Freeman built his one-man firm up to a leading London firm, with 53 partners and 250 employees by the time of his retirement as senior partner in 1992. The firm practised commercial property, insurance and media work. Freeman was known for high-profile insolvency, including the State Building Society crash in 1959, the John Bloom/ Rolls Razor case through the mid-1960s, and the
Robert Maxwell DTI inquiry in 1970. Freeman advised in the liquidation of
Barlow Clowes in 1987. In the Secondary Banks crisis of 1974, he worked on several rescues, including Hambro’s rescue of Vavasseur, the Stern Administration, the Ronald Lyon Administration, and the Israel British Bank collapse. In 1974 he advised then-Prime Minister
Harold Wilson on libel. In 1977 he was appointed a Department of Trade Inspector into AEG Telefunken (UK) ltd and Credit Collections Ltd, the first practising solicitor, rather than a QC, to be so appointed. After retiring in 1992, Freeman remained a consultant at DJ Freeman until 2003. The firm is now known as
Locke Lord LLP after a series of mergers. ==Other activities==