William Mark Lanier (born October 20, 1960 in Dallas, Texas[1]) is an American trial lawyer.[2] He lives in Houston, Texas, and maintains offices in New York, Houston, and Los Angeles. Mark Lanier also writes about the Bible and teaches Biblical classes in person at Champion Forest Baptist Church, via the internet[3] and through print.
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After graduating from Coronado High School in Lubbock, Texas, Lanier attended Texas Tech University for two years. Lanier finished his undergraduate degree at David Lipscomb University in Nashville, Tennessee. He received a B.A. in Biblical Languages with a minor in Economics in 1981. His awards included the Granny White Bible Award for the highest G.P.A. among those planning to preach.
From Lipscomb, Lanier then attended the Texas Tech University School of Law, completing his J.D. in 1984. Lanier was selected as the Texas Tech University School of Law Distinguished Alumnus for 2005.[4] Lanier also serves on the law school's Foundation Board.[4]
Lanier is married to Becky (Smith) and has five children.[5] Together, Lanier and his wife have contributed to building the Mark and Becky Lanier Professional Development Center at the Texas Tech University School of Law.[6]
Recently Lanier and his wife have finished construction of the Lanier Theological Library, an Oxford inspired library in Houston dedicated to areas of theology, Biblical studies, Semitic languages, Judaic Studies, Classics, Philosophy, and Ancient Near Eastern studies. The library also has a speakers series.[7]
Lanier began his legal career working in Houston for Fulbright & Jaworski on June 1, 1984. Lanier worked in the appellate and trial divisions through August 1989.[8] On September 1, 1989, Lanier began working for Ernest Cannon and Associates, a small plaintiffs trial practice firm in Houston, Texas. Lanier stayed there until launching his own firm with Bill Vernon on June 1, 1990.
Lanier's own firm went through several iterations before taking the name "Lanier Law Firm." It expanded from a small two-person firm into one with 65 lawyers in four cities, New York, Houston, Palo Alto and Los Angeles.[9]
Lanier's practice centers in trial work with a cases ranging from personal injuries to corporate disputes and asset recovery. Lanier's noteworthy verdicts have included 480 million dollars in a business fraud case (Rubicon v. Amoco),[10] 118 million in an asbestos case (Aaron v. Carborundum)[11] and 253 million in the first Vioxx verdict in America (Ernst v. Merck).[12] Among his most recent verdicts is a 56.2 million dollar verdict against Caterpillar, Inc. on behalf of a crippled driver of a Caterpillar Tractor Scraper.[13]
In 1998 and 2006, The National Law Journal recognized Mr. Lanier as one of nation's top trial attorneys,[14] and in 2006, The National Law Journal designated him as one of the 100 Most Influential Lawyers in America.[15] The journal also named him among the country's 40 top attorneys under the age of 40.[16]
He was named by The American Lawyer magazine as one of the top 45 attorneys in the nation under the age of 45.[17] In a Texas survey of legal peers published by Texas Monthly magazine, Mr. Lanier was selected a "Texas Super Lawyer" in 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 (in 2007-2009 he was one of the top vote getters in the state).[18] For many years, Texas Lawyer newspaper named Mr. Lanier as one of the top 5 "Go To" personal injury plaintiff attorneys in Texas. In 2007, it selected Lanier as the "Go To" lawyer in Texas in the area of personal injury work.[19] In addition, Texas Lawyer named him its 2005 "Impact Player of the Year."[20]
In 2010, the The National Law Journal selected Lanier as one of Decade's Most Influential Lawyers (2000–2010). The list included only 40 lawyers out of the 1.1 million in America. Lanier was the only plaintiff's attorney selected.[21] The Texas Lawyer honored Lanier as one of the twenty-five greatest attorneys of the past twenty-five years.[22]
Lanier's experience in the courtroom has resulted in feature articles in The Wall Street Journal, The American Lawyer, Texas Lawyer, The New York Times, New York Lawyer, The National Law Journal, Los Angeles Times, The Boston Globe, Houston Chronicle, and Bloomberg L.P., among others.[9] He is also a frequent guest on news shows on CNBC, Fox Business News, ABC, and others.
Some of Lanier's trials have been carried on the Court TV website and have been the subject of articles and books emphasizing his communication techniques and legal accomplishments. Cliff Atkinson's book, Beyond Bullet Points describes in Chapter 1 the approach used by Lanier in the Ernst trial,[23] which Fortune magazine described as "frighteningly powerful".[24] Legal write-ups frequently reference Lanier's usage of multi-media in his presentations.[25]
Lanier is also featured in the book Texas Justice: The Legacy of Historical Courthouses for his accomplishments in the Rubicon trial.[26]
In 2011, Lanier was the principle subject of the book, All The Justice Money Can Buy, by ex-NPR reporter Snigdha Prakash. Prakash was embedded in the Lanier trial team for the high profile Vioxx trial of Lanier in Atlantic City, New Jersey.[27]
Lanier is the founder of the Christian Trial Lawyers Association, a nonprofit organization whose goal is to create a network of principled attorneys to minister to others through civic-minded endeavors.[28]