There’s at least over $1 million in “misappropriated funds,” some of which went to Heat tickets. Lawyers victimized by fraud and lawyers who participated in fraud. And attorneys who took the money and, if not ran, disappeared, at least professionally.
So, below in Part 1 are the alphabetical first 10 of the 19. The remaining nine will be in Part 2, which will post Monday.
▪ Golden
Beach attorney Jeremy Alters, admitted 1997 out of UM School of Law,
jumped in the deep end of trouble over improper transfers from Alters,
Boldt, Brown, Rash and Culmo’s trust account to the operating account.
The Bar alleged that forty-nine such
transfers occurred, totaling approximately $2,051,474.32, between
September 2009 and December 2010. The Court approved the Bar’s Petition
for Emergency Suspension and suspended Alters from the practice of law
on December 28, 2011.
The Referee found that Alters
should be reinstated because there was “no basis to conclude that Alters
had made or authorized the improper transfers, and that no clients had
been injured by the improper transfers.”
When the Florida Supreme Court
reinstated Alters in January 2012, the Bar filed another complaint
alleging Alters violated six Bar rules regarding the transfers. The
Referee opined that Alters not be further sanctioned, but that he pay
the Bar’s administrative costs ($1,250) while the Bar pays Alters’ legal
defense costs ($143,913.35).
The Bar challenged everything in the Referee’s Report but the ink and asked the State Supreme Court to disbar Alters.
The Court found the Referee
improperly excluded evidence that Alters lied about his personal tax
status and called the Referee’s Report “inadequate.” Not only did the
Court find the Referee came to “only the most basic conclusions from the
summarized testimony, and oftentimes has failed to make any findings
regarding undisputed evidence in the case,” but noted the findings of
fact were only four pages of the 71-page report.
“It is inconceivable that the
facts of such a complicated case, which has taken years to litigate and
the record of which spans thousands of pages, could be reduced to four
pages.”
The Court ultimately found that Alters misappropriated client funds and “must be disbarred.”
▪ Orlando’s
Elizabeth Anderson, a Stetson Law School graduate admitted in 2003,
Stetson, has been suspended since Nov. 7 for trust account shortages of
$160,000, most of which were in two accounts.
A bar audit found a shortage of
$37,000 in the trust account at Seaside Bank that The Anderson Law
Group used for matters involving Stoneybrook West Master Association.
“During her sworn statement on
August 1, 2018, respondent admitted to the shortage in her Seaside trust
account and stated that she would not have been able to pay the
balances she owed to Stoneybrook without obtaining either the loan from
her parents or using funds from her retirement account.”
The Bar’s audit also revealed
that there was a shortage of at least $122,330.62 in another trust
account at Fairwinds Credit Union.
From
this account, the Bar says in its Petition for Emergency Suspension,
she used settlement funds for a client to office rent, rent, herself,
American Express, and Florida Lawyers Mutual.
▪ John
Borland of Ocala started his suspension Dec. 28, but seems like he
suspended his law career well before that. The Bar says Borland
abandoned his law practice, client files, fell behind in his Bar fees
and continuing legal education credits and then ignored Bar inquiries
about all this. The Florida Coastal School of Law had been a Bar member
since 2006.John Borland The Florida Bar |
When Busot didn’t submit an affidavit with the clients, tribunals and opposing lawyers notified of his suspension and the names and addresses of people and businesses that got a copy of his suspension order, the Cal Berkeley School of Law graduate was found in contempt and disbarred. He’d been a member since 1987.
▪ West Palm Beach attorney Richard Carey, a Bar member since 2009 out of the University of Pittsburgh’s law school, served a 10-day suspension in December. According to Carey’s guilty plea, non-lawyers at his Pinnacle Land and Title handled a real estate sale that involved a fraudulent court order. Carey said he was on vacation at the time. He tried to rectify matters upon hearing of the problem and eventually reached a settlement with the harmed party.
▪ Miami’s Robert Dixon’s 90-day suspension in May for mishandling his trust account and suffering a shortage in trust funds required he produce trust account records from July 2015 to the present. The University of Florida School of Law graduate, a Bar member since 2006, needed to do this by June 24. Dixon came across with records June 25 that the Bar’s auditor found a day late and several dollars short of accuracy — checks that had cleared listed as outstanding, deposits that had cleared listed as not having cleared. For this failure, Dixon received a public reprimand.
▪ John Eagen of Tallahassee, a Florida State law school man and Bar member since 1990, served a 30-days suspension that ended Jan. 7. Eagen continued to represent a defendant in Volusia County in January 2017 despite being ineligible to practice law. This got revealed after he failed to show up for a scheduled hearing and didn’t tell the judge of his status, even as the judge asked repeatedly over the phone, “Is there anything else you want to tell me?”
Eagen was ineligible because he was delinquent paying $2,500 restitution from a previous