Rikki Klieman

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Rikki Klieman
William J. Bratton

Rikki Klieman (born 1948) is an American

New York Police Department
.

Early life

Klieman was born in 1948 to a

Ukrainian Jewish immigrant family in Chicago, where she danced, acted, and sang as a youth.[2] Klieman attended Northwestern University where she was a theater major and had plans of becoming an actress.[3] However, she decided to attend law school. Klieman graduated from Boston University School of Law in 1975 with her Juris Doctor.[3] During law school she externed for U.S. District Court judge Walter Jay Skinner.[3]

Legal career

After law school Klieman was an assistant district attorney for the Middlesex County District Attorney's Office, before she joined the

Boston, Massachusetts, law firm of Friedman & Atherton and then started her own private practice.[3] In 1983 she was named by Time magazine as one of the five best female attorneys in the United States.[2] In 1993 in the case of Commonwealth v. Twitchell she defended the Christian Scientist parents whose two-year-old son died of an untreated bowel obstruction. From 1996 to 2003 she was a member of the faculty of Columbia Law School, and previously taught at the law school of her alma mater, Boston University.[3]

Other

Klieman worked for

Shark.[4] She also wrote her autobiography with co-author Peter Knobler, Fairy Tales Can Come True: How a Driven Woman Changed Her Destiny. She's been married to her third husband, Bill Bratton, the former police chief of Boston, New York City, and Los Angeles, since 1999. Klieman is his fourth wife. In 2013 she appeared as Katrina McCarthy in the season 4 episode "Justice Served"[5] of the CBS police procedural drama Blue Bloods, as well as appearing in 2014 in the season 5 episode "Loose Lips"[6] as Judge Fowler, and again appeared as Judge Fowler in 2015 in the 6th-season episode "Rush to Judgment"[7] of Blue Bloods
.

As of 2015, Klieman regularly appears as a legal analyst for CBS News' morning news show CBS This Morning.[8]

References

  1. ^ Shallwani, Pervaiz (September 16, 2016). "Rikki Klieman Had a Starring Role as First Lady of the NYPD". wsj.com. Retrieved September 16, 2016.
  2. ^ a b Gayle Pollard-Terry. Style and Culture: Counsel to the cop: She fits the profile. Los Angeles Times, October 14, 2002.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Rikki Klieman. Archived December 6, 2007, at the Wayback Machine CourtTV. Retrieved on May 21, 2007.
  4. ^ Rikki Klieman. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on May 21, 2007.
  5. ^ "Justice Served". IMDb. November 15, 2013. Retrieved September 16, 2016.
  6. ^ "Loose Lips". IMDb. October 24, 2014. Retrieved September 16, 2016.
  7. ^ "Rush to Judgment". IMDb. October 30, 2015. Retrieved September 16, 2016.
  8. ^ "Rikki Klieman to address UMass Law Class of 2015 at Commencement". massachusetts.edu. March 15, 2015. Retrieved September 16, 2016.

External links