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The Researching Paralegal

Category Archives: Attorney Discipline

New Jersey Lawyers Use Paralegal to Spy on Facebook and Cross the Ethical Line.

30 Saturday Apr 2016

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Attorney Discipline, Legal Ethics, Social Media, Supervising Support Staff

≈ Comments Off on New Jersey Lawyers Use Paralegal to Spy on Facebook and Cross the Ethical Line.

Tags

Facebook, Findlaw, Jonathan R. Tung, Legal Ethics, Paralegal Ethics, William P. Statsky

NJ Lawyers Get Sanctioned for Facebook Spying, by Jonathan R. Tung, Esq., Strategist, The FindLaw Law Firm Business Blog (with hat tip to William P. Statsky)

http://bit.ly/1X0X44k

When news came out that two New Jersey defense attorneys had spied on a plaintiff through Facebook, there was obvious buzz within the legal community over bright-line rules and attorney ethics. Just what qualifies as an ‘unauthorized’ communication? Lawyers should always take steps to tread carefully in these ‘novel ethical issues.’ First impression or not, you don’t want to end up being the poster child.

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The Oklahoma Supreme Court Sanctions Attorney for Computer Illiteracy.

31 Thursday Mar 2016

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Attorney Discipline, Bankruptcy Court Rules, Bankruptcy Law, Diligence, Legal Ethics, Oklahoma Supreme Court, Sanctions, Technology

≈ Comments Off on The Oklahoma Supreme Court Sanctions Attorney for Computer Illiteracy.

Tags

Attorney Discipline, Bankruptcy Court, Computer LIteracy, Legal Profession Blog, Mike Frisch, Oklahoma, William P. Statsky

Oklahoma Accepts Computer Illiteracy As Mitigation: Censure Imposed, by Mike Frisch, Legal Profession Blog (with hat tip to William P. Statsky!)

http://bit.ly/1MFG9S8

No doubt you have seen posts here and elsewhere that discuss whether computer competency is now required due diligence for attorneys. The Oklahoma Supreme Court bench-slammed an older attorney for his lack of computer literacy. But, before you make up your mind, read the dissent. -CCE

 

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Gender Discrimination During Deposition Earns Judge’s Benchslap.

16 Saturday Jan 2016

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Attorney Discipline, Benchslap, Depositions, Discovery, Judges, Legal Ethics, Professional Civility, Rules of Professional Responsibility

≈ Comments Off on Gender Discrimination During Deposition Earns Judge’s Benchslap.

Tags

Above the Law (blog), Benchslap, Depositions, Gender Discrimination, Staci Zaretsky

Lawyer Receives Stern Benchslap And Amazing Sanction For Sexist Deposition Comment, by Staci Zaretsky, Above The Law Blog 

http://bit.ly/1RNcs34

As we’ve thoroughly documented in these pages, women who practice law are often subjected to demeaning and degrading comments from their male colleagues, for no other reason than because they’re women. One federal judge had finally had enough of this type of disrespectful behavior, so he took a lawyer to task for making a sexist remark during a deposition. . . .

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Proposed New York State Bar Discipline Reforms With A Focus on Prosecutorial Misconduct.

29 Tuesday Sep 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Attorney Discipline, Ethics Opinions, Legal Ethics, Rules of Professional Responsibility

≈ Comments Off on Proposed New York State Bar Discipline Reforms With A Focus on Prosecutorial Misconduct.

Tags

Legal Ethics, Legal Profession Blog, Mike Frisch, Plea Bargaining, Prosecutorial Misconduct

Reforms Proposed For New York Bar Disciplinary System, by Mike Frisch, Legal Profession Blog

http://tinyurl.com/pl3atls

A comprehensive series of reform proposals have been set forth in a recent report evaluating the New York State bar disciplinary system by the Commission on Statewide Attorney Discipline.

Two proposals strike me as particularly important and, in my view, should be adopted throughout these United States . . . .

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Attorney Refusing Mental Health Eval Is Suspended By Florida Bar Association.

06 Monday Apr 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Attorney Discipline, Legal Ethics, Rules of Professional Responsibility

≈ Comments Off on Attorney Refusing Mental Health Eval Is Suspended By Florida Bar Association.

