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June 30-July 1, 2009
GENERAL
Attorneys Unite to Support Government Watchdog Dismissed by Obama
Administration
Noeleen
G. Walder, New York Law Journal
7-1-09 --
Nearly 150 prominent attorneys of all political stripes have banded
together to support one of their own who went to Washington, D.C.,
to serve as a government watchdog, only to be unceremoniously
dismissed by the Obama administration earlier this month. . . . Read
the
letter in support of Walpin (pdf). . . . Appointed by
former President George W. Bush in January 2007, Gerald Walpin, the
former inspector general for the board of the Corporation for
National & Community Service, said that in mid-June, Norman L. Eisen,
special counsel to President Barack Obama, called him, curtly
thanked him for his service and gave him less than an hour to "move
on." . . . The call came after Walpin issued two "substantial
reports" raising questions about the misuse of AmeriCorps funds,
Walpin said. One accused Sacramento mayor Kevin Johnson, a former
NBA basketball star who founded the nonprofit St. HOPE, of misusing
an $850,000 AmeriCorps grant, and the other involved a probe into a
teacher training program at the City University of New York.
FTC Rule on Identity Theft Draws Strong Criticism
From Bar Groups
Daniel
Wise, New York Law Journal
7-1-09 --
The New York State Bar Association Monday became the latest bar
group to protest new Federal Trade Commission rules requiring
lawyers to become involved in preventing identity theft, calling the
move unauthorized, unnecessary and destructive to the
attorney-client relationship. . . . The State Bar's objections
follow those submitted last week by the American Bar Association and
the New York County Lawyers' Association. . . . In addition, the ABA
reports that statewide bar associations in Arkansas,
Colorado, Illinois,
Ohio and Virginia have also
contacted the FTC to express their opposition, with Oregon and
Wisconsin expected to follow shortly. . . . The rules, which are
slated to take effect on Aug. 1, implement a 2003 statute aimed at
curbing identity theft.
Lawyers Remember Michael Jackson for
‘Smooth’ Shoe Patent
By
Martha Neil, ABA Journal
7-1-09 --
As many remember Michael Jackson for his Thriller work or read his
will in the
Smoking Gun today, some lawyers recall him for an
innovative dance shoe patent. . . . The design, which was patented
in 1993 by the pop singer and two partners, contains a special heel
slot. Retractable pegs in a stage floor allowed the singer to anchor
the shoes so he could lean forward beyond his center of gravity, as
he did in his "Smooth Criminal" video, reports
USA Today.
For the 2nd Time in Less Than 3
Months, Judge Sullivan Castigates DOJ
By
Martha Neil, ABA Journal
7-1-09 --
For the second time in less than three months, Judge Emmett Sullivan
offered blistering comments from the bench yesterday castigating the
U.S. Department of Justice concerning its compliance with ethical
obligations to turn over exculpatory evidence to the defense. . . .
In the latest case, the Washington, D.C., federal
district judge questioned whether the DOJ had violated D.C. Rules of
Professional Conduct and standards contained in a U.S. Attorneys
manual for federal prosecutors by either making or failing to
correct false statements to the court, reports the
Blog of Legal Times. . . . The judge did not make any
formal finding of wrongdoing, however, and Paul O’Brien, who serves
as chief of the DOJ Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section says the
government will provide a written response “to educate the court
better” about its handling of a high-profile narcotics case against
Zhenli Ye Gon.
Law Firm Apprentice Programs Add Extra Step for New
Associates
Jeff
Jeffrey, The National Law Journal
6-30-09 --
After three years of law school, a hundred grand of debt and weeks
sweating out a bar review and exam, it's time to start practicing
law in earnest, right? . . . At a handful of firms, the answer is
fast becoming "not yet." These firms are putting new recruits
through additional apprenticeship programs that they say will better
train their attorneys for life at a law firm and for handling
clients. Think of it as the equivalent of a medical residency, only
with suits instead of scrubs. . . . The latest -- and so far largest
-- firm to move to an apprenticeship model, 659-lawyer Howrey,
announced its program last week. Starting next year, first-years at
the firm will get a pay cut -- from $160,000 to $100,000 in base pay
plus a $25,000 bonus to pay down law school loans -- and they'll
spend a good portion of their time attending classes with partners
and shadowing them on client matters. The apprenticeship period will
last two years. . . . Robert Ruyak, Howrey's managing partner, said
associates will be doing far less client work, and when they do work
on client matters it won't necessarily be billed to clients. "We
really want them to focus on learning the skill they need to be
first-rate litigators," Ruyak said.
CALIFORNIA
Last Charge Against High-Profile Litigator Dropped (for Now Anyhoo)
By
Amanda Bronstad | The National Law Journal | New York Lawyer
6-30-09 --
A federal judge on June 29 dismissed the final criminal count
against Pierce O'Donnell, the lead attorney representing Hurricane
Katrina victims in litigation against the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers. . . . O'Donnell, of O'Donnell & Associates in Los
Angeles, was accused of reimbursing employees of his law firm and
other individuals who gave $26,000 in campaign contributions to a
committee supporting a presidential candidate, believed to be former
U.S. Senator John Edwards (D-N.C.). . . . On June 8, U.S. District
Judge S. James Otero of the Central District of California granted
O'Donnell's motion to dismiss the first two counts on the ground
that the Federal Election Campaign Act did not cover the
reimbursement of contributions or indirect contributions. Federal
prosecutors planned to appeal that decision to the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the 9th Circuit.
DISTRICT OF
COLUMBIA
Womble Carlyle Faces Malpractice Suit
Jordan
Weissmann, The National Law Journal
7-1-09 --
Womble, Carlyle, Sandridge & Rice is facing a legal
malpractice suit from a Catholic radio broadcaster and education
group that alleges mistakes by the firm cost it millions of dollars.
. . . The
North American Catholic Educational Programming Foundation
alleges that Womble missed crucial deadlines and made other mistakes
that caused the foundation to lose its bids for several
telecommunications channels and new broadcast licenses. The bids
were made in small markets, such as Eureka,
Calif., as well as larger cities
such as Las Vegas and Toledo, Ohio. . . . The foundation's
complaint, filed last week at the U.S. District Court for the
District of Columbia by a legal team from
Zuckerman Spaeder -- including Mark Foster, Thomas Mason
and Andrew Goldfarb -- names Womble as well as former Womble
attorney Howard Barr as defendants. Womble's general counsel
declined to comment on the suit, but a secretary at its Washington,
D.C., office said Barr had not worked at the firm in more than a
year. No new contact details for Barr could immediately be found.
