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 Attorneys Fees News & Views


August 31 - September 1, 2010

GENERAL

Litigators Losing Love of Arbitration Argue for Trials

Gina Passarella, The Legal Intelligencer

09-01-10 -- Large-scale commercial contracts often include arbitration clauses in the hopes of avoiding large-scale commercial litigation. But litigators are starting to find the quicker, cheaper, more private aspects of arbitration have turned into lengthy, expensive and often public quasi-trials. . . . This has a growing number of attorneys advising clients to either take their chances in court or tailor very specific arbitration clauses with the hopes of limiting the expense of arbitration. It's a slow-moving process, however, as litigators are rarely consulted when corporate attorneys are drafting contracts.


E-Mail Isn't as Ethereal as You Might Think

Craig Ball, Law Technology News

09-01-10 -- E-mail is simple. But because there's so much of it in so many different locations, and because enterprise e-mail resides in complex database environments integrating layer-on-layer of useful metadata, it's easy to lose sight of e-mail's inherent simplicity. . . . An e-mail is as simple as a postcard. Like the back left side of a postcard, an e-mail has an area called the message body reserved for the user's text message. Like a postcard's back right side, another area called the message header is dedicated to information needed to get the card where it's supposed to go and transit data akin to a postmark. . . . We can liken the picture or drawing on the front of our postcard to an e-mail's attachment. Unlike a postcard, an e-mail's attachment must be converted to letters and numbers for transmission, enabling an e-mail to carry any type of electronic data -- audio, documents, software, video -- not just pretty pictures.


Federal Circuit Rules for Lawyer Who Sued Over Expired Bow Tie Patent

By Debra Cassens Weiss, ABA Journal

09-01-10 -- A lawyer who sued Brooks Brothers for selling Adjustolox bow ties with expired patent markings has standing to pursue his qui tam suit, a federal appeals court has ruled. . . . In a decision (PDF) issued Tuesday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled patent lawyer Raymond Stauffer did not have to show he was injured by the false patent mark, according to stories in Reuters, the Wall Street Journal and Law360. The opinion said that federal law recognizes an injury to the United States when companies make false patent claims, and since the government has standing to enforce its own law, Stauffer also has standing as the government’s assignee.


Law Firms Trying a Different Path to China

After establishing solid presences, Morrison & Foerster and Pillsbury are calling experienced partners back to the United States

Amy Miller, The Recorder  

08-30-10 -- Morrison & Foerster is no stranger to China.

Since 1983, it's opened offices in Hong Kong, Beijing and Shanghai. Now, the firm is taking its approach to China business one step further: It's moved corporate partner Charles Comey back to Palo Alto after a 16-year stint in Asia, with the goal of strengthening ties between the firm's China practice and its U.S. clients. . . . "We already have the critical mass here [in China]," said Venantius Tan, managing partner of MoFo's Hong Kong office. "[Comey] will focus more on connecting the dots for us. It's important to have that person stateside to do that for us." . . . MoFo isn't alone. Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman brought Thomas Shoesmith, head of the firm's China practice, back to its Silicon Valley office from Shanghai in June. . . . There's no doubt that firms are still making a big push into China. Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, for example, last week announced plans to open an office in Hong Kong, while earlier this month Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher relocated partner Joseph Barbeau to open its Hong Kong office. . . . But MoFo and Pillsbury are trying a new approach. After already establishing a solid presence in China, bringing an experienced partner such as Comey back to Silicon Valley "was just a natural thing for us to do," Tan said.


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CALIFORNIA  

Lawyers Take Swings at Each Other in Dodgers Divorce Trial

Amanda Bronstad The National Law Journal

08-31-10 -- The contentious divorce trial of Frank and Jamie McCourt opened in a downtown Los Angeles courtroom on Monday with lawyers for each side accusing the other of engaging in bad faith. Control of the Los Angeles Dodgers could rest on the outcome. . . . "Frank and his lawyers have deceived Jamie, her lawyers and this court," said Dennis Wasser of Wasser, Cooperman & Carter in Los Angeles, representing Jamie McCourt. He quoted Sir Walter Scott's poem "Marmion": "Oh what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive." . . . Stephen Susman, a partner at Houston's Susman Godfrey who represents Frank McCourt, countered that former family law attorney Jamie McCourt was attempting to become "the first successful spouse to invalidate an agreement that she proposed" and the "first divorce lawyer to claim she did not understand her own postnuptial agreement."


The go-to guy in California's high court headquarters

Frederick Ohlrich is clerk of the California Supreme Court — its keeper of records, its historian and its biggest fan. If you're a lawyer preparing to address the justices, he has some tips for you.

By Maura Dolan, Los Angeles Times

08-31-10 -- Frederick K. Ohlrich, the warm-up act for the California Supreme Court, has some advice for nervous lawyers appearing before the seven robed justices. . . . Don't call a justice by name. You'll probably get it wrong. Don't ask the chief justice how much time you have left. And when your name is called after the justices enter the chambers, answer "Ready," whether you are or not. . . . Ohlrich, 67, known around court headquarters here as "Fritz," is clerk of the California Supreme Court — its keeper of records, its historian and its biggest fan. . . . The avuncular administrator of the state's top court calls the cases for monthly oral argument — a hearing that signals a decision is coming soon — and preps the lawyers waiting to make their final pitch to the justices. . . . "I try to put them at ease," Ohlrich said. "I like to have them be relaxed and make the best argument they can."


FLORIDA  

Lawyer in Scientology case is stuck between state and federal judges

By Craig Pittman and Curtis Krueger, Tampabay.com staff writers 

09-01-10 -- One of the Church of Scientology's most vocal critics, Tampa lawyer Ken Dandar, is in a pickle. . . . Six years ago, he settled a wrongful death case against the church on behalf of the family of Lisa McPherson, who died in 1995 after 17 days in the care of church members in Clearwater. . . . Part of the settlement agreement, approved by a judge in state court, required Dandar to never again represent anyone suing Scientology. . . . But last year, Dandar took on another wrongful death case against the church's Flag Service Organization — in federal court. . . . The church's attorneys objected that Dandar violated his agreement. Senior Circuit Judge Robert Beach agreed and in June 2009 ordered Dandar to withdraw from the new case. . . . Dandar resisted for some time, even asking the Florida Supreme Court to review the case. Finally, though, four months ago Dandar filed a motion to withdraw from the federal lawsuit. . . . But on April 12, U.S. District Judge Steven Merryday told him he cannot get out of it. The reason: No other attorney wants to take on Scientology. Two days later, records show, Beach found Dandar in willful contempt of court.


Avvo.com Publishes False Information, Suit Charges

Florida lawyer says website coerces attorneys into participating

By Jon Hood, ConsumerAffairs.Com

09-01-10 -- Avvo.com, a website that provides consumer ratings of attorneys nationwide, has been slapped with a lawsuit spearheaded by a Florida attorney. Larry Joe Davis, Jr. says he was defamed by the site and punished when he tried to fight back. . . . Davis, of St. Petersburg, says Avvo "purports to list over 90 percent of lawyers in the United States, and...all members of the Florida Bar." According to the suit, those listings are made "without [the lawyers'] knowledge, input or approval, based on allegedly available public information, primarily, information made available by the Florida Bar."


Tampa judge reprimands defense attorney in Walker rape case

By Alexandra Zayas, Times Staff Writer 

09-01-10 -- A judge gave a defense attorney a tongue-lashing Wednesday for filing a motion "at the 11th hour" in the Walker Middle School rape case. . . . But attorney Bryant Camareno said the motion needed to be filed. . . . He wants Hillsborough Circuit Judge Chet A. Tharpe either to hold separate trials for the two remaining defendants facing sexual battery charges or to have two juries deliberate in the same trial. . . . Camareno also asked for limits on use of the defendants' written confessions.


Non-Investor Law Firm Clients to Recoup Bulk of Funds Stolen by Rothstein

38 clients to recover most of their RRA losses

John Pacenti, Daily Business Review

08-31-10 -- While most of the victims of lawyer-turned-convicted felon Scott Rothstein will recover pennies on the dollar in his criminal case, about three dozen clients will be made whole, a federal judge ruled Monday. . . . U.S. District Judge James I. Cohn decided last week that 25 non-investor clients of Rothstein's defunct Fort Lauderdale law firm, Rothstein Rosenfeldt Adler, would receive all or most of the money stolen from the firm's trust accounts. On Monday, he added 13 more clients to the list. . . . The other 320 claimants will have to split an estimated $50 million to $60 million collected by the government through that sale of seized Rothstein assets such as sports cars, boats and furniture.


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Supreme Court Disciplines 21 Attorneys

CONTACT: Karen Y. Kirksey; kkirksey@flabar.org,  / The Florida Bar / TELEPHONE: 850/561-5766
08-31-10 -- The Florida Bar, the state's guardian for the integrity of the legal profession, announces that the Florida Supreme Court in recent court orders disciplined 21 attorneys, disbarring seven and suspending 11. Some attorneys received more than one form of discipline. Three attorneys were publicly reprimanded and one was placed on probation. Two were ordered to pay restitution. . . . As an official agency of the Florida Supreme Court, The Florida Bar and its Department of Lawyer Regulation are charged with administering a statewide disciplinary system to enforce Supreme Court rules of professional conduct for the 88,000-plus lawyers admitted to practice law in Florida. Since Aug. 1, 2007, case files have been posted to attorneys' individual Florida Bar profiles and may be reviewed at and/or downloaded from The Florida Bar's website, www.floridabar.org. . . . Court orders are not final until time expires to file a rehearing motion and, if filed, determined. The filing of such a motion does not alter the effective date of the discipline. Disbarred lawyers may not re-apply for admission for five years. They are required to go through an extensive process that rejects many who apply. It includes a rigorous background check and retaking the bar exam. Historically, fewer than five percent of disbarred lawyers seek readmission.

