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Law 2025: DAVID P. CORRIGAN

After their former firm dissolved in 1990, Corrigan and colleagues Mike Harman, John Claytor and Stan Wellman launched their own firm, which turns 35 years old in 2026.

A former president of the Virginia Association of Defense and fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers, Corrigan has tried more than 100 cases to verdict and specializes in representing state and local governments and government employees. His clients have included school superintendents, mayors, city council members and police officers.

Over the course of his career, Corrigan has been associated with several high-profile cases. He represented the City of Charlottesville in a lawsuit filed by RaShall M. Brackney-Wheelock, the city’s first Black female police chief, who alleged she experienced racial and gender discrimination.

He received his bachelor’s degree from Hampden-Sydney College and his law degree from Notre Dame, and is aboard member of Elk Hill Farm, a Goochland County mental health care organization and school.

A player of pickleball, tennis and basketball, Corrigan likes to see good sportsmanship both on the court and in the courtroom.

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Law 2025: MICHAEL R. SKLAIRE

A litigator, Sklaire focuses on government investigations, civil fraud cases, and financial services litigation and regulation at Greenberg Traurig, a global firm with more than 2,850 in 49 offices.

Sklaire represents corporations and executives before federal agencies including the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Federal Trade Commission.

Earlier this year, Sklaire served as part of a team representing Jennifer Kerkhoff Muyskens, a former federal prosecutor who went before a hearing committee of the D.C. Board on Professional Responsibility for allegations of manipulating evidence in cases of people arrested at President Donald Trump’s first inauguration in 2017.

Previously, Sklaire worked as an assistant U.S. attorney for the District of Connecticut’s Organized Crime Task Force. He was also a special assistant to the U.S. attorney in the Southern District of California and the Western District of Texas.

A graduate of the American University Washington College of Law, Sklaire previously shared the duties of running the Northern Virginia office with Laura Foote Reiff, who stepped down from that role this year.

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Law 2025: VICTOR O. CARDWELL

A native of Lynchburg, Cardwell retained his position as chair of the Woods Rogers board in 2022 when the firm merged with Norfolk’s Vandeventer Black.

Cardwell, who also became the first Black president of the Virginia Bar Association that same year, continues to lead the state’s fifth largest firm, which shortened its name from Woods Rogers Vandeventer Black back to the original Woods Rogers last year.

After graduating from the , where he played , Cardwell earned his law degree at Washington and Lee University.

Following graduation, he worked as deputy associate chief counsel with the U.S. Department of Labor Benefits Review Board before joining Woods Rogers in 1991.

In his practice, Cardwell advises executives and human resources managers on issues including harassment, sexual orientation and gender identity, retaliation and discrimination. He also provides guidance on topics including workforce reductions, unfair competition and union-organizing campaigns.

This year, the Virginia Law Foundation inducted Cardwell, along with 25 other lawyers, into the 2025 Fellows Class. He also was among several NAACP Roanoke Citizens of the Year Awards winners in May.

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Law 2025: DAVID C. BURTON

Burton, who specializes in labor and employment , has defended employers in federal court cases involving disability, the Family and Medical Leave Act and age discrimination.

He also has defended clients in claims brought by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and has represented management in labor contract negotiations and arbitrations.

After graduating from Elon College, Burton earned his law degree from the University of Richmond. He joined Williams Mullen in 1993 after clerking for the Virginia Supreme Court.

Burton has served on Williams Mullen’s board of directors since 2012 and was named the firm’s Hampton Roads managing partner in 2016. He chairs the Virginia Bar Association’s labor and employment law section council.

Burton, who served as King Neptune in 2018, is chair of the Virginia Beach Neptune Festival. He also is secretary of the Princess Anne Country Club.

FIRST JOB: Stock clerk at a Winn-Dixie grocery store in Chesterfield County

NEW LIFE EXPERIENCE: We are a dog family, but we recently bought a Maine Coon cat.

FAVORITE FASHION ACCESSORY: Bow tie

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Law 2025: JEFFREY BREIT

A Hampton Roads native, Breit is known for representing plaintiffs in high-profile personal injury cases.

Breit is a member of the team representing Abby Zwerner, the Newport News elementary school teacher who was shot by a 6-year-old student in 2023. In July, a circuit court judge allowed Zwerner to proceed with a lawsuit against the school’s former assistant principal. A jury trial is expected this fall.

In 2010, a federal judge appointed Breit to the 15-lawyer plaintiff steering committee for the consolidated BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill lawsuits. Breit oversaw the case against Halliburton, which settled its portion for $1.24 billion. Alabama also retained Breit as one of its and recovered $1 billion.

Breit also represented plaintiffs in Virginia, North Carolina and Georgia in a decade-long national lawsuit against Chinese drywall manufacturer Taishan Gypsum Co., which settled for $248 million in 2019.

In 2022, Breit Cantor Grana Buckner split into two firms: Breit Biniazan and Cantor Grana Buckner Bucci. Virginia Speaker of the House Don Scott is one of Breit Biniazan’s five partners.

