President-elect Donald Trump has looked beyond the Big Law firms dotted along the K Street Corridor in Washington to fill key legal positions in his incoming administration, turning instead to the conservative boutiques that took him as a client.

Ever the outsider, Trump has largely bucked traditional right-leaning firms like Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher and Jones Day that had close ties to past Republican administrations, showing a preference for his own personal criminal defense lawyers for top postings in the Department of Justice and White House.