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Deborah Hendrick Karpatkin, Civil Rights Attorney in New York

Over 44 years of legal practice · focused on Civil Rights, Employment, and Military · 5.0/5 rating from 1 verified client review

MemberatDeborah H. Karpatkin

New, NY

Practicing civil rights in New York since 1982.

44+
Years practicing
5.0 ★
1 client review
2
Bar admissions

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Quick answer

Deborah Hendrick Karpatkin is a member based in New York, NY. The practice focuses on Civil Rights, Employment, and Military. Deborah has over 44 years of legal experience. Currently practicing at Deborah H. Karpatkin. Rated 5.0 out of 5 from 1 client review.

Based in
New York, NY
Experience
over 44 years
Known for
Civil Rights · Employment · Military
  • Handles Civil Rights, Employment, and Military matters from New York, NY.
  • Over 44 years of practice as a licensed attorney.
  • Recognized with AV Preeminent.

About Deborah Hendrick Karpatkin: Deborah Hendrick Karpatkin is a member based in New York, NY. The practice focuses on Civil Rights, Employment, and Military. Deborah has over 44 years of legal experience. Currently practicing at Deborah H. Karpatkin. Rated 5.0 out of 5 from 1 client review.

Areas of practice

Deborah's practice areas in New York

Deborah concentrates on civil rights, employment, and military. Each area below outlines the kind of case Deborah handles, typical outcomes to expect, and how the intake process starts.

Civil Rights cases in New York

Deborah takes civil rights matters in New York. Typical engagements include intake calls to scope the issue, review of any records or filings you already have, and a written strategy memo before Deborah agrees to represent you.

Employment cases in New York

Deborah takes employment matters in New York. Typical engagements include intake calls to scope the issue, review of any records or filings you already have, and a written strategy memo before Deborah agrees to represent you.

Military cases in New York

Deborah takes military matters in New York. Typical engagements include intake calls to scope the issue, review of any records or filings you already have, and a written strategy memo before Deborah agrees to represent you.

Biography

Deborah Hendrick Karpatkin, civil rights attorney serving New York

Deborah Hendrick Karpatkin is a member based in New York, NY. The practice focuses on Civil Rights, Employment, and Military. Deborah has over 44 years of legal experience. Currently practicing at Deborah H. Karpatkin. Rated 5.0 out of 5 from 1 client review. Deborah works from New York and takes on civil rights matters across the region.

Deborah Hendrick Karpatkin is a lawyer practicing employment rights, civil rights, military law. Deborah received a B.A. degree from University of Rochester in 1977, and has been licensed for 44 years. Deborah practices at Deborah H. Karpatkin in New York, NY.

Deborah's approach to civil rights cases

Deborah Hendrick Karpatkin is a lawyer practicing employment rights, civil rights, military law. Deborah received a B.A. degree from University of Rochester in 1977, and has been licensed for 44 years. Deborah practices at Deborah H. Karpatkin in New York, NY.

The kind of cases Deborah takes

Deborah reviews new inquiries case-by-case for civil rights, employment, and military matters across New York.

Credentials

Credentials — where Deborah studied and practices

  • Columbia Law School

    J.D. · 1980

  • University of Rochester

    B.A. · 1977

Jurisdictions

Deborah's state bar admissions

  • New Jersey

    1984 · ACTIVE

  • New York

    1982 · ACTIVE

Deborah studied at J.D. in Columbia Law School and B.A. in University of Rochester.

Law school and academic background

Deborah completed J.D. in Columbia Law School and B.A. in University of Rochester. Formal legal training is one signal of substantive knowledge — the day-to-day practice Deborah runs in New York is where that training gets applied to real client questions.

Recognition

Deborah's legal honors and published work

Deborah has received 1 formal recognition from bar associations, industry bodies, and peer-review services.

  • AV Preeminent

Legal awards and honors

AV Preeminent.

Locations

Deborah Hendrick Karpatkin's office in New York

Deborah's primary office is at 99 Park Ave., Rm. 1600, New York, NY, 10016-1607. In-person meetings are by appointment; a phone intake usually comes first.

