ABOUT
FRANK D. EAMAN
Mr. Eaman has
a distinguished resume as
one of Michigan's premier criminal defense attorneys. For example:
He has been
selected to fill leadership roles by the State Bar of Michigan,
the Criminal Defense Attorneys of Michigan, and the Michigan
Trial Lawyers Association. He has received awards for his leadership
from the Criminal Defense Attorneys of Michigan, the National
Legal Aid and Defender Association, and the Friends of Legal
Aid.
He has represented
criminal defendants in several famous Detroit cases. When a local
newspaper recently released a book about the history of Detroit,
in a section about Detroit's most famous trials, three of the
trials mentioned were trials where Mr. Eaman represented a client.
In two of those cases, Mr. Eaman's client was acquitted despite
enormous publicity before and during trial.
He has deep
roots in Detroit and the Detroit legal community. His grandfather,
also named Frank D. Eaman, was a famous lawyer in Detroit for
over fifty years, founding a law firm that remains one of Detroit's
major law firms. Mr. Eaman's grandfather was a progressive force
in the Detroit community, especially when he was the Police Commissioner
of the Detroit Police Department in the 1940's. As police commissioner,
Mr. Eaman's grandfather broomed out corrupt officers, many of
who were later indicted, and brought civil service appointment,
racial integration, and order and respect to the Detroit Police
Department. The era was known in Detroit history as "The
Eaman Earthquake."
Mr. Eaman has
a deep and abiding commitment to equal justice under the law.
As a young college student in the 1960's, he engaged in civil
rights activities in the North, including marching with hundreds
of thousands of Detroiters in the civil rights march down Woodward
Avenue in 1963. As a lawyer, he has fought hard to see that individuals
who cannot afford counsel have competent counsel who are paid
a fair fee for their services. Three times he has represented
lawyers associations who have sued judges in the Michigan Supreme
Court, where those judges refused to pay reasonable fees to lawyers
who accept court assignments to represent those who cannot afford
counsel in criminal cases. Mr. Eaman accepted assignments to
represent indigent defendants for many years at the beginning
of his career.
While Mr. Eaman
enjoyed success as a criminal defense attorney early in his career,
his skills have continued to improve as he has represented clients
in increasingly difficult cases, still continuing to win his
cases. Now, he is often sought for advice by other criminal defense
attorneys. Many of Detroit's most distinguished citizens have
sought Mr. Eaman's help when friends or families needed representation
because of exposure to liability in criminal cases.
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