A disbarred attorney was sentenced today to three years probation, 250 hours of community service, and a suspended, 180-day stint in the county jail for misapplying $47,000 in settlement funds belonging to three clients.
''As I said, I was wrong but throughout my career I have tried to act diligently and honestly for my clients,'' said former Morristown attorney Paul J. Hirsh, 61, who has relocated from Mendham to Washington, D.C.
Hirsh pleaded guilty in August in state Superior Court, Morristown, to forgery and misapplication of entrusted property -- $47,000 in settlement funds that he should have immediately turned over to clients.
Morris County Assistant Prosecutor Robert Weber asked Judge Thomas V. Manahan to impose 364 days in the county jail, in addition to probation. The judge instead set a 180-day jail term but suspended it and said it could be set aside after two years if Hirsh is successfully progressing through probation at that point. As part of his plea, Hirsh agreed to disbarment.
Hirsh didn't outright steal the money but used client funds for his own benefit and delayed turning them over to clients that Weber said needed the funds.
Weber said that Hirsh ''played fast and loose with his clients' funds,'' and used the money ''as his personal piggybank.''
Of the sentencing, Prosecutor Robert A. Bianchi said: “The Morris County Prosecutor’s Office Investigation commenced as a result of a referral from the New Jersey Office of Attorney Ethics following a financial audit. This resolution sends a clear message that those entrusted with the legal care of the citizens will be made to answer when they commit a crime. Mr. Hirsh will now have a criminal record and he will lose his privilege of practicing law, as he has proven himself unworthy of the trust needed to fulfill his duties as an attorney. As a result of this conviction, Mr. Hirsh was disbarred by Order of the New Jersey Supreme Court on September 9, 2009.”
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Ex-Morris Attorney Gets Probation
What do you mean - steal?
ReplyDeleteHe didn't "outright steal the money"???? Really now?
ReplyDelete"Hirsh pleaded guilty in August in state Superior Court, Morristown, to forgery and misapplication of entrusted property -- $47,000 in settlement funds that he should have immediately turned over to clients."
ReplyDeleteIf a lawyer does it the language is: misapplication of entrusted property
If we do it, that same lawyer will call it: embezzlement / theft / stealing
Probation? Oh, gee how frightful is that? I think this is a sweeeeet soft deal / sentence sending a message to us HOW STUPID DO WE LOOK????
Is it just me, but this crook Paul J. Hirsh looks like A CROOK! Hirsh needs to be locked up what is wrong with this picture?
ReplyDeleteProbation? Well, that's not much of an inconvenience for Paul Hirsh, is it?
ReplyDeleteIs this Justice? If so, we lost our way!
ReplyDeleteNew Jersey does not allow suit against lawyers under the consumer fraud law - thanks to the former chief judge!
ReplyDeleteHirsh, the punishment does not fit the crime. How many other have you stolen from that we just don't know about. As a former client of paul Hirsh I saw the dishonesty in his eyes. Shame on the state for giving him a free ride.
ReplyDeleteThe NJ Lottery Commission's Raymond Ryan and Carole Hedinger destroyed a deposition in a October 2002 lottery investigation 02-868, with evidence proving a Mr. Isaac Mendez was the winner of $4.5 million in the September 16, 2002 New Jersey Pick 6 Lotto jackpot. The NJ Lottery Commission and the Acting Director Carole Hedinger was sued in November 2002. The NJ Attorney General's David Dembe committed fraud upon the court to have Ms. Carole Hedinger and the NJ Lottery Commission dismissed from the 2002 lawsuit, and tampered with evidence and witnesses before the trial with the help of the Commission, attorneys and trial Judge Camille Kenny, formerly of Hudson County. In March 2003, Hedinger "leaves" the Lottery Commission. In 2009 Mr. Hirsh was about to prosecute my case against the NJ Attorney General and the Lottery Commission for fraud and spoliation but before he could file in court, but before he coudl the NJ Attorney General made its move and prosecuted him first. On July 2009, Raymond Ryan "leaves" the NJ Lottery Commission. The NJ Attorney General held onto info on Hirsh since 2005, the same year Mr. Hirsh became involved in the ongoing lottery case, when he filed in court to have this stolen winning lottery ticket fingerprinted. It turnded out the winning ticket mysteriously had not a single fingerprint. (Really?) When he prepared to take the State to court, Hirsh was targeted for prosecution and disbarred, leaving Mendez without an attorney to prosecute the case. The NJ Attorney General's office do justice? They prosecute to make an example? Really??? Look deeper people
ReplyDelete