LOUISIANA
High court suspends BR lawyer
By Joe
Gyan Jr., Advocate staff writer
7-1-09 --
A Baton Rouge lawyer who claimed a Gold Club stripper was driving
his BMW when it broadsided another car, resulting in his second DWI
arrest, has been suspended from practicing law for three years. . .
. The Louisiana Supreme Court took Stephen J. Holliday’s 2001 and
2002 DWI arrests into account, as well as two other misconduct
charges, in giving him the maximum suspension allowed. . . . In
addition to the DWI arrests, Holliday was arrested on charges of
simple criminal damage to property and violating a restraining order
in 2001 after he allegedly smashed the windows of his estranged
wife’s boyfriend’s truck with a shovel, the high court noted. . . .
The final misconduct charge accused Holliday of failing to cooperate
with the disciplinary investigation by unjustifiably invoking his
5th Amendment right against self-incrimination when asked how many
times he had been arrested.
Judge, 2 lawyers charged in corruption case
Associated Press WXVT
7-1-09 --
Two attorneys have been charged with engaging in a scheme to pay a
Louisiana judge for orders that allowed prisoners to be freed from
custody. . . . State District Judge Wayne Cresap was arrested on
corruption charges in April. . . . Federal charges filed Wednesday
accuse attorneys Nunzio Salvadore Cusimano Jr. and Victor Dauterive
of paying Cresap to convert prisoners' secured bonds to unsecured
personal surety bonds.
MASSACHUSETTS
Court Says 'Civil Action' Lawyer Had Right to Sue Fellow Attorneys
Sheri
Qualters, The National Law Journal
7-1-09 --
Jan Schlichtmann didn't violate state law when he sued
his fellow plaintiffs lawyers in a fee fight, a Massachusetts court
ruled Monday. . . . But the ruling isn't likely to help Schlichtmann
recover any money. . . . The lawyer, best known for his role in the
case that inspired the book and movie "A
Civil Action," had sued to try to recover $9 million in lost
legal fees. He claimed that he lost the money when
Nestle Waters North America Inc. backed out of a
settlement to prevent a lawsuit against it for allegedly making
fraudulent claims about the purity of its water. . . . Schlichtmann
and his fellow plaintiffs lawyers had entered into an agreement with
each other and several Nestle competitors to bring legal claims
against the company. The lawyers also found a plaintiff for a
consumer case. . . . When three members of the plaintiffs team
pulled out to pursue their own separate cases, Nestle withdrew from
the settlement. . . . The fee fight has already been decided:
Schlichtmann lost on summary judgment. The case decided Monday
involved whether he had the right to sue in the first place. . . .
One of the lawyers targeted in the fee fight, Max Stern, of
Boston-based
Stern Shapiro Weissberg & Garin, said that Schlichtmann
had violated Massachusetts' anti-SLAPP law (or so-called strategic
lawsuits against public participation, which directly or indirectly
threatens citizens' rights to petition the government) and filed an
interlocutory appeal.
Former Bingham Associate Files Date Rape Suit
Against Firm
Brian
Baxter, The American Lawyer
7-1-09 --
Months after a
Massachusetts state agency dismissed a sexual harassment and
retaliation complaint against
Bingham McCutchen filed by a former associate, the firm
has been slapped with a civil suit by Michelle Moor, who is seeking
damages for allegedly being drugged at a holiday party by a Bingham
staffer. . . .
Courthouse News reports that Moor filed an
18-page complaint in Suffolk County Court in Boston last
week alleging that she was drugged with Tegretol -- an anti-seizure
medication that causes memory loss when mixed with alcohol -- while
attending a lunch party with about 100 other Bingham employees at
Lucia Ristorante & Bar in Boston's North End in December
2007. . . . The Am Law Daily
reported on Moor's allegations in May 2008 when the
former litigation associate claimed that during an office outing at
another Boston restaurant called
Grill 23 a month later, a litigation support employee
told her that he liked to have sex with unconscious women and knew
how to get "roofies," a slang term for the date rape drug Rohypnol.
Moor also claims that at least one other female associate was
drugged and raped by a Bingham employee the previous year.
MICHIGAN
Paralegal at U.S. Attorney's Office suspended
Margaret
Lucas Agius, Detroit Legal News Examiner
6-30-09 --
The Detroit News reports that a paralegal at the United States
Attorney's Office is suspended after officials suspected she leaked
confidential information to Detroit political consultant Sam Riddle
while he was under criminal investigation. . . . U.S. Attorney's
Office spokeswoman Gina Balaya said Monday that Wendolyn Greene,
formerly Wendolyn Johnson, "is still an employee of this office."
Beyond that, "we can't discuss her status at all," she said. Greene
herself answered "no" Monday when asked if she still worked for the
federal prosecutor's office in Detroit, where she was a paralegal in
the special prosecutions unit.
NEW JERSEY
NEW YORK
Amherst attorney charged in attempted rape
Buffalo
News
7-1-09 --
An attorney from Amherst has an Aug. 11 court date on attempted rape
and two other felony charges following an incident two weeks ago at
the home of a woman he knows. . . . Amherst police charged Philip R.
Rothschild III, 46, with first-degree attempted rape, criminal
sexual act, burglary, unlawful imprisonment and aggravated
harassment after the June 17 incident, police said. He was arrested
the next day.
Former Latham Partner Gets 15 Months in Prison for
Defrauding Clients and Firm
New York
Law Journal
6-30-09 --
A former partner at Latham & Watkins was sentenced Friday to 15
months in prison followed by three years of supervised release and
ordered to pay a $10,000 fine and $350,000 in restitution to Latham
for defrauding both clients and his own firm. . . . Samuel A.
Fishman, 51, of Fairlawn, N.J., a mergers and acquisitions
specialist in the firm's New York office from 1993 to 2005,
pleaded guilty to a single count of mail fraud in March 2008.
He faced a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. . . . Fishman
admitted that he had billed fraudulent expenses to clients by
mischaracterizing some nonreimbursable costs, such as local meals
and parking, as other reimbursable costs, such as photocopying and
express mail, and had inflated other, otherwise reimbursable
expenses.
PENNSYLVANIA
Powell pleads guilty
By
Michael Sisak, Staff Writer
7-1-09 --
Robert J. Powell, the attorney and power broker behind the Luzerne
County kids-for-cash corruption scandal, pleaded guilty today in
U.S. District Court to charges of failing to report a felony and
being an accessory to a conspiracy. . . . Powell, 49, did not speak
as he walked from the courtroom to an elevator, escorted by a U.S.