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Law 2025: ROBERT P. BEAMAN III

Beaman became office managing partner of Troutman Pepper’s Virginia Beach office in 2024. Since then the firm, which completed a merger with Texas-based Locke Lord in January, has changed its name to Troutman Pepper Locke, but Beaman’s role stayed the same.

Beaman is a member of the firm’s real estate practice group. He handles commercial real estate development, commercial leasing, real estate transactions and real estate litigation. His clients include leaders in the retail, manufacturing, energy, hospitality, entertainment and residential industries. He’s experienced in working with local government offices on zoning requests.

After graduating from the , Beaman worked as a title examiner for a year before earning his degree from William & Mary.

Beaman joined the firm then known as Troutman Sanders in 2007 and was named partner in 2017. He is a member of the board of directors for Virginia Beach Vision, a business advocacy group.

Troutman Pepper Locke has more than 1,600 in more than 30 offices in the United States and the United Kingdom.

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Arts | Entertainment | Sports 2025: ODOM, RYAN

Odom became head coach of the ’Hoos in March, after Tony Bennett’s unexpected October 2024 retirement less than three weeks before the start of the season.

Now in his fifth collegiate head coaching role, Odom previously led Virginia Commonwealth University’s Rams for two seasons, coaching them to a 52-21 record, an appearance in the 2025 NCAA tournament and victory in the 2025 Atlantic 10 tournament championship.

Odom, who has a 222-127 career record, also was head coach at Utah State University, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and Lenoir-Rhyne University. In 2018, his UMBC team beat U.Va. in the Big Dance — the first time a No. 16 seed defeated a No. 1 seed in the tournament.

The Wahoos will face the University of Texas at Austin Dec. 3 in the ACC-SEC Challenge. The team is 1-1 in the challenge.

U.Va.’s 13th head coach spent third through 10th grades in Charlottesville while his father, Dave Odom, was a U.Va. assistant basketball coach. He was a ball boy for home games.

Odom was a starting point guard at his alma mater, Hampden-Sydney College, for four years.

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Arts | Entertainment | Sports 2025: PRY, BRENT

A former defensive coordinator at Vanderbilt University and Penn State and a player for the University at Buffalo until he suffered a career-ending injury, Pry became the Hokies’ 35th head coach in November 2021.

His first season, not surprisingly, was not exactly stellar, with a 3-8 record, but in 2023, the Hokies improved to 7-6 and beat Tulane in the Military Bowl. A disappointing 6-7 season followed in 2024. Afterward, Pry fired three assistant coaches, and his offensive coordinator left. Gearing up for the 2025 season, Tech announced four assistant coach hires in March. Quarterback Kyron Drones said in July that he’d recovered from a foot surgery in the spring. A Lexington native, Pry grew up in a family; his father, Jim Pry, was a quarterback at Marshall University beginning in 1971.

This is Pry’s second time on the coaching staff; from 1995 to 1997, he was a graduate assistant coach for the defensive line when the Hokies appeared in back-to-back bowl games. Pry previously spent eight seasons at Penn State, including six as the defensive coordinator and linebackers coach, before returning to Blacksburg.

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Arts | Entertainment | Sports 2025: SCHOFIELD, JENNIFER

With 34 years of industry experience, Schofield started her new role on May 31, succeeding Bridgette Bywater as head of the 400-acre following corporate restructuring. Previously vice president of retail at the Cedar Point amusement park in Ohio,

Schofield holds a bachelor’s degree in hospitality and management from Grand Valley State University.

Six Flags Entertainment and Cedar Fair Entertainment (‘s former parent) completed an $8 billion merger in July 2024.

2025 marks Kings Dominion’s 50th anniversary.

The park has more than 60 rides, shows and attractions, plus a 20-acre waterpark. In March, the park opened the 3,086-foot, 145-foot-tall Rapterra, billed as the world’s longest, tallest launched wing roller coaster.

FIRST JOB: When I was 15, I was hired as a games attendant at the amusement park in my hometown. To this day, I will still happily step behind a counter and assist a guest on their quest to win the big prize.

MOST VALUED POSSESSION: I have several pieces of furniture and mementos that belonged to my grandparents and great-grandparents. It is important to always remember where you come from.

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Arts | Entertainment | Sports 2025: JOHNSON, DWAYNE ‘THE ROCK’

Known as “The Rock,” Johnson shot to fame as a professional wrestler and is now one of the nation’s most popular and prolific movie and TV actors.

He’s also been a relatively quiet resident of Virginia for several years, although for its 2024 Men of the Year issue, GQ interviewed him at the Orange County horse farm that serves as his retreat from Hollywood. In addition to his movie career — including the “Fast & Furious” and “Jumanji” franchises — Johnson is a co-owner of the United League, a spring pro football league that started in 2024 after the merger of the United States Football League and the XFL.

His business partner and ex-wife, Dany Garcia, runs their production company, Seven Bucks Productions, which produces TV shows and movies, including the “Young Rock” and “Ballers” TV series.

Although Johnson’s known for his comedy and action movie career, in 2023 he made headlines for his philanthropy, making a seven-figure gift to the SAG-AFTRA Foundation during the writers’ and actors’ strike — a sum that SAG-AFTRA Foundation Chairman and President Courtney B. Vance declared was the largest single donation in the organization’s history.

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