Tags

Attorney Discipline, Florida Bar Association, Legal Ethics, Legal Profession Prof, Mental Health Evalution, Mike Frisch

Attorney Suspended For Refusing Mental Health Evaluation, by Mike Frisch, Legal Profession Prof

http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/legal_profession/2015/04/attorney-suspended-for-refusing-mental-health-evaluation.html

Janice L. Jennings, P.O. Box 103, West Palm Beach, suspended for 91 days, effective immediately, and indefinitely thereafter, until she complies with the terms and conditions set forth in a Feb. 19 court order and demonstrates rehabilitation. (Admitted to practice: 1985) Jennings refused The Florida Bar’s request that she schedule a mental health evaluation with Florida Lawyers Assistance. The request came after the Bar learned of a written filing and statements in which Jennings advised the court, among other things, that her former employer had caused the implantation of a microchip in her left ear that was designed to harm and disrupt her ability to function. (Case No. SC14-1218)

The Tampa Bay Times reported on the situation in June 2014

A June 16 Times article showed that she had been  telling federal judges for more than a decade that she was the victim of mind control and torture, with no apparent effect on her license to practice law….

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Lawyer Sanctioned For Throwing Paralegal Under The Bus To Explain Mistake To Court.

24 Tuesday Mar 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Attorney Discipline, Lawyer Supervision, Legal Ethics, Paralegals/Legal Assistants, Rules of Professional Responsibility, Supervising Support Staff

≈ Comments Off on Lawyer Sanctioned For Throwing Paralegal Under The Bus To Explain Mistake To Court.

Tags

ABA Journal, Debra Cassens Weiss, Lawyer Supervision, Legal Ethics, Paralegals

Judge Sees ‘Self-Congratulatory Blather’ In Biglaw Brief; Paralegals Blamed For Error, by Debra Cassens Weiss, ABA Journal (with hat tip to William Statsky!)

http://tinyurl.com/na9l6gy

A Florida bankruptcy judge overseeing a fight between investors in a shuttered fashion mall made no secret of his dissatisfaction with a Duane Morris pleading during a sanctions hearing on Friday.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge John Olson said the law firm appeared to be throwing a paralegal ‘under the bus’ when it blamed her for a mistaken court filing, and its sanctions brief was lacking the proper tone, the Daily Business Review (sub. req.) reports.

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Don’t Have A PIN Lock On Your Phone? Hope Your Malpractice Insurance Is Up To Date.

16 Monday Feb 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Android Phones, Attorney Discipline, Blackberry Phones, Cell Phones, Confidentiality, Cybersecurity, E-Filing, Emails, iPad, iPhones, Law Office Management, Legal Ethics, Legal Technology, Malpractice, Office Procedures, Passwords, Rules of Professional Responsibility, Supervising Support Staff, Technology, Technology

≈ Comments Off on Don’t Have A PIN Lock On Your Phone? Hope Your Malpractice Insurance Is Up To Date.

Tags

Android Phones, Confidentiality, Cybersecurity, DARKReading, Ed Hansberry, InformationWeek©, iPhones, Legal Ethics, Malpractice, PIN Lock, Smart Phones

Most Consumers Don’t Lock Mobile Phone Via PIN, by Ed Hansberry, DARKReading, InformationWeek©

http://tinyurl.com/plw76ut

My guess is that most people who use a smart phone access some kind of confidential information, such as your bank account or conversations with a client or the office. If you do not have a PIN lock on your smart phone, this truly is special kind of stupid.

This is not a hard one to understand. If you use your cell phone to communicate with clients, sync your phone to your office computer and docket, or attach yourself to your office and confidential information – without taking simple, basic security measures – you are  inviting a dangerous breach of confidentiality. -CCE

44% of respondents say it’s too much of a hassle, new survey reports.

People put a lot of sensitive info on their phones, but they often give little though to how secure their data is. In a survey by a security company, over half of the respondents said they didn’t bother with a PIN lock. This takes on a whole new dimension when you begin to understand how many of these people keep corporate data on the device.

Losing an unlocked phone can be far worse than losing a wallet. Emails on the device alone can reveal a wealth of information about the person, including where they bank, where they live, names of family members, and more. If company email is on the device, and it often is, there can be competitive information, salaries, system passwords, etc. If any of those emails contain links, often clicking on it will take you into the website, be it Facebook or a corporate portal.

