Firm History: A Quest for Justice

  • 1960-1961
    A Legacy of Service Begins

    Joseph W. Cotchett enrolls at UC Hastings Law School after serving as an officer in the U.S. Army Intelligence Corps.

  • June 1964
    Setting the Foundation

    Joe Cotchett receives his law degree from the University of California, Hastings College of the Law.

  • 1967
    A Practice is Born

    Cotchett worked for a small firm in San Bruno for a year with a notable attorney, Saul Ross. In 1967, he opens his own practice in San Mateo in association with two other young lawyers, James Tormey and Bill Kenney.

  • 1968
    Moving Forward

    The young firm founded by Cotchett quickly began to make a name for itself representing workers and consumers. Using his engineering background, Cotchett sues a Los Angeles manufacturer whose machinery tore the arm off a Mexican factory-worker. Cotchett convinced the court that a simple $1.50 safety switch would have saved the worker's arm and prevented similar injuries to others who had no voice in workplace safety. 

  • 1973
    Early Fights Against Fraudsters

    In 1973, the firm took on financial operator C. Arnholt Smith, a banker and friend of Richard Nixon. The suit resulted in a $31 million verdict for shareholders who lost millions when Smith’s U.S. National Bank failed. Smith went to federal prison for embezzlement and tax fraud. At the time, the verdict was the largest damages award and first class action judgment of its kind rendered by a jury in the United States. 

  • 1976
    Cotchett, Hutchinson and Dyer

    In 1972, Cotchett asked Bob Hutchinson to become his first partner. Hutchinson left to Sacramento in 1976 to join the first Jerry Brown Administration, but later returned to run the firm’s Southern California operations. 

  • 1977
    Swine Flu Litigation

    U.S. soldiers fall ill and die after improperly tested Swine Flu vaccination. In one of the earliest multidistrict litigation (MDL) mass tort cases in the country, Cotchett was appointed lead counsel for thousands of cases consolidated in Washington, D.C.

  • 1978
    Cotchett & Illston

    In the mid-1970s, a bright Stanford Law student named Susan Illston joined the firm. Illston became a partner in 1976, and was added to the firm name in 1978. Illston was appointed to the federal bench in 1995, and remains one of the most universally respected District Court judges in the nation.

  • 1979
    Taking on the KKK

    The firm takes on the FBI over Ku-Klux-Klan assassination of Civil Rights Activist Viola Liuzzo. The suit called the FBI to task for hiring the informant involved in the murder, Gary Rowe. By shining a light on questionable FBI tactics, the Liuzzo case would lead the agency to completely revamp its policies about hiring unsavory confidential informants.

  • 1980
    A Nationwide Reputation Solidified

    By the end of the 1970s, the firm’s fight for justice, and its reputation, had expanded nationwide. It was during this time that Cotchett started putting pen to paper and wrote one of his first books on Products Liability and later books on Courtroom Evidence and Trial Practice – books still used today by lawyers and judges. 

  • 1982
    Dropping Roots in the Heart of Silicon Valley

    In 1982, Frank Pitre and Michael Samuels joined the firm, followed in 1984 by Bruce Simon. In 1986, the firm left San Mateo and established its main office in Burlingame – close to the San Francisco airport for mobility around the state.

  • 1990
    Lincoln Savings & Loan

    In the 1990s, the CPM team secured one of the most celebrated victories in U.S. history when they won a $3.3 billion jury verdict and settlements against Lincoln Savings & Loan, and its head, Charles Keating. The case received international attention because of Keating’s political connections ranging from former President Richard Nixon, to five U.S. Senators – all involved in helping Keating. The firm’s flair for representing the underdog was on public display. 

  • 1993
    Pro Bono Litigation: Service at Our Core

    Joe Cotchett files an unprecedented class action lawsuit against the United States Navy on behalf of 8,600 children of U.S. Servicemen who were abandoned in the Philippines after closure of the Subic Bay Naval Base. After trial, the U.S. government agreed to provide millions of dollars in direct aid to fund education and health care for the children fathered by U.S. servicemen. 

  • 1995
    Enriching the Bench

    CPM Partner Susan Y. Illston was nominated to the federal bench by President Bill Clinton on the recommendations of Senators Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein. She was confirmed by the Senate on May 25, 1995 and took senior status in July 2013.

  • 2000
    Lead Paint: A 20-Year Battle

    At the start of the new Millennium, CPM was asked by the County of Santa Clara to sue manufacturers of lead paint to hold them responsible for the harm they caused by promoting lead paint when they knew of its toxic harm to children. The lawsuit was ultimately joined by nine other California cities and counties who prosecuted the lawsuit on behalf of the People of California. A 20-year legal battle commenced and culminated with $1.1 billion in settlements and three manufacturers’ agreement to remove toxic lead paint from homes in 10 California cities and counties.  

  • 2002
    CPM Partner Marie Weiner Appointed Judge

    Marie Weiner, a CPM partner and well-respected civil litigator, is appointed to the bench by former Governor Gray Davis. By 2020, three former CPM partners are on the bench--more than from any firm of its size in California.  

  • 2005
    Valerie Plame v. Dick Cheney, et al.

    Valerie Plame was a former CIA agent whose cover was intentionally exposed by officials at the highest echelons of the American government, including Vice President Dick Cheney. Valerie Plame contacted Cotchett to seek justice for egregious violations of her constitutional civil rights. On October 28, 2005, Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald announced an indictment against Cheney’s Chief of Staff, I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, stating “It is important that a CIA officer’s identity be protected, that it be protected not just for the officer, but for the nation’s security… Valerie Plame’s cover was blown."