Marshal. His attorneys, Mark Sheppard and Joseph D'Andrea, also
declined comment. Sheppard said his office will issue a brief
statement later this morning. . . . Powell paid disgraced former
judges Mark A. Ciavarella Jr. and Michael T. Conahan more than
$770,000 in kickbacks for facilitating the development of two
privately owned juvenile detention centers — Pennsylvania Child Care
in Pittston Township and Western Pa. Child Care in Butler County.
TEXAS
Alternative Billing Increasingly Important for Texas Firms, Survey
Shows
Jeanne Graham, Texas Lawyer
7-1-09 --
Each Wednesday at noon Texas time, all of the lawyers
in
Susman Godfrey's five offices are invited to dial in to
vote yea or nay on proposed cases that require alternative --
nonhourly -- billing. . . . Kenneth S. Marks, a partner in the
firm's Houston office, says he was ready to vote thumbs up for a
defense case in which the client would pay a fixed fee and a
negative contingent fee, which is like a bonus. "There's a specific
claim made against the potential client for a specific amount, and
if we are able to resolve it for less than that, we get a percentage
of the savings," Marks says. . . . As it turns out, the case
proposed by Bill Carmody, a partner in the firm's New York office,
would have created a conflict of interest for the firm so it didn't
take the case, says founding partner Stephen D. Susman. But the
hybrid fee arrangement of a fixed fee plus a negative contingent fee
is representative of the kind of flexibility firms can use in
alternative billing, he says.
Dallas County judges using cheaper defense
attorneys for the poor
Kevin
Krause/ Dallas Morning News Reporter
6-30-09 --
Dallas County officials announced this
morning during a budget session that the county criminal court
judges are saving money by appointing fewer private defense lawyers
to cases. . . . State and county studies have long shown that it's
cheaper for counties to use public defenders rather than
court-appointed attorneys. And in the misdemeanor courts, where most
cases end with relatively easy plea deals, there's little reason not
to tap public defenders. . . . The judges -- particularly in the
district courts -- were
initially slow to catch on to this concept.
Ryan Brown, the county budget
director, said 10 of the 13 county criminal courts (aka misdemeanor
courts) each have two public defenders. Brown said the result is
very marginal court-appointed attorney costs.

June 27-June 29, 2009
GENERAL
U.S. Attorney Firings 'No. 1 on the Hit Parade' at House Judiciary
Committee
Mike Scarcella, The National Law Journal
6-29-09 --
A House Judiciary Committee lawyer said Friday the committee has
received a "pretty good number of internal White House memos"
through an agreement with the White House amid
the investigation of the firing of nine U.S. Attorneys in 2006.
. . . The documents "do provide more information" about the
controversial firing of the Republican-appointed U.S. Attorneys
under then-Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, said Elliot Mincberg,
chief counsel for oversights and investigations at the House
Judiciary Committee, who spoke at a forum Friday on prosecution
misconduct. . . . Mincberg said the documents produced through
the agreement remain confidential (for now) but said
on-the-record depositions of Karl Rove and former White House
counsel Harriet Miers will be made public. Miers met with House
Judiciary staff earlier this month behind closed doors, according to
published reports. Mincberg declined to say when Rove is expected to
be deposed.
John Rizzo: The most influential career
lawyer in CIA history
John Rizzo, acting general counsel, has long guided the agency
through murky legal matters, but he's paying the price for it.
By Greg
Miller, Los Angeles Times
6-29-09 --
Reporting from Washington -- In his memoir, former CIA Director George J. Tenet described the agency's first course of action
in a crisis. "Despite what
Hollywood might have you believe," Tenet wrote, "you don't call in
the tough guys; you call in the lawyers." . . . For more than three
decades, that almost always has meant making a call to John A.
Rizzo. . . . The acting general counsel at the CIA, Rizzo has guided generations of agency leaders on the legal contours
of clandestine operations and the often-ensuing investigations. . .
. At CIA headquarters, he is known for his eye-watering wardrobe -- with ties,
cuff links and suspenders colored like scoops of sherbet. His legal
approach, however, always accommodated shades of gray, earning him a
reputation among spies as an ally who understood the murky morality
of what they do. . . . When he retires this summer, Rizzo will go
out as the most influential career lawyer in
CIA history, having risen to the top
of the agency's legal ranks while leaving his mark on classified
programs from proxy wars in Central America to Predator strikes in
Pakistan.
A Legacy of Litigation Survives the King of Pop
Amanda
Bronstad, The National Law Journal
6-29-09 --
When
pop legend Michael Jackson died on Thursday, he left
behind multiple lawsuits that are pending against, and some brought
on behalf of, himself and his production company, MJJ Productions
Inc. . . . Lawyers handling those cases are spread across the
country, managing everything from breach-of-contract disputes to
employee claims to copyright infringement. It's unclear who would
represent Jackson's estate in the
litigation. . . . "I imagine this is going to be a very complicated
engagement -- the competing claims, the uncertainty and who might
owe what to whom," said Jerry Hawxhurst, a partner at
Baker Marquart Crone & Hawxhurst in Los Angeles.
Hawxhurst represents Julien's Auction House, which Jackson's company
sued in March to stop the sale of more than 2,000 of his personal
items at Neverland Ranch.
ARIZONA
Police: Child Porn Linked To Attorney
Flash Drive Found In Busy Parking Lot
Omadelle
Nelson, Reporter, KPHO.com
6-27-09 --
A Valley attorney was booked on suspicion of having child
pornography on his computer. . . . David William Curtis Jr., 63,
faces 10 counts of sexual exploitation of a minor, the maximum
amount of charges a person can face for crime, said a Tempe police
spokesman. . . . Police said an employee of Tempe Marketplace found
a computer flash drive in a parking lot south of Harkins Theater at
Tempe Marketplace. . . . Police said after the employee found the
device, he took it home and put it in his computer and found several
files with "images that depict the sexual exploitation of a minor."
. . . “I’m Mr. Curtis,” replied Curtis Jr.'s father when he answered
to the door to their Phoenix home. “I have nothing to say to you.
Goodbye.”

DISTRICT OF
COLUMBIA
D.C. Circuit Upholds Dismissal of $50 Million Malpractice Suit
Against Pillsbury
Mike
Scarcella, The National Law Journal
6-29-09 --
A federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., Friday unanimously upheld
the dismissal of a $50 million malpractice suit against
Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman. . . . The U.S. Court of
Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
ruled that Capitol Hill Group's claims -- stemming from
the work two partners performed in representing Capitol Hill Group
in a zoning proceeding in the District of Columbia -- are barred by
res judicata. . . . Chief Judge Royce Lamberth of U.S.
