Abbye Lawrence is presently an attorney in private practice, currently practicing in personal injury law. She served as the Principal Law Clerk and Special Master for several Supreme Court Justices in New York City for over 7 years (Hon. James E. d’Auguste – recently assigned to the commercial division, Hon. Mary Rosado (ret.), and Hon. Kathryn E. Freed (ret.). She also served as Senior Counsel in the Special State Law Enforcement Defense Unit, defending NYPD officers in excessive force and false arrest claims, for the Corporation Counsel’s Office. She also served as a judicial and alternate delegate for over a decade, and supports progressive judicial candidates and other elected officials. Abbye works on a variety of complex legal issues, which receive notoriety in the community, and routinely appears in court in all counties. Abbye is also a small claims arbitrator.
She received her J.D. from Cardozo Law School and her B.A. from Cornell University. She was on Law Review at Cardozo and wrote an article that was independently published nationwide on a then-new and nuanced issue in attorney discipline. As a result, she received a special appointment to the Committee on Professional Discipline for the New York State Bar Association to help unify the attorney disciplinary rules in all 4 judicial departments. She received a public interest fellowship to begin her career in the court system, where she is known for her excellent writing and research skills, kind temperament, knowledge of the law, common sense approach to cases, and fairness to litigants.
In fact, she started her career interning for the Hon. Marsha L. Steinhardt (ret.) in Supreme Court, Kings County, while the Hon. Consuelo Mallafre Melendez was her law secretary. Abbye continued to intern for a federal judge in Brooklyn in the Eastern District Courthouse. She also has ties to Brooklyn in that her father grew up in Midwood before becoming an attorney himself. She is the first female attorney in her family of 9 lawyers in total.
She also graduated from high school at 16 as valedictorian and went on to Cornell.