Howard J. Schulman

Howard J. Schulman was admitted to the Maryland Bar in 1977 and concentrates as a civil trial lawyer in such areas as civil rights, insurance defense, insurance coverage, medical staff privileges, representation of professionals before the Maryland State licensing boards, tax assessment appeals and intellectual property litigation. He also has successfully represented victims in serious and complex motor vehicle and truck accidents.

Mr. Schulman’s cases include a variety of high profile cases and controversies: Robinson v. Balog (First Amendment claim against Baltimore City Director of Public Works); Burtnick v. McLean (racial purge of white, senior level management employees in the Baltimore City Comptroller’s Office by Jacqueline McLean); The Pack Shack, Inc. v. Howard County (invalidating adult bookstores zoning law on free speech grounds); City of Frederick v. Randall Family, LLC (defense of City in Public Information Act case involving a madam’s “black book”); Pinkley, Inc. v. City of Frederick (defense of the City and its police department after the department raided and seized the entire contents of an adult book store); and Bouchat v. Baltimore Ravens, Inc.(Raven’s “Flying B” logo copyright litigation).

Prior to beginning his career in law, Mr. Schulman taught History at Baltimore’s Polytechnic High School and coached football for Johns Hopkins University.