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Howard Talenfeld

Kelley Kronenberg - Fort Lauderdale
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Howard Talenfeld
Kelley Kronenberg - Fort Lauderdale
Fort Lauderdale,
 FL

Howard Talenfeld is a Co-Business Unit Leader/Partner in the firm’s Justice for Kids Division, Kelley Kronenberg’s growing national practice dedicated to providing legal services to abused, disabled and catastrophically injured children harmed at home, in child welfare and foster care settings, group home settings and residential treatment centers, as well as all children harmed by the acts of others.

He is one of America’s leading children’s rights, injury and child disability attorneys representing the needs of abused and neglected children, especially in cases of foster child abuse, child sexual abuse, child rape, sex trafficking and other harm and abuse of children in the child welfare system. His work has resulted in multimillion-dollar damage awards and has created systemic change in how government agencies and private institutions care for those vulnerable individuals. In 2024, Howard received the American Association for Justice’s Trial Lawyers Care Award and was recognized on Forbes’ inaugural list of America’s Top 200 Lawyers as one of only six lawyers on the list nationally selected for Civil Rights Law. In 2018, he was recognized by The Florida Bar Foundation as the recipient of the Medal of Honor Award for a Lawyer. The Medal of Honor Award is the highest award given by The Florida Bar Foundation and recognizes individuals who have distinguished themselves through their exceptional achievements in improving the administration of justice in Florida.

Since the late 1980s, Howard has focused his practice exclusively on protecting the rights of vulnerable individuals in civil rights cases, personal injury cases and systemic reform litigation. He began his career working with at-risk children, fragile seniors and the developmentally disabled in the late 1980s when he represented the state of Florida in its major class-action lawsuits dealing with the foster care system, children’s mental health system, juvenile justice system, state psychiatric hospitals and the provision of Medicaid services to the developmentally disabled. He pioneered defending these cases by advocating for the improvement and reform of human service systems, while protecting states’ rights and avoiding federal over-sight. In Florida, he also represented governors, secretaries of state agencies, Florida’s Insurance Commissioner, the Florida Legislature and Florida’s Auditor General in civil rights cases in federal and state court.

In the 1990’s, when it was apparent that Florida’s leaders changed their political priorities about improving the state’s human service systems, Howard stopped representing the state and then joined the Board of the Youth Law Center one of our country’s most respected national advocacy groups. Howard’s knowledge and skill in defending and improving state systems to help Florida’s children, and his successes in trial courts, appellate courts and negotiations, formed the foundation of creative legal approaches that have delivered extraordinary results. He has similarly prevailed in the largest claims against the various types of child welfare entities in the state of Florida that injure children.

Howard has litigated scores of cases that have resulted in multi-million dollar settlements and jury verdicts as well as legislative appropriations that changed how government and private institutions care for children and the elderly. In 1998, he served as lead counsel in the Broward County foster care class action, Ward v. Kearney. The resulting settlement agreement greatly improved the child welfare practice and almost tripled the District 10 budget for its child welfare system.

In 1999, he achieved another major victory, this time for Florida’s developmentally disabled population in Baumstein v. Sunrise Community, Inc., 738 So. 2d 420, (Fla. 3DCA 1999). Howard negotiated a landmark $5 million settlement and focused the nation’s attention on the case in an episode of ABC’s 20/20. The case established the existence of a private cause of action for damages for the violation of Florida’s Bill of Rights for the developmentally disabled.

He also was the first attorney in Florida to utilize 42 USC § 1983, the federal civil rights damage statute, to recover a damage award in excess of Florida’s sovereign immunity limit of $100,000 on behalf of a foster child. In the 2002 case, Roe v. Florida Department of Children & Family Services, 176 F. Supp. 2d 1310 (S.D. Fla. 2001). Howard was also the lead counsel in H.A.L. v. Foltz, 551 F.3rd 1227 (11 Cir. 2008), the federal court precedent that establishes the right of children not to be sexually victimized. Among his wins, Howard prevailed against New York City and the Archdiocese of Brooklyn, which together paid more than $27 million in the case of Judith Leekin. The former foster mother ran what the courts called a “house of horrors” that imprisoned, abused and starved 10 disabled foster children.

