Monthly Archives: August 2011

ALVIN DORFMAN: A Life Filled with Achievement

Alvin Dorfman has handled personal injury cases from inception through trial for more than 40 years.

The son of Russian Immigrants, he grew up in Brooklyn, New York, attended Brooklyn College and graduated Columbia Law School, where he achieved the distinction of being a Harlan Fiske Scholar.

His practice emphasizes personal injury, criminal, civil rights and civil liberties cases.  His political activities have included running for District Attorney of Nassau County twice, running for the Nassau County legislature, and running for the New York State Assembly.

Mr. Dorfman is widely recognized for his impressive ability as an attorney and for his broad community involvement.  Very notable in his background is his deep and abiding commitment to civil rights issues.  Mr. Dorfman has been very active in defending civil rights activists, racial discrimination cases, freedom of information issues and integration issues.

He has served as the Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Long Island Coordinating Committee for Civil Rights. He was a Board Member and the Treasurer of CARECEN, the Central American Refugee Center in Hempstead. And, he has been an Attorney for a number of Nassau County community, civic and charitable organizations.

Mr. Dorfman fought a winning legal battle for a group of 100 Hispanic tenants who were being evicted from their apartment house complex in Hicksville.  He spoke out for the residents of a minority neighborhood in Long Beach against the advertising weekly newspaper for engaging in a racially motivated economic boycott.  He represented the residents of the Moxy-Rigby Housing Project against the Freeport Housing Authority in their struggle for adequate premises security. And, he represented Lakeview’s minority students in their historic fight in the Malverne School District busing case.

He’s been honored by many organizations including the Long Island Progressive Coalition, the Long Island Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives and the American Jewish Congress.

Mr. Dorfman has been a Freeport resident for more than 50 years and together with his wife, Rochelle, raised four children and now enjoy the blessings of 23 grandchildren.

In December 1997, a group of 100 tenants, mostly Hispanic, received word from the Town of Oyster Bay that they would be immediately evicted from a building complex in Hicksville.  Al Dorfman represented the tenants in a successful legal challenge to the planned eviction.

In 1982 Al Dorfman represented the residents of a minority section of Long Beach against the advertising weekly called the Pennysaver, charging that the Pennysaver had engaged in a racially motivated economic boycott of their neighborhood.  In 1984, as part of the settlement, the Pennysaver agreed to distribute the paper to the neighborhood.

In 1974 Mr. Dorfman represented Dennis Dillon, then a Democratic candidate for Nassau County District Attorney, in a suit against the incumbent DA.  It was the first lawsuit brought under the recently enacted Freedom of Information Law.

In 1967, the only Black teacher at Baldwin High School, Maurice McNeill, was accused of molesting a 16 year old, white female student.  The School Board pressed administrative charges against the teacher.  A large segment of the community supported McNeill.  Mr. Dorfman represented McNeill at the school disciplinary hearings that lasted approximately two months.  McNeill was fully exonerated at the conclusion of the hearings and reinstated with back pay.  The hearings were covered by the national and international press and the major broadcast networks.

In 1969, during a period of racial tension at Long Beach High School, a Black student was arrested and charged with desecrating the American flag.  Al Dorfman represented the student.  During the four day trial, one witness invoked the Fifth Amendment and refused to answer after Dorfman asked him if he had fabricated the charges.  The student was acquitted after the jury deliberated only 10 minutes.

Bar Admissions

  • New York, 1958
  • U.S. District Court Eastern District of New York
  • U.S. District Court Southern District of New York

Education

  • Columbia Law School, New York, New York, 1957
    J.D., Doctor of Jurisprudence
    Honors: Designated a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar
  • Brooklyn College of the City University of New York, Brooklyn, New York, 1954
    B.A., Bachelor of Arts
    Honors: Cum Laude

Classes/Seminars Taught

  • Criminal Justice, Adelphi University, late 1970s

Honors and Awards

  • Allard K. Lowenstein Memorial Award given by the American Jewish Congress, 1984
  • CARECEN Pro-Bono Attorney of the Year 1997
  • “Long Islander who has made a difference” by LI Progressive Coalition, 1994
  • Kairos Award by LI Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives, 1997
  • John F. Kennedy Memorial Award by Freeport Democratic Club, 1975

Professional Associations and Memberships

  • New York State Defenders Association
    Member
  • New York State Trial Lawyers Association, 1960 – Present
    Attorney
  • Nassau County Bar Association, 1960 – Present
    Member
  • New York Civil Liberties Union, Nassau Chapter, 1970 – 1998
    Cooperating Attorney
  • National Governing Council of the American Jewish Congress
    Former Member
  • American Jewish Congress
    Former Vice President of Long Island Region & President of South Shore General Division
  • Long Island Coordinating Committee for Civil Rights
    Former Chairman and member of Board of Directors
  • Central American Refugee Center (CARECEN)
    Former member of Board of Directors, Treasurer, and Attorney
  • Five Towns Forum, 2001 – 2011
    Chairperson
  • Freeport Community Worklink Center
    Founder
  • Lawyers’ Constitutional Defense Committee
    Former member
  • Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party & Mississippi Challenge
    Former Chairman of Long Island Committee of Support
  • Wharlest Jackson Memorial Fund
    Founder & former chairman (NAACP leader killed in Mississippi)
  • Holocaust Survivors Association, 1996 – 2003
    Former Chairperson
  • Nassau County Democratic Party
    Former member of Executive and Policy Committees
  • Nassau County Democratic Party
    Former candidate for County Legislator, 1975, and State Assembly, 1976
  • Nassau County Democratic Party
    Former candidate for Nassau DA, 1968 and 1974
  • Nassau County Democratic Party Law Committee
    Former Chairman
  • Long Island Council for Integrated Housing, 1964 – 1968
    Former member of Board of Directors

Pro Bono Activities

  • Baldwin School Board vs. Maurice McNeill, 1967 – 1968
  • Malverne School District busing 1978
  • Class action suit against Long Beach Pennysaver, 1982 – 1984
  • Moxey Rigby housing project residents vs. Freeport Housing Authority 1989
  • Asbestos removal in Hempstead High School 1991
  • Mass tenant eviction in Hicksville by Town of Oyster Bay, 1997 – 1998
  • Freedom of Information Law and Nassau County DA 1974
  • Attorney for Southern Christian Leadership Conference in St. Augustine, FL 1964

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