The following lawyers are disciplined:

Gabrielle Alexis, 4613 N. University Drive #558, Coral Springs, suspended until further order, following an Aug. 4 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1996) According to a petition for emergency suspension, Alexis has caused and continues to cause great public harm. Alexis is the subject of several Bar disciplinary investigations regarding the misappropriation of client funds, including more than $665,000 meant to pay off a mortgage. (Case No. SC10-1528)

Cheryl L. Anderson, P.O. Box 428, Palatka, suspended for one year, effective 30 days from a July 21 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1983) Anderson was held in contempt of court. In October 2009, Anderson was publicly reprimanded and placed on probation for three years. She failed to comply with the terms of the probation. (Case No. SC10-972)

Esteban Anderson Jr., 12555 Biscayne Blvd. #911, North Miami, disbarred effective immediately, following a July 21 court order. (Admitted to practice: 2003) Upon reviewing Anderson's trust account records, the Bar found evidence that he misappropriated client funds. (Case No. SC10-689)

Peter Steven Baranowicz, 1797 San Silvestro Drive, Venice, suspended for 90 days, effective 30 days from a July 8 court order. Further, the probation period imposed in 2008 is extended for three years. (Admitted to practice: 1986) In August 2008, Baranowicz was publicly reprimanded and placed on probation for three years. He failed to comply with the terms of the probation. (Case No. SC09-1449)

Robert Patrick Beatty, P.O. Box 2333, Stuart, disbarred for 10 years, effective retroactive to July 2, following a July 29 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1969) Between March 2002 and April 2009, Beatty used without authority, at least $107,000 in client funds from his trust account for his own business and/or personal purposes. (Case No. SC19-1490)

Sanford David Bosem, 6005 S. Eastern Ave. #15, Las Vegas, Nev., suspended for 91 days, effective 30 days from an Aug. 5 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1990) Bosem failed to comply with the terms of a 2008 court order which required him to meet the terms of a two-year contract with Florida Lawyers Assistance, Inc. (Case No. SC10-1188)

Steven Hill Lee Bowman, 611 U.s. Highway 41 S., Inverness, disbarred for 10 years, effective immediately, following a July 21 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1984) After the death of a client in 2004, Bowman, the trustee, failed to notify the sole beneficiary, a nationally recognized charity, of its assets. Bowman allowed the main asset of the trust, the client's house, to fall into disrepair and the real estate taxes from 2006 to 2008 became delinquent, resulting in a tax deed sale. Bowman used, without the authority of the charity, at least $53,000 to pay unpaid business taxes. He also took excessive fees. (Case NO. SC10-722)

Patrick Cicalese, 129 Center St., Jupiter, suspended effective 30 days from a July 12 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1992) In June, Cicalese was adjudicated guilty in federal district court in New York, of three illegal gambling-related felonies. He was sentenced to three years probation on each count, fined $10,000 and assessed $300.00. Cicalese was also ordered to forfeit his interest in at least $4 million obtained as a result of the gambling offenses. (Case No. SC10-1331)

Charles Weaver Cope, IV, 1188 Mandalay Point, Clearwater Beach, suspended for 91 days, effective immediately following a July 8 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1975) In June 2008, Cope was suspended for 90 days and placed on probation for three years. He was also ordered to enter into a contract with Florida Lawyers Assistance, Inc. Cope was held in contempt of court for failing to comply with the terms of his probation. (Case No. SC09-1127)

David Noble Doss, 5209 Gulfport Blvd. S., Gulfport, disbarred effective retroactive to Nov. 3, 2009, following a July 14 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1986) Doss pleaded guilty in circuit court to grand theft, a first-degree felony. (Case No. SC09-2010)

Thomas W. Dvorak, 633 S. Andrews Ave., Suite 402, Fort Lauderdale, suspended for one year, effective 30 days from a June 24 court order. (Admitted to practice: 2002) Dvorak will also pay restitution of more than $127,500 to clients. Dvorak was the subject of more than 45 Bar complaints -- most having to do with mortgage loan modifications. After being retained, Dvorak failed to competently represent his clients. He also failed to supervise those who worked for him. (Case No. SC10-1166)

David Moss Edelstein, 1111 Brickell Ave., Suite 250, Miami, to be publicly reprimanded following a July 8 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1995) Edelstein pleaded guilty to disseminating information on his law practice website that was misleading. (Case No. SC10-433)

David Andrew Ehrlich, 2 Wallbrook Court, Cohoes, N.Y., suspended until further order, following an Aug. 3 court order. (Admitted to practice: 2003) According to a petition for emergency suspension, Ehrlich appeared to be causing great public harm by engaging in a repeated pattern of fraud, neglect and abandonment of his clients. (Case No. SC10-1497)

L. Daniel Ferrer, 1 Financial Plaza, Suite 2612, Fort Lauderdale, disbarred effective immediately, following a July 14 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1988) Ferrer was found guilty in court with one count of misprision of a felony — for having knowledge of stock fraud and failing to report it. He also lied to the Security and Exchange Commission about stock trading activities. Ferrer was sentenced to 21 months of imprisonment followed by one year of supervised release. (Case No. SC09-1833)

Albert Elsworth Ford, II, 740 Florida Central Parkway, Suite 2008, Longwood, suspended until further order, following an Aug. 3 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1995) According to a petition for emergency suspension, Ford appeared to be causing great public harm by engaging in threatening behavior toward a former client. He was charged with grand theft, burglary of a dwelling or structure while armed, and criminal mischief. (Case No. SC10-1498)

Nirav Mahendra Jamindar, 2650 Airport Road S., Suite H, Naples, to be publicly reprimanded following a July 14 court order. (Admitted to practice: 2008) While working as an assistant public defender, Jamindar and a client developed a mutual interest in pursuing a personal relationship. Jamindar tried to conceal the relationship from jail staff by sending personal correspondence to the client under an assumed name. When initially confronted about his misconduct, Jamindar intentionally misled his supervisor. He later admitted the truth. (Case No. SC10-203)

Richard Francis Joyner, 2770 Indian River Blvd., Suite 300, Vero Beach, disbarred effective immediately, following a July 21 court order. (Admitted to practice: 2003) Further, Joyner shall pay restitution of $50,000 to an insurance company. An audit of Joyner's trust accounts revealed non-compliance with Bar rules. Additionally, Joyner attributed missing funds to a check he inadvertently wrote, but later said an employee embezzled the money. (Case No. SC10-27)

Douglas Liddell Kirkland, 203 N.E. 8th Ave., Ocala, disbarred effective retroactive to May 20, following a July 21 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1993) An audit revealed that funds from Kirkland's trust account were used to pay expenses that should have been paid from his operating account. The audit also found that at least five prohibited loans totaling $4,600 were made from Kirkland's trust account. (Case No. SC10-894)

Carlos Michael Muniz, 1800 S.W. 27th Ave., Suite 201, Miami, to be publicly reprimanded following a July 14 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1999) Muniz represented himself pro se and his law firm in a civil lawsuit. On more that one occasion, in the absence of the opposing counsel, Muniz implored the judge to rule against the opposing counsel, despite being warned that his comments were improper. (Case No. SC10-387)

Alfredo Padron Jr., 8105 N.W. 155th St., Miami Lakes, suspended indefinitely, following a July 30 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1994) According to a petition for emergency suspension, Padron appeared to be causing great public harm by the misappropriation and/or diversion of funds entrusted to him. (Case No. SC10-813)

Christopher Rumsey Qualmann, P.O. Box 940669, Maitland, suspended for three years effective immediately, following a July 8 court order. (Admitted to practice: 1984) Qualmann engaged in the practice of law while suspended. He was held in contempt of court for non-compliance with Bar rules. (Case Nos. SC09-1215, SC09-1725 and SC10-247)


GEORGIA  

Disbarred attorney Eichholz loses sentencing appeal

By Jan Skutch, Savannah Morning News

09-01-10 -- Disbarred Savannah attorney Benjamin Eichholz has lost his bid to reduce his 21-month federal prison sentence for obstructing a federal investigation into mishandling of pension and retirement funds in his law firm. . . . The 11th U.S. Circuit court of Appeals Tuesday ruled U.S. District Judge William T. Moore Jr. properly increased the sentence based on an abuse-of-trust enhancement. . . . “We affirm Eichholz’s 21-month sentence, the three-judge court ruled.


