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New York State Unified Court System

http://www.courts.state.ny.us/ -- a good place to research attorneys and find information about CLE status.

State Bar Associations

New JerseyNew York   | Connecticut | Pennsylvania


Other State Bar Associations: Search by State Letter:


A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  K  L  M  N  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z

A
  • Alabama

  • Alaska

  • Arizona

  • Arkansas

    ALABAMA

    Alabama State Bar
    http://www.alabar.org

    Mobile Bar Assn. (AL) 
    http://www.mobilebar.com

     

    ALASKA

    Alaska Bar Assn.
    http://www.alaskabar.org

    ARIZONA

    State Bar of Arizona
    http://www.azbar.org

    ARKANSAS

    C

  • California

  • Colorado

  • Connecticut

    CALIFORNIA State Bar of California 
    http://www.calbar.org  Santa Clara County Bar Assn. (CA)
    http://www.sccbalegalink.com San Diego County Bar Assn. (CA)
    http://www.sdcba.org Beverly Hills Bar Assn. (CA) 
    http://www.bhba.org Bar Assn. of San Francisco (CA)
    http://www.sfbar.org Contra Costa County Bar Assn. (CA) 
    http://www.cccba.org  San Fernando Valley Bar Assn. (CA)
    http://www.sfvba.org Los Angeles County Bar Assn. (CA) 
    http://www.lacba.org San Mateo County Bar Assn. (CA)
    http://first-webmaster.com/smcba/index.html Lawyers Club of Los Angeles 
    http://www.sidebar.com/lawyers Lawyers Club of San Diego 
    http://www.lawyerselubsandiego.com Sunnyvale-Cupertino Bar Assn. (CA)
    http://www.lawscape.com/suncupbar/links.html Marin County Bar Assn. (CA) 
    http://www.marinbar.com Ventura County Bar Assn. (CA)
    http://www.vcba.org Orange County Bar Assn. (CA) 
    http://www.ocbar.org Palo Alto Area Bar Assn. (CA) 
    http://www.lawscape.com/paaba/index.html  *Sacramento County Bar Assn. (CA) 
    http://www.sacbar.org Specialty Bars: Bay Area Lawyers for Individual Area Freedom
    http://www.balif org Charles Houston Bar Assn. (CA) 
    http://www.charleshouston.org Consumer Attorneys of California 
    http://www.caoc.com/index.html  California Find Law
    http://www.california.findlaw.com California Small Claims Info. Ctr.
    http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/smallclaims

    COLORADO

    Colorado Bar Assn. 
    http://www.cobar.org 

    Boulder County Bar Assn. (CO)
    http://www.boulder-bar.org

    Specialty Bars:

    Colorado Criminal Defense Bar 
    http://www.ccdb.org

    Colorado Women's Bar Assn. 
    http://www.cwba.org

    CONNECTICUT

    Connecticut Bar Assn.
    http://www.ctbar.org

    Greater Danbury Bar Assn. (CT)
    http://www.thecommon.com/dba.html

    D

  • Delaware

  • District of Columbia

    DELAWARE

    Delaware State Bar Assn. 
    http://www.dsba.org

    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

    The Bar Assn. of the District of Columbia
    http://www.badc.org

    District of Columbia Bar
    http://www.dcbar.org

    Specialty Bars:

    Women's Bar Assn. of DC
    http://www.wbadc.org

     

    F

  • Florida

    FLORIDA

    The Florida Bar
    http://www.flabar.org

    Broward County Bar Assn. (FL)
    http://www.browardbar.org  

    Clearwater Bar Assn. (FL) 
    http://www.clwbar.org 

    Orange County Bar Assn. (FL) 
    http://www.obar.org 

    Specialty Bars:

    Academy of Florida Trial Lawyers 
    http://www.aftl.org

    G  

  • Georgia

    GEORGIA

    State Bar of Georgia
    http://www.gabar.org

    State Bar of Georgia, Computer Law Section
    http://www.computerbar.org

    Atlanta Bar Assn. 
    http://www.atlantabar.org

    Decatur Bar Assn. (GA) 
    http://www.decaturbar.org

    Specialty Bars:

    Atlanta Legal Aid Society
    http://www.law.emory.edu/PI/ALAS/

    Georgia Assn. for Women Lawyers
    http://www.law.emory.edu/GAWL/gawl.html

    H

  • Hawaii

    HAWAII

    Hawaii State Bar Assn.
    http://www.hsba.org

    I

  • Illinois

  • Indiana

  • Iowa

    ILLINOIS

    Illinois State Bar Assn.
    http://www.illinoisbar.org

    Champaign County Bar Assn. (IL) 
    http://www.ccba.org

    The Chicago Bar Assn. (IL) 
    http://www.chicagobar.org

    DuPage County Bar Assn. (IL) 
    http://www.dcba.org

    INDIANA

    Indiana State Bar Assn.
    http://www.ai.org/isba

    IOWA

    Iowa State Bar Assn.
    http://www.lowabar.org

    K

  • Kansas

  • Kentucky

    KANSAS

    Kansas Bar Assn.
    http://www.ksbar.org

    Specialty Bars:

    Kansas Trial Lawyers Assn. 
    http://www.ink.org/public/ktla

    KENTUCKY

    Kentucky Bar Assn.
    http://www.kybar.org

    Louisville Bar Assn. (KY) 
    http://www.legalnetwork.net/lba/index.html

     

    L

  • Louisiana

    LOUISIANA

    Louisiana State Bar Assn.
    http://www.lsba.org

    Baton Rouge Bar Assn. (LA) 
    http://www.brba.org

    Specialty Bars:

    Louisiana Young Lawyers
    http://www.younglawyers.org

    M

  • Maine

  • Maryland

  • Massachusetts

  • Michigan

  • Minnesota

  • Mississippi

  • Missouri

  • Montana

    MAINE

    Maine State Bar Assn.
    http://www.mainebar.org

    Specialty Bars:

    Maine Trial Lawyers Assn.
    http://www.mtla.org

    MARYLAND

    Maryland State Bar Assn.
    http://www.msba.org

    Anne Arundel Bar Assn. (MD) 
    http://www.aabar.org

    Baltimore County Bar Assn. (MD) 
    http://www.bcba.org 

    Prince George's County Bar Assn. (MD) 
    http://www.mdlaw.net/pgbar.html

     

    MASSACHUSETTS

    Massachusetts Bar Assn.
    http://www.massbar.org

    Boston Bar Assn. (MA) 
    http://www.bostonbar.org 

    MICHIGAN

    State Bar of Michigan
    http://www.michbar.org

    State Bar of Michigan, Probate and Estate Planning Section
    http://www.icle.org/sections/probate

    Grand Rapids Bar Assn. (MI) 
    http://www.grbar.org 

    Oakland County Bar Assn. (MI) 
    http://www.ocba.org

    Washtenaw County Bar Assn. (MI) 
    http://www.lawtech.com/wcba

     

    MINNESOTA

    Minnesota State Bar Assn.
    http://www.mnbar.org

    Specialty Bars:

    Minnesota Women Lawyers
    http://www.mwlawyers.org

    MISSISSIPPI

    The Mississippi Bar
    http://www.msbar.org

    MISSOURI

    The Missouri Bar
    http://www.mobar.org

    The Bar Assn. of Metropolitan St. Louis (MO) 
    http://bamsl.org

    MONTANA

    State Bar of Montana
    http://www.montanabar.org

     

    N

  • Nebraska

  • Nevada

  • New Hampshire

  • New Jersey

  • New Mexico

  • New York

  • North Carolina

    NEBRASKA

    State Bar of Nebraska
    http://www.nebar.com

     

    NEVADA

    State Bar of Nevada
    http://www.nvbar.org

     

    NEW HAMPSHIRE

    New Hampshire Bar Assn.
    http://www.nhbar.org

    NEW JERSEY

    New Jersey State Bar Assn.
    http://www.njsba.com

    New Jersey State Bar Foundation
    http://www.njsbf.com

    Specialty Bars:

    New Jersey Institute for Continuing Legal Education
    http://www.njicle.com

    New Jersey Lawyer Newspaper 
    http://www.njlnews.com

    NEW MEXICO

    *State Bar of New Mexico
    http://www.nmbar.org

     

    NEW YORK

    New York State Bar Assn.
    http://www.nysba.org

    Local Bars:

    Albany County Bar Assn. (NY)
    http://www.albanycountybar.com/

    Brooklyn Bar Assn.
    http://www.brooklynbar.org

    The Assn. of the Bar of the City of New York
    http://www.abcny.org

    Dutchess County Bar Assn. (NY)
    http://www.mhv.net/~dcba/dcba3.html

    Bar Assn. of Erie County (NY)
    http://www.eriebar.org

    Greene County Bar Assn. (NY)
    http://members.aol.com/dewoodin/gcba/gcba.html

    Bar Assn. of Nassau County (NY)
    http://www.nassaubar.org

    Onondaga County Bar Assn. (NY)
    http://www.onbar.org

    Queens County Bar Assn. (NY)
    http://www.infoshop.com/qcba

    Suffolk County Bar Assn. (NY)
    http://www.scba.org

    Specialty Bars:

    New York State Defenders Assn. 
    http://www.nysda.org

    New York Trial Lawyers Assn. 
    http://www.nystla.org 

    Women's Bar Assn. of the State of New York
    http://www.wbasny.org

    Queens Womens Bar Assn. 
    http://www.wbasny.org/queens.html

    NORTH CAROLINA

    North Carolina Bar Assn.
    http://www.barlinc.org

    O

  • Ohio

  • Oregon

    OHIO

    Ohio State Bar Assn.
    http://www.ohiobar.org

    Akron Bar Assn. (OH)
    http://www.akronbar.org

    Cleveland Bar Assn. (OH)
    http://www.clevelandbar.org

    Columbus Bar Assn. (OH)
     http://www.cbalaw.org

     

    OREGON

    Oregon State Bar
    http://www.osbar.org

     

    P

  • Pennsylvania

    PENNSYLVANIA

    Pennsylvania Bar Assn.
    http://www.pabar.org

    Allegheny County Bar Assn. (PA)
    http://www.acba.org

    Delaware County Bar Assn. (PA)
    http://www.delcobar.org

    Hennepin County Bar Assn. 
    http://www.hcba.org

    Lancaster Bar Assn. (PA)
    http://www.lancasterbar.org

    Montgomery Bar Assn. (PA)
    http://www.montgomerybar.org

    SASFIRM Section-Solo & Small Firm Practitioners
    http://bamsl.org/sasfirm

    Philadelphia Bar Assn. (PA)
     http://www.philabar.org

    Specialty Bars:

    Pennsylvania Bar Institute 
    http://www.pbi.org

    Philadelphia Trial Lawyers Assn. 
    http://www.philatla.org

     

    R

  • Rhode Island

    RHODE ISLAND

    Rhode Island Bar Assn.
    http://www.ribar.com

     

    S

  • South Carolina

  • South Dakota

    SOUTH CAROLINA

    South Carolina Bar
    http://www.scbar.org

     

    SOUTH DAKOTA

    State Bar of South Dakota 
    http://www.sdbar.org

    T

  • Tennessee

  • Texas

    TENNESSEE

    Tennessee Bar Assn. 
    http://www.tba.org

    Essex County Bar Assn. 
    http://www.essexbar.com

    Memphis Bar Assn. (TN) 
    http://www.memphisbar.org

    Nashville Bar Assn. (TN) 
    http://www.nashbar.org

    Specialty Bars:

    Tennessee Assn. of Criminal Defense Lawyers
    http://www.tncrimlaw.com

    TEXAS

    *State Bar of Texas 
    http://www.texasbar.com

    State Bar of Texas, Computer Law Section 
    http://www.sbot.org

    Houston Bar Assn.
    http://www.hba.org

    Dallas Bar Assn. 
    http://www.dallasbar.com

    Specialty Bars:

    Bexar County Women's Bar Assn. (TX)
    http://www.netxpress.com/~bcwba

    Texas Young Lawyers Assn.
    http://www.tyla.com

    U

  • Utah

    UTAH

    Utah State Bar
    http://www.utahbar.org

    V

  • Vermont 

  • Virginia

    VERMONT

    Vermont Bar Assn.
    http://www.vtbar.org

    VIRGINIA

    Virginia Bar Assn.
    http://www.vba.org

    Virginia State Bar
    http://www.vsb.org

    W

  • Washington

  • Washington, D.C.