  • 2007
    The California Power Scam

    CPM takes on natural gas retailers who brazenly fixed prices during California’s 2001-02 energy crisis.

  • 2008
    An American Hero Joins CPM

    War hero and co-founder of Earth Day, Congressman Paul N. “Pete” McCloskey, Jr., joins CPM’s environmental law practice.

  • March 2008
    In re Freight Forwarders Antitrust Litigation

    In 2008, CPM was appointed co-lead counsel for purchasers of freight forwarding services from the world’s largest freight forwarders which allegedly engaged in an antitrust conspiracy to unlawfully inflate, fix, raise, maintain, and/or artificially stabilize the prices of freight forwarding services. CPM and its co-lead counsel recovered $450 million for the class.

  • 2010
    Stopping the Sale of California’s Beautiful Public Buildings

    In November 2010, with 45 days left in Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s term, a phone call came into CPM’s office asking if they would help stop Schwarzenegger-led sale of public buildings – one of the most outrageous scams in the history of California politics. After around-the-clock work by CPM, two days before the date set for the sale, the Sixth District Court of Appeals stayed the buildings’ sale.   On Feb. 9, 2011, newly elected Gov. Brown announced the building sale would not happen, saying it was “short-sighted” and “not prudent.”  Brown thanked Cotchett and his crew for a terrific job for the public, saying the action would save taxpayers “billions of dollars” over 35 years. 

  • September 9, 2010
    The San Bruno Explosion and Fire

    At 6:11 pm, a 54–year-old gas pipeline owned and maintained by the local utility, Pacific Gas & Electric Co., ruptured beneath the ground of the Crestmoor neighborhood of San Bruno. The explosion literally shook the ground and sent a wall of fire nearly 1,000 feet into the air. CPM partner Frank Pitre spends the next decade fighting against PG&E on behalf of victims of the explosion, and a series of subsequent wildfires in Northern California caused by PG&E’s negligence. In 2018, Pitre receives the Lifetime Legal Achievement Award for his work. 

  • 2011
    Hunter Labs v. Quest Diagnostics, et al.

    Taking on the “Blood Brothers,” CPM recovers $301 million for California taxpayers in largest recovery at the time under the California False Claims Act.

  • 2012
    Auto Parts

    CPM was appointed co-lead counsel for end-payor plaintiffs against scores of the world’s largest automotive parts suppliers for allegedly engaging in massive antitrust conspiracies to fix the prices, rig the bids, and allocate the markets of various automotive parts. CPM and its co-lead counsel recovered over $1.2 billion from 74 defendant groups. This remains the largest indirect purchaser recovery in the history of the United States.

  • 2013
    CPM Santa Monica

    CPM opens an office in Santa Monica headed by Robert Hutchinson (ret.). Gary Praglin and Kelly Weil head the Santa Monica office today.

  • 2016
    Millennium Tower

    CPM began filing lawsuits on behalf of owners of units in Millennium Tower colloquially referred to as “San Francisco’s Leaning Tower,” which has vertically moved more than 16 inches and is tilting as much as 20 inches, against the tower's developer and adjacent property owners. The cases involved complex legal and technical issues. Frank Pitre and Niall McCarthy receive the 2021 California Lawyer Attorneys of the Year (CLAY) Award for their work on the case.

  • 2017
    Northern California Wildfires

    Frank Pitre and his team, along with co-counsel, began working diligently to prosecute claims for damages on behalf of fire victims against PG&E arising out of 22 separate wildfires that ravaged Northern California in 2017 nad 2018.  After three years, these efforts resulted in successful confirmation of a restructuring plan that resolves PG&E's bankruptcy and includes payment of $13.5 billion to wildfire victims.

  • 2018
    State of California v. BP

    On the eve of a four-week jury trial, BP (formerly British Petroleum) pays $102 million over accusations that the oil company engaged in massive overcharging of California cities, counties, universities, and government agencies on purchases of natural gas over the course of a decade. It remains the largest whistleblower settlement in California history involving an oil company.

  • 2019
    STOP QIP Tax Coalition v. California Dept. of Food & Agriculture, et al.

    Niall McCarthy represented California’s dairy farmers in successfully fighting off a corporate campaign to end the complex milk pricing, quota, and income pool system that has been in place since the 1960s to equalize revenue for producers. Niall restored over $500 million in quota asset value to family dairy farms across the state. Niall was named 2023 California Lawyer Attorney of the Year by the legal Daily Journal for his work on this case.

  • 2020
    “Batterygate”

    CPM announces an agreement with Apple Inc. to settle a nationwide class action based on allegations that Apple issued software updates that slowed down the performance of certain iPhones. Under the proposed settlement, Apple will pay a minimum of $310 million and up to $500 million in cash compensation.

  • August 2020
    Cotchett Law Center

    In August 2020, UC Law San Francisco honored alumnus and CPM Founding Partner Joe Cotchett by naming its new academic building in San Francisco’s Civic Center, the UC Law San Francisco Cotchett Law Center.

  • 2021
    CPM Seattle

    CPM expands into the Pacific Northwest by opening an office in Seattle. Karin Swope and Thomas Loeser head the Seattle office today.

  • 2022
    Zoom Settlement

    Mark Molumphy and his team represented consumers against Zoom and reached a ground-breaking settlement on behalf of a nationwide class of Zoom users and subscribers. Zoom paid $85 million in cash compensation and agreed to implement comprehensive reforms to its business practices. 

  • 2024
    Maui Fires Settlement

    Frank Pitre and his team secured a historic tentative global settlement of $4.037 billion for the victims of the August 2023 Maui wildfires. This settlement, reached within one year of the Mauifires, is unprecedented and allows affected individuals to rebuild their lives quickly without prolonged and costly litigation.

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