ILLINOIS  

Retired Marion judge jailed for allegedly smuggling drugs

Carmi Times  

09-01-10 -- Retired southern Illinois Circuit Judge Robert Drew has been arrested for allegedly smuggling about two ounces of heroin into the federal prison here, The Southern Illinoisan reported Wednesday. . . . Robert Drew, 68, a Marion attorney, was arrested Saturday after police, acting on a tip, searched him as he entered the facility, the newspaper said. . . . Police found 52.1 grams of heroin taped to his body, along with $12,000 on his person, according to The Tribune-Star newspaper in Terre Haute.


KENTUCKY  

Spoofers Use Kentucky Law Firm’s Phone Number in Credit Card Scam

By Debra Cassens Weiss, ABA Journal

08-31-10 -- Louisville, Ky., lawyer Scott Zoppoth started getting some strange phone calls last week. People from the area of Olympia, Wash., and the state of Maine were calling with a question: What’s the problem with my credit or debit card? . . . The callers told Zoppoth, the managing partner and owner of The Zoppoth Law Firm, that they were receiving automated calls telling them of a problem and asking for credit or debit card information. When they looked at their caller ID, the phone number from Zoppoth’s firm showed up.


NEW JERSEY  

Appeals Court Vacates $99,000 Fee to Counsel for Plaintiff Who Won $650

By David Gialanella | New Jersey Law Journal | New York Lawyer

09-01-10 -- A state appeals court on Tuesday overturned a $99,000 legal fee on a plaintiff's $650 recovery in a consumer fraud case, finding the trial court's measurement scales askew. . . . The appellate panel said the judge below in Walker v. Giuffre, A-2942-08, improperly used his own personal experience to gauge the hourly rate the plaintiff's lawyer was to receive for work on the case, a putative class action suit accusing Route 22 Nissan Inc. and other car dealerships of fraudulently inflating fees contained in sales contracts. . . . The judge also failed to provide a sufficient analysis for his decision to enhance the plaintiff's counsel's lodestar by 45 percent - he only stated his impression that the case "can hardly be classified as 'typical.'"


Chatham law firm sues ex-office manager, husband who allegedly stole more than $1M

Jim Lockwood/The Star-Ledger  

09-01-10 -- A Chatham Borough law firm is suing its former office manager and her husband claiming they embezzled $1.1 million from the company over several years, including almost $40,000 spent on a vintage car. . . . The law firm of Maloof, Lebowitz, Connahan & Oleske filed a lawsuit Tuesday in Superior Court in Morristown against former office manager Beth Friedland and Alex Cruz, both of Roxbury. . . . Friedland was in charge of the firm’s general business account and deposited money and paid bills, the lawsuit states. She and Cruz allegedly had been stealing money through a scheme of improperly issuing, forging and endorsing dozens of checks, falsifying bank and business records, deleting records and receiving funds without authorization, the lawsuit states.


Meet the Lawyer Trying to Bring Down "Jersey Shore"

By Eriq Gardner, ABC News 

08-31-10 -- Fans of MTV's "Jersey Shore" love the outsized personalities and the occasional fisticuffs. But it's hard to throw a punch without making some enemies, and chief among them might be New Jersey-based attorney Eugene Lavergne. . . . He isn't the only lawyer going after MTV and parent Viacom for airing the show. But in the past year, Lavergne has filed three separate "Jersey" lawsuits. From his first case on behalf of client Stephen Izzo, Jr., the alleged victim of a punch from one of the cast members, to his latest case on behalf of a woman identified as J.P., an alleged victim of the show's security staff, Lavergne has been pushing New Jersey judges to accept the notion that "Jersey" has all the characteristics of a racketeering enterprise. Which Lavergne says makes Viacom chairman Sumner Redstone the equivalent of a mob boss.


NEW MEXICO  

Retired NM attorney pleads to child porn charges

Associated Press, NewsWest9.com

09-01-10 -- A 70-year-old retired Santa Fe attorney has pleaded guilty to federal receipt of child pornography charges. . . . Robert Warren was indicted last year and pleaded guilty Monday before U.S. District Judge Bruce Black.


NEW YORK  

Lawyer Wins Bid to Depose 'Law & Order' Producers in Libel Suit

Noeleen G. Walder, New York Law Journal

09-01-10 -- Attorney Ravi Batra can question "Law & Order" producer Dick Wolf in connection with a $15 million libel action the lawyer filed in 2004 against 35 defendants, including Wolf and NBC Universal, a New York judge has ruled. . . . The suit centers around a "Law & Order" episode entitled "Floater," in which a bald Indian-American matrimonial attorney called "Ravi Patel" is depicted bribing a Supreme Court justice in Brooklyn. Batra, who was born in India, claimed the episode was based on a widely publicized corruption scandal involving Justice Gerald Garson and matrimonial lawyer Paul Siminovsky.


Aging Divorce Lawyer Sues Former Partners for $26 Million

Nate Raymond, New York Law Journal

08-31-10 -- Prominent divorce lawyer Norman M. Sheresky lodged a $26 million suit against his former partners at Sheresky Aronson Mayefsky & Sloan on Friday after being pushed out earlier this month (See Complaint). . . . Sheresky -- whose clients have included former supermodel Christie Brinkley's most recent ex-husband and actor James Gandolfini's ex-wife -- alleged that his ex-partners in the firm he founded 15 years ago, motivated by "disloyalty and greed," reneged on agreements to pay his life insurance premiums and the mortgage on his apartment. . . . The lawsuit, filed in Manhattan Supreme Court, followed the breakup earlier this month of Sheresky Aronson, considered one of the top matrimonial firms in Manhattan. The firm has formally dissolved, and all of the partners except for Sheresky have reconstituted it under the name Aronson Mayefsky & Sloan.


Funds Sue Pryor Cashman Over Embezzlement Scandal

Nate Raymond, New York Law Journal

08-31-10 -- Trustees to a union's benefit funds have sued Pryor Cashman for failing to provide legal advice that would have prevented the funds' third-party administrator from embezzling $42 million. The trustees for the three Construction Workers Local 147 funds filed the suit last week in Manhattan Supreme Court against the firm and partner Christopher J. Sues. The malpractice suit followed the December arrest of Melissa G. King, who was charged federally with misappropriating millions from the funds as the principal behind administrator King Care LLC. . . . Pryor Cashman had advised the trustees and benefit funds for more than a decade. The trustees claim Pryor Cashman should have realized administrative expenses for the funds compared to contributions were "unusually high" and encouraged the trustees to ask why, the complaint said. Pryor Cashman also failed to recommend hiring an independent auditor or ensure the funds' accountants and auditors maintained proper and adequate books and records, the complaint said.


OHIO  

Attorneys, Appraisers, Loan Officers Accused of Mortgage Fraud

Youngstown Business Journal

08-31-10 -- A $7.5 million fraud scheme involving mortgage loans for 48 properties throughout Mahoning and Trumbull counties today resulted in a 49-count indictment naming seven men – including two local title attorneys, two appraisers and a loan officer. . . . The indictment charges one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud involving the entire mortgage fraud scheme and 48 counts of wire fraud, one cont for each property, said Steven M. Dettelbach, U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Ohio. . . . The two title attorneys charged in the scheme are William Helbley and Michael Wagner, both of whom have offices in Boardman; Helbley resides in Poland, Wagner in Canfield. The loan officer is identified by the U.S. attorney's office as Robert Lunsford of Hubbard. And the appraisers are identified as Timothy Corey of Youngstown and Damon Petrich of Boardman.


PENNSYLVANIA  

Attorney pleads guilty to theft in investment scam

By Matt Miller, patriot-news.com

09-01-10 -- Embattled East Shore lawyer William Trick ett Smith and his son, who is a defendant in a Peruvian slaying case, could end up serving prison terms on different continents. . . . The elder Smith, 73, a Lower Paxton Twp. resident and former Dauphin County GOP chairman, likely paved his way to prison Tuesday by pleading guilty to multiple theft charges before county Judge Bernard L. Coates Jr. . . . The counts, filed last year by the state attorney general's office, involve an investment scam Smith and Jerome A. Kindrachuk, 65, of Allentown, are accused of mounting to steal thousands of dollars from elderly clients.


Greensburg divorce attorney denies negligence

By Bob Stiles, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review  

09-01-10 -- A Greensburg attorney says in court papers that he asked a Jeannette woman several times if she wanted him to freeze her husband's assets in a divorce case, and she declined. . . . Scott E. Avolio further denies in his recent response to Tracy L. Stull's lawsuit in Westmoreland County Court that he committed malpractice or was negligent in how he handled her divorce action. . . . Stull, of 420 Lafferty St., alleges that Avolio failed to freeze about $242,855 that her husband had in a Pennsylvania State Employees' Retirement System Account. . . . That cost her $121,427 -- or half the money in the account -- when her husband removed the funds during the summer of 2008 and spent the money "frivolously," according to Stull's suit. Les Stull died in August 2009 at age 45.


Lower Merion School District ordered to pay plaintiff's lawyer $260,000

By John P. Martin, Philadelphia Inquirer Staff Writer  

08-31-10 -- A federal judge Monday ordered the Lower Merion School District to pay about $260,000 now - and potentially much more later - to the lawyer who brought the lawsuit over the district's webcam monitoring. . . . In a 14-page opinion, Senior U.S. District Judge Jan E. DuBois said Mark S. Haltzman deserved to be paid for work that led to a preliminary injunction against the district in May. And he said Haltzman could submit the rest of his bills when the case ended. . . . The injunction banned Lower Merion school employees from activating webcams on students' district-issued laptops without their consent and required new policies governing the use of technology.