  • West Virginia

  • Wisconsin

  • Wyoming

    WASHINGTON

    Washington State Bar Assn.
    http://www.wsba.org

    King County Bar Assn. (WA)
    http://www.owt.com/kcba

    *Spokane County Bar Assn. (WA)
    http://www.spokanebar.org

    Tacoma Pierce County Bar Assn. (WA)
    http://www.co.pierce.wa.us

    WEST VIRGINIA

    West Virginia State Bar
    http://www.wvbar.org

    WISCONSIN

    State Bar of Wisconsin
    http://www.wisbar.org

    WYOMING

    Wyoming State Bar Assn.
    http://www.wyomingbar.org

     

    Specialty Bar and Other Legal Organizations


    Academy of Florida Trial Lawyers 
    http://www.aftl.org

    American Assn. of Law Libraries
    http://www.aallnet.org 

    Assn. for Continuing Legal Education
    http://www.aclea.org

    American Bar Assn.
    http://www.abanet.org 

    Assn. of Federal Defense Attorneys
    http://www.afda.org

    ALI-ABA-Committee on Continuing Legal Education 
    http://www.alanet.org

    American College of Trust and Estate Counsel (ACTEC)
    http://www.actec.org

    Assn. of Trial Lawyers of America
    http://www.atlanet.com

    American Corporate Counsel Assn. 
    http://www.acca.com

    Atlanta Legal Aid Society
    http://www.law.emory.edu/PI/ALAS/

    American Health Lawyers Assn. 
    http://www.healthlawyers.org

    American Immigration Lawyers Assn. 
    http://www.aila.org

    Bar Assn. of National Lawyers
    http://www.nationlaw.org

    American Inns of Court Foundation 
    http://www.innsofcourt.org

    Bay Area Lawyers for Individual Area Freedom
    http://www.balif.org

    American Intellectual Property Law Assn.
    http://www.aipla.org

    Bexar County Women's Bar Assn. (TX)
    http://www.netxpress.com/~bcwba

    American Judicature Society 
    http://www.ajs.org

    American Society of Corporate Secretaries
    http://www.ascs.org 

    Charles Houston Bar Assn. (CA) 
    http://www.charleshouston.org

    Lawyer-Pilots Bar Assn.
    http://www.lpba.org

    Colorado Criminal Defense Bar 
    http://www.ccdb.org

    Louisiana Young Lawyers
    http://www.younglawyers.org

    Colorado Women's Bar Assn. 
    http://www.cwba.org

    Maine Trial Lawyers Assn.
    http://www.mtla.org

    Commercial Law League of America 
    http://www.clla.org

    Minnesota Women Lawyers
    http://www.mwlawyers.org

    Consumer Attorneys of California 
    http://www.caoc.com/index.html 

    National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys
    http://www.naela.com

