Leidos effectively doubled in size last year when it merged with Lockheed Martin’s $5 billion information technology business, and the government services giant’s lawyers have been working hard to ensure the process unfolded smoothly.

“It’s something that kept everybody busy,” said Vincent Maffeo, the firm’s outgoing executive vice president and general counsel, who retired in July after heading the firm’s legal department for seven years. “It’s one of those situations where you have to remember that everybody also has a day job to do — because we still have all of our customers, all of our contracts and all of the other things that we’re engaged in as a normal matter to keep an eye on — at the same time we’re sort of reconstructing the building from the ground up.”

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