Throughout his career, Howard has been a forceful advocate for change to improve human service systems. He has argued for systemic reform litigation before many state and national groups, including twice before the U.S. Congress, the National Association of State Mental Health Lawyers, the American Public Welfare Association and many Florida legislative committees. In 1996, he was appointed to the Board of Directors of the Youth Law Center (YLC), a national children’s advocacy group and in 2024 he was invited to rejoin the YLC Board. In 2002, he was on the steering committee that advocated for the creation of the Children’s Services Council of Broward County (CSC), and in 2014, he co-chaired the political action committee that successfully advocated for its permanent reauthorization. The CSC funds more than $60 million dollars and almost 100 programs each year to protect Broward’s children.

Howard has also chaired the Florida Bar Legal Needs of Children Committee three times in 2009-10, 2020-2021, and 2021-22 –more times than any other advocate. In this role, he has inspired legislation providing for the representation of foster children in their own dependency cases including disabled children, medically fragile children, severely emotional disturbed children and victims of human trafficking. He also created the sub-committee examining the over-representation of black children in foster care.

In 2002, Howard founded Florida’s Children First, Inc. , and has served as Founding President to this day. This not-for-profit organization has become Florida’s most prominent advocacy organization for at-risk children in the state. The organization, comprised of current and former foster youth, seeks full representation of youth and meaningful and sustainable improvement in Florida’s child-serving systems using a range of strategies including public policy development, on-going training and technical assistance, and, where necessary, strategic litigation. Beyond that, this organization is home to Florida Youth SHINE, a statewide youth-driven, peer-led organization that empowers current and former foster youth to become advocates for all children in care. Comprised of 14 Chapters and 350 current and former foster youth, Florida Youth SHINE participates in public policy advocacy to improve child protection and foster care services on both a state and local level. In February 2020, Howard was Recognized By 2-1-1 Broward as Non-Profit Board Leader of the Year for his leadership of Florida’s Children First.

Howard has been equally as effective in the state capital where his advocacy dates back almost three decades. He was instrumental in the passage of such landmark legislation as the Foster Children Bill of Goals, Florida’s pilot project on the representation of foster children in Dependency Court. As president of Florida’s Children First, he helped write Florida’s interagency education bill for foster children, the law that required mandatory reporting of child-on-child sexual abuse and in 2014 he advocated for the passage of § 39.01305, Florida Statutes, (“Appointment of an Attorney for a Dependent Child with Certain Special Needs”). This law ensures children who are victims of sexual abuse, human trafficking, are on psychotropic medications, or have been committed to a residential treatment facility, have attorneys representing them in all legal or administrative proceedings.

Recently, Howard joined the Board of Trustees of Keiser University, which has the distinction of being named amongst the top colleges in the country in providing social mobility to its students according to U.S. News & World Report. He was also invited to join the National Trial Lawyers Top 100 in 2025.

Professionally, Howard has received numerous awards, including the Daily Business Reviews’ Professional Excellence Lifetime Achievement award in 2016, the University of Miami Law Alumni Association’s Alumni Achievement Award in 2016, Lifestyle Media Group’s “Leader in Law” in 2014, and the Daily Business Review’s “Most Effective Lawyer” in the Public Interest category in 2013. In 2024, he was recognized on Forbes’ inaugural list of America’s Top 200 Lawyers. In 2018, Howard was the recipient of The Florida Bar Foundation’s Medal of Honor Award for a Lawyer. Additionally, he has been listed since 2017 in The Best Lawyers in America® in the fields of Civil Rights Law and Personal Injury Litigation – Plaintiff. Since 1986, he has been recognized by Martindale Hubbell as having their highest AV Preeminent® rating. Howard also received The Florida Bar President’s Award in 2010, the South Florida Business Journal’s Key Partners Award in 2012, and The Florida Bar President’s 2006 Pro Bono Service Award for the 17th Judicial Circuit in and for Broward County, Florida.

Howard received his Bachelor of Business Administration degree from University of Miami School of Business, and his Juris Doctor from the University of Miami School of Law, cum laude.


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