Attorneys

Gretchen Sween

Gretchen Sween

SPECIAL COUNSEL

713.227.1744  Office 

Biography

After laboring simultaneously as a free-lance writer, theater actor and director, and adjunct college professor, Gretchen opted for a career change in 2000. She set out for the University of Texas School of Law, where she was active in the Advocacy Program, the Capital Punishment Clinic, and the Texas Law Review. Upon graduation, she served as a law clerk to a federal judge, the Honorable Sim Lake, in the Southern District of Texas. She then practiced civil trial and appellate law at prestigious firms (Susman Godfrey LLP, Dechert LLP, and Beck Redden LLP). She also spent several years serving her alma mater, UT Law, by teaching legal writing and appellate advocacy courses and coaching winning interscholastic moot court teams—including a team featuring firm founder, Ben Allen.

As an attorney, she is committed to giving voice to those who are wrestling with injustices, overwhelming commercial challenges, and seemingly intractable disputes. She strives to think strategically about the most efficient way out of legal quagmires while communicating like an authentic human being—whether in a courtroom, a conference room, or a legal brief.

Representative Matters

Obtained termination of appeal of trial success in case challenging the constitutionality of a state administrative rule before the Supreme Court of the United States in Hegar v. Texas Etn. Ass’n, Inc., 142 S. Ct. 2852 (Jun. 21, 2022) and then enabled prevailing client to recover virtually all attorneys’ fees and costs.

Obtained a rare summary reversal from the Supreme Court of the United States for a death-sentenced client in Andrus v. Texas, 140 S. Ct. 1875 (2020).

Expedited resolution of a diverting appeal in Pontchartrain v. Tierra de Los Lagos, No. 22-30286 (5th Cir. 2022), obtaining swift affirmance of the district court’s conclusion that a duplicative lawsuit should not be deemed the “first-filed” but rather an “anticipatory lawsuit” more indicative of “childish fighting in the sandbox” endeavoring to avoid “addressing this serious matter.”

Led two successful, parallel appeals to the Fifth Circuit, one obtaining mandamus relief, and both successful, in multi-million-dollar commercial disputes: See In Re: Lloyd’s Register North America, Inc., No. 14–20554 (5th Cir. Feb. 18, 2015); Vloeibara Pret Ltd. v. Lloyd’s Register North America, Inc., No. 14-20538 (5th Cir. April 16, 2015); then successfully opposed a petition for writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court.

Obtained reversal and rendition of a take-nothing judgment for client who had lost multi-million-dollar retaliation claim at trial because no evidence supported the jury’s constructive discharge finding; see Microsoft Corp. v. Mercieca, 502 S.W.3d 291 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2016).

Managed all litigation matters in federal and state courts in Texas, California, and South Carolina for a commercial real estate capital markets intermediary, successfully moving to dismiss all claims in federal multi-defendant action.

Represented international pharmaceutical company and related entities in mass tort litigation in MDL proceeding, serving as key member of motions team and preparing and pursuing strategy to garner dismissal of numerous defendants and of discrete claims brought against all defendants; led process of responding to Plaintiffs’/Appellants’ initial appeal to 11th Circuit Appeal of hundreds of consolidated dismissals, including all drafting, strategic planning, and communications with the court until Appellants’ agreed to abandoned the appeals on the eve of their deadline to file a brief on the merits.

Represented a leading global distributor of high-performance steel and alloy products in resolving several multi-party contractual disputes so as to forestall protracted litigation, procuring favorable settlement terms for the client.

Represented New York Stock Exchange oil & gas services business in multiple matters, including as first-chair in evidentiary hearings obtaining a preliminary injunction to enforce Noncompetition Agreement and negotiating a favorable settlement on the eve of trial, resulting in entry of a permanent injunction.

Represented a venture capital group, and individual board members in litigation arising from the demise of publicly traded company; briefed and argued cross motions for summary judgment involving novel issues of law in the Northern District of Texas; negotiated a settlement that included dismissal with prejudice of hundreds of claims under the Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act.

Managed, from case acceptance through trial, wrongful death action arising from a private plane crash that ended with a negligence verdict against two non-settling defendants in Texas state court.

Represented agent of physician groups seeking to recover under a class action settlement with CIGNA HealthCare in In re Managed Care Litigation in Southern District of Florida, negotiating multi-million-dollar settlement without filing suit.

