Latham Shows How Big Law Cashes In on AI-Driven Data Center Boom
For years, Michael Rechtin, who works as a lawyer negotiating data center real estate agreements, went to a “sleepy,” “nerdy” tech junkie conference in Hawaii. It’s now a high-profile event that attracts a lot of private equity folks.
In an interview, Rechtin declared, “We’re finally having our time in the sun,”
Rechtin is making money because data center work is in high demand. Last week, the real estate attorney quit DLA Piper to work for Latham & Watkins, one of the most lucrative and second-largest legal firms in the nation by revenue. He said that he did so in order to collaborate with the energy law firm’s staff.