side, but your fellow students are as well. Being all together in C-U for those three years provided a great foundation.

“I think the relationships that I developed with faculty and with fellow students at Illinois were 10-20 times better than what I’ve seen from any of my other fellow attorneys that they experience in their law schools,” Epstein added.

When students ask him for advice, at the Sports & Entertainment Law Society event he spoke at this month or in classes he teaches at Loyola University School of Law (where he has been adjunct faculty for almost 15 years), he cautions them against seeking out a job because of their personal enthusiasm for the subjects. In his entertainment practice, Epstein makes a point to only represent the buyers of talent and to avoid all work with the talent themselves in order to deliver the best results for his clients. Although he is a sports and music fan himself, he is decidedly not a “fanboy.”

“My enthusiasm for both sports and entertainment law is first and foremost based on development on the ground floor of a practice of law, and not any fandom,” he said.

What Epstein encourages students to do is use their own resolve to find a niche in an industry where they can establish themselves as a powerhouse.

“Don’t start something just for the sake of starting something to say it’s yours. I would say see what is out there and see what is missing or broken and then attack it and make it your own,” he said. 

With a growing list of accolades including a place on Law Bulletin’s Forty Under 40, his sports law practice being ranked among the best, as well as accolades from Billboard for his work in live entertainment, following Epstein’s advice might be a great idea for any young legal mind.

Tim Epstein

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Remembering Judge Harold A. Baker ’56

Though many people are remembered for their personal achievements, the truly great individuals—those who are recalled fondly and for a long time—are those who bring out the best in others. Judge Harold A. Baker ’56, who died on September 18, certainly was that kind of person. In every memorial and obituary written, those who knew him have recalled his ability to elevate those around him to their best selves.

“He treated younger people, including me, as sitting at the table right there with him,” Richard Pope ’79 recalled about Baker. “He had more experience, and there were times when he pulled rank of course, but…he considered you to be an equal. 

“He was fair. He treated everybody with respect: every party, every lawyer, every juror.” 

Baker was born in Mt. Kisko, NY, on October 4, 1929, but came to Illinois to finish his bachelor’s degree and made a home here. He graduated in 1951 and enlisted in the Navy, serving two years during the Korean War, reaching the rank of Lieutenant on the destroyer USS Watts. After his service, he earned his JD in 1956 and worked in private practice for more than 20 years. 

He gave back to his alma mater by serving as an adjunct professor at Illinois from 1972 to 1978, including work with another future federal judge, Prentice Marshall, to create the trial advocacy program. President Jimmy Carter appointed him as judge for the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Illinois in 1978, and soon after his confirmation the courts were rearranged so that he served the Central District of Illinois. 

He would spend the next 44 years on the bench in some capacity, becoming Chief Judge of the Central District in 1984 and Senior Judge from October 1994 until January 2022. Additionally, Baker served a seven-year term on the United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court from 1995 to 2005, having been appointed by Chief Justice William Rehnquist. 

During his time as a judge, he earned a reputation as more than just a good colleague. In 1987, he ruled that Springfield’s commission government was in violation of the federal Voting Rights Act, which ended the mayor-and-four-commissioners governance of the city that had elected no Black individuals from 1911 to 1987. He also took prisoner rights cases much more seriously than was common for his time, going so far as visiting the Pontiac Correctional Facility to examine conditions first-hand. His belief in humanity of incarcerated individuals led to decisions that would become part of law review literature.

“He never lost sight of the fact that these people in the prison remained human,” said Pope, remembering Baker’s actions. 

Hollywood even took notice of Baker’s decisions, as his role as judge in the lysine price-fixing conspiracy case against Archer Daniels Midland was later immortalized on the silver screen in 2009’s “The Informant!” Baker was played by Dick Smothers, one half of the famous Smothers Brothers comedy team, in the film. 

However, for all hose individual accolades and career achievements, Baker is best remembered for his personality and gracious spirit. 

In the News-Gazette’s memorial, U.S. District Court Judge Sue Myerscough described Baker as “one of the smartest people I ever met.” 

A law clerk to Baker in the early 1980s, overlapping with Pope in his office, Myerscough also recalled Baker “treated everyone equally and he didn’t hesitate to call out an injustice when he saw one. He didn’t put up with fools lightly in his courtroom.” 

Fellow Illini judges Arnold F. Blockman ’73, who served the Sixth Circuit of Illinois, and Colin Bruce ’89, who served on the Central District bench with Baker beginning in 2013, both hailed Baker for his collegiality. 

“He was quite a character and a really great guy and a good friend,” said Blockman. 

“Sometimes when a sentencing is wearing me down, it makes me remember Judge Baker’s smile and ‘onward and upward,’” said Bruce. 

Everyone who came into Baker’s orbit will remember the man for a long time, such was the nature and strength of his personality. Pope, who had a life-long relationship with Baker extending far beyond his time as a clerk for the young judge, credits him with lessons that shaped a career. 

“Harold showed me what the finest lawyer, judge, and human could be. He saw something in me that he liked and valued,” Pope said. “That confidence in me, from someone I admired, helped me gain and keep confidence in myself. I’m sure there are many others he mentored that feel the same way.”

Judge Harold Baker speaking before a Senate committee.

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Daniel Campbell ’13 named to Crain’s 40 Under 40

“The best young partner I’ve ever worked with,” is how former McDermott Will & Emory Chair Jeff Stone describes Daniel Campbell ’13. It’s little wonder then that Crain’s Chicago Business chose the young lawyer as one of their “40 Under 40” for 2023. With an incredible work ethic and an impressive and growing list of arguments, this is just the latest recognition in a career that has already received numerous praise and will certainly earn more.

Maatuka honored with Athena Award

Shayla Maatuka ’03 made a promise to her grandma that she would try to get her uncle out of jail. When he died in prison, her determination to do good never wavered. Since receiving a law degree, she has continued working for the community and doing the most good she can, all while mentoring the next generation and helping others around her. Her humble commitment was recently recognized with the 2023 Athena Leadership Award by the Executive Club of Champaign County. 

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