Los Angeles
Overview
Crowell’s Los Angeles office, located in the heart of downtown, opened in 2008. Our team of attorneys is composed of accomplished lawyers with extensive experience in litigation, regulatory matters, and corporate law. We are recognized for our strengths in antitrust, complex commercial litigation, government contracts, health care, intellectual property, international trade, investigations, privacy and cybersecurity, and white collar and regulatory enforcement, among others. A diverse spectrum of clients turn to Los Angeles team and the firm for counsel, including industry-leading high tech, health care, medical device, transportation, and retail and consumer products; Fortune 500 enterprises; and companies doing business with the federal government.
515 South Flower Street
41st Floor
Los Angeles, CA 90071Contact- O | +1.213.622.4750
- F | +1.213.622.2690
Click here to explore opportunities in our Los Angeles office.
Crowell’s dedication to pro bono and public service is a core part of who we are as a firm, and our Los Angeles office takes pride in the variety of work we do to give a voice to those without access to justice. Our office exemplifies this commitment through relationships with a number of local organizations, including: Bet Tzedek, Inner City Law Center, Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, Volunteers of America, Los Angeles, Asian Americans Advancing Justice–Los Angeles, Public Counsel, and more.
Our Los Angeles office is committed to taking bold action to keep us moving forward in diversity, equity, and inclusion. Our office managing partner is a woman of color, and a number of our diverse lawyers are leaders in the community. This includes a board member of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, a vice chair (diversity) for the Los Angeles County Bar Association, a board member of the South Asian Bar Association of Southern California, a board member of the Federal Bar Association of Los Angeles, a board member of Inner City Law Center, an officer of the Women Lawyers Association of Los Angeles, a pro bono advisory council member of Asian Americans Advancing Justice–Los Angeles, and many more. The office also includes several alumni of Legal Council on Legal Diversity (LCLD) Fellows and Pathfinders Programs.
Contacts
Insights
Client Alert | 7 min read | 12.17.25
After hosting a series of workshops and issuing multiple rounds of materials, including enforcement notices, checklists, templates, and other guidance, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) has proposed regulations to implement the Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act (SB 253) and the Climate-Related Financial Risk Act (SB 261) (both as amended by SB 219), which require large U.S.-based businesses operating in California to disclose greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and climate-related risks. CARB also published a Notice of Public Hearing and an Initial Statement of Reasons along with the proposed regulations. While CARB’s final rules were statutorily required to be promulgated by July 1, 2025, these are still just proposals. CARB’s proposed rules largely track earlier guidance regarding how CARB intends to define compliance obligations, exemptions, and key deadlines, and establish fee programs to fund regulatory operations.
Firm News | 2 min read | 12.10.25
Insights
FCPA Under Fire: What Companies Need to Consider After Trump’s Executive Order
|07.18.25
ABA Criminal Justice Magazine
DOJ Secures First Criminal Wage-Fixing Conviction In Home Health Care Staffing Case
|05.19.25
Westlaw Today
The Notorious C.E.C.—An Analysis of California Evidence Code Section 352.2
|01.27.25
Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
ADL Files suit On Behalf Of U.S. Victims Of Oct.7 Against Iran, Syria, North Korea
|09.18.25
Jewish Insider
Experts: UFLPA Enforcement Changing As CBP Tested By Tariffs Changes
|08.21.25
International Trade Today
West Coast Government Contracts Seminar - Doing Business with the U.S. Government
|06.11.24 - 06.12.24
"U.S. Forced Labor Compliance and Regulations," International Trade Administration, MOEA Webinar, Presented to Taiwan Institute of Economics Research
|12.02.25
Supreme Court Puts the Brakes on Preemption Uncertainty
|10.13.25
Crowell & Moring’s Transportation Law: Moving Forward
FTC Updates (August 4 –August 22, 2025)
|09.12.25
Crowell & Moring’s Retail & Consumer Products Law Observer
Not Just the FAR, SAM.gov Gets Overhauled Too
|09.05.25
Crowell & Moring’s Government Contracts Legal ForumFAR Council Issues Rewrites to FAR Parts 8 and 12
|08.21.25
Crowell & Moring’s Government Contracts Legal Forum
The End of the Continuous SAM Registration Requirement …. Almost
|08.13.25
Crowell & Moring’s Government Contracts Legal Forum
Legal Challenges to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act’s Restrictions on Federal Medicaid Funding
|08.12.25
Crowell & Moring's Health Law Blog
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08.01.25
Crowell & Moring’s Government Contracts Legal Forum
Professionals
Insights
Client Alert | 7 min read | 12.17.25
After hosting a series of workshops and issuing multiple rounds of materials, including enforcement notices, checklists, templates, and other guidance, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) has proposed regulations to implement the Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act (SB 253) and the Climate-Related Financial Risk Act (SB 261) (both as amended by SB 219), which require large U.S.-based businesses operating in California to disclose greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and climate-related risks. CARB also published a Notice of Public Hearing and an Initial Statement of Reasons along with the proposed regulations. While CARB’s final rules were statutorily required to be promulgated by July 1, 2025, these are still just proposals. CARB’s proposed rules largely track earlier guidance regarding how CARB intends to define compliance obligations, exemptions, and key deadlines, and establish fee programs to fund regulatory operations.
Firm News | 2 min read | 12.10.25















