- Jennifer C. Archie, Latham & Watkins
- Jennifer A. Beckage, Beckage PLLC
- Jennifer A. Coughlin, Mullen Coughlin
- Marcus A. Christian, Mayer Brown
- Chris Cwalina, Norton Rose Fulbright
- Luke Dembosky, Debevoise & Plimpton
- David N. Fagan, Covington
- Ashden Fein, Covington
- Nicole Friedlander, Sullivan & Cromwell
- Beth George, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati
- Sean B. Hoar, Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith
- Antony P. Kim, Orrick
- Theodore J. Kobus III, BakerHostetler
- David C. Lashway, Baker & McKenzie
- Travis LeBlanc, Cooley
- Dominique Shelton Leipzig, Perkins Coie
- Paul H. Luehr, Faegre Baker Daniels
- Edward R. McNicholas, Sidley
- Douglas H. Meal, Orrick
- Michael Morgan, McDermott Will & Emery
- Jim Pastore, Debevoise & Plimpton
- Kimberly Kiefer Peretti, Alston & Bird
- Kari M. Rollins, Sheppard Mullin
- Lisa J. Sotto, Hunton Andrews Kurth
- John Reed Stark, John Reed Stark Consulting
- Phyllis B. Sumner, King & Spalding
- Heather Egan Sussman, Orrick
- Tara M. Swaminatha, Squire Patton Boggs
- Aravind Swaminathan, Orrick
- Miriam H. Wugmeister, Morrison & Foerster
About the Incident Response 30: Cybersecurity Docket’s Incident Response 30 is our list of the 30 best and brightest data breach response lawyers. Based on nominations, input from numerous senior lawyers and other professionals in the field, and considerable research, we tried to answer a simple question:
Who would you hire if your company suddenly found itself the victim of a data breach?
We also imposed three key requirements:
- Candidates for the Incident Response 30 must be in the private sector for at least the past two years.
- Candidates for the Incident Response 30 must have a practice that is dedicated primarily to data breach response work.
- Candidates for the Incident Response 30 must be attorneys (as opposed to accountants, economists or other experts).