TEXAS  

Former Texas Supreme Court Chief Justice Is a Defendant in Wrongful-Death Suit

Miriam Rozen, Texas Lawyer

09-01-10 -- Former Texas Supreme Court Chief Justice Tom Phillips, now a partner in the Austin office of Baker Botts, is a defendant in a wrongful-death suit in Bastrop County, Texas. . . . In a petition filed Tuesday (pdf) in the 335th District Court, the parents of a teenage girl killed in a March 2009 accident are suing defendants Phillips; his wife Marilyn; their son Daniel; Glenda and Scott Halbert, as trustees of the Halbert Revocable Trust d/b/a Country Corner; and Point Horizon Properties LLC and Kiego LLC (collectively referred to in the petition as Beverage Barn). In the petition, the plaintiffs -- Cheryl and Bobby King, individually and as representatives of their daughter's estate -- allege that the Phillips' house "was well known in the Bastrop community as the location of frequent underage drinking parties."


Former Houston attorney on trial in 2007 drowning

By Renée C. Lee, Houston Chronicle  

08-31-10 -- Three years after a Houston woman mysteriously drowned in her bathtub, her boyfriend, a criminal defense attorney with a history of drug use, now stands trial on charges that he gave her heroin before she died. . . . On Tuesday, Harris County prosecutors opened their case against Shawn Roland Roberts. . . . Roberts, they said, injected 32-year-old Tara Sganga with the drug on March 19, 2007. . . . That same day, Roberts found Sganga unconscious and submerged in brownish red water in the bathtub of their far west Houston apartment sometime after noon, prosecutors said. . . . He called 911, and paramedics took her to a hospital, where she died.


Charges filed against attorney accused of theft

abc13.com, KTRK  

08-31-10 -- We have an update to a story we first brought you last week. A felony charge has been filed against a local attorney, accused of taking money that was supposed to be given to a crime victim. . . . Raymond Bess represented Christina Troung, who had been ordered to pay back more than $40,000 she had stolen from her former boss.


Judge to attorney: Pay $100K to former client

By Nancy Flake, North Channel Sentinel 

08-31-10 -- A Conroe attorney has been ordered to pay $100,000 in damages to a former client for breach of fiduciary duty. . . . Visiting Judge P.K. Reiter, sitting in the 284th state District Court, signed a final judgment Monday ordering Joseph LaBella and LaBella, Dennis and Associates PLLC to pay $100,000, along with more than $5,000 in trial and appellate court costs, to Salomon Juan Hernandez. . . . A jury originally ordered LaBella to pay Hernandez $500,000 in actual damages stemming from a February 2008 case, but LaBella, his firm and Hernandez had come to a settlement agreement, including a $100,000 payment from LaBella, before the jury could decide on punitive damages, court documents state. . . . Reiter ruled the settlement agreement was unenforceable and reduced the damages to $1,000. The 14th Court of Appeals reversed and remanded Reiter’s ruling in February.


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August 28 - August 30, 2010

GENERAL

Plaintiffs Lawyers in 9/11 Cases Lose Bid to Recoup $6.1 Million in Interest

Mark Hamblett, New York Law Journal

08-30-10 -- Plaintiffs lawyers in the 9/11 respiratory cases cannot pass on to clients some $6.1 million in interest costs associated with financing the massive litigation, Southern District Judge Alvin K. Hellerstein ruled Friday. . . . Even though lead lawyer Paul Napoli marshaled opinions by bar associations, court cases and experts to show that borrowing to finance litigation and passing the cost to clients is both legal and ethical, Hellerstein said he would not allow it. / Read Napoli's filing. / "Mr. Napoli, I can tell you now, I'm not going to allow this charge," the judge said. "I'm not saying it was unethical. I'm not saying you didn't try to stay attuned to the rules of professional responsibility. What you're getting is too much." . . . The judge's decision came as all sides in the litigation are pressing to convince some 10,000 plaintiffs who suffered respiratory and other illnesses in the response to and cleanup after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks to accept a settlement that could run as high as $712.5 million.


Plaintiffs Lawyers Say Oil Spill Fund Unlikely to Deter Litigation

Some claimants might not be eligible for compensation

Amanda Bronstad, The National Law Journal

08-30-10 -- The $20 billion compensation fund for victims of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill has begun taking applications, but plaintiffs lawyers doubt it would significantly forestall litigation. In fact, they said, it could lead to a new wave of lawsuits. . . . Many of their clients, especially large businesses such as hotel owners, condominium developers and tourism operators, are unlikely to seek final settlements anytime soon -- if at all, they said. For one thing, the claims process might not give them enough time to calculate their losses. For another, it's unclear whether the fund would compensate governmental entities or businesses that are geographically remote from the spill. . . . Plaintiffs attorneys expect many claimants to sue, joining about 300 cases already in the multidistrict litigation before U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier in New Orleans.


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CALIFORNIA  

Tax Lady" Roni Deutch Sued For Fraud

The Associated Press, The South Florida Times

08-30-10 -- California's attorney general sued "tax lady'' Roni Deutch for more than $34 million on Monday, alleging that her law firm regularly violates state law by making false promises that it will help people resolve disputes with the Internal Revenue Service. . . . Attorney General Jerry Brown contends that Deutch overstates her TV claims of winning tax battles with the IRS. She advertises a success rate of up to 99 percent, yet successfully reduces the amount of money her clients owe in taxes in just 10 percent of cases, the lawsuit says.


CONNECTICUT  

Classrooms Are Filled With Armchair Lawyers

By Karen Lee Torre, Connecticut Law Tribune

08-30-10 -- I was once being trained to teach law, not practice it. But I could not help but be drawn to the courtroom, an ineluctable consequence of my personality (or, some would say, being born an Aries). . . . Too many go from being a law student to law professor. Forget the in-between. Some might, before becoming “professor,” log a clerkship, a short stint in a government agency, or a year or two as a staffer to some politician. What good are they? . . . With some exceptions, they are, by and large, a lazy bunch, content to do little or no heavy lifting, but ready to critique those who do, clad in their pajamas (first class isn’t until 2 p.m.). . . . I wanted to be one who actually stood between a citizen and the power of the state, not one who just talked of others’ accomplishments from behind a lectern. I wanted as my audience a jury sitting in the room that counts, not the classroom where you count for nothing.


Tough Tactics Are Just Part Of The Process

Grievance committee sides with attorney in deposition conduct case

By Douglas S. Malan, Connecticut Law Tribune

08-30-10 -- If you can’t stand the heat, stay out of the deposition. . . . Lawyers on both sides agree that to maintain the integrity of litigation, they need to be free to engage in tough, pointed cross-examinations of witnesses. . . . And they shouldn’t have to hold back in their questioning because they’re worried about a grievance complaint from the other party. . . . “We should not have a system that allows the opposing party to grieve attorneys just because they’re engaged in an aggressive exam,” said attorney Richard A. Roberts of Nuzzo & Roberts in Cheshire. . . . Roberts, the vice president of the Connecticut Defense Lawyers Association, has been keeping an eye on a grievance proceeding that revolved around a 2008 deposition. . . . Hartford defense attorney Andrew J. O’Keefe was grieved by a Manchester woman named Kathleen Sinnamon who said O’Keefe aimed to “harass, intimidate and embarrass” her with questions asked in the midst of a lawsuit Sinnamon filed against O’Keefe’s client, Twin City Fire Insurance Co.


FLORIDA  

Child Support Modification Clinic – group assistance by pro bono attorneys

by Kathy Para, Jacksonville Daily Record, JPA Pro Bono Committee Chair

08-30-10 -- With many people experiencing job loss due to the economy, some parents have fallen behind in child support payments. They are at risk of having their driver’s license suspended or of being held in contempt of court for nonpayment, thereby exacerbating their problems. . . . Jacksonville Area Legal Aid has been inundated with child support modification requests and simply cannot handle the caseload. . . . Two Jacksonville area attorneys, Marla Buchanan, a Rogers Towers attorney and chair of the Family Law Section of The JBA, and Jamie Ibrahim, a family law staff attorney with JALA, have teamed up to combat this ever-increasing issue by creating a new group assistance opportunity, the Child Support Modification Clinic at JALA.


INDIANA  

Former Barnes & Thornburg Partner Found Dead After Husband's Shooting Spree Near Firm's Offices

Brian Baxter, The American Lawyer

08-30-10 -- Mary Jane Frisby, a former IP partner in Barnes & Thornburg's Indianapolis office, was found dead in her home on Thursday, hours after her husband committed suicide across the street from her old firm, according to The Indianapolis Star. . . . Frisby's body was found late Thursday after a lone gunman, who turned out to be her estranged husband, went on a shooting spree in the downtown Indianapolis neighborhood where the firm is located. The gunman, while on the rooftop of a parking garage located across the street from Barnes & Thornburg's office, fired shots into several buildings before he killed himself with a shot to the head and fell eight stories to the street below.


