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Prior to Frank's work at the Institute and Mediation Center, he served as law clerk to OATH judges. Before joining OATH, Frank served as a law clerk to the Honorable Robert A. Coogan of the New Jersey Superior Court and served as an intern to the Honorable Frederic S. Berman of the New York Supreme Court. Frank received his law degree from New York Law School and his bachelors of arts in Forensic Psychology from John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Frank Ng is also an alumnus of the Management Academy, a City Executive Development program. |
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Prior to his tenure at OATH, he spent one year as a VISTA volunteer attorney with the Statewide Youth Advocacy Project in Rochester, New York, and then joined the Juvenile Rights Division of the Legal Aid Society of New York, where he worked as a trial attorney in the Bronx Family Court for four years. In 1983, he was named to the clinical faculty at New York University Law School, where he taught the Juvenile Rights Clinic for two years. Judge Kramer is a member of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, where he has served as a member of the Children's Law Committee and the Administrative Law Committee. He is also a member of the National Association of Administrative Law Judges. |
About the Administrative Judicial Institute
Mission Statement The New York City Administrative Judicial Institute at OATH, like its state judiciary counterpart the New York State Judicial Institute, has been created as a resource center to provide training, continuing education, research and support services for the various administrative law judges and tribunals throughout New York City. The goal of the Institute is to improve the overall quality and professionalism of administrative justice in the City, enhance public access to administrative tribunals, improve the efficiency and responsiveness of such tribunals, explore alternative dispute resolution methods, and keep judges current on emerging legal trends, technology and administrative judicial reform. The Institute will develop and present a wide-ranging curriculum of theoretical and practical interest to administrative law judges throughout the calendar year. |
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