Lee D. Goldstein - Cambridge, MA
Attorney at Goldstein and Feuer
Non-Profit Organizations and Federal Tax Exemption Lawyers in Cambridge, MA
678 Massachusetts Ave Ste 600 Cambridge, MA 02139
Cambridge Non-Profit Organizations and Federal Tax Exemption Lawyer
Updated: 02/16/2026
Areas of Practice
- Non-Profit Organizations and Federal Tax Exemption
- Landlord/Tenant
- Business Organizations
- Wills & Trusts
- Estate Planning, Probate & Estate Administration
- Group Home Ownership
- Peace and Justice Protesters
Attorney Information
Overview
Throughout his legal career, Lee has divided his time between teaching, practice and theory. As a committed political person, he has attempted to blur the boundaries between progressive activist, teacher, scholar, and lawyer. In 1971, as a clinical teacher and a Reginald Heber Smith Fellow at the Northwestern University Legal Assistance Project in Chicago, he represented tenants, alternative institutions, prisoners, gangs, community groups, and members of the Black Panther Party. Upon moving to Boston in 1972, Lee became a staff attorney at Project Place Legal Services, where he represented poor people as well as advising progressive community organizations, with particular concentration in the areas of mental health, housing law, and patients' rights. While at Project Place, he published his book, Communes, Law and Common Sense, in 1974.
In the mid-1970's, Lee was the Regional Vice President of the National Lawyers Guild and was the Chairperson of the Massachusetts Chapter for two terms. In 1977, he was a member of the first delegation of Western lawyers who were invited to study the Chinese legal system. He subsequently wrote and lectured extensively about socialist legal theory. Lee was selected by the NLG, Massachusetts Chapter, as its "Lawyer of the Year" in 1998.
Since 1975, Lee has practiced law as part of a community law office in Central Square, Cambridge, representing tenants, workers, community and political groups. He has worked with his current law partner, Jeff Feuer, who shares his political outlook, since 1995. Lee's current clients reflect the diversity of the progressive movement in the greater Boston area - The Foundation for Civic Leadership (The Democracy Center), Resist, Foundation for the Study of Therapeutic Encounter, The Defense Against Thought Control Foundation, The Climate Direct Action Education Fund and The Movement Retreat Center.
Lee's legal work has also involved privacy and discrimination claims on behalf of members of Local 26 of the Hotel and Restaurant Workers Union and other employees. As lead counsel, Lee won a large settlement for the invasion of the privacy of male hotel workers at the Boston Sheraton Hotel who were secretly videotaped in their locker room by their employer. Lee also represented the Everett Cafeteria workers in protracted litigation over unequal pay issues, after which he drafted the recent amendment to the Massachusetts Pay Equity Law which was signed into law in August of 2016. Lee has also been active as a lawyer for persons engaged in acts of civil resistance pertaining to issues of disarmament, peace and justice, and he has successfully incorporated international law defenses in many of those cases. His civil disobedience clients have included members of the Ploughshares religious movement, the Pledge of Resistance, anti-CIA, anti-nuclear, anti-apartheid protestors, Occupy Boston, Extinction Rebellion, members of the Black Lives Matter movement, as well members of City Life/Vida Urbana who engage in blockades of foreclosed properties.
Lee has shared his enthusiasm for and commitment to law and political activism with many students in varied settings. He was the Director of the Legal Studies program at the Goddard-Cambridge Graduate School in the mid and late 1970's, where he taught community activists how to conjoin an awareness of legal tactics into their political goals. He has also taught legal theory at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst and jurisprudence at Northeastern University School of Law, and completed advanced legal studies at Harvard, obtaining an LL.M. in 1981. From 1979 until 2019, Lee was a clinical instructor at the Harvard Law School Legal Aid Bureau, assisting second and third year law students in their representation poor people in wage and hour, benefits, housing, and family law cases. Lee also worked with student anti-foreclosure activists as part of the City Life/Vida Urbana "No One Leaves" project. While at the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau, Lee drafted legislation to protect tenants of foreclosed properties which was enacted in 2012.
Lee continues to be on the faculty of the Harvard Law School's Trial Advocacy Workshop.
After his retirement from the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau, Lee is a Consulting Attorney for the Housing Unit of the Volunteer Lawyers Project and conducted evidentiary training for Boston Area Legal Services attorneys.
Awards and Honors
Honors
- Adlai Ewing Stevenson Award for Legal Writing
- "Lawyer of the Year," National Lawyers Guild, Massachusetts Chapter
Education
-
Legal Education
-
Harvard Law School,
Cambridge,
Massachusetts, 1981
LL.M., Master of Law(s) -
Northwestern University School of Law,
Chicago,
Illinois, 1971
J.D.
-
Harvard Law School,
Cambridge,
Massachusetts, 1981
-
Non Legal Education
-
Vanderbilt University,
Nashville,
Tennessee, 1967
B.A.
-
Vanderbilt University,
Nashville,
Tennessee, 1967
Past Positions
- Northwestern Law School, Reginald Heber Smith Community Law Fellow, 1971 to 1973
- Northwestern Law School, Member, Clinical Faculty, 1971 to 1973
- Project Place Legal Services, Staff Attorney, Director, 1973 to 1976
- Director of Legal Studies, Goddard Cambridge Graduate School, 1975 to 1979
- Harvard Legal Aid Bureau, Senior Supervising Attorney and Instructor, 1979 to 2019
- Project Place - Interseminarian Incorporated, 1975 to 1990
Representative Clients
Aquarian Enterprises
The Cambridge MultiCultural Arts Center Inc.
Center for Awareness and Connection
Climate Direct Action Education Fund
Crowdsourcing Sustainability Inc.
Campaign for Peace, Disarmament, and Common Security
Defense Against Thought Control Foundation
The Economic Human Rights Project
Food Not Bombs
The Foundation for Civic Leadership
Foundation for the Study of the Therapeutic Encounter
The Occupational Rehabilitation Group
The Movement Retreat Center
Red Sun Press
Resist
Published Works
Articles
-
Communes, Law & Commonsense, New Community Project, 1974
-
High Theory and Low Practice: A Dream and Five Theses on Being a Left Lawyer and a Legal Worker, Unbound Vol. 8, Page 133 (2012-13)
Bar Admissions
- Illinois, 1971
- Massachusetts, 1973
- U.S. District Court Northern District of Illinois, 1971
- U.S. District Court District of Massachusetts, 1973
- U.S. Court of Appeals 7th Circuit, 1972
- U.S. Court of Appeals 1st Circuit, 1973
Other Affiliations
- National Lawyers Guild, Massachusetts Chapter, President, 1984 to 1986
- National Lawyers Guild, Regional Vice President, 1977 to 1979
Contact
678 Massachusetts Ave
Ste 600
Cambridge, MA 02139
Phone: (617) 492-8473
Email: Send a message
Website: http://www.avvo.com/legal-guides/ugc/tenants-rights-in-massachusetts
Hours: Flexible -- we will meet with you at home or our office
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