A Las Vegas probate and real-estate lawyer transferred a home
purchased for nearly $1 million to his wife amid an investigation into
missing client funds and the abrupt shuttering of his law practice.
The allegations surrounding lawyer Robert Graham raise questions
about the need for additional safety nets for lawyer trust accounts,
according to Brandi Cassady, one of the attorneys appointed to assume
control of Graham’s files and law practice.
Graham was arrested on Wednesday in connection with the theft of $2.1 million from clients in three cases, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reports. Chief Deputy District Attorney J.P. Raman said in court that the total amount stolen may be more than $15 million.
Raman said that, when Graham closed his law firm, he deleted nearly
3,000 files relating to clients, wire transfers and operations. The
initial charges are “just the tip of the iceberg,” she said.
Graham was temporarily suspended as a result of action by the State Bar of Nevada, which says
Graham closed the practice on Dec. 2, abandoning more than a hundred
client files. The bar has filed a complaint alleging Graham stole
millions of dollars from his clients before closing his firm, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reports. Prior stories by the newspaper are here, here and here.
Graham transferred the Colorado home to his wife just days after he
closed his law practice, according to property records examined by the
Review-Journal.
The bar complaint says Graham should be holding more than $13 million
in safekeeping for his clients, but account balances “total much less.”
The money should have been held in deposit in Graham’s Interest on
Lawyers Trust Account, known as an IOLTA account, according to the bar.
Brandi and Jasen Cassady of the Cassady Law Office have both been
appointed to take over Graham’s law practice at his Lawyers West firm.
Brandi Cassady tells the ABA Journal in an email that the vast majority
of lawyers are decent people who would never touch the money held in
IOLTA accounts. “Collectively, we hold billions without issue,” Brandi
Cassady said.
“However, I think the time has come for additional safety nets to be
added when appropriate. You cannot legislate a moral compass, and
stealing client money held in a lawyer’s trust account is already
illegal, but I think bonding for attorneys who hold trust accounts would
be an excellent solution,” Cassady said.
“The legal community will be brainstorming to create a viable
solution that will protect the public and keep the process affordable
and realistic for solo attorneys and small firms, and thus, the
clients,” Cassady added. “I think bonding that is specific to attorneys
would be a great idea and keep the process affordable and keep the
courts unclogged.”
Graham told the Review-Journal in a December interview that his law
practice was a business failure. “I was responsible for the litigation
and felt I had no out,” Graham said. “So bit by bit, I moved the chairs
on the deck. Each year, things got worse and worse, and I tried to bail
myself out and just couldn’t.”
The newspaper asked Graham about what he would say to his former
clients. “There’ll be a time when I can fall to my knees and ask them to
please forgive me,” he said. “I’ve been sidetracked. How I ended up
here, I’ll never know.”
Graham’s public defender, Bryan Cox, says his client disputes the
prosecutor’s allegations about deleted files. Cox told the
Review-Journal that the files may have been moved to a hard drive for
preservation.
Full Article & Source:
Millions missing from lawyer's trust account, bar alleges after he abruptly closes law firm
And there's no way to get the money back. I hope he's heavily insured.
ReplyDeleteAre there any good guardians or lawyers in Las Vegas at all?
ReplyDeleteDrinking, carousing, gambling, or drugging...one of these is probably involved.
ReplyDelete