District Court for the District of Columbia granted summary judgment
in favor of the firm last year. . . . Capitol Hill Group had filed
for bankruptcy in 2002 and retained Pillsbury. CHG also brought the
firm in for representation before the District of Columbia Board of
Zoning Appeals. CHG was involved in a dispute about the number of parking spaces at
CHG's primary property, which is leased to a nursing home and to a
hospital.
FLORIDA
Does lawyer who bares sole have an ace in the hole?
By Frank
Cerabino, Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
6-27-09 --
The holes in the soles of a lawyer's shoes have become a legal issue
during a civil trial in the Palm Beach County Courthouse. . . .
Defense lawyer Michael Robb has been showing up in Circuit Judge
Donald Hafele's courtroom with a pair of black tasseled Cole Haan
loafers that have visible holes in both soles. . . . "I've had
pretty good luck with these shoes," Robb said. "They're comfortable
and I wear them." . . . But they bothered the opposing lawyer, Bill
Bone, who characterized the shoes in a court motion as part of
Robb's trial strategy. . . . "Part of this strategy is to present
Mr. Robb and his client as modest individuals who are so frugal that
Mr. Robb has to wear shoes with holes in the soles," Bone wrote.
"Mr. Robb is known to stand at sidebar with one foot crossed
casually beside the other so that the holes in his shoes are readily
apparent to the jury who are intently watching all counsel and the
Court at that moment."
GEORGIA
Disbarred Lawyer Says He's a Victim of Federal Fraud Suit
Greg
Land, Fulton County Daily Report
6-29-09 --
Disbarred lawyer James S. Quay, the target of an injunction filed by
the State Bar of Georgia earlier this month, said he's long since
ceased advertising himself as an attorney, and that the Bar's action
is actually the result of an outcry by the victims of an unrelated,
multimillion-dollar Ponzi scheme orchestrated by another lawyer, and
in which he was an unwitting participant. . . . That lawyer, Robert
P. Copeland,
pleaded guilty to federal wire-fraud charges in April and
is free on $100,000 bond pending sentencing in July; Copeland was
disbarred earlier this month. . . . Quay was not named in Copeland's
criminal indictment, but he and the company he works for, Perimeter
Wealth Management, are among more than a dozen individual and
corporate defendants in a federal suit charging Copeland and his
co-defendants with fleecing investors of more than $40 million in
bogus securities.
INDIANA
Light on lawyers
Think the Hoosier state brims with attorneys? Guess again—they’re
comparatively scarce
Scott
Olson, IBJ staff
6-27-09 --
If the country indeed has too many lawyers, as the knock on the
profession suggests, Indiana may be exempt from the conversation. .
. . Only North and South Dakota,
Tennessee and Wisconsin have
smaller proportions of lawyers within their working populations,
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics figures show. In Indiana, 0.24
percent of the work force of 2.9 million are attorneys—one-third the
concentration of New York’s. What does that say about Indiana? And
more important, does it even matter that Indiana has so few lawyers?
Prominent legal professionals attribute Indiana’s depressed ranking
to a shrinking base of corporate headquarters and an exodus of law
school graduates. A less-litigious climate and relatively low wages
are thought to be factors, too. . . . As a result, Indiana may be
missing out on many of the brightest young legal minds the state’s
four law schools have to offer. And with fewer lawyers, the state’s
push to provide free legal advice to the most needy may be falling
short, they argue.
Wilder resigns as attorney for council, school board
Sellers: He'll continue to litigate cases he's handling at present
David.Mann, Evening News and Tribune
6-25-09 --
Larry Wilder, the attorney who was found by police sleeping in his
neighbor’s garbage can last week after a night of drinking, has
resigned as the Jeffersonville City Council attorney. . . . He also
will quit as attorney for the board of trustees at Greater Clark
County Schools, newsgathering partner WLKY-TV in Louisville reported
today. . . . Jeffersonville City Council President Connie Sellers
said Wilder resigned from his duties for the council Monday evening.
A council meeting to discuss his situation was canceled early today.
MASSACHUSETTS
Alleged fraud puts immigrants in limbo
Dozens of lawyer’s worker petitions denied
By Maria
Sacchetti, Boston Globe Staff
6-28-09 --
Attorney John K. Dvorak was their passport to America. . . .
Hundreds of immigrants desperately seeking legal residency poured
into his Boston office, waiting for hours as the line curled out the
door. In the Brazilian community, word had spread from cooks to
bakers to seamstresses that Dvorak was the lawyer to know. They
filled out piles of paperwork, paid thousands of dollars, and waited
for green cards to arrive in the mail. . . . Now, eight years later,
the US government has begun rejecting dozens of Dvorak’s clients,
saying it found fraud, such as fake employment letters, in a
significant number of cases, according to a copy of a rejection
letter that lawyers say clients are receiving. The unexpected action
is wreaking havoc from Maine to Cape Cod. Immigrants who plunked
down hard-earned cash with high hopes of staying in America are now
racing to other lawyers for help. . . . Those lawyers say dozens of
immigrants with legitimate cases have been unfairly swept up in the
federal government’s action. . . . As a result, lawyers say,
hundreds of immigrants and their children now could be deported or
have their families split up.
Law firm sued over allegations that include drugging
By Todd
Wallack, Boston Globe staff
6-26-09 --
A former associate at Bingham McCutchen LLP sued the Boston law firm
this week, complaining the firm brushed off her complaints that she
was drugged by a co-worker at its holiday party in 2007. . . . The
associate who filed the complaint, Michelle Moor, also alleged that
a Bingham employee said that he enjoyed giving women date-rape drugs
and having sex with them, but Bingham failed to fully investigate
the allegations. Moor also said she was told a co-worker was drugged
and raped by a Bingham employee the previous year. . . . Moor, 31,
who left Bingham in February, 2008, previously made such claims in a
complaint filed with the Massachusetts Commission Against
Discrimination that same year. But Moor, who now works as an
attorney at Kotin, Crabtree & Strong LLP, filed suit in Suffolk
Superior Court after the state commission dismissed her complaint in
April. She is seeking $155,000 in lost wages plus an unspecified
amount for emotional distress and other damages.
MICHIGAN
City to let discipline board talk to attorney
Privilege waived for inquiry into text message lawyers
By
Zachary Gorchow • Free Press Staff Writer
6-26-09 --
The Detroit City Council waived attorney-client privilege for one of
the city's lawyers Thursday so she can testify before a board
investigating whether several attorneys should face professional
discipline for their conduct in the text message scandal. . . . With
the 5-2 vote, attorney Ellen Ha, who is the city's Freedom of
Information Act officer, can answer questions from the Attorney
Discipline Board about the city's handling of the Free Press'
request for all documents pertaining to the city's $8.4-million
settlement of police whistle-blower lawsuits. . . . Former Mayor
Kwame Kilpatrick and his then-chief of staff Christine Beatty lied
under oath during the trial about whether they had a romantic
relationship and about the firing of a former deputy police chief.
