Blaney McMurtry LLP Barristers & Solicitors

Ted Frankel

Ted Frankel

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  • TEL 416.593.3995

Practice Areas

Called to the Bar of Ontario, 2004

Education

  • LL.B., Dalhousie University, 2003
  • B.A., McGill University

Memberships

  • Member, Law Society of Upper Canada
  • Member, Canadian Bar Association (Ontario)

Profile

Ted articled with Blaney McMurtry in 2003-2004, and returned to the firm after his call to the Bar in July 2004 as an associate in the Insurance Litigation Group. Ted's practice involves both insurance and government litigation.

Prior to joining Blaney McMurtry, Ted graduated with a B.A. in History from McGill University and completed his legal studies at Dalhousie University. While at Dalhousie Law School, Ted was the recipient of the Hon. Richard B. Hanson Prize for highest standing in Constitutional Law and the Hon. Alistair Fraser Scholarship for first class standing among second year students.

Ted also received the Gowlings Essay Prize for an academic paper entitled "Exodus: 40 Years of Deinstitutionalization and the Failed Promise of Community Care", which was published in the Dalhousie Journal of Legal Studies (Vol. 12, 2003). The paper examines the plight of Canadians with mental illness who have been released into the community over the past several decades and explores the constitutional ramifications of the deinstutionalization movement.

Profile

Ted articled with Blaney McMurtry in 2003-2004, and returned to the firm after his call to the Bar in July 2004 as an associate in the Insurance Litigation Group. Ted's practice involves both insurance and government litigation.

Prior to joining Blaney McMurtry, Ted graduated with a B.A. in History from McGill University and completed his legal studies at Dalhousie University. While at Dalhousie Law School, Ted was the recipient of the Hon. Richard B. Hanson Prize for highest standing in Constitutional Law and the Hon. Alistair Fraser Scholarship for first class standing among second year students.

Ted also received the Gowlings Essay Prize for an academic paper entitled "Exodus: 40 Years of Deinstitutionalization and the Failed Promise of Community Care", which was published in the Dalhousie Journal of Legal Studies (Vol. 12, 2003). The paper examines the plight of Canadians with mental illness who have been released into the community over the past several decades and explores the constitutional ramifications of the deinstutionalization movement.

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