Hyman lives in Washington, D.C., and has a home on the Caribbean island of Tortola, where he is a board member of H. Lavity Stoutt Community College and the National Parks Trust in the British Virgin Islands. He also acted as a United States legal counsel for the BVI.[2][citation needed]
For the Clinton administration, Hyman vetted candidates for Vice President, Attorney General, Secretary of the Treasury, Director of the CIA, and the U.S. Supreme Court, including preparation for the senatorial confirmation hearings.
In 1994, President Clinton appointed him to the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial Commission, which oversaw the construction of the FDR Memorial in Washington. President Clinton appointed Hyman to the Presidential Delegation, which represented the United States at the 1996 Peace Accord signing in Guatemala that ended a 36-year civil war.
Author
Hyman's book, United States Policy Towards Liberia, was published by the Africana Homestead Legacy Publishers in 2003.[4] It is based on his time as legal counsel to Liberia from 1997 to 1999 and talks about the humanitarian crisis.
Federal and state government
In the federal government, Hyman served as an attorney with the Corporation Finance Division of the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission, and later as a senior consultant to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.[5] On the state level, he was chief assistant to the governor, then secretary of commerce and development, and later chairman of the Massachusetts Democratic Party.
As a member of the International Observer Team in 1990 headed by former President Jimmy Carter, he monitored the first democratic election in the history of Haiti. Additionally, he has been involved in peace resolution efforts in Africa, as well as legal and governmental issues in Japan, France, Korea, Germany, England, Lebanon, Russia, and the Caribbean.[6]
He is a member of the board and chair of the Legal Advisory Committee of the not-for-profit Center for Advanced Defense Studies (CADS), and has taught a course in "Decision-Making in Politics" at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.[9] He is also a founding member of the board of directors of the Center for National Policy.[citation needed]