After the city lost a $6-million verdict in the case, the cops'
attorney confronted the mayor's attorney with text messages showing
Kilpatrick and Beatty had lied during the trial. The city agreed to
settle for $8.4 million, but ripped up the agreement after the Free
Press filed a FOIA request for all settlement documents.
MINNESOTA
Married, unmarried couples deserve equal treatment, Minnesota State
Bar Association says
Report promotes reforms for unwed
By Emily
Gurnon, pioneerpress.com
6-27-09 --
Married and unmarried couples should be treated equally under
Minnesota law, the Minnesota
State Bar Association said in a unanimous policy vote by its general
assembly Friday morning. . . . The group voted to approve the
executive summary of a report by its Unmarried Couples task force.
The next step will be for the task force to forward specific
legislative recommendations to the various sections of the bar
association, which may work with the Legislature to get them passed,
said David Ahlvers, who co-chaired the task force. . . . "I believe
the Minnesota State Bar Association, in approving this report, has
taken a huge step forward toward equality in Minnesota," Ahlvers
said.
Supreme Court reprimands Dakota County attorney
Joy
Powell, Star Tribune
6-25-09 --
Dakota County Attorney James Backstrom was officially reprimanded
Thursday by the Minnesota Supreme Court for his efforts to
discourage public medical examiners from testifying as defense
witnesses. . . . Backstrom last month apologized for his "lack of
judgment" and said he accepted the proposed discipline, which was
recommended by the Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility
after an investigation into his conduct related to a 2008 Washington
County murder trial. . . . Backstrom sent e-mails to Dakota County
Coroner Lindsey Thomas, objecting to one of her lieutenants
testifying for the defense in the case of a mother accused of
killing her baby. He said he'd consider withdrawing his support for
her reappointment to the coroner post if representatives of the
office continued serving as paid defense experts.

MISSISSIPPI
Legal program for poor may see layoffs, cutbacks
Jimmie
E. Gates • clarionledger.com
6-29-09 --
A program that provides volunteer lawyers to help low-income
Mississippi residents with civil legal help could be forced to lay off staff and
reduce services. . . . The economy has reduced funding for the
Mississippi Volunteer Lawyers Project, which is a partnership
between the Mississippi Bar and the federally funded Mississippi
Legal Services. . . . In 2008, more than 10,000 people contacted
MVLP offices last year with a legal issue. MVLP staffers and some
1,850 volunteer lawyers helped more than 8,178 people, said MVLP
Executive Director Shirley Williams. . . . But Williams said she
will have to lay off most of her 10-person staff unless other
funding is found. . . . "Losing experienced staff and helping fewer
people is no fun," Williams said. "We will get more calls from
helpless individuals ... more than we would if the economy was
fine."
NEW YORK
Poverty Lawyer Finds Coverage Problems in ‘Travel Protection’
By Debra
Cassens Weiss, ABA Journal
6-29-09 --
A poverty lawyer turned to a newspaper columnist after her parents
discovered their “travel protection” plan wouldn’t give them a
cruise refund, despite her father’s heart attack and later death. .
. . Catherine Bendor’s parents had agreed to pay for a cruise
costing nearly $10,000, and paid an extra $978 for travel
protection, Bendor told the
New York Times’ “Haggler” columnist. Mailings sent
after the couple purchased the travel protection plan said they
would not forfeit the cost of the cruise if they had to cancel for a
covered medical reason; the fine print warned that any trip “refund”
would be in the form of a credit for a future trip. . . . Bendor, a
Harvard law grad and a lawyer with the National Law Center on
Homelessness and Poverty, told the Haggler her mother wanted her
money back. The columnist helped Bendor resolve the matter—details
weren’t released. But the column questions whether such protection
plans can be misleading—and also looks at the specifics of the sales
tactics used in the case of Bendor’s parents.
NY Lawyer, Firm Can Represent Wife in Divorce Though
Husband Consulted Them First
By
Vesselin Mitev | New York Law Journal | New York Lawyer
6-29-09 --
A consultation with a law firm to "possibly" represent a husband in
a divorce does not automatically bar the firm from representing the
wife in the same case, a Long Island judge has ruled, especially if the consultation was solely an attempt
to disqualify the firm. . . . "The blanket assertion that a
consultation between a matrimonial attorney and a prospective client
should result in a per se disqualification, is inaccurate," Supreme
Court Justice Robert A. Ross of Nassau County held in
Limprevil v. Limprevil, 200242-09, in ordering a
hearing to determine the extent of the consultation. . . . Fred
Limprevil, a substitute teacher, sued for divorce from his wife,
Claude, who is a nurse, in May 2009. But approximately a year ago,
he consulted with David Vallone of Gervase & Vallone, the Garden
City law firm now representing his wife, to inquire whether they
would represent him, according to the decision. . . . According to
Mr. Limprevil, "there is clearly a conflict of interest and the only
way to resolve same would be for [the firm] to be disqualified as my
wife's attorney."
TEXAS
Clark, Thomas & Winters Agrees to Pay Millions to Former Client
Mary
Alice Robbins, Texas Lawyer
6-29-09 --
A double whammy hit Austin, Texas-based
Clark, Thomas & Winters this month. On June 17, a Blanco
County, Texas, grand jury indicted Bennie Fuelberg, former general
manager of
Pedernales Electric Cooperative (PEC), and Walter Demond,
a former Clark Thomas shareholder who represented the PEC for two
decades. Then on June 18, the firm agreed to pay the PEC a $4.1
million settlement, thereby avoiding a civil suit. . . . The two
indictments obtained by the Texas office of the attorney general,
which investigated and will prosecute Fuelberg and Demond, charge
both men with misapplication of fiduciary property, theft and money
laundering stemming from allegations of payments of PEC money to two
outside consultants. . . . Attorneys for Fuelberg and Demond say
their clients have done nothing wrong.

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June 25-June 26, 2009
GENERAL
Former N.J. Prosecutor Defends Contract for Ashcroft
David
Ingram, The National Law Journal
6-26-09 --
The former U.S. Attorney for New Jersey told lawmakers Thursday that
he did nothing wrong when he steered a multimillion-dollar contract
to the firm of former Attorney General John Ashcroft. . . .