    Corporate Bar Assn. 
    http://www.corporatebar.org 

    National Asian Pacific American Bar Assn.
    http://www.napaba.org

    Cyberspace Bar Assn. 
    http://www.cyberbar.net

    National Assn. of Bond Lawyers
    http://www.nabl.org

    Federal Bar Assn. 
    http://www.fedbar.org 

    National Assn. of College and University Attorneys
    http://www.nabl.org

    Federal Communications Bar Assn.
    http://www.fcba.org 

    National Assn. of Legal Assistants
    http://www.nala.org

    Federal Magistrate Judges Assn.
    http://www.fedjudge.org 

    National Assn. of Legal Secretaries
    http://www.nals.org

    First Amendment Lawyers Assn.
    http://www.fala.org 

    National Assn. of Patent Practitioners
    http://www.napp.org

    National Assn. for Public Interest Law
    http://www.napil.org

    Georgia Assn. for Women Lawyers
    http://www.law.emory.edu/GAWL/gawl.html 

    National Employment Lawyers Assn.
    http://www.nela.org

    Inter-American Bar Assn.
    http://www.erols.com/iaba 

    National Federation of Paralegal Assns.
    http://www.paralegals.org

    Inter-Pacific Bar Assn.
    http://www.ipba.org 

    National Lawyers Assn.
    http://www.nla.org

    International Trade Commission Trial Lawyers
    http://www.itctla.org

    Assn. National Lesbian and Gay Law Assn.
    http://www.nlgla.org

    Internet Bar Assn.
    http://www.lawyers.org 

    National Organization of Bar Counsel
    http://www.nobc.org

    Kansas Trial Lawyers Assn. 
    http://www.ink.org/public/ktla

    New Jersey Institute for Continuing Legal Education
    http://www.njicle.com

    New Jersey Lawyer Newspaper 
    http://www.njlnews.com

    Tennessee Assn. of Criminal Defense Lawyers
    http://www.tncrimlaw.com

    New York State Defenders Assn.
    http://www.nysda.org 

    New York Trial Lawyers Assn.
    http://www.nystla.org 

    Women's Bar Assn. of DC
    http://www.wbadc.org

    Pennsylvania Bar Institute 
    http://www.pbi.org 

    Philadelphia Trial Lawyers Assn. 
    http://www.philatla.org 

    Women's Bar Assn. of the State of New York
    http://www.wbasny.org

    Queens Womens Bar Assn. 
    http://www.wbasny.org/queens.html

    Legal Aid Organizations

    LawHelp.org/NY/

     

    Legal Services for New York City - Brooklyn Branch
    180 Livingston Street
    Brooklyn, NY 11201
    Telephone: 718 852-8888
    Fax: 718 858-1786
    Website: www.lsnybb.org

     

    Bedford-Stuyvesant
    Community Legal Services

    1368-90 Fulton Street
    Brooklyn, N.Y. 11216
    (718)-636-1155
    Fax: 398-6414

     

    Bushwick Office
    1455 Myrtle Avenue
    Brooklyn, NY 11237
    Telephone: 718 487-0800
    Fax: 718 326-2944
    Website: www.bka.org

     

    East Brooklyn Office
    80 Jamaica Avenue
    Brooklyn, NY 11207
    Telephone:718 487-1300
    Fax: 718 342-1780
    Website: www.bka.org

     

    Williamsburg Office
    256-260 Broadway
    Brooklyn, NY 11211
    Telephone: 718 487-2300
    Fax: (718) 782-6790
    Website: www.bka.org

     

    Brighton Office
    3049 Brighton 6th Street
    Brooklyn, NY 11235
    Telephone: 718 852-8888
    Fax: 718 858-1786
    Website: www.lsnybb.org

     

    Williamsburg Outreach Office
    32 Penn Street
    Brooklyn, New York 11211
    Telephone: 718 643-9700
    Fax: 718 858-1786
    Website: www.lsnybb.org

     

    Brooklyn Legal Services
    Corporation A - Bushwick
    1455 Myrtle Avenue
    Brooklyn, NY 11237
    (718) 326-1300
    Website:www.bka.org

     

    Brooklyn Legal Services
    Corporation A - Williamsburg

    Brooklyn Legal Services Corporation A
    256-260 Broadway
    Brooklyn, NY 11211
    (718)-782-6195
    Fax: (718)-487-2300

     

    Williamsburg Outreach Office
    32 Penn Street
    Brooklyn, NY 11211
    (718) 643-0830
    Website: www.lsnybb.org

     

    Brooklyn Legal Services
    (East New York)

    80 Jamaica Avenue
    Brooklyn, N.Y. 11207
    (718)-487-1300; (718) 345-6207
    Fax: 342-1780

     

    Brooklyn Legal Services
    Corporation B (South Brooklyn)
    105 Court Street
    Brooklyn, N.Y. 11201
    (718) 237-5500
    Fax: (718) 855-0733
    Website: www.sbls.org/index.htm

     

    Legal Services Brighton Office
    3049 Brighton 6th Street
    Brooklyn, N.Y. 11235
    (718)-934-2989;
    Fax: 858-1786
    Website:www.lsnybb.org

     