Main office

Deborah H. Karpatkin

99 Park Ave., Rm. 1600

New York, NY 10016-1607

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Client feedback

Client reviews of Deborah Hendrick Karpatkin — 5.0/5 rating from 1 verified client review

Every review below is from a verified client of Deborah. Reviews cover communication, case outcome, and value — the three signals that matter most when comparing civil rights attorneys in New York.

5.0

1 client review

Client ratings are sourced from public records and editorial research. Reviews on LawyersListed are accepted from verified clients once Deborah Hendrick Karpatkin claims this profile.

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Hiring guide

How to hire Deborah Hendrick Karpatkin — what to expect in your first consultation

Working with a new civil rights attorney should feel structured. Here's how the first two conversations with Deborah usually go, from the moment you request a consult to the day representation begins.

Consultation formats and pricing

Deborah charges for the initial consult. That fee is credited toward representation if you retain Deborah's office.

What to bring to your first meeting

Bring any documents you already have — police reports, medical records, filed pleadings, correspondence from an insurer, a copy of the contract at issue. If you're not sure, err on the side of bringing everything; Deborah will tell you what matters and what doesn't.

Questions to ask a civil rights attorney in New York

A short list to run through before you commit: How many civil rights matters have you handled in the last year? What's your fee structure? Who else in the office will work on this? What's your realistic estimate of timeline and range of outcomes? How do I reach you between meetings?

Fees & payment

Fees, payment methods, and consultation options for Deborah

Deborah discusses fees during intake so the arrangement fits the matter. Contingency, hourly, and flat-fee options are all common in civil rights practice — ask which fits.

Hourly rates, contingency fees, and flat-fee options

Every civil rights matter is priced differently. Simple document review might be a flat fee. Injury litigation is often contingency. Complex commercial disputes usually run hourly with a retainer. Deborah confirms the model in the engagement letter before any work starts.

Payment methods and payment plans

Deborah's office accepts standard payment methods. Ask about payment plans if the retainer is a stretch — many civil rights practices work with clients on structured schedules.

Frequently asked

Frequently asked questions about Deborah Hendrick Karpatkin

  • How much does it cost to hire Deborah for a civil rights case?

    Cost depends on the type of matter, the fee model (contingency, flat, hourly), and how contested the case becomes. Deborah walks through the likely range during the consult so there are no surprises.

  • Does Deborah offer a free consultation?

    Deborah charges for the initial consult; that fee is credited toward representation if you retain Deborah's office. Some civil rights attorneys offer free consults — check Deborah's current terms during booking.

  • How long do civil rights cases in New York typically take?

    Simple civil rights matters can wrap in a few weeks; disputed cases can run 6–18 months from intake to resolution, longer if the matter goes to trial. Deborah gives a realistic estimate for your facts at the consult — vague answers here are a red flag.

  • Can Deborah take my case if I'm outside New York?

    Deborah is licensed in New York. Matters governed by New York law are the natural fit. Out-of-state matters are handled case-by-case, sometimes with local co-counsel. Ask during intake — Deborah will tell you if the case is a fit or refer you to someone closer to your court.

  • What should I bring to my first meeting with Deborah?

    Bring every document that touches the dispute: contracts, correspondence, police or medical reports, filed pleadings, invoices, photographs, insurance letters. Also bring a written timeline of what happened, in your own words. Deborah will filter what matters — over-preparing at intake is always cheaper than needing a second meeting.

  • Is Deborah accepting new civil rights clients right now?

    Deborah's intake status shifts week to week. Submit the form; the office will confirm availability or refer the matter out.

Areas served

Civil Rights attorneys serving Albany and Brooklyn in New York

Deborah handles civil rights matters throughout New York. Each city below is a direct link into the search page for verified civil rights attorneys in that community.

More counsel

If Deborah's intake is full or the fit isn't right, these civil rights attorneys in New York handle similar matters. Every profile below is verified and open to consultations.