Christopher Christie said during a House subcommittee hearing that
controversy over the no-bid contract -- worth as much as $52 million
-- has been exaggerated by Democrats looking to derail his bid as a
Republican running for New Jersey governor. He said he recommended
Ashcroft's firm for the job because he knew that Ashcroft was
qualified and because there was no Justice Department process to put
the contract out to bid. . . . Christie, telling lawmakers he had a
train to catch, finally walked out of the hearing in frustration
after two and a half hours. Democrats tried to get him to stay as
television cameras followed him out.
Free-Riding Lawyers on the Obamacare Bus
By
Gilbert Ross, M.D., American Spectator
6-26-09 --
This month, President Obama ventured into the lion's den of
healthcare reform. He tried to cajole a reluctant American Medical
Association -- and the physicians they represent -- to accept his
push for more government-provided medical service. What he did not
do, though, was offer to remove the largest thorn in physicians'
paw: run-amok malpractice lawsuits. . . . The President's stated
goal is to get more Americans more healthcare at less cost -- which
means getting multiple healthcare interest groups to pitch in and
give up some of their traditional perks. Unfortunately, his pitch to
the AMA offered only a pretense of concern for doctors' needs. Obama
merely dangled a tort-reform carrot before the doctors -- and
exempted the plaintiffs' bar from his general call for team play and
mutual sacrifice. . . . He specifically rejected capping damage
awards for non-economic issues (i.e., "pain and suffering"). Such
caps are the only medical malpractice remedy that reduces liability
insurance premiums and decreases the need for the wasteful and
inefficient practice known "defensive medicine."
Weil's AIG Fees Could Exceed $25 Million, Filing
Shows
Nate
Raymond, The American Lawyer
6-25-09 --
AIG has no doubt been a boon to the coffers of the law firms advising the
company throughout its divesture efforts. But how big of a boon has
never come to light -- until now. . . . In a filing in the General
Motors bankruptcy Tuesday
(pdf),
Weil, Gotshal & Manges disclosed that 3 percent of its
revenue during the last 12 months came from
AIG. The firm revealed the fees in
the process of disclosing possible conflicts of interest in the GM
bankruptcy. . . . Exactly what dollar amount that equals is unclear.
But back-of-the-envelope math suggests the fees are at least $25
million to $36 million, if not more. . . . Here's the math. Weil's
filing says
Lehman Brothers made up 6.6 percent of its revenue in the
last year. Weil has already
submitted a $55 million bill for its work on the Lehman case
between September 15 to January 31. A little cross multiplication,
then, would put its AIG fees easily in excess of $25 million.
What's the Damage? Lawyers Line Up for
Payment in Chrysler Case
Brian
Baxter, The American Lawyer
6-25-09 --
Jones Day,
Schulte Roth & Zabel and
Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel have submitted
applications for nearly $19 million in attorneys' fees in the
Chapter 11 case of the company formerly known as Chrysler. . . .
As we reported last week, Chrysler's bankruptcy docket
now has a new name: Old Carco LLC. The company was a profitable one
in May -- for bankruptcy lawyers, at least. (Hourly billing rates
are listed parenthetically as available.) . . . Chrysler's
bankruptcy counsel at Jones Day,
which submitted bills for $18.5 million last month,
sought an additional $12.7 million in fees and expenses for work its
lawyers did for the Auburn Hills, Mich.-based automaker between
April 30 and May 31.
Inspector general fired to avoid embarrassing Obamas?
Report cites his dedication to investigating AmeriCorps
© 2009 WorldNetDaily
|

Gerald Walpin |
6-24-09 --
A new report reveals that there is substantial evidence that
Inspector General Gerald Walpin was fired from his post where he was
investigating AmeriCorps funding to avoid embarrassment for
President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle. . . . The report is
from Byron York at the Washington Examiner. On his
blog, he wrote he interviewed a Republican member of the
board for the Corporation for National and Community Service, the
overseer for AmeriCorps, a favorite program for the Obamas. . . .
The report said the board discussion was revolving around the St.
HOPE program in California, which has been given hundreds of
thousands of federal dollars and used it for, among other things,
washing cars for Obama friend and Sacramento mayor Kevin Johnson. .
. . The board member told York Walpin opposed an agreement that
would require a return of only part of the allegedly misused money
and leave Johnson open to receiving more federal dollars. . . . "Walpin
told board members at the meeting that he wanted to issue some sort
of public statement to the effect that there should be more
investigation of the St. HOPE matter," York reported. . . . "He
said, 'I feel so strongly about this that today I am going to issue
a statement to the press calling for further investigation,'" the
member said, York reported. "The board members all caught that."

CALIFORNIA
East Bay lawyers convicted of manipulating immigration of asylum
seekers
Mercury
News Staff Report
6-26-09 --
Two immigration attorneys from the East Bay are among five men who were
convicted Thursday by a federal grand jury in a long-running scheme
to defraud federal immigration services by filing hundreds of false
asylum claims from 2000 through 2004, according to the Department of
Justice. . . . Manjit Kaur Rai, of Discovery Bay, Jagprit Singh
Sekhon, formerly of Oakland, and a third lawyer specialized in
representation of clients seeking asylum. . . . Rai, 33, and Sekhon,
42, had offices in Sacramento and San Francisco. Between the late
1990s and 2004, they filed hundreds of asylum applications with the
U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service and its successor, the
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service, on behalf of clients who
were primarily Indian, Romanian, Fijian and Nepali, the DOJ said. .
. . Prosecutors said the defendants filed hundreds of asylum
applications using fake stories of persecution that the clients had
supposedly suffered in their home countries on ethnic, religious, or
political grounds.
FLORIDA
Lawyer Burton was 'one of best'
By
Shannon Behnken, Brandon News and Tribune
6-26-09 --
Prominent Tampa trial lawyer Glenn M. Burton died Wednesday, the
same day Florida's governor decided to appoint him to the board of
the Tampa Sports Authority. . . . Burton, 51, was driving back from
a Florida Bar convention in Orlando when his heart stopped shortly
after 6 p.m., said Nancy Burton, his wife of 28 years. . . . The two
were on Interstate 4, near the Hard Rock Casino when Burton slumped
over. His wife said the car was at full speed when she took control
of the wheel, used her hand to press the brake and guided the car
onto the grassy median. She and paramedics tried to perform
cardiopulmonary resuscitation but were unsuccessful. . . . "Everyone
who ever came in contact with Glenn remembers his whit, sense of
humor and generosity," Nancy Burton said. . . . In addition to his
wife, he is survived by his son, Glenn Mathew Burton Jr, 21. . . .
Burton was a partner in the Tampa law firm, Burton, Beytin &
McLaughlin. He was active in the Florida Bar and was chairman-elect
of the Trail Lawyers Section of the Bar. He was to be named chairman
this week and to officially take the position next week. . . . He
graduated from the University of
Florida in 1980 and from Stetson University College of Law in 1983.
