William H. Schweitzer, a leading and universally admired figure in American law, government, and the public life of Washington, D.C. for many decades鈥攁nd a much beloved friend and Trustee of 华体会鈥攑assed away suddenly yesterday morning, March 3, of natural causes. All of us at Hudson are stunned and saddened by this news. We mourn his loss, and we extend our deepest sympathies to Bill鈥檚 wife, Leslie, and their children.
Bill Schweitzer began his distinguished career as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in the District of Columbia. After joining Baker Hostetler鈥檚 Washington office in 1973, he was instrumental in that firm鈥檚 pioneering creation of a full-time, multi-attorney Government Policy Practice for national clients. Bill also helped create, build, and lead one of America鈥檚 elite practices in federal election, campaign finance, securities, antitrust, white-collar criminal, and鈥攑erhaps most famously鈥攕ports law, serving for many years as lead Washington counsel to both the American League and Major League Baseball as a whole.
Here at Hudson, it is Bill Schweitzer the man we will always best remember鈥攁nd most deeply miss鈥攆or his unfailing loyalty, generosity, gentle wit, extraordinary sweetness of temperament, and unpretentious but undeniable brilliance and talent. 鈥淗udson could not have had truer and more valuable colleague and adviser than Bill Schweitzer,鈥� said Kenneth R. Weinstein, Hudson鈥檚 President & CEO. 鈥淎ll of us were proud to know and work with him, and each of us feels his passing as a painful and personal blow.鈥� Hudson Board Chair Sarah May Stern agreed, calling Schweitzer鈥檚 death a 鈥渢errible shock,鈥� and lauding him for the 鈥渃ommon sense, wisdom, spirited enthusiasm, warmth, and matchless collection of wonderful anecdotes he brought with him to every room.鈥