
Martha Franks is a graduate of St. John’s College in Santa Fe,
New Mexico (1978), the University of New Mexico School of Law (J.D.,
magna cum laude, 1982), and the Virginia Theological Seminary (M.T.S.,
magna cum laude, 1997).
After a clerkship with the Tenth Circuit, from 1983
to 1985, she worked for the firm of Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver and
Kampelman in Washington, D.C., practicing in the area of complex securities
law litigation. In 1985, she returned to New Mexico as Special Assistant
Attorney General with the Office of the State Engineer.
In 1996, Ms. Franks returned to Washington D.C. as Solicitor
for the Department of the Interior, representing the Bureau of Reclamation
and the Bureau of Land Management. She joined Mr. Abramowitz in 2002
to form the firm of Abramowitz & Franks.
Ms. Franks has appeared before the United States Supreme Court twice
representing states on matters involving interstate water disputes.
She has a broad, unsurpassed knowledge of federal reclamation law and
western water law administration and policy, as well as environmental
law compliance and disputes, the Endangered Species Act, and the National
Environmental Policy Act.
Ms. Franks has served
as lead counsel in numerous state water rights adjudications, emphasizing
those involving the adjudication of Pueblo and Native-American claims
to water, and she is a recognized authority on Indian and Native-American
claims to water. She has extensive experience in structuring complex
litigation.
Ms. Franks has served as lobbyist in water matters
on behalf of various state and governmental agencies, and has testified
in numerous forums regarding water and water-related natural resource
matters. She practices primarily in the areas of water policy, administration
and regulation, interstate water disputes, general water and natural
resource law, and Indian law. Ms. Franks is licensed in all state and
federal courts in New Mexico as well as in the Tenth Circuit and the
United States Supreme Court.

Ms. Franks is married to Grant Franks, a professor at St. John’s
College, and lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico. She is an avid bicyclist,
scholar and artist who is fluent in French, and in her spare time she
teaches philosophy and theology at St. John’s College.