ILLINOIS
Unqualified Law Student Admitted in Exchange for Promise of 5 Jobs
By Molly
McDonough, ABA Journal
6-26-09 --
The most prestigious Illinois public university took another hit to
its reputation Thursday when it released e-mail messages that show
an unqualified, but politically connected law student was admitted
to the University of Illinois in exchange for a promise that other students would find gainful
employment upon graduation. . . . The documents—released by U of I
as part of an unfolding newspaper and state investigation of
clout-heavy admissions at the university—show for the first time
that favors were sought in order to accept unqualified students, aka
"special admits," the
Chicago Tribune reports. . . . One message shows that U
of I Chancellor Richard Herman forced the law school to admit a
student connected to now-impeached Gov. Rod Blagojevich. As part of
the admissions deal, it was agreed that five other law school
graduates would get jobs.
MASSACHUSETTS
Yeah, That's the Ticket!: Online Law School Grad Who Sued to Take
Bar Gets His License
By Sheri
Qualters | The National Law Journal | New York Lawyer
An online law school graduate who
sued the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts for the opportunity
to take that state's bar examination is now a newly minted
Massachusetts lawyer. . . . The Boston Herald first reported that
Ross E. Mitchell is the first Massachusetts lawyer with an
exclusively online legal education. Mitchell was sworn in on June 22
and has 90 days to register with the Massachusetts Board of Bar
Overseers, according to the court. . . . Mitchell, a Newton,
Mass.-based independent computer consultant, said he views his legal
credentials as "another tool in his consulting arsenal."
MISSISSIPPI
Ex-attorney accuses fed prosecutors of misconduct
Associated Press, Picayune Item Published
6-25-09 --
An imprisoned former prominent Mississippi attorney wants his
bribery conviction thrown out, with his lawyer on Wednesday accusing
prosecutors of withholding evidence as in the botched case against
former U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens. . . . Paul Minor was one of
Mississippi’s most successful attorneys and was a big donor to
Democratic candidates before being convicted on corruption charges
in 2007. Minor has long said he was the target of a political
prosecution by the Justice Department under Republican President
George W. Bush. . . . Minor’s attorney, Hiram Eastland Jr., said he
sent a letter to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, who was
appointed after Democrat Barack Obama became president in January.
Eastland said Minor’s case has striking similarities to the Stevens’
case. . . . “This is like the Stevens case on steroids,” Eastland
told The Associated Press in a telephone interview Wednesday.
NEVADA
9th Circuit OKs Suing Prosecutor Over DNA Sample
Evan
Hill, The Recorder
6-25-09 --
A Las Vegas prosecutor and a police detective can both be sued by a
former defendant for taking a sample of his DNA without a warrant, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled on
Tuesday. . . . The 2-1 opinion touched on the scope of defendants'
privacy rights when they have been arrested and charged but are
still awaiting trial. It also addressed the lengths to which law
enforcement officials can go to collect
DNA. . . . "The warrantless,
suspicionless, forcible extraction of a DNA sample from a private
citizen violates the Fourth Amendment," Judge Sidney Thomas wrote
for the majority in
Friedman v. Boucher (pdf), 08 C.D.O.S. 7786. Thomas
was joined by 3rd Circuit Senior Judge Jane Roth, who was sitting by
designation.
NEW JERSEY
Parsippany board's ex-attorney disbarred over corruption
Ex-counsel to planners pleaded guilty in '08
By Peggy
Wright • Staff Writer
6-26-09 --
John J. Montefusco Sr., the former counsel to Parsippany's Planning
Board who admitted guilt in a federal corruption case, has been
disbarred by order of the state Supreme Court. . . . Montefusco
voluntarily agreed to disbarment and that consent, made public
Thursday, was accepted on June 4 by Supreme Court Chief Justice
Stuart Rabner. . . . Montefusco, a Parsippany resident and attorney
since 1966, pleaded guilty in February 2008 to mail fraud in U.S.
District Court in Trenton. He first was suspended from practicing
law on Feb. 21, 2008, after his guilty plea. . . . As the foundation
of his plea, he admitted he made $26,000 by giving "official
assistance" and easing the way in the planning process for a
prominent developer, Edward Mosberg.
Essex County attorney admits to practicing law after
having license suspended
by Jim
Lockwood/The Star-Ledger
6-24-09 --
An attorney from Essex County who had his law license
suspended three years ago pleaded guilty today to
continuing to practice law, authorities said. . . .
Andrew Kimmel, 65, of West Orange, whose office was in the Cedar
Knolls section of Hanover, Morris County, was suspended from
practicing law in May 2006 and pleaded guilty in Superior Court in
Morristown to fourth-degree unauthorized practice of law, the Morris
County Prosecutor's Office said. . . . In April 2008, the New Jersey
Office of Attorney Ethics alerted the prosecutor's office that
Kimmel did not end his law practice, despite being suspended by the
New Jersey Supreme Court on May 26, 2006, for failing to cooperate
with an attorney ethics investigation and being fined in August 2006
for contempt, authorities said. . . . Under the plea, Kimmel is
likely to be sentenced to an unspecified probationary term, 300
hours of community service and psychological treatment, according to
the prosecutor's office. Kimmel also consented to disbarment and to
paying restitution, if applicable, authorities said. . . . The
prosecutor's professional standards unit received a call in April
2008 that Kimmel had been suspended by the New Jersey Supreme Court
for failing to cooperate with the ethics investigation. Despite
being ordered by a judge to stop practicing law, and being fined for
contempt for that, he didn't end his unauthorized law practice,
authorities said.
NEW YORK
Ex-Latham Practice Head Gets 15 Months in Client Expense Fraud Case
By
Martha Neil, ABA Journal
6-26-09 --
In a sad day for a former partner at Latham & Watkins and his
family, he has been sentenced to 15 months in federal prison after
expressing contrition for bilking the firm and clients in a
six-figure expense fraud in which he mischaracterized personal bills
and nonreimbursable work-related costs. . . . Samuel Fishman pleaded
guilty last year to one count of mail fraud in the Manhattan federal
court case. His sentence also includes three years of supervised
release after he completes his prison term, a $10,000 fine and
restitution of $350,000, reports
Dow Jones Newswires (sub. req.). . . . Fishman, who
headed several practice groups and served as billing partner in a
number of matters while working at Latham's office in New York,
falsely claimed more than $200,000 in nonreimbursable costs, such as
meals, parking and personal hotel bills, to be reimbursable client
expenses, according to prosecutors in the case. He also allegedly
sent bills to clients that padded actual expenses by more than
$100,000, the news agency recounts.