    Legal Services
    Brooklyn Branch

    186 Jorelemon Street
    Brooklyn, N.Y. 11201
    (718)-852-8888
    Fax: 858-1786
    Website: www.lsnybb.org

    International Bar Associations

    Australian Plaintiff Lawyers Assn. 
    http://www.apla.com

    Law Society of New South Wales
    http://lawsocnsw.asn.au

    Law Society of Western Australia
    http://www.lawsocietywa.asn.au

    Federation of Law Societies of Canada 
    http://www.flsc.ca 

    Finnish Bar Assn. 
    http://www.asianajajat.fi 

    New South Wales Bar Assn.
    http://www.fl.asn.au/nsw_bar

    Ontario Trial Lawyers Assn.
    http://www.otla.com

    Turkish Bar Assn.
     http://www.avukat.com/tbb_eng.html

    International Bar Assn. 
    http://www.ibanet.org 

    Ukranian American Bar Assn.
    http://www.uaba.net

    Law Society of England and Wales 
    http://www.lawsoc.org

    The Victorian Bar (Melbourne, Australia)
    http://www.ozemail.com.au/~vicbar

    DISCLAIMER: The information contained in this web site is provided as a service to the Internet community, and does not constitute legal advice. We try to provide quality information, but we make no claims, promises or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained in or linked to this web site and its associated sites. As legal advice must be tailored to the specific circumstances of each case, and laws are constantly changing, nothing provided herein should be used as a substitute for the advice of competent counsel.

     

    Brooklyn's Court Houses - A History

    The Old Kings County Courthouse 1896-1903

    Photo courtesy of the Brooklyn Historical Society

     

    Former Kings County CourthouseThe court first sat in the old Kings County Courthouse, located on what is now the site of Brooklyn Law School at the southwest corner of the intersection of Joralemon Street and Boreum Place in downtown Brooklyn. Change was in the air in 1894 and 1895. In addition to the Constitutional Convention and the alterations it brought, in those years the City of Brooklyn annexed the remaining Kings County towns of Flatbush, New Utrecht, Gravesend, and Flatlands. When this was done the whole of Kings County had become identical with the City of Brooklyn and a separate county government with its own officers was rendered unnecessary. The end of the need for county government came on December 31, 1895, and coincidentally the Constitution of 1894 went into effect on the following day. Thus the chamber of the former Kings County Board of Supervisors, which went out of existence with the end of county government, became available and it was redecorated for use as the courtroom for the Appellate Division, Second Department.

     

    The first session of the court was held in the former Supervisors' Chamber on January 6, 1896. At 10 a.m. on that day the proclamation was made and Presiding Justice Charles F. Brown, and Associate Justices Calvin E. Pratt, Edgar M. Cullen, Willard Bartlett, and Edward S. Hatch took the bench. Joseph A. Burr, the President of the Brooklyn Bar Association, addressed the court, the calendar was called, and argument was held. Not only was this the first meeting of a new court, in a new courtroom, but the Justices also had a new look. It was on that day that the Justices of the Supreme Court first wore judicial gowns while on the bench. The New York Law Journal observed that the decision to wear judicial gowns did not spring from a "love of mere pomp," but rather "from a deliberate conviction that a certain amount of ceremony and symbolism…may have real utility in constantly reminding the Bench and Bar alike of the obligation of conscientious and decorous official conduct." The first appeal that the court decided was Kingsland Land Co. v Newman, reported by Marcus T. Hun as the first case in the first series of the Appellate Division reports. It involved an action brought against the endorser of a promissory note on an appeal from what was then called the Kings County Circuit.

    The use of a courtroom in the Kings County Courthouse was a temporary measure. Unlike the former General Term, whose judges sat both at the trial level and on appellate panels in courthouses in each of the Judicial Districts making up the Judicial Department, the Appellate Division was intended to be a permanent and independent court with full-time Justices and staff. It needed its own courtroom, clerk's office, and chambers for its Justices.

     

    The Brooklyn Borough Hall 1903-1938

    Photo courtesy of The Office of the Brooklyn Borough President

     

    The court's second home was in what is now known as Borough Hall, a Greek revival building, designed in 1835 and completed in 1849 for use as the City Hall of the City of Brooklyn, and located on the triangle of land bounded by Joralemon, Court, and old Fulton Streets. The building was home to the Mayor and Common Council of the City of Brooklyn when, on the morning of February 26, 1895, a lighted gas jet in a small, third-floor closet filled with waste paper caused a fire that destroyed the clock and bell tower, gutted the top floor of the building, and ruined the walls and ceiling of the Common Council chamber by water damage. In January 1898 the independent City of Brooklyn was consolidated into the City of New York and Kings County became the Borough of Brooklyn. Like county government before it, Brooklyn City government ended with consolidation. Space in the damaged, former Brooklyn City Hall, now known as the Borough Hall, became available, but had to be redesigned, repaired, and reconfigured as a courthouse for the Appellate Division, Second Department. Beginning in 1902 the old Common Council chamber was converted into a courtroom in the beaux-arts style under the direction of architect Axel Hedman. In July 1903 the Court issued an order altering the place of its sittings to the new ceremonial courtroom in the Borough Hall and moved to the chambers prepared for it on the third and fourth floors of that building.

