When GC Fatheree III decided to take a BigLaw job in 2008, he also decided he wouldn’t stay long.
He planned to spend two or three years honing his analytical and writing skills and learning as much as he could from other lawyers. If at the end of that period he wasn’t spending a substantial amount of his time on issues that mattered to him, he would move on to something else.
“What was amazing was it didn’t take three years,” says Fatheree, who spent nearly 10 years in the real estate group at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom before becoming a partner at Munger, Tolles & Olson and Sidley Austin in Los Angeles. “I figured out early on that BigLaw can be—for the right person, for someone who is committed and motivated—a very good platform to support a lot of the causes that were important to me and my family.”
Armed with his legal training and firms’ resources, Fatheree built an all-encompassing pro bono practice. He invested thousands of hours in his cases, which included securing reparations for survivors of the Holocaust and successfully advocating for public school students with disabilities at the California Supreme Court. He also worked for nearly 15 years with the Debbie Allen Dance Academy, including on the nonprofit’s development of a state-of-the-art facility in central Los Angeles.
In 2020, Fatheree began what became his most notable pro bono case, representing members of a Black family in their quest to secure “Bruce’s Beach,” a stretch of oceanfront property that was taken from their ancestors nearly a century earlier by officials in Los Angeles County who cited eminent domain. It was unprecedented because, according to Fatheree, stolen property had never been returned to a Black family or community in the United States.
He still remembers his first conversation with the descendants of Charles and Willa Bruce, who purchased the land in 1912.
“I said something to the effect of, ‘I can’t guarantee I’ll be successful in getting this land back for your family. But what I can promise you is, I don’t think you’ll find another attorney who shares my personal passion and commitment for this issue or who has my professional training and experience to help your family,’” Fatheree says. “I really felt like I was being called to this opportunity.”
Focus on education
Fatheree grew up in Chino, which was then a rural city in Southern California.
He played Little League Baseball, raised sheep in 4-H and joined a youth group. He says being a lawyer never crossed his mind because many adults he knew worked at the local prison or on dairy farms.
While attending public high school, Fatheree met passionate teachers who encouraged his intellectual curiosity and helped change his trajectory. He didn’t know anyone from Chino who went to Harvard University, but when it became an option for college, he applied and was accepted.
He studied government and religion, and after graduating in 1997 worked as a management consultant in New York City. He later helped launch an e-government internet company in New York City and Silicon Valley before returning to consulting with Mc-Kinsey & Co. in Los Angeles in 2001.
After the birth of their first son, Fatheree and his wife discovered the infant had an intractable seizure disorder and often had more than 100 seizures a day. He says his consulting career quickly became “fundamentally incompatible” with the need to prioritize his family.