Former Attorney Anthony Leonardo, in Poor Health,
Gets 15 Years
Reported
by: Sean Carroll
6-26-09 --
Defense attorney Anthony Leonardo, convicted of drug and money
laundering was re-sentenced -- to 15 years in prison Friday,
including time already served, so he has about 6 years left to
serve. . . . The previous sentence was 16 years in prison. . . .
Leonardo suffered a severe brain injury from an alleged fall in
prison last year, which put court proceedings on hold. . . . He is
now serving 16 years in federal prison, but a federal appellate
court questioned the procedural validity of his plea agreement,
prompting the need for a new sentence. . . . His attorney, John
Parrinello, attempted to convince U.S. District Judge David Larimer
that Leonardo should be released on home confinement to live with
his parents, because of the severity of his head injury. He is
now mentally retarded because of the alleged falls, and has a heart
condition.
No Keepsies:
NY Leader Has to Cough Up $375,000 in Fees
By Sheri
Qualters | The National Law Journal | New York Lawyer
6-25-09 --
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom of New York has agreed to
return $375,000 in legal fees that retailer the Sharper Image Corp.
paid it shortly before the company filed for bankruptcy. . . . In
its Delaware bankruptcy case, TSIC Inc., which is the Sharper Image's legal name, claimed that Skadden
should return $1 million in fees paid to the law firm in the 90 days
before the bankruptcy filing. The court approved the $375,000 cash
settlement on June 22. In re
TSIC, Inc.,
No. 08-10322 (Bankr. D. Del.). . . . Skadden countered that it
wasn't legally bound to return the money, but that the upper limit
of the Sharper Image's claims was $650,000 because its insurer had
reimbursed the company $350,000. . . . Aside from the cash payout,
the settlement also calls for the parties to release claims against
each other, except for Skadden's prebankruptcy claim for
indemnification for legal fees and litigation expenses for former
company directors facing lawsuits related to their service as
directors.
Felony Conviction Reversed due to Lawyer Who Slept
During Trial
Judge finds solo practitioner did not provide client with
'meaningful representation'
Mark
Fass, New York Law Journal
6-25-09 --
A Brooklyn judge has thrown out a felony weapons conviction after the defendant's
attorney repeatedly fell asleep at trial, allegedly read magazines
while witnesses testified and provoked laughter among the jurors
with his "bizarre" opening statement. . . . Acting Justice Vincent
M. Del Giudice ruled that the attorney,
Manhattan solo practitioner Michael
Harrison, did not provide his client "meaningful representation" as
defined by New York case law. . . . "It is very unusual for this
court to criticize a member of the bar and I am hesitant to do so in
this opinion. This is a learned profession and I appreciate and
enjoy watching members of the bar perform their craft," Del Giudice
wrote in
People v. Irizarry, 6676-2006.
TENNESSEE
Unlicensed Lawyer Ordered To Stop Practice
Do
Homework When Choosing Lawyer, Says Tenn. AG's Office
Reported
By Marc Stewart WSMV
6-25-09 --
According to the Tennessee Attorney General's office, a Nashville
man claiming to be a licensed lawyer isn't properly licensed and may
be putting his clients at risk. . . . The Attorney General's office
said Michael Sneed has been operating as an attorney even though his
license was suspended in February after a long list of issues. . . .
It's unclear exactly how many clients the one-time lawyer still has
on his roster, but the attorney general fears they could be losing
their money and their rights. . . . "He's continued to advertise
himself as an attorney and schedule motions, file motions and act as
an attorney," said Jeff Hill of the Attorney General's office. "He
was supposed to notify his clients that he could no longer have
their cases and find a home for those cases. He, to our knowledge,
has not done that at this point."
TEXAS
Court says no to attorney blame
Staff
writer Sean Thomas, Amarillo.com
6-26-09 --
The 7th Court of Appeals shot down Alfonso Demetrio Rodriguez's
attempt to blame his guilty plea on his attorney. . . . Rodriguez
pleaded guilty in 2006 to abandoning a child, kidnapping,
unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, assault on a public servant and
criminal mischief. . . . The charges stemmed from a 2006 incident in
which Rodriguez was riding with another Amarillo man and the man's
infant son. . . . The man left the car for about 10 minutes, and in
the time, Rodriguez fled with the car and the man's son.
Local attorney disbarred
By John
Tompkins, Brazosport Facts
6-25-09 --
An attorney who repeatedly missed court hearings and was suspected
at times of being under the influence when he did show up was
disbarred on the grounds he mishandled a Brazoria County robbery
case. . . . Shawn Roland Roberts, 39, who practiced law in Brazoria
County, failed to properly inform client Vincent Goree Woodard about
his aggravated robbery case and did not withdraw as Woodard’s
attorney when Roberts was impaired, according to a judgment issued
by the State Bar of Texas. . . . The judgment was issued May 22, but
was not public information until 30 days passed, during which time
the attorney can appeal, said Maureen Ray, special administrative
counsel for the Office of the Chief Disciplinary Counsel. . . .
Woodard, 24, was charged with beating and robbing an 85-year-old
Holiday Lakes woman in her home and then stealing her truck in July
2007. . . . Roberts represented Woodard in the trial alongside
attorney Shannon Baldwin. Woodard was convicted of aggravated
robbery and sentenced to 50 years in prison. . . . The disbarment
opinion states Roberts should have withdrawn as Woodard’s attorney
because he was impaired and could not properly defend his client.
The State Bar ordered him to pay Woodard’s mother $20,000. Roberts
also must pay $9,486 in attorney’s fees to the State Bar of Texas.
Man sues divorce attorney over botched
representation,
false billing
By John
Suayan, Southeast Texas Record Galveston Bureau
6-25-09 --
Alleging his motion for a divorce was bungled from the start, a
Galveston County man is suing his lawyer for more than $50,000 in
damages. . . . Randal Mack Hall claims Houston attorney Guillermo De
La Garza and his firm Bill De La Garza & Associates PC violated many
aspects of a contract they entered on Nov. 1, 2005, for the case against Hall's wife. . . . The suit was filed on June 22
in Galveston County District Court. . . . Chief among the
plaintiff's grievances are poor management of essential paperwork,
misrepresentation, lack of communication and erroneous invoicing. .
. . "The defendants wholly failed to properly handle the case and to
move the matter toward a conclusion," the original petition says. .
. . The plaintiff's assets and the value thereof were highly
contested in the proceeding, according to court documents. . . .
Hall explains that hundreds of documents from his personal
accountant were given to De La Garza, but the defendant blatantly
mishandled them.
|
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
From Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia |
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