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LOUISIANA   

Five Years After Katrina, New Orleans Legal Community Is Finding Its Way

Leigh Jones, The National Law Journal

08-30-10 -- Gary Elkins has become well acquainted with Washington red tape. Taking on a lobbying role, pro bono, for still-struggling New Orleans, he has watched while financial incentives threatened to sunset just as development started to reawaken after Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast five years ago. . . . Since then, he's made trips to the nation's capital, at times meeting with the general counsel for former U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to help loosen restrictions on finance tax credits. And, along with and bankers, accountants and architects from New Orleans, he persuaded members of Congress to extend the Gulf Opportunity Zone Act when key provisions of the rebuilding legislation were set to expire two years ago. "Projects were starting to come on line as the window was closing," Elkins said.


MASSACHUSETTS   

McDermott Files Counterclaim in Suit by Medical Device Maker

Sheri Qualters The National Law Journal

08-30-10 -- McDermott Will & Emery is countersuing medical device maker Nomir Medical Technologies Inc. in Boston federal court for breach of contract and nearly $491,000 in damages following the company's $143 million claim against the firm for missing patent deadlines. . . . Nomir filed suit against McDermott Will in Suffolk County Superior Court in Massachusetts on July 1, claiming that McDermott Will missed four crucial patent deadlines when it represented the company. McDermott Will removed the case to the District of Massachusetts on July 27. On Aug. 26, the law firm and three individual defendants filed a joint answer and counterclaim alleging that the medical laser company owes it $490,857.65 in unpaid legal bills. The firm claims that Nomir is liable for breach of contract because the two parties entered into "one or more valid, enforceable contracts."


MICHIGAN  

Macomb County attorney disbarred

Margaret Agius, Detroit Legal News Examiner 

08-29-10 -- Attorney Discipline Board Tri-County Hearing Panel #103 disbarred Chesterfield Township attorney Kevin M. Shepherd effective August 26, 2010, the Attorney Discipline Board reported Friday. . . . The panel found, by default, that Shepherd practiced law while suspended, failed to provide his clients with notice and details of his suspension, failed to file a notice of disqualification from the practice of law with every tribunal in which he was actively practicing at the time of suspension, and knowingly disobeyed an obligation under the rules of a tribunal. The panel revoked Shepherd’s license to practice law in Michigan and ordered him to pay costs of $1,746.


Detroit attorney suspended again

Margaret Agius, Detroit Legal News Examiner 

08-29-10 -- Attorney Discipline Board Tri-County Hearing Panel #57 suspended Detroit attorney Wendell N. Davis, Jr. for a period of 180 days effective May 25, 2010, the Attorney Discipline Board reported Friday. . . . Davis entered a plea of no contest to the allegations that he committed professional misconduct by neglecting the criminal appeal of a client and failed to refund unearned fees consisting of a snowmobile and a motorcycle. The parties stipulated that Davis be suspended from the practice of law in Michigan for 180 days retroactive to May 25, 2010, subject to a condition relevant to the alleged misconduct and payment of $1,076.32 in costs.


Oakland County attorney suspended

Margaret Agius, Detroit Legal News Examiner 

08-29-10 -- Attorney Discipline Board Tri-County Hearing Panel #73 suspended Clarkston attorney Michael C. Packard for a period of 60 days effective August 25, 2010, the Attorney Discipline Board reported Friday. . . . Based on Packard’s conviction in the 52-2 District Court for domestic violence and attempted interference with electronic communications, the parties entered into a stipulation for consent order of discipline. Based on that stipulation, the panel entered an order placing Packard on probation for two years effective June 11, 2008, subject to conditions and payment of costs of $760.76.


NEVADA  

'Lawyers for Burners' Challenge Arrests at Annual Burning Man Festival

Martin Griffith, The Associated Press, Law.com

08-30-10 -- David Levin represents entrepreneurs, investors and developers in his legal practice. As an aside, he's a Burning Man barrister -- offering free legal advice to those who run afoul of the law at the annual counterculture festival on the Nevada desert. . . . The Palo Alto, Calif., attorney maintains law enforcement has become so heavy-handed at the eclectic art and music gathering that he was compelled to form a legal defense team known as Lawyers for Burners to help participants who were cited or arrested. . . . He and other Burning Man fans accuse overzealous officers of destroying the quality of an otherwise peaceful celebration of radical self-expression to be held today through Sept. 6. Some 50,000 people are expected to gawk at offbeat artwork, wear bizarre costumes or nothing at all and torch the event's 40-foot signature effigy on the Black Rock Desert, about 110 miles north of Reno.


NEW JERSEY  

Corruption in N.J.? Fuhgeddaboudit, U.S. Attorney says

By Bob Ingle, Vineland Daily Journal

08-30-10 -- Over the years, I've heard a lot of incredibly uninformed remarks from public officials, but U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman tops them all when he said New Jersey doesn't have a culture of corruption. . . . His published remarks also included, "I don't know how you can make that kind of comparison" and "I don't happen to believe that to be true." . . . Fishman says such talk is "demoralizing" to New Jersey residents. . . . To which Inthelobby.net, one of the best informed and most read political blogs, responded: "That's nice, Mr. Fishman. But this isn't Iowa or Kansas -- we live in New Jersey. And we know exactly what we've got here ... Like there is a reason why undercover FBI agents were able to walk through a League of Municipalities convention and catch so many fish." . . . For full disclosure, Sandy McClure and I wrote a book called "The Soprano State." The original manuscript was about one-third longer than the hardback, and the paperback is updated from the hardback. There is a website, www.thesopranostate.com, that updates readers regularly on what has happened since the book went to press.


NEW YORK  

104-year-old heiress gave lawyer 'millions' in gifts

By Dan Mangan, New York Post   

08-30-10 -- A 104-year-old heiress lavished "millions" of dollars in gifts on the family of her lawyer, who is now under investigation for his handling of her finances as she lives out her days in a Manhattan hospital, an ex-employee told The Post. . . . Huguette Clark once bought at auction a dol lhouse worth well more than $10,000 for lawyer Wallace Bock's grand daughter, and gave him a check for about $1.5 mil lion to build a "bomb shel ter" for a settlement in Israel where his daughter and her family live, two people said yesterday. . . . Bock's co-workers were so amused by his reliance on the copper heiress that they once gave the estate lawyer a purported signed copy of her last will and testament -- which named him as a big beneficiary -- at the firm's holiday party, said Bock's former paralegal, Cynthia Garcia.


Union Fund Sues Firm for Not Preventing Embezzlement

By Nate Raymond | New York Law Journal | New York Lawyer

08-30-10 -- Trustees to a union's benefit funds have sued Pryor Cashman for failing to provide legal advice that would have prevented the funds' third-party administrator from embezzling $42 million. The trustees for the three Construction Workers Local 147 funds filed the suit last week in Manhattan Supreme Court against the firm and partner Christopher J. Sues. The malpractice suit followed the December arrest of Melissa G. King, who was charged federally with misappropriating millions from the funds as the principal behind administrator King Care LLC.


NORTH CAROLINA  

Local D.A. one of dozens statewide demanding SBI lab audit

By Brigida Mack, WBTV 

08-30-10 -- A full scale audit. That's what District Attorneys from across North Carolina are demanding, including the D.A. for Union County, N.C. . . . "We work on behalf of justice and justice requires this and the attorney general should give it to us," said John Snyder, District Attorney for the rapidly growing county. . . . Snyder is a member of the North Carolina Conference of DAs that sent a press release to Attorney General Roy Cooper demanding the audit of the SBI's crime lab. . . . "It's not doing spot-checking which the attorney general wants to do,: said Snyder. "It's not doing random, surprise checks. It needs to be a full complete and total audit. Because the public deserves that." . . . The SBI has been under the microscope since a review revealed stunning revelations that blood evidence in many cases had been omitted or falsely reported.


OHIO  

Ohio Supreme Court Suspends Lawyer for Destroying Documents and Lying About It

Karen Sloan, The National Law Journal

08-30-10 -- The Supreme Court of Ohio on Wednesday suspended the law license of a Columbus attorney for one year after finding that he destroyed confidential law firm documents then lied about it when he moved to a rival firm. . . . The suspension of David J. Robinson is half the length recommended by the state's Board of Commissioners on Grievances & Discipline. Still, the court found that Robinson "engaged in a pattern of misconduct involving multiple instances of lying and misrepresentation under oath, as well as the destruction of documents with potential evidentiary value in a pending civil proceeding."  


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August 26 - August 27, 2010

GENERAL

Corporate Clients Eager to do Pro Bono with Outside Counsel

By Rachel M. Zahorskyhttp://www.abajournal.com/?ACT=49&vars=YToyOntzOjg6ImVudHJ5X2lkIjtzOjU6IjI4MDIwIjtzOjk6IndlYmxvZ19pZCI7czoxOiIxIjt9, ABA Journal

08-27-10 -- Corporate law departments’ interest in pro bono has surged as they grow eager to establish their own legal volunteer legacies, and they’re looking to their outside counsel to become active partners in the effort.

“It’s definitely a national trend,” Ellyn Haikin Josef, a staff attorney who coordinates Vinson & Elkins’ pro bono efforts, told the ABA Journal. “In-house lawyers are catching up in the world of pro bono and looking to law firms as the experts.” . . . And it’s not surprising that partners and associates—eager to boost client relations as competition among law firms intensifies—are more than happy to help. In fact, Josef said, the firm’s pro bono client-firm partnership opportunities have increased as work picks up. . . . “Lawyers want to show clients their strengths and how they operate,” Josef said. “It’s a great way to get the firm’s name out there.”


