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Richard H. "Dick" Borow

Richard H. "Dick" Borow obituary

Richard Borow Obituary

June 19, 1935 - September 3, 2022 Richard H. "Dick" Borow, an Emeritus Senior Partner, and founder of the Litigation Practice of the Los Angeles law firm of Irell & Manella LLP, passed away on September 3, 2022 of complications of Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (with which he had heroically battled for two decades), cardiac and other co-morbidities. He was 87. He is survived by Trudy, his wife of 65 years, his son Harlan Borow (and wife Ellen Schultz), his daughter Carolyn Sorenson (and husband Patrick Sorenson), his daughter Jennifer Borow, and four grandchildren, Joseph Borow, Amanda Borow, Ryan Sorenson and Olivia Sorenson.
He and the love of his life, Trudy Frances Speiser, were married in 1957. They first met in 1952 when both were staff at summer camp. They (and their family) treasured their annual trips to their cottage on Maine's Sebago Lake each summer for over six decades. Trudy was Dick's steadfast and devoted partner throughout their long life together. He credited her consistent loving support for much of his success. Trudy and Dick found their greatest reward in life in loving and nurturing their children and grandchildren, of whom they were immensely proud.
Dick had the fighting heart of a lion, but he was kind and generous, particularly towards his family, friends and law firm. He was a tireless advocate for his clients and a principal creator of one of the most powerful litigation departments in the country. He was a loving and devoted husband, father and grandfather. He will be greatly missed.
Dick was a member of the Bars of New York (1959), California (1966) and Maine (1985). He taught for 14 years as an Adjunct Professor of Law at UCLA School of Law. He also served as Chair of the Judicial Elections Evaluation Committee of the Los Angeles County Bar Association. From 1987, and continuing until his death, Dick was a Trustee and member of the Board of Directors of The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, a project about which he was passionate and proud.
He was a tenacious and successful champion of his clients' causes, but he viewed his greatest accomplishment in the law in building, training and mentoring a world-class litigation group at Irell, many of the members of which came to be acknowledged as among the best in the nation. His ability to recruit, train, mentor and promote truly exceptional lawyers and then to get out of their way to enable them to succeed in their own right was the hallmark of his success. He frankly acknowledged that the most difficult task was getting out of their way.
Richard Henry Borow was born in New York City in 1935. He attended the Bronx High School of Science and then Hunter College receiving a B.A. in economics with honors in 1956. He received the first Outstanding Scholar/Athlete Award of Hunter College (where he later was also elected to its Athletic Hall of Fame). He lettered for four years in soccer and in track and field.
Dick attended Columbia Law School and was elected to the Board of Editors of the Columbia Law Review. Fellow editors included later Supreme Court Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. He graduated from Columbia with highest honors in June 1959.
After graduation, Dick was associated with Paul Weiss in New York City, where he was selected to be a law clerk to Hon. Simon Rifkind, acting as Special Master for the Supreme Court of the U. S. in Arizona v. California, the interstate water rights case allocating the Colorado River water flow among the states of its lower basin, and among U.S. Government dependencies (such as Native American reservations and national parks). He wryly noted that his first case unquestionably included some of the most important issues of his career.
Dick came to Los Angeles in 1965 to start the litigation group of Irell & Manella LLP, then a boutique tax and transactional firm of some 13 lawyers. He became a partner in 1968 and retired at the end of 2005, having served as the firm's General Counsel, Chair of its Litigation Group and member of its Executive Committee for over three decades. Under his stewardship, the Litigation Group at the time of his retirement exceeded 150 lawyers with a national and international reputation for excellence, creativity, integrity and diversity.
In 1969, Dick successfully represented the Faculty of UCLA in a nationally publicized case involving the decision of the Regents of the University of California (including then Governor Ronald Reagan) directing the Chancellor of UCLA to fire Angela Davis, a Black, openly Marxist woman who had recently been hired by UCLA's Philosophy Department. The sole ground for the termination was her acknowledged membership in the Communist Party. Representing the UCLA Academic Senate, Dick and colleagues filed suit and in 30 days obtained a permanent injunction preventing the termination of Prof. Davis as unconstitutional.
In 1973, Dick was one of those named on then President Richard M. Nixon's infamous "Enemies list." He always acknowledged this proudly.
Another noteworthy early case was Dick's representation of the California Democratic congressional delegation in the electoral reapportionment following the 1980 census, resulting in a unanimous victory in the California Supreme Court.
When the children were grown, he finally had the time to take up golf. His crowning achievement on the golf course was to play "Amen Corner" at Augusta National Golf Club in one under par commencing with two consecutive birdies.
He was an extraordinary, complex, brilliant and passionate person who left an indelible mark on those with the good fortune to know him.
Donations can be made in Dick's memory to The CLL Society or to The Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Los Angeles Times on Sep. 11, 2022.

Memories and Condolences
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3 Entries

Carol Resnick

September 14, 2022

Trudy: I'm not sure if you remember Carol & Bob (died 9/23/11) Resnick.
We had a lot of happy/fun times when you lived across the street from my cousin Donny in Sherman Oaks. And of course the "Junior Guiders" , our little support group helping the Foundation of the Jr Blind. I'm so sorry to read about Dick. He was a terrific guy. To you and your family, I send my sincere condolosenses.

Richard Abramson

September 12, 2022

I was an associate and partner at Irell & Manella in the 1980´s and had the opportunity to work with Dick on a couple of cases. Even at a firm full of high-powered lawyers, Dick stood out, not merely for his intellect, but also for his tenacity. I was diagnosed with CLL in 2016, and it is inspirational to learn that Dick battled it for two decades. Frankly, they don´t make `em like Dick any more.

John Mounier

September 11, 2022

Dick guided and inspired UCLA Law students 50+ years ago. An outstanding human being.

John Mounier
Los Angeles & San Francisco

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