Stephen Palley, a lawyer in Washington D.C., known for his wry tweets about the industryâs travails, has started a blockchain and cryptocurrency practice with an unusual focus.
The new 10-person team at Anderson Kill will concentrate on mediating disputes and what people in the traditional finance world call âworkoutsâ â that is, resolving distressed situations.
Itâs a fitting mission for Palley, who has long voiced skepticism about the just-do-it mentality of some tech innovators. In his view, many projects are forging ahead without first thinking through dry but critical matters such as governance, indemnification, directors and officers insurance and so on.
This creates a need for lawyers who can help companies stay out of trouble â or get out of it.
As Palley told CoinDesk:
 âIâm the guy you talk to before you get started, or after you have problems because you didnât talk to someone like me first.â
While many big law firms have created blockchain or digital currency practices in recent years, few have positioned them as cleanup crews. Silver Miller, which has sued a number of cryptocurrency exchanges and ICO promoters, comes closest, though Palley said heâs not particularly interested in class-action plaintiff work.
Palley, who has 18 years of litigation experience, joined Anderson Kill in April 2016. His previous work at the firm involved construction and other insurance disputes, but also software development.
Taking advantage of that tech knowledge, he hopes to help clients build things that are useful but compliant. Blockchain networks, which know no borders, present interesting challenges in this regard.
âIf somebody wants to work with a system of nodes that are distributed among various jurisdictions, you have to think through things a lawyer might worry about,â such as local healthcare privacy laws, copyright, or takedown notices, he said.
But for clients who failed to do that sort of thinking at the outset, he and his colleagues are ready to defend them in court when necessary. Last year, he noted, he won a three-week trial case in a federal court in Brooklyn, N.Y.
The web page for Anderson Killâs new practice takes a dig at members of the profession who have branded themselves as blockchain advocates: âWe are lawyers, not âCryptoLawyers.'â
Palley said his main objection to that term is that unlike âdivorce lawyerâ or âsecurities lawyer,â which indicate specialized knowledge but are essentially neutral descriptions, adding the âcrypto-â prefix positions attorneys as âfellow travelers.â
Such positioning âcould preclude them from providing advice people donât want to hear,â he said, adding:
âPeople donât hire me because of my ideological or philosophical bent. They hire me to provide neutral advice thatâs in their best interest.â
Image via Shutterstock.