Attorneys general call for Craigslist to get rid of adult services ads

By the CNN Wire Staff  

08-26-10 -- Attorneys general in 17 states have banded together to call on Craigslist, the online classified ad website, to discontinue its adult services section. . . . "The increasingly sharp public criticism of Craigslist's Adult Services section reflects a growing recognition that ads for prostitution -- including ads trafficking children -- are rampant on it," the attorneys general said in a Tuesday letter to Craigslist CEO Jim Buckmaster and founder Craig Newmark. . . . The letter continued: "We recognize that Craigslist may lose the considerable revenue generated by the Adult Services ads. No amount of money, however, can justify the scourge of illegal prostitution, and the suffering of the women and children who will continue to be victimized, in the market and trafficking provided by Craigslist."


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CALIFORNIA  

Attorney Pays $1 Million to Settle Allegation of Foreclosure Relief Fraud

Amanda Bronstad, The National Law Journal

08-27-10 -- California Attorney General Jerry Brown has obtained a $1.1 million judgment against a Los Angeles attorney accused of bilking 2,000 homeowners seeking foreclosure relief out of thousands of dollars. . . . Mitchell W. Roth of M.W. Roth PLC in Sherman Oaks, Calif., operated United First Inc., a Nevada company that claimed to provide help to struggling homeowners, according to the attorney general's office. Roth provided legal services and paired with the company's president, Paul Noe, who previously was convicted of wire fraud. . . . Brown filed suit last year, alleging that Roth, Noe and United First violated California's unfair competition, credit counseling and foreclosure consultant laws. On Aug. 12, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Zaven V. Sinanian approved a stipulated judgment between the parties.


Former MoFo Partner Charged With Misappropriating Funds for Son's Autism Services

Kate Moser, The Recorder

08-27-10 -- Former Morrison & Foerster partner Jonathan Dickstein and his wife, Barclay Lynn, have been arrested and charged with 31 felony counts over an alleged scheme that netted nearly $400,000, according to the San Francisco district attorney's office. . . . Prosecutors say Dickstein and Lynn collected the money as reimbursement from the San Francisco Unified School District, Anthem Blue Cross and MoFo's own self-insurance plan for special education services for their son, provided by a company called Puzzle Pieces. Nobody knew that Puzzle Pieces was actually Dickstein and Lynn, they allege. . . . The DA says that Dickstein and Lynn sometimes double-charged or more for the services.


Lawyer leaves courtroom for the pulpit

By Daniel Wolowicz, theacorn.com 

08-26-10 -- Bruce Zachary is the first to admit that his spiritual journey to become lead pastor at Calvary Nexus in Camarillo took some unexpected turns. . . . Born and raised in an Orthodox Jewish family, the Los Angeles native was working as an attorney when he agreed to attend a Christian church with his real estate agent. It was a visit that ultimately led him to change his religious beliefs. . . . “One of the clearest differences was to see people actively worshipping God,” Zachary said of his first impression of the church. “They were looking for a reverent relationship with God as opposed to a religion.” . . . The then 31-year-old attorney was living in Orange County when he told his parents of his decision to change his religion. . . . “They were grieved,” said Zachary, 51. “They tore their garments. Every picture of me in their home, they turned upside down.” . . . Pained by his parents’ reaction but undaunted, Zachary was soon leading an in-home Bible study group that quickly grew to 50 members. . . . “As I prayed, I felt a sense that I was supposed to teach,” he said. “As I started teaching, people started coming.” . . . To better understand the Bible, Zachary attended Calvary Chapel School of Ministry in Orange County. . . . “I had a voracious appetite for the word of God,” he said. . . . In 1996, Zachary—at that time still practicing as an attorney and teaching at the Calvary Chapel Bible college—was approached to open a Calvary Chapel Church in Camarillo.


Judge slashes Calif. election case attorney fees

By Michael R. Blood Associated Press Writer, San Jose Mercury News

08-26-10 -- A Madera County judge slashed more than $1.6 million from legal fees sought by attorneys who filed a lawsuit against a school district over the way it conducted elections, officials said Thursday. . . . The Madera Unified School District did not contest the 2008 lawsuit, but lawyers billed the district for $1.2 million, a fee later increased to $1.8 million, according to district officials. The district called the attorneys' bill a money grab and feared it would force administrators to cut money for books and lunches to pay it. . . . In an order issued Monday, Superior Court Judge James Oakley reduced the amount to $162,500 for the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area, law professor Joaquin Avila and the firm of Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher, which sought the fees.


COLORADO   

Pa., N.J. Insurers Win $10.9 Million in Colorado Jury Trial

Gina Passarella, The Legal Intelligencer

08-27-10 -- After nearly eight years and an initial decision that their clients were owed only $500, Cozen O'Connor attorneys in Denver were successful in getting two area insurance company clients a $10.9 million jury award against an alarm monitoring company. . . . The insurers, Pennsylvania-based Commonwealth Insurance Co. and New Jersey-based United States Fire Insurance Co., joined forces with the company they insured, food distributor Core-Mark Midcontinent Inc., to sue alarm company Sonitrol Corp. for willful and wanton breach of contract after burglars broke into a Core-Mark warehouse and burned it down. . . . The two insurance companies, represented by Thomas M. Dunford of Cozen O'Connor in Denver, were suing for the claims they already paid to Core-Mark in the amount of $10.96 million. Core-Mark, represented by Brian Letofsky of Watkins & Letofsky in Newport Beach, Calif., was suing for the amount of damages not covered by insurance, or $7.34 million.


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CONNECTICUT  

New Haven Lawyer Charged With Casino Cheating

By Christine Dempsey, courant.com

08-26-10 -- A New Haven defense attorney was charged with cheating at the MGM Grand Casino late Wednesday, state police said. . . . Walter Bansley IV, 34, also was charged with sixth-degree larceny, interfering with an officer and criminal mischief, according to a press release from the state police casino unit. . . . Shortly after 11:30 p.m., state police said, Bansley took a bet off the craps table — which is against the rules. The dealer alerted MGM security, but when security workers approached, Bansley ignored them, the release states. . . . Security notified the state police, and when troopers arrived and asked for Bansley's identification, he refused to provide it, police said. He also refused to leave the gaming floor, they said.


Lawyer says client, Conn. prosecutor facing probe

By John Christoffersen, Meriden Record-Journal

08-26-10 -- An attorney confirmed Thursday that federal authorities are investigating ties between his client and Waterbury State's Attorney John Connelly and blasted their tactics. . . . Norm Pattis, who represents defense attorney Martin Minella, told The Associated Press that investigators are looking at trips the two men took together to Las Vegas, but he said Connelly reimbursed Minella for the travel. . . . Pattis said the two men are longtime friends and he's seen no evidence of wrongdoing.


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA  

Filings in Civil Suit Against Ex-BigLaw Partner, Lover in Lawyer's Murder Unsealed

By Mike Scarcella | The Blog of Legal Times | New York Lawyer

08-26-10 -- Lawyers in the Robert Wone civil case have withdrawn their effort to obtain e-mail and telephone records from the three men who were acquitted this year on charges tied to the fatal stabbing of Wone. A D.C. Superior Court judge has ordered the court papers in the dispute unsealed. . . . The attorneys representing Wone’s estate filed court papers earlier this month in D.C. Superior Court seeking a subpoena to force Verizon to turn over e-mail and phone records for Joseph Price, Victor Zaborsky and Dylan Ward. . . . The Wone family attorneys allege Price, Zaborsky and Ward conspired to protect themselves from criminal and civil liability and likely had "relevant and incriminating” communication in the weeks before and after Wone was fatally stabbed on Aug. 2, 2006. Wone, general counsel for Radio Free Asia, was killed in the Dupont Circle home of Price and Zaborsky.


Assistant D.C. Attorney General Faces Disciplinary Punishment

Jeff Jeffrey, The National Law Journal 

08-26-10 -- A hearing committee of the Board on Professional Responsibility has recommended that an assistant D.C. attorney general receive a 30-day stayed suspension for ethical violations allegedly committed while in private practice. . . . In a July 20 report, the hearing committee approved a negotiated discipline for Rachele Reid that would also require her to serve a one-year unsupervised probation and to complete a mandatory CLE course. Based on the hearing committee's report, the board will make an official recommendation to the D.C. Court of Appeals, which makes final decisions on all disciplinary matters. . . . If the appeals court ultimately approves the negotiated discipline, Reid would not face suspension if she doesn't have any disciplinary issues arise during the one-year probation period.


Steptoe Wins Injunction in Battle Over Wafting Burger Fumes

By Debra Cassens Weiss, ABA Journal

08-26-10 -- There may be no free lunch for a hamburger restaurant near Steptoe & Johnson in Washington, D.C. . . . A superior court judge has granted Steptoe’s request and ordered Rogue States, a Burger Company to develop a plan to stop its fumes from wafting into the law firm’s air handlers. Judge John Mott of Washington, D.C., granted the preliminary injunction request on Wednesday and gave the restaurant 30 days to comply, according to The BLT: The Blog of Legal Times. He also set an Oct. 4 trial date.