Education

J.D., with honors, The University of Texas School of Law, 2003

  • Texas Law Review, 2001-2003; Associate Editor, 2002-2003; “Best Published Note,” 2003
  • Order of the Coif, 2003
  • Niemann Cup Winner for Excellence in Advocacy (UT Law’s “Best Advocate” Award), 2003
  • Order of Barristers, 2003
  • ABA National Appellate Advocacy Competition: National Championship Finalist, Regional Champion and Best Brief, 2003
  • National Moot Court Team National Finalist, Regional “Best Oralist,” 2002-2003
  • The Board of Advocates Outstanding Member Award, 2002
  • Scott, Douglass & McConnico Litigation Award, 2002
  • Susman Godfrey Intramural Moot Court Champion, 2002
  • ATLA Interscholastic Mock Trial Team Semi-Finalist, 2002
  • National Moot Court Team, Regional “Best Speaker” Award, 2001
  • Thad T. Hutcheson Moot Court Champion, 2001
  • The Review of Litigation’s First Year “Best Brief” Award, 2001

 

 
Ph.D., Humanities, with distinction, The University of Texas at Dallas, 1994

M.A., Humanities, The University of Texas at Dallas, 1990

B.A., Literary Studies, magna cum laude, The University of Texas at Dallas, 1988

Drama Major, Tisch School of the Arts, New York University, Dean’s List, 1982-1985

Honors & Awards

Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty’s Appreciation Award, 2021

Texas Law Fellows, Private Attorney Recognition Award, 2021

Texas Bar Fellow, 2013-2020

Pro Bono Attorney of the Year Nominee, American Gateways, 2014

The University of Texas School of Law Legal Research & Writing Professor of the Year, 2013

Dechert LLP’s “50+,” honored for logging over 50 hours of pro bono legal work in a year, 2008-2013

Texas State Bar Journal Short Story Fiction Writing Contest Second Place, 2011

Dechert LLP’s Samuel E. Klein Pro Bono Award, 2010

Selected as Texas Super Lawyers Rising Star in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011

Selected Publications

  • The Empathy Gambit, Texas State Bar Litigation Section, News for the Bar, Spring
  • Write by Talking to Yourself, Texas State Bar Litigation Section, News for the Bar, Fall
  • And the Light Got In: From Habeas Volunteer to Full-Time Capital Writs Attorney, The Appellate Advocate, Spring
  • Just Listen: A Free Association on the Challenge of Listening, Texas State Bar Litigation Section, News for the Bar, Spring
  • Ode to Reading, Texas State Bar Litigation Section, News for the Bar, Winter
  • Advice to the Lovelorn Litigator, Texas State Bar Litigation Section, News for the Bar, Fall
  • Don’t Cry for Argentina—But Do Take Note, Law360, New York (June 27, 2014).
  • Texas Ain’t Tuscany: How a Truism Might Further Invigorate Contemporary “Cost Arguments” for Death-Penalty Abolition, American Journal of Criminal Law Spring 2014.
  • Who’s Your Daddy?: A Psychoanalytic Exegesis of the Supreme Court’s Recent Patent Jurisprudence, Northwestern Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property, Vol. 7, No. 2, April 2009.
  • Surveying the High Court’s Recent Patent Jurisprudence, The National Law Journal, Dec. 1, 2008.
  • Learned-Intermediary Opinion Sets Bad Policy, with Steven B. Weisburd, Texas Lawyer, Vol. 23, No. 31, Oct. 2007.
  • Rituals, Riots, Rules, and Rights: The Astor Place Theater Riot of 1849 and the Evolving Limits of Free Speech, L. Rev., Vol. 81, No. 2, Dec. 2002.
  • Eurydice’s Rhapsody, Art Times, Vol. 17, No. 10, June 2001.
  • Ritual/Performance Hybrids: Unlikely Sites of Holocaust Theatre, Theatre Research International, Fall 1994.
  • Binary Oppositions: Software for a Progressive Friction, New Orleans Rev., Vol. 18, No. 4, 1991.
  • Interdisciplinary (Dis)orientation, Philosophica, Vol. 48, No. 2, 1991.

Community Involvement

Capital Defense Committee, Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association, 2022-present

Board Member, Texas Defender Service, 2013-2018

Active commitment to pro bono legal representation; clients have included Safe Place family shelter, The University of Texas School of Law Capital Punishment Clinic, American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, MAAP Services for Autism and Asperger Syndrome, The Autism Society of America, American Gateways, Catholic Legal Immigration Network, Inc. (“CLINIC”), the ACLU of Texas, putative class of girls incarcerated at a Texas Youth Commission facility, and indigent individuals facing threat of a death sentence in Texas

Bar Admissions

United States District Courts in the Southern, Northern, Eastern, and Western Districts of Texas

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits

Supreme Court of the United States