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Karen
Frink Wolf is a 1982 Phi Beta Kappa graduate of the University of New Hampshire and a 1985 graduate of Syracuse University College of Law. Prior to law school, she was a legislative intern for former United States Senator Warren B. Rudman in Washington, D.C. At Syracuse, she was a member of the Syracuse Law Review and served as Notes and Comments Editor in the 1984-85 academic year, receiving the Law Review Editor's Award for distinguished service, and the Robert M. Anderson Publication Award for her article, Defining a Standard for Punitive Damages in Prisoners’ Rights Litigation. Karen was named "Outstanding Third Year Advocate" in the Lionel O. Grossman Trial Competition and was a member of the 1985 ATLA Trial Team. She is admitted to practice in Federal and State courts in Maine and New Hampshire. She is a trial lawyer and appellate advocate in the areas of product liability, medical malpractice, directors and officers liability, employment practices, insurance coverage, and domestic relations. Karen is a member of the Defense Research Institute and Women in Drug, Device and Chemical Litigation. She is currently the Chairperson of the Federal Practice Section of the Maine Bar Association, a member of the Edward Gignoux Inn of Court, and a 2003 recipient of the Maine Bar Association Pro Bono Publico Award for her representation of low-income family law litigants. She is a frequent lecturer on litigation-related topics for health care providers, schools, and members of the Bar.
Karen lives in Falmouth, Maine with her attorney husband, Alan Wolf, and two children Chloe and Nate. She keeps busy outside of her legal practice reading, antique hunting, watching Nate play most every sport and traveling with Chloe, who is a nationally competitive figure skater.
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