Kramer was born in
Brooklyn His son, Daniel (born c. 1952), also became a lawyer, and was later recognized for representing more compensation claims
pro bono on behalf of 9/11 victims over a three-year period, than any other attorney or firm for victims who filed claims to the Victims Compensation Fund. An avid art collector, Kramer donated five large collections, notably
Picasso linocut prints to the
Metropolitan Museum of Art;
Edvard Munch's surrealist prints and self-portraits to the Tel Aviv Museum of Art; and works by
M.C. Escher to the Israel Museum. He died on March 23, 1988, at
Mount Sinai Medical Center in Manhattan, of a heart attack, at age 72. At the time of his death he lived in
Whitestone, Queens. He was survived by his wife, son, two daughters, a sister, and six grandchildren. ==Career==