     

    The court's first sitting in the new space in the Borough Hall was held on Monday, September 28, 1903. Court opened at 1 p.m. with the call of a motion calendar. The courtroom was filled with lawyers and a few spectators and the proceedings had not been long in progress when a stout woman, "the sole representative of her sex in the court room," made her way to the counsel table and stood staring fixedly at Presiding Justice Goodrich. A court officer walked to where she stood, took her by the arm, and motioned her to a chair. She shook off his grasp and stood resolutely before the five "astonished" Justices. A motion had just been called and a young lawyer had begun to address the court concerning it, but the Presiding Justice interrupted him and asked "What is it you will have, madam?" She said that she was Ann Nolan, the plaintiff in the case that had just been called. "Have you no lawyer in the court room?" asked the Presiding Justice. Mrs. Nolan said she had but preferred to state her own case. After Mrs. Nolan told her story, "a very unusual and almost unprecedented proceeding before the Appellate Division," her lawyer rose to say that he could do nothing with his client, and with that the court took her motion for an enlargement of time to print the record on submission. With this intrusion of a female litigant into the then virtually all male world of appellate practice, the Borough Hall courtroom was inaugurated. It was to be the court's home for exactly the next 35 years.

    By the 1920s, space in the Borough Hall had become inadequate to meet the needs of the court and then Presiding Justice Edward Lazansky began to urge the construction of an independent courthouse for its use. With the support of Mayor LaGuardia, the Board of Estimate of the City of New York voted to provide a new courthouse.

     

     

    The Monroe Place Courthouse 1938-Present

     

    Monroe Place CourthouseA site was selected in a residential area at the northwest corner of the intersection of Monroe Place and Pierrepont Street in what is presently the Brooklyn Heights Historic District. The location is the highest point in Brooklyn Heights and was once known as Clover Hill. During the Revolutionary War American troops began to build an earthen fort on the spot as part of the defenses of Brooklyn. After the American evacuation of Long Island, the fort fell into the hands of the British, who redesigned and completed it during their occupation of New York. "Brooklyn Fort" mounted 18 cannon and was 450 feet square with walls that rose 45 feet above a 20-foot deep ditch. When peace came, the fort reverted to the possession of the farmers on whose land it stood. Over the next 50 years they dismantled it as best they could but parts of the ramparts and ditch were visible until 1836 when the present streets were put through and houses and a church occupied the corner.

     

    Construction began on March 1, 1937, and the new courthouse was completed and officially opened on September 28, 1938, at a cost slightly exceeding $1,500,000. Although there were no formal opening ceremonies, the event was marked by the presence on the bench of all eight of the then Justices of the court, making it the only known occasion in which the court has sat en banc.

    The court's third home was designed by the Brooklyn architectural firm of Slee & Bryson. The building is of a classical revival style that flourished in the Great Depression and is three stories high, clad in white limestone with a pink granite base. Two fluted Doric columns stand at either side of the bronze entrance doorway and the ornamental grillwork over the lobby windows. A stepped parapet and four bas-relief, sculptural rondels at the third floor adorn the Monroe Place facade. The low height and restrained classical details of the courthouse allow it to harmonize with the nineteenth century buildings in the surrounding historic district.

    The interior of the courthouse is also finished in the classical revival style. The imposing lobby has a coffered, vaulted ceiling that is supported by four green marble Ionic columns. There is extensive decorative bronze work on the doors, elevators, railings, and vents. The two-story courtroom is half-paneled in American walnut with acoustical stone from the level of the second floor to the coffered ceiling, which is accented with gold leaf. Four large bronze chandeliers light the room. The clerk's office, administrative offices, and lawyers' lounge complete the first floor. The lounge is notable for its collection of photographs of the Justices who have made up the bench of the court since its founding in 1896. The second and third floors contain nine walnut-paneled chambers for Justices, the court's library, and its consultation room. Hallways throughout the building have marble wainscoting and cork flooring.

     

    When the present courthouse opened in 1938, a complement of 8 Justices and 63 staff were employed in the building, a total of 71. Today 21 Justices and 199 staff serve the court, a total of 220. Present staffing thus represents three times the number for which the building was originally designed. Only the Presiding Justice and two Associate Justices now have their principal chambers at the courthouse. The remaining 18 Justices have their principal chambers in the counties from which they were elected. To further reduce overcrowding, in 1997 the court opened an annex in a neighboring office building to house its law department.

    What constitutes the practice of law?

    A person who has a Juris Doctor (or LL.B.)but is not admitted to any bar is not a lawyer. However, federal courts often allow law students to act as "certified student attorneys" after the satisfactory completion of their first year of law school and the completion of particular second- and third-year courses such as Evidence. In systems that follow the English practice a person who has completed the course of study but is not yet admitted to the bar may practice under supervision in Articles of Clerkship usually called an Articling student. Otherwise, engaging in the kind of work customarily done by lawyers, without a valid, current license to do so, is the "unauthorized practice of law." In some jurisdictions, the definition of the practice of law is quite strict; persons have been successfully prosecuted for publishing do-it-yourself will forms and for representing special-education children in federal proceedings as specifically allowed by federal law.

     

    Criminal Attorneys need to be experienced trial lawyers giving their clients keen insight into all aspects of any criminal litigation and assisting them in making the right choices for a successful defense of the crimes they are accused of. Top care must go into the preparing of the defendant’s defenses in the pre-trial phase of any case with special emphasis on all discovery material handed over by the prosecutor and evaluations of any post arrest statements made by the accused and witnesses.

     

    If you've been accused or arrested, you cannot afford second-best representation. Choose from one of our certified criminal defense attorneys listed on this site for the best possible aggressive and highly-creative defense strategies to protect your rights.

     

    A lawyer or attorney at law is an individual licensed by the state to advise clients in legal matters and represent them in courts of law and other legal agencies. Most countries today require professional law advisors in their juridical systems. Lawyers have many names in different countries -- including "advocate," "attorney," "barrister," "counselor," "civil law notary", and "solicitor" -- and many of these names indicate specific classes or ranks of jurists.

     

    In criminal cases attorneys defend clients accused of a crime. Criminal Attorneys need to be experienced trial lawyers giving their clients keen insight into all aspects of any criminal litigation and assisting them in making the right choices for a successful defense of their felony case. Top care must go into the preparing of the defendant’s defenses in the pre-trial phase of any case with special emphasis on all discovery material handed over by the prosecutor and evaluations of any post arrest statements made by the accused and witnesses.

     

    If you've been accused or arrested, you cannot afford second-best representation. Choose from our list of certified criminal defense attorneys here.

     

    Statement of Clients' Rights

    1. You are entitled to be treated with courtesy and consideration at all times by your lawyer and the other lawyers and personnel in your lawyer's office.
    2. You are entitled to an attorney capable of handling your legal matter competently and diligently, in accordance with the highest standards of the profession. If you are not satisfied with how your matter is being handled, you have the right to withdraw from the attorney-client relationship at any time (court approval may be required in some matters and your attorney may have a claim against you for the value of services rendered to you up to the point of discharge).
    3. You are entitled to your lawyer's independent professional judgment and undivided loyalty uncompromised by conflicts of interest.
    4. You are entitled to be charged a reasonable fee and to have your lawyer explain at the outset how the fee will be computed and the manner and frequency of billing. You are entitled to request and receive a written itemized bill from your attorney at reasonable intervals. You may refuse to enter into any fee arrangement that you find unsatisfactory. In the event of a fee dispute, you may have the right to seek arbitration; your attorney will provide you with the necessary information regarding arbitration in the event of a fee dispute, or upon your request.
    5. You are entitled to have your questions and concerns addressed in a prompt manner and to have your telephone calls returned promptly.
    6. You are entitled to be kept informed as to the status of your matter and to request and receive copies of papers. You are entitled to sufficient information to allow you to participate meaningfully in the development of your matter.
    7. You are entitled to have your legitimate objectives respected by your attorney, including whether or not to settle your matter (court approval of a settlement is required in some matters).
    8. You have the right to privacy in your dealings with your lawyer and to have your secrets and confidences preserved to the extent permitted by law.
    9. You are entitled to have your attorney conduct himself or herself ethically in accordance with the Code of Professional Responsibility.
    10. You may not be refused representation on the basis of race, creed, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, age, national origin or disability.

     


     

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