jvc@groom.com
202-861-0175
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Jim
Cole earned a double major in Philosophy and English at
the University of Virginia. He graduated with distinction
from Georgetown University Law Center, earning an LL.M. in
Tax and a Certificate in Employee Benefits Law. He
has a law degree from George Mason University, where he was
the Senior Notes Editor of the Law Review. He has written
scholarly works on plan asset transfers and multiemployer
apprentice plans. He is comfortable delving into
arcane and intellectually challenging matters, his mind
trained to think logically, reason carefully, and express
itself rationally.
So why is it that a visitor to his office can’t avoid
noticing that he keeps a “Magic 8 Ball” on his
desk?
“I only consult it when I have a really tough decision
to make,” Jim says, laughing, and then adds:
“As an employee benefits lawyer, I am often dealing
with client issues that are so complicated or difficult that
answers may appear unobtainable. The Magic Eight Ball
reminds me to keep the proper perspective on my work—to
give my clients answers they can use and understand in the
real world, not self-aggrandizing mumbo jumbo.”
Jim has been providing practical answers to tough questions
for multiemployer clients and tax-exempt organizations since
the mid-1990s. He has a wealth of experience with a
broad range of ERISA issues, has drafted scores of plan amendments,
has worked with the IRS to obtain determination letters and
private letter rulings, and has developed particular expertise
with tax qualification for charitable organizations .
Jim’s occasional reliance on his somewhat unusual consultation
aid does not mean that he takes his work lightly. Just
the opposite. “As the largest pool of investment
money in the world, our health and retirement benefits systems
are the future of the United States in more ways than one,” he
notes. “Helping to shape the rules around the investments
and the benefit structure of those plans is a way that I can
contribute to society that is consistent with my beliefs about
the importance of labor to the American enterprise.” |