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FLORIDA  

Fla. Supreme Court Disbars Attorney for Drug Trafficking

Leigh Jones, The National Law Journal

08-27-10 -- Former Florida attorney Noah Daniel Liberman has been on the right path since he was busted more than six years ago for drug trafficking. But despite his rehabilitation from his addiction, the Florida Supreme Court has rejected a recommendation to suspend his license and instead has disbarred him. . . . In an Aug. 26 ruling, the court noted that Liberman had remained drug-free since his arrest in 2004 for trafficking Ecstasy. It also considered 11 mitigating factors in a referee's report, including Liberman's remorse, his full disclosure of his arrest and the lack of any prior discipline. . . . Even so, the court held in a per curiam decision that it could not justify a sanction less severe than disbarment. The Florida Bar Association, which brought the action against him, had urged a three-year suspension.


Citing Attorney's Inflammatory Language, Court Erases Most of Jury Verdict

Adolfo Pesquera, Daily Business Review

08-27-10 -- A Florida state appeals court erased most of a jury award due to an attorney's inflammatory and prejudicial language while representing a man injured when granite fell on his head in an elevator. . . . It was the second time this month that the 3rd District Court of Appeal issued reversals and chided attorneys for inflammatory arguments. . . . The three-judge panel agreed with defense arguments that Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Peter Adrien abused his discretion by denying a motion for new trial based on opening and closing remarks by Tampa lawyer Michael V. Laurato of Austin & Laurato. The panel also ruled Adrien, who lost his re-election bid Tuesday, failed to eject an unjustified claim for future medical expenses.


As Rothstein Claimants' Losses Balloon, Recovery Estimates Dwindle

Julie Kay, Daily Business Review

08-26-10 -- Losses claimed by victims of Ponzi schemer Scott Rothstein have ballooned from $188 million to $318 million, while attorneys say recoveries are probably only about $30 million or so. . . . All told, about $1.2 billion flowed through the former law firm chairman's Ponzi scheme. Based on the claims for criminal restitution, fraud victims can hope for a recovery of only 9 cents on the dollar. Two other recovery options remain: a pool of money in Rothstein's defunct law firm's bankruptcy case and civil suits pending against third parties, including banks holding Rothstein accounts.


INDIANA  

Lawyer Found Dead in Home After Suicidal Gunman Shoots at Downtown Indy Firm

By Molly McDonough, ABA Journal

08-26-10 -- The body of Mary Jane Frisby, 44, a former partner at the Indianapolis-based Barnes & Thornburg, was found in her home, the apparent victim of homicide. . . . Police discovered her body after her estranged husband, David Frisby, shot himself at a parking garage near the firm, which she'd recently left, reports Channel 6 in Indianapolis. . . . The news outlet reports that the couple was getting a divorce. Police went to Mary Jane Frisby's home after finding a tape recording apparently left by David Frisby in his car, WTHR Channel 13 reports.


IOWA  

Waterloo lawyer: Courthouse sex allegation is 'baseless'

By Clark Kauffman • Desmoines Register

08-27-10 -- A Waterloo lawyer says allegations that he had sex with a client in an Iowa courthouse are "completely baseless." . . . The Iowa Supreme Court's Attorney Disciplinary Board alleges that Clovis M. Bowles, 56, had sexual relations with a 33-year-old female client on several occasions in 2007 and 2008. . . . Bowles was allegedly aware that the client had a history of emotional problems and had hired him shortly after attempting suicide and checking herself into a psychiatric facility. The Grievance Commission of the Iowa Supreme Court is recommending that the court suspend Bowles' law license for three years.


KENTUCKY  

Kentucky Bar Association v. James B. Gray

No. 2010-SC-000381-KB, Supreme Court of Kentucky

Leagle.com

The Board of Governors for the Kentucky Bar Association (KBA) has recommended that Respondent, James Basil Gray, be suspended from the practice of law for five years (with two years to serve followed by probation for the remaining three years) conditioned upon his compliance with a KYLAP monitoring program. Gray's KBA Member No. is 88427, and his last known bar roster address is 1244 Constitution Drive, Independence, Kentucky 41051. We agree with the Board's rulings and adopt its recommendations.


Kentucky Bar Association v. Bryant

No. 2010-SC-000258-KB, Supreme Court of Kentucky

Leagle.com

08-26-10 -- The Board of Governors of the Kentucky Bar Association has recommended to this Court that Marc Ashley Bryant, who was admitted to the practice of law in 2004 and whose bar roster address is 521 Highland Avenue, Suite B, P. O. Box 277, Carrollton, KY 41008, be suspended from the practice of law for sixty days. We adopt the Board's recommendation. . . . Bryant represented Ronald Kornewald in three separate actions — a worker's compensation claim, a Social Security disability appeal, and a personal injury action. Only the worker's compensation claim was satisfactorily resolved. Kornewald alleged, and the Board ultimately found, that Bryant (1) failed to contact Kornewald or keep him advised of deadlines or court events; (2) failed to return paperwork to Kornewald; (3) failed to file paperwork timely in the Social Security disability appeal, which led to that appeal's dismissal; and (4) failed to respond to discovery in the personal injury case, which caused the circuit court to dismissed that case with prejudice.


Kentucky Bar Association v. Whitlock

No. 2010-SC-000238-KB / Supreme Court of Kentucky

Leagle.com

08-26-10 -- A trial commissioner has recommended that Jennifer Sue Whitlock, who was admitted to practice law in Kentucky on April 16, 1998, whose Bar Roster Address is P.O. Box 171, 1401 Winchester Avenue, Suite 526, Ashland, Kentucky 41105, and whose KBA Member Number is 87562, be suspended for one year for professional misconduct related to her representation of Rebecca Anderson. . . . Ms. Anderson hired Whitlock in 2007 to represent her in a lawsuit in Elliott County. Ms. Anderson had previously filed suit in small claims court, and Whitlock agreed to withdraw the case from small claims and file it in either district or circuit court. Ms. Anderson signed an agreement with Whitlock on November 1, 2007 and paid her a $200 retainer.


MARYLAND   

Solo Practitioner, Insurer Lock Horns Over Malpractice Coverage

Jeff Jeffrey, The National Law Journal

08-27-10 -- A solo practitioner in Silver Spring, Md., is embroiled in a legal battle with his malpractice insurance company over whether he was improperly denied coverage for a dispute with a former client. . . . Jonathan Shurberg says in his Aug. 19 complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland, that the Minnesota Lawyers Mutual Insurance Co. denied him malpractice coverage when he was sued by his former client, Rosa de Jesus Peralta, in May 2009. . . . Shurberg, who is representing himself, says in his complaint that he is seeking to obtain a court order requiring the company to defend against the Peralta claim and to indemnify him if necessary. Sherberg's complaint also seeks attorney fees. . . . The insurance company fired back with a countersuit claiming that Shurberg was denied coverage because he withheld information about the Peralta case when he filed paperwork to extend his insurance policy.


NEW JERSEY  

Master in Prudential Fraud Case Lowers His Fees as Plaintiffs Seek His Ouster

Judge defends appointment of special master and the hours billed

Charles Toutant, New Jersey Law Journal

08-26-10 -- The special master appointed to handle discovery in a mammoth fraud and bribery suit against Prudential Life Insurance Co. has agreed to reduce his fees, even as the plaintiffs lawyers are trying to dispense with him altogether. . . . William Hunt said in an Aug. 19 letter to the parties that he would cut his hourly rate from $450 to $350. The concession came after plaintiffs lawyer Angela Roper sounded alarms over the $77,265 bill Hunt submitted for his first three weeks on the job. The rate reduction, retroactive to Hunt's appointment, will shave about $17,000 off the total. . . . But Roper says she will nonetheless proceed with her motion, filed July 30, for an emergent interlocutory appeal of Hunt's appointment in the case, In re Prudential Life Insurance Co. of America Litigation, AM-00820-09.



Paul Weiss and Lowenstein Ordered to Pay $1.96 Million for Filing Frivolous Suit Against Ron Perelman's In-Laws

Andrew Longstreth, The American Lawyer

08-26-10 -- Bergen County, N.J., Superior Court Judge Ellen Koblitz doesn't seem too worried about sparing the reputations of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison and Lowenstein Sandler. In June, you'll recall, she found that the two firms had filed a frivolous suit on behalf of billionaire Ronald Perelman in a family dispute over hundreds of millions of dollars. On Friday she issued a final opinion (pdf), rejecting the firms' arguments for mercy and ordering them to pay $1.96 million in legal fees to the defendants, Perelman's former father-in-law and brother-in-law. . . . "Paul Weiss and Lowenstein Sandler argue that since they are both such important, well-regarded law firms, the mere finding that they engaged in frivolous litigation is deterrence enough," Koblitz wrote. "They argue that this court's finding of frivolous litigation has been widely publicized and besmirches their reputation, which will cost them untold, unspecified damages. A monetary sanction, however, is clearly appropriate here."


