Herbert J. Wallenstein
Lawyer, Deceased Person
1917 – 1996
Who was Herbert J. Wallenstein?
Herbert Joseph Wallenstein was an Assistant New York State Attorney General from 1959 to 1979 and the first Bureau Chief of the State Charity Frauds Bureau.
Born in Manhattan to Joseph S. Wallenstein, a cigar and leather merchant, and Martha Schallek, Herbert Wallenstein's paternal grandmother was Esther Wallenstein, the founding president of the Hebrew Infant Asylum, a prominent Jewish orphanage in New York City.
After growing up in Morningside Heights and attending New York City public schools and Townsend Harris High School, he graduated from CCNY in 1939 and received a Bachelor of Laws in 1942 from New York University Law School. He was admitted to the New York State Bar just before being drafted into the United States Army. Wallenstein served in the Army during World War II and was honorably discharged in 1946. Following the war, he went back to NYU Law School where he received his Master of Laws in 1951 on the GI Bill.
In 1957, and again in 1958, Wallenstein was an unsuccessful candidate for Municipal Court Judge in New York’s 7th District. Following the 1958 campaign, he left a private practice when he was appointed an Assistant Attorney General in the office of New York State Attorney General Louis J. Lefkowitz.
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