Skip to Main Content
11/13/2007

Carol Warnick Named One Of Nation's Top 100 Attorneys

Carol Warnick Named One Of Nation's Top 100 Attorneys

DENVER (November 13, 2007) - Holland & Hart LLP Partner Carol Warnick is one of this year's "Top 100 Attorneys" according to the list in Worth magazine's December issue, on newsstands today. The list focuses on attorneys practicing in trust and estates, philanthropy, elder care, matrimonial, and other private client practice areas across the United States.

Warnick concentrates her practice on estate and wealth transfer planning and administration, including values-based estate planning. Her clients include executives, owners of closely-held businesses, and families of significant wealth. She also advises and represents fiduciaries in trust administration litigation and mediation. She is a fellow of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel, past president of the Rocky Mountain Estate Planning Council, and has been selected for publication in Best Lawyers in America. She actively practices in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming.

To develop the list of top attorneys, Worth's staff searched for individuals with exceptional legal experience as well as lawyers with great tact, discretion, and interpersonal skills, enabling them to explain a client's options in the face of incredibly complicated legal and psychosocial issues. 

Worth is the only magazine devoted exclusively to the best interests and unique challenges of readers who possess substantial wealth. Its mission is to provide crucial financial intelligence to a readership whose personal wealth has prompted a singular focus on issues related to wealth preservation, management, and transference. 

DISCLAIMER

Unless you are a current client of Holland & Hart LLP, please do not send any confidential information by email. If you are not a current client and send an email to an individual at Holland & Hart LLP, you acknowledge that we have no obligation to maintain the confidentiality of any information you submit to us, unless we have already agreed to represent you or we later agree to do so. Thus, we may represent a party adverse to you, even if the information you submit to us could be used against you in a matter, and even if you submitted it in a good faith effort to retain us.