Andrea Peraner-Sweet | Partner, since
1995 | |
| phone | (617) 542-5542 |
| fax | (617) 542-1542 |
| Email Me | |
"We combine the highest of professional standards with an understanding of the serious nature of the problems confronting our clients. We never lose sight of the fact that our clients are real people with real problems."
Andrea Peraner-Sweet is a 1976 graduate, cum laude , of Smith College and a 1987 graduate, magna cum laude, of Boston College Law School. In between, she received her Masters degree in Social Work from New York University (1980), and was a medical social worker at Newton-Wellesley Hospital from 1980 to 1984. She joined Sally & Fitch immediately after law school, and was elected to the partnership in 1995. For the past three years, Andrea was named a "Massachusetts Super Lawyer" in Boston Magazine.
Andrea's civil litigation practice, covering a broad array of product liability, tort, employment, insurance, and general business litigation matters, takes her before the state and federal courts and before such administrative agencies as the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination and the Massachusetts Division of Insurance. From 1996 - 1998, she was an Adjunct Lecturer at Boston College Law School, where she taught a clinical course entitled "Pre-trial Litigation." In 1992 she received a Recognition Award from the Women's Bar Association for her work on behalf of battered women, and specifically her representation of one of the "Framingham Eight" defendants in her petition for commutation of her sentence.
She is admitted to practice in Massachusetts and Rhode Island and before the United States District Court for the Districts of Massachusetts and Rhode Island and the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. She is a member of the Boston, Massachusetts and Rhode Island Bar Associations. She has been a member of the Planning Board of the Town of Westford since 1997 and served as Chair from 1999 - 2002. She also currently serves on the Towns Affordable Housing Committee and Master Plan Implementation Committee.
Reported cases include FDIC v. Elio, 39 F.3d 1239 (1st Cir. 1994) (fraudulent conveyance, appointment of trustee and other preliminary relief) (with Jonathan W. Fitch).














