 Franklin J. Hickman
Since his graduation from the University of
Pennsylvania School of Law in 1973, where he received the Wiley C. Rutledge Memorial Award, Franklin
J. Hickman has focused his career on legal issues affecting
persons with mental disabilities.
Frank's first major case established the right
of indigent persons in Ohio being civilly committed to have
legal counsel provided at public expense.
During nine years as a member of the Law Reform Unit of the
Legal Aid Society of Cleveland, Frank brought numerous successful class actions
establishing and defining the treatment rights of patients in
psychiatric hospitals and state institutions for the mentally
retarded, and inmates with psychiatric problems. He was
founder and director of the Cleveland Bar advocacy project which
sponsored education programs for the private bar and conducted
extensive advocacy work in the establishment of group homes.
Since going into private practice in 1981, Frank has focused his
practice on families with members who are mentally and/or physically
impaired as well as the agencies and county boards throughout the
state which provide services to persons with mental illness and
mental retardation.
He has represented families in special education cases since 1975
in negotiations, mediations, due process proceedings and cases in
all courts, including the Federal Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit. He spends a major part of his practice on cases under the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), which defines
and protects rights of children who need special education.
Frank is on the faculty of the medical and law schools at Case
Western Reserve University where he teaches a course on law and psychiatry. He has
presented over 800 local, regional, and national seminars and
workshops on legal issues relating to mental disability.
FHickman@Hickman-Lowder.com
© 2006 by Hickman & Lowder Co., L.P.A. All rights reserved.
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