Richard A. Lerner (born 28 August 1938) is an American research chemist. Best known for his work on catalytic antibodies, Lerner is currently President of The ...
Richard W. Lerner, P.C. 1 Old Country Road Suite 125, Carle Place, NY 11514 516 741-4100 (Office), 516 741-7485 (Fax)
Licenses:
New York - Currently registered 1970
Education:
Brooklyn Law School Degree - JD - Juris Doctor - Law Graduated - 1969 State University of New York at Buffalo Degree - BS - Bachelor of Science Graduated - 1966
Specialties:
Personal Injury - 20% Administrative Law - 20% Criminal Defense - 20% Workers Compensation - 20% Social Security - 20%
Associations:
Nassau County Bar Association - Member New York State Bar Association - Member
Lerner & Lerner, P.C. 1 Old Country Road, Suite 125, Carle Place, NY 11514
Phone:
516 741-4100 (Phone)
Specialties:
Criminal Law Traffic New York State Disability Retirement Accidents Social Security Disability Workers Compensation Driving While Intoxicated
Memberships:
Nassau County (Member, Criminal Law and Procedure Committee) and New York State Bar Associations.
ISLN:
905509349
Admitted:
1970, New York
University:
State University of New York at Buffalo, B.S., 1966
Law School:
Brooklyn Law School, J.D., 1969
Languages:
English
Links:
Site
Biography:
Richard has been practicing law in New York for 40 years. He is a former Nassau County Assistant District Attorney who specializes in criminal defense, and defends both felonies and misdemeanors. Mr. ...
Dr. Lerner graduated from the Tufts University School of Medicine in 1989. He works in Worcester, MA and specializes in Internal Medicine. Dr. Lerner is affiliated with UMASS Memorial Medical Center.
Isbn (Books And Publications)
The Molecular Basis Of Cell-Cell Interaction: Proceedings Of First International Conference, La Jolla, California, 1977
Queens College, Queens Ny & Columbia Univ. Law School 1961 - 1964
Doctor of Jurisprudence, Doctorates, Bachelors, Bachelor of Arts, Economics, Law
Queens College
Sea Lane Biotechnologies, advised by Richard Lerner, the Lita Annenberg Hazen Professor of Immunochemistry at Scripps Research, began by collecting bone marrow from patients who had been exposed to certain key strains of flu. Because the bone marrow is a "fossil record" of all the antibodies a perso