NEW YORK  

Already Under Fire, Lawyers for 9/11 Workers Are Ordered to Justify Some Fees

By Mireya Navarro   New York Times

08-27-10 -- The lawyers representing most of the ground zero workers who sued the city over health issues will be appearing in court in a new role: defending themselves. . . . The federal judge overseeing the cases has summoned the law partnership of two firms, Worby Groner Edelman and Napoli Bern Ripka, to a hearing on Friday to justify $6.1 million in legal expenses that they are charging their clients. . . . Next week, the lawyers are due back in federal court to respond to accusations of overcharging made by the other leading law firm representing workers. That firm, Sullivan Papain Block McGrath & Cannavo, alleges that its co-counsel is trying to inflate its fees by inappropriately charging clients more than $400,000 for publicists, lobbyists and legal and medical experts as case-related costs.


Report: N.Y. Governor Misled Inquiry Over Yankees Tickets

Joel Stashenko, New York Law Journal

08-27-10 -- An independent counsel on Thursday referred to a local prosecutor evidence that New York Gov. David A. Paterson may have lied to a government agency investigating his reception of tickets to an October 2009 World Series game at Yankee Stadium. . . . Judith S. Kaye, the state's former chief judge, concluded that the governor's testimony before the state Commission on Public Integrity about his intention to pay for the tickets was "at a minimum ... inaccurate and misleading."

See the Report of Investigation Into Events Arising From Governor
David A. Paterson's Acquisition of 2009 World Series Tickets
.


Northwestern's Van Zandt to Lead The New School in New York

Karen Sloan, The National Law Journal

08-27-10 -- David Van Zandt, the longtime dean of Northwestern University School of Law, has been named the next president of The New School in New York. . . . Van Zandt has held the top position at Northwestern's law school since 1995, earning a reputation as one of the most progressive and outspoken deans in legal education. He has advocated tailoring legal education to the job market and has been critical of the ever-rising cost of a legal education amid shrinking job prospects. . . . He spearheaded the creation of the law school's three-year joint J.D./M.B.A. program and also started its two-year accelerated J.D. program -- the first of its kind at a top-tier school.


Criminal Defense Attorneys Blast Bar Groups Over Settlement Talks With New York City

Daniel Wise, New York Law Journal

08-26-10 -- Several groups of 18-B attorneys have attacked the five bar associations suing New York City over proposed changes to its assigned counsel program for "abandoning" them in settlement talks and taking a position that "will substantially if not completely demolish the role of the private bar." . . . Three groups, made up predominately of lawyers who accept assignments under Article 18-B of the County Law to represent the poor in criminal cases, have written to Manhattan Acting Supreme Court Justice Anil Singh urging him not to approve a settlement in New York County Lawyers' Association (NYCLA) v. Bloomberg, 107216/10.


Claiming Excessive Fees, Patent Holder Sues Law Firms for $10 Million

Nate Raymond, New York Law Journal

08-26-10 -- A retired university professor who has pursued dozens of electronics companies for patent infringement on Monday filed a notice to sue her former attorneys for $10 million, accusing them of misusing escrow funds and charging her excessive fees. . . . Gertrude Neumark Rothschild filed a summons in Manhattan Supreme Court against Troutman Sanders; an intellectual property boutique chaired by Albert L. Jacobs Jr. before he became a partner at Troutman; and Jacobs.

Read the Troutman Sanders and Albert Jacobs LLP complaints.


OHIO  

Lawyer Suspended for Destroying Law Firm Docs in Court Restroom and After Hearing

By Debra Cassens Weiss, ABA Journalhttp://www.abajournal.com/?ACT=49&vars=YToyOntzOjg6ImVudHJ5X2lkIjtzOjU6IjI4MDE2IjtzOjk6IndlYmxvZ19pZCI7czoxOiIxIjt9

08-27-10 -- An Ohio lawyer has been suspended for a year, in part because he destroyed law firm documents in a courthouse bathroom during a recess and after a civil case claiming a violation of his employment agreement. . . . The Ohio Supreme Court said the documents had potential evidentiary value and Columbus lawyer David Robinson had engaged in a pattern of misconduct involving lying and misrepresentation under oath, according to an opinion (PDF) issued on Wednesday. The National Law Journal (sub. req.) has the story. . . . Robinson had removed seven boxes of documents from his law firm, Schottenstein Zox & Dunn, after he initiated job talks with two other firms, the opinion says. He sent one of the firms detailed information about his clients and client-billing reports after obtaining a confidentiality agreement governing the information.


OREGON  

Umatilla district attorney steps aside

Associated Press • Statesman Journal 

08-27-10 -- Umatilla County District Attorney Dean Gushwa has stepped aside while he is under investigation for a possible sex crime. . . . The East Oregonian reports Gushwa said Thursday he asked the state Department of Justice to appoint someone to take his place during the investigation “for the good of the county.”


TEXAS  

Attorney Says Immigration Boss Defamed Him

By Cameron Langford, Courthouse News Service 

08-27-10 -- An experienced attorney claims the Houston District director of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services defamed him by falsely accusing him of "tampering with a government document," which is a felony in Texas. Kurt Clarke says he obtained the documents for a client from the Texas attorney general and submitted them to the USCIS "just as they were received from the A.G." He demands $3 million in punitive damages. . . .      Clarke sued USCIS Houston District Director Sandra Heathman and the agency's national director Alejandro Mayorkas in Federal Court.


UTAH  

Two Utah County women killed in Nepal plane crash

By Donald W. Meyers and Bob Mims, The Salt Lake Tribune

08-26-10 -- Heather Finch and Leuzi Cardoso were co-workers and good friends who loved the outdoors and dreamed of someday hiking in Nepal. . . . On Tuesday, they were close to realizing that dream when their small passenger plane crashed in heavy rain outside Nepal’s capital of Katmandu, killing all 14 people aboard. . . . Finch, 40, of Orem, was the head paralegal at the Provo law firm of Howard, Lewis & Petersen, where Cardoso, 49, of Provo, was the office manager. John Valentine, the Republican state senator from Orem and a partner in the law firm, said Tuesday that the news hit the staff hard. The women were long-term employees: Finch worked for the firm for 15 years and Cardoso had been there 29 years. . . . “This had been their life-long dream, of making a trek to the base camp of Mount Everest,” he said. “This is a horrible tragedy for us all.”


 evidence-of-misconduct_logo_630.jpg

Specials / Evidence Of Misconduct

By David Boeri, A WBUR Series

02-19-10 -- When Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey Auerhahn joined Boston’s war on organized crime, he turned his focus to an up-and-coming mobster named Vincent Ferrara. The operation was called “Tunnel Vision,” fitting for a case in which prosecutors were willing to break the rules to bring down their target. Auerhahn thought he had a smoking gun in a witness who testified that Ferrara ordered a hit. Problem is, the witness lied. Worse, a judge ruled Auerhahn knew he lied — and covered it up. . . . The case raises troubling questions from critics — including judges — who worry that withholding evidence has become a tactic of some federal prosecutors. Those critics question whether Justice can police itself. In three parts, WBUR’s David Boeri examines the case, the actions of the Boston prosecutor and how it was handled by the Department of Justice.


Part I: A Prosecutor, Mobster, A Witness Who Lied

In 2003, a judge found that a federal prosecutor for the U.S. attorney’s office in Boston, Jeffrey Auerhahn, intentionally withheld evidence that could have cleared two men charged in a murder case. In the first report, we consider the crucial evidence that Auerhahn never turned over. Full story »

Part II: ‘The Smokingest Gun’

The Department of Justice has never taken public action to discipline Auerhahn. Now the chief federal judge here has set local proceedings in motion to do what Justice hasn’t: publicly punish him. In the second report, we dive into the misconduct case against Auerhahn. Full story »

Part III: The Judges’ Rebellion

In the third report, we consider how the Department of Justice dealt with Auerhahn, and how it’s come to the point that federal judges in Boston could suspend or even disbar him. Full story »


The Courts:

Rochester resident puts American justice on trial

By Tim Louis Macaluso, rochestercitynewspaper

11-25-09 -- In the opening pages of "Ordinary Justice: How America Holds Court," Amy Bach recounts the story of a Texas defense lawyer, Joe Frank Cannon, who literally fell asleep during the trial of his client, Calvin Burdine. . . . After being convicted of murder for shooting a man during a convenience-store robbery, Burdine was sentenced to death. But in a sadly comical turn of events, a panel of federal appellate judges vigorously debated whether Burdine's attorney had violated the Constitution by repeatedly falling asleep, chin-to-chest, during his client's trial. . . . Burdine's death sentence was overturned and he was granted a new trial. But the real question, Bach says, is how did a defense lawyer sleep through a murder trial without a single objection from the judge, prosecutor, jurors, or courtroom witnesses? . . . After eight years of research, Bach found that such cases are not extraordinary. Instead, she says, they occur with disturbing regularity in courtrooms across the country, and require surprisingly little effort to find.


Missing: Ray F. Gricar Centre County, PA District Attorney

http://www.raygricar.com/ FBI MISSING PERSON

RAY GRICAR

 If you have information regarding the disappearance of Centre County, Pennsylvania District Attorney Ray F. Gricar, please contact the Bellefonte Police Department at (814) 353-2320 or your local law enforcement agency.

Please direct all media inquiries to
Tony Gricar at (937) 287-3841

RAY GRICAR

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INAUGURATED ON: September 6, 2004
Updated 09/02/2010