John Lopes is a market-leading bank executive and recognized authority in financial solutions for the plaintiff-side legal industry. As Senior Managing Director and Head of Specialized Legal Banking at First Horizon Bank, he leads a national platform focused on delivering capital, deposit, and technology solutions to contingency-based law firms, mass tort practices, claims administrators, and Qualified Settlement Funds (QSFs).
John began his career over 20 years ago advising AM Law firms, building a strong foundation in traditional legal banking and developing deep expertise in the operational and financial dynamics of large defense-side practices. He later held leadership roles at institutions including Citibank, Wells Fargo, and Western Alliance Bank, where he managed significant portfolios, built high-performing teams, and executed strategic growth initiatives across the legal vertical.
Over a decade ago, John identified a critical gap in the market and shifted his focus to the plaintiff side of the bar—where firms face unique challenges related to contingent revenue, cash flow volatility, and complex settlement structures. Since then, he has become a trusted advisor to many of the nation's leading plaintiff law firms and ecosystem partners, structuring sophisticated credit facilities, supporting billions of dollars in settlement flows, and delivering innovative banking solutions across the full lifecycle of litigation.
John is known for his ability to bridge capital, technology, and legal strategy—partnering with law firms, claims administrators, and litigation finance providers to drive growth, enhance liquidity, and create operational efficiency at scale. Through his leadership, he continues to position First Horizon as a premier banking partner to the plaintiff bar, bringing institutional-grade capabilities to a rapidly evolving segment of the legal industry.
He holds a background in financial markets from Yale University and has continued to build on that foundation through executive education with the Yale School of Management.
Below is our LFJ Conversation with John Lopes:
What gaps in the settlement and mass tort landscape led you to build a dedicated Settlement Services platform?
Historically, most banks approached settlement accounts as transactional escrow relationships rather than as a specialized vertical requiring tailored infrastructure. As mass tort and class action settlements have grown in size and complexity, that model became insufficient.
We saw several structural gaps:
- Lack of dedicated infrastructure for high-volume sub-accounting and audit transparency
- Limited understanding of QSF governance, fiduciary responsibilities, and multi-party oversight
- Manual disbursement processes that created inefficiencies and risk
- Inflexible credit solutions for contingency firms managing large case inventories
We built our Specialty Legal Banking group to address those gaps holistically — combining dedicated settlement banking, digital sub-accounting, modern disbursement capabilities, and tailored financing solutions under one coordinated platform.
Rather than treating settlements as ancillary deposits, we treat them as a highly specialized ecosystem requiring neutrality, transparency, and purpose-built technology.
Courts increasingly demand transparency and auditability. How do you see expectations evolving around reporting and fiduciary accountability?
Expectations are rising meaningfully. Judges and special masters now expect:
- Real-time visibility into balances
- Clear segregation of funds at the claimant or fee level
- Transparent interest allocation methodologies
- Clean audit trails across every transaction
In complex QSFs, accountability is no longer theoretical — it must be demonstrable.
We've responded by building a platform that allows structured sub-accounting at scale, defined user permissions (analyst vs. approver roles), exportable audit logs, and reporting that aligns with court oversight requirements.
The future standard will be near real-time transparency, not quarterly reconciliation. Specialized banks must offer specialized infrastructure to the settlement process — not just holding funds.
What are the most significant fraud or AML risks facing settlement administrators today, and how can institutions mitigate them without slowing distributions?
The scale and speed of modern distributions introduce new risk vectors:
- Synthetic identity and claimant impersonation
- Payment redirection and ACH fraud
- Social engineering attacks targeting administrators
- Sanctions and cross-border payment compliance risk
The key is not adding friction — but adding intelligent controls. Financial institutions must offer:
- Multi-layer payment verification protocols
- OFAC and sanctions screening at both onboarding and disbursement
- Segregated user permissions and dual-approval workflows
- Positive pay and transaction monitoring services
Technology should accelerate payments while reducing exposure. The answer is not slowing distributions — it's modernizing controls around them.
Claimants now expect faster access to funds and more flexibility in how they receive payments. How is innovation reshaping the claimant experience?
The claimant experience is evolving dramatically.
Traditional paper checks are increasingly insufficient. Claimants now expect options — ACH, prepaid cards, digital wallets, and other electronic modalities — delivered quickly and securely.
Real-time rails and digital disbursement platforms are reshaping expectations around:
- Speed
- Choice
- Transparency of payment status
At the same time, the institution must provide tools so that flexibility coexists with compliance and oversight.
The institutions that succeed will be those that can offer multiple payment modalities within a controlled, audit-ready environment. That's where innovation truly adds value — not just convenience, but structured efficiency.
As litigation finance and aggregate settlements continue to grow, what role should specialized settlement banks play in reinforcing neutrality and trust?
As capital flows increase in mass tort and aggregate litigation, neutrality becomes even more critical. A specialized settlement bank must function as a stabilizing counterparty amid multi-party financial arrangements. In large aggregate settlements — especially where litigation finance is involved — clarity around control, reporting, and fee segregation becomes paramount.
Our role is not to influence outcomes, but to provide a compliant, transparent, and scalable platform that reinforces trust across all stakeholders: plaintiffs' firms, defense counsel, administrators, courts, and capital providers.
Ultimately, trust in the settlement process depends on financial infrastructure that is purpose-built for complexity — and governed by strong compliance standards.