r/Indialawfirms

▲ 15 r/Indialawfirms+2 crossposts

Questionable people at law firms

I know a guy who’s currently with a law firm. He did some horrible things to a friend of mine after they broke up. She chose not to pursue anything and instead moved on with her life, but seeing what she went through and the fact that there was no accountability still really bothers me.

What also deeply disturbs me is that he committed SA and continues to be part of a large firm, likely working around women who have no idea what kind of person he is.

Is there any way to call someone like this out?

reddit.com
u/kantaben420 — 6 days ago
▲ 4 r/Indialawfirms+2 crossposts

Welcome to r/IndiaLawfirms

Welcome to r/IndiaLawfirms 👋

This subreddit was created as a space for honest conversations about life inside Indian law firms — the good, the bad, and the painfully confusing.

The fact that there are probably two or three active subreddits regarding Law in India, and none in particular for Law firms got me thinking, and I have created this community to bridge that gap. This subreddit is meant as a safe space for Law students and young practioners in particular, to discuss and express thier views on Law firms in India.

A lot of us enter the legal profession with very little idea of what actually happens behind the polished LinkedIn posts, placement statistics, and corporate presentations. The long hours, office culture, internships, mentorship, burnout, toxic teams, great seniors, impossible deadlines, career confusion — these are things people experience every day, but rarely speak openly about. Hopefully, this community can change that a little.

Whether you are:

  • a law student trying to understand how firms really work,
  • an intern surviving on caffeine and formatting corrections,
  • a junior associate figuring things out one redline at a time,
  • or someone experienced who simply wants to guide others,

you are welcome here.

The idea is simple: this should feel like a space where people can speak freely without feeling judged

A couple of things to keep in mind:

  • Respect everyone’s privacy and anonymity
  • No personal attacks, harassment, or doxxing
  • Keep disagreements civil — this profession is stressful enough already

Most importantly, you do not have to pretend everything is perfect here.

Glad to have you here. Hope this becomes a genuinely useful community for law students and lawyers across India.

reddit.com
u/Aromatic_Share_1015 — 10 days ago