According to Confident Technologies, 65% of users have corporate data on their phone, even though only 10% actually have a corporate issued device.

For that majority that don’t lock their phone at all, 44% said it is too much of a hassle to lock it and 30% said they weren’t worried about security. These are likely the same people that store things like social security numbers, passwords, and other sensitive information in text files or basic note applications. They may even store their computer’s password on a Post-It Note in their center desk drawer. . . .

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Attorney Discipline For Drunk Driving. Agree or Disagree?

19 Monday Jan 2015

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Attorney Discipline, Ethics Opinions, Legal Ethics

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Drunk Driving, Lawyer Discipline, Legal Ethics, Legal Ethics Opinions, Legal Profession Blog, Mike Frisch

A Not-So-Golden Oldie, by Mike Frisch, Legal Profession Prof, Legal Profession Blog

http://tinyurl.com/m4y2erx

The most overdue District of Columbia hearing committee report (perhaps ever) has finally been filed.

Attorney Wayne R. Rohde was convicted of felony hit and run in Virginia way back in 2005.

After a night of heavy drinking at a D.C. bar called Rumors, he drove home to Virginia. En route, he caused a head on collision that seriously injured a woman, backed his car away from the collision and drove home.

His effort to avoid detection failed in part because he had left his car bumper (with license plate affixed) at the scene.

He managed to convince the Court of Appeals to not suspend him pending the disciplinary proceedings, a departure from the court’s usual (indeed, nearly invariable) practice for felony convictions.

The hearing was competed on January 15, 2008.

The report was filed last Friday – seven years and a day after.

And it stinks.

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Five-Month Suspension Appropriate for Serious and Deliberate Ethical Misconduct?

05 Sunday Oct 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Attorney Discipline, Legal Ethics, Probate and Trusts

≈ Comments Off on Five-Month Suspension Appropriate for Serious and Deliberate Ethical Misconduct?

Tags

Bar Discipline, Ethical Misconduct, Fraud, Legal Ethics, Legal Profession Blog, Mike Frisch, Probate, Suspension

Suspension Proposed For Failure To Correct False Client Affidavit, by Mike Frisch, Legal Profession Blog

http://tinyurl.com/k7tevnu

An attorney who failed to correct his client’s  false affidavit claiming sole heirship in an estate matter should be suspended for five months, according to a report and recommendation of the Illinois Review Board.

Following the death of James Volgar (‘James’) in 2008, Respondent agreed to represent James’ brother, Paul Volgar (‘Paul’), regarding the administration of his brother’s estate. Paul was angry that Margaret Madonis (‘Margaret’), a great-niece who had cared for James during his life, was named as a joint tenant on one of James’ bank accounts. After James’ death, Margaret received about $400,000. Paul wanted this money. Paul told Respondent that he was James’ only heir. Based upon the information he received from Paul, Respondent drafted and filed in Will County an affidavit of heirship and letters of administration stating that Paul was the only surviving heir. The probate court then appointed Paul as administrator of the estate.

In early 2009, Respondent learned that Paul had lied to him and that James had additional heirs. However, Respondent took no steps over the following seventeen months to correct the false affidavit he had filed with the court or to file an amended affidavit of heirship. At hearing, Respondent asserted he failed to amend the affidavit of heirship because he simply forgot about it and forgot about the existence of other heirs. He testified he was more focused on the issue as to whether Paul could obtain the money received by Margaret. The Hearing Board rejected Respondent’s testimony, finding it incredible, and noting that 1) Respondent discussed the existence of additional heirs with various individuals; 2) he conducted research regarding distribution law; and 3) he formulated a potential argument to limit the share of the other heirs. Accordingly, the Hearing Board found that Respondent knowingly failed to correct the false statement in the affidavit. Respondent does not challenge this finding.

Following Paul’s appointment as administrator of the estate, Respondent used the false information regarding heirship to obtain information from financial institutions in an attempt to support Paul’s claims against Margaret. Respondent also sold James’ home in 2009 without notification to the other heirs. Respondent’s mother-in-law was the listing real estate agent and Respondent was the title agent. Respondent took over $9,000 in attorney’s fees from the sale proceeds, most of which was for fees Paul owed him to pursue the claim against Margaret.

In addition, Respondent repeated the false statement that Paul was an only heir in subsequent statements to the court, including in a motion for waiver of a surety bond filed in December 2009. . . .

 

 

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Indiana Ethics Opinion Doesn’t Like Legal Start Ups.

01 Sunday Jun 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Attorney Discipline, Legal Ethics, Technology

≈ Comments Off on Indiana Ethics Opinion Doesn’t Like Legal Start Ups.

Tags

Carolyn Elefant, Law Tigers, Legal Ethics Opinion, Legal Start Ups, myShingle.com, Nolo Law Directory, Nolo.com

An Indiana Ethics Opinion That May Kill Legal Start Ups, by Carolyn Elefant, myShingle.com

http://tinyurl.com/llpdhd4

Via the Legal Profession Blog, comes a recent Indiana ethics decision reprimanding a lawyer who’d practiced 41 years without incident for participating Law Tigers, a site that helps members of the public find a motorcycle attorney.  Trouble is, in pursuit of a single Tiger that may purportedly cause harm to the public, the Indiana Supreme Court now has the entire fledgling industry of legal matchmaking platforms by the tail.

Here’s the background. The American Association of Motorcycle Injury Lawyers (AAMIL) operates the Law Tigers website – one of dozens of  lead gen platforms like the Nolo Law Directory  Total Attorneys that direct website visitors and prospective clients to participating lawyers who pay to receive leads within a designated geographic area. Naturally, to encourage site visitors to seek legal services, the Law Tigers website boasts ‘Exceptional Results: Settlements and Verdicts’ and links to glowing client testimonials.  However, the respondent lawyers website, which could be accessed through a link on the Law Tigers site, included a disclaimer that a firm could not advertise past settlements or results. . . .

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Legal Ethics Head’s Up – Don’t Get Drunk, Move A Dead Body, And Lie To Police.

10 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Attorney Discipline, Kansas Supreme Court, Legal Ethics

≈ Comments Off on Legal Ethics Head’s Up – Don’t Get Drunk, Move A Dead Body, And Lie To Police.

Tags

Attorney Discipline, Kansas Supreme Court, Legal Ethics, Legal Profession Blog, Legal Profession Prof, Mike Frisch, Robert A. Mintz

Someone Died, Someone Lied, by Legal Profession Prof (Mike Frisch), Legal Profession Blog

http://tinyurl.com/p3vxrmw

A partner-shareholder has an adulterous affair with one of the firm’s associates who suffered from depression and alcohol abuse. From there, it sadly got worse. -CCE

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Reinstatement of Suspended Attorneys With Unique Conditions.

11 Saturday Jan 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Attorney Discipline, Kansas Supreme Court, Legal Ethics

≈ Comments Off on Reinstatement of Suspended Attorneys With Unique Conditions.

Tags

Attorney Reinstatement, Bar Discipline, Kansas Supreme Court, Legal Ethics, Legal Profession Blog, Mike Frisch

Reinstated With Conditions, by Mike Frisch, Legal Profession Blog

http://tinyurl.com/kb7g6ea

The Kansas Supreme Court has reinstated two suspended attorney, with unique and unusual conditions imposed on each. Of the two attorneys reinstated by the Kansas Supreme Court, one is still on federal criminal probation. The other attorney is limited to representing only criminal defendants. -CCE

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South Carolina Court Says to Attorney: No Email = No License.

24 Thursday Oct 2013

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Attorney Discipline, Court Rules, Emails, Legal Ethics, Legal Technology, Trust Accounts

≈ Comments Off on South Carolina Court Says to Attorney: No Email = No License.

Tags

Attorney Discipline, Court Rules, Emails, Legal Ethics, South Carolina

No E-Mail, No License, by Mike Frisch, Legal Profession Prof, Legal Profession Blog
http://bit.ly/16v90hL

The South Carolina Supreme Court suspended an attorney for repeatedly refusing to follow its explicit rules to maintain and monitor a working email account. This transgression, plus other failures by the Respondent to follow the Court’s orders and rules, led to the attorney’s suspension. The lawyer’s license to practice law was until further order of the Court.

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