J. PATRICK HICKEY
Biography
J. Patrick Hickey was born October 20, 1939 in Iron
Mountain, Michigan, the second of four children of Edward J.
and Jeanette G. Hickey. His father was employed in the
theater business, and was also a talented musician and band
leader.
The family moved to Walla Walla, Washington in 1943, and Mr.
Hickey attended St. Patrick’s Grade and High School there,
graduating in 1956. He graduated from Carroll College,
Helena , Montana (B.A. in Philosophy, maxima cum laude) in
1959.
He received a scholarship to Harvard Law School, and was
awarded the LL.B. in 1963. He was then selected as an E.
Barrett Prettyman Fellow in Trial Advocacy at the Georgetown
University Law Center, Washington, D.C. for the 1963-64
academic year. He was admitted to the Bar of the United
States District Court for the District of Columbia in
December 1963, and served as a trial attorney for indigent
defendants in criminal cases in that court during his
Fellowship at Georgetown. He received a LL.M. degree from
Georgetown in 1966.
In 1965, Mr. Hickey became a staff attorney with the Legal
Aid Agency in Washington, providing representation in
criminal trials in the United States District Court. (The
Agency was a forerunner of the D.C. Public Defender Service,
established in 1970.) In 1967, Mr. Hickey joined the
Washington, D.C. firm of Shaw, Pittman, Potts, Trowbridge &
Madden, where he had a litigation practice primarily
handling aviation accident defense work.
In 1970, Mr. Hickey left private practice to join the newly
established Public Defender Service, and remained there
until 1979. He served as the Director of PDS from 1975-79.
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In 1979, Mr. Hickey rejoined Shaw Pittman as a partner, and
remained there until his retirement in 2008. (The firm
became Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman in 2005).
From 1972 until 2003, Mr. Hickey served as counsel for the
plaintiffs (residents of the D.C. Jail) in Campbell v.
McGruder, a case in the U.S. District Court which found
conditions of confinement at the Jail to be in violation of
Constitutional requirements. The lengthy proceedings
addressed continuing efforts to improve living conditions
for persons confined at the Jail.
Mr. Hickey was married in 1970 to Frances J. Hummel. They
have four children, Anne, Kathleen, Edward and Elizabeth.
He is a member of the Bar of the United States Supreme Court
and numerous Federal courts.
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