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Doug Fierberg is a partner and trial lawyer in the firm of Bode & Grenier L.L.P. specializing wrongful death, serious personal injury, sexual assault, business and other civil disputes. Across the country, Doug has served as lead counsel for numerous young victims of hazing, sexual assault or other deadly, dangerous or violent misconduct in school or institutional (camp, juvenile mental health and other) settings, as well as victims of auto or other serious accidents. In his business practice, Doug has represented national and local businesses as outside General Counsel, and in the prosecution and defense of numerous types of claims, including breach of contract, employment or other business agreements, and commercial torts.
Doug
was President (2003-2004) of the National
Advisory Board of the National Crime
Victim Bar Association ("NCVBA") and continues as a member of the Board. NCVBA
is comprised of lawyers and other
professionals across the country who
advocate for the rights of victims
of crime, particularly with respect
to victims' rights to utilize the
civil justice system to seek compensation
and protect their interests.
Doug
is a Founder and Chairperson of the
national litigation group, Schools:
Violence, Misconduct, and Safety,
which operates within and under the
authority of the Association of Trial
Lawyers of America (ATLA). Doug
is also a member of ATLA, the Trial
Lawyers Association of Metropolitan
Washington, D.C., and the Bars of
the District of Columbia and Maryland. Doug has been admitted to practice
in federal, district and circuit courts
serving Maryland and the District
of Columbia, and he has been admitted pro hac vice in order to
serve as counsel for wrongful
death and catastrophic personal injury
cases brought in numerous other state
courts, including, among others, California,
Virginia, Michigan, Tennessee, Indiana,
Texas, Mississippi, Nevada, Maryland, District of Columbia, and Ohio.
Doug has appeared as an expert in a number of forums, such
as national television (CNN, MSNBC
and Fox Television) and radio programs
in the United States and Canada. Cases in which Doug is serving as counsel have been featured on ABC 20/20(multiple times) and Dateline, among others. Doug has been quoted in numerous articles
on the subjects of injuries to students
and related litigation (New York Times,
Washington Post, Sports Illustrated,
and others). Doug appeared as
a legal expert on hazing on John McGlaughlin's
television production, "One-On-One,"
and Kweisi Mfume's television show,
"The Bottom Line" (WBAL-CH11). Doug
has lectured about the legal issues
relating to campus safety and student
injury at various universities and high
schools, including Middlebury
College and Wake Forest University. Doug
was also a featured speaker at the
2001 national conference of the National
Crime Victim Bar Association. Doug appeared as a panelist on the
nationally-broadcast videoconference,
"Broken Pledges: Fraternities and Sororities at the Crossroads," sponsored by Black Issues in Higher Education.
Doug's
more recent publications include: Student Victims of Sexual Assault: An Overview of Administrative and Legal Remedies, (ATLA, 2006 National Conference,
Education Program); Student Victims: An Overview of the Problem, Civil Litigation, and Related Proceedings, (National Student Legal Services Association, 2005 Conference); The Greek Industry: Strategies
for Litigating Claims Involving Serious
Injury, Death, Hazing, and Alcohol
Misuse, (ATLA, 2005 National Conference,
Education Program); Fraternity
Litigation: A Basic Primer on
the Status of Violence, Injury, Death,
Alcohol Misuse, and Litigation Involving
the Fraternity Industry, (ATLA,
2004 National Conference, Litigation
at Sunrise); Victim Advocate, Representing
Victims of Hazing and Other Group
Violence on Campus, (Vol. 3, No.
2, Fall, 2001); Synthesis: Law and
Policy in Higher Education, (Vol.
10, No. 3, Winter, 1999); and, The
School Administrator: Hazing Prevention
Deserves Attention, Too, (Vol.
57, No. 9, October 2000).
Doug has represented some of the largest Washington-area community associations and local Advisory Neighborhood Commissions, including the Citizens Association of Georgetown, the Capital Hill Restoration Society, the Dupont Circle Citizens Association, the Logan Circle Community Association, the Kalorama Citizens Association, and the Lamond-Riggs Citizens Associations, and he has received Community Advocate, Community Liaison and Public Defense awards in connection with his work in this area of law.
Doug graduated from the University of Michigan (BA, Psychology) with Class Honors in 1980, and received his law degree with Honors from the George Washington University National Law Center in 1988. Doug was a member of the George Washington Journal of International Law and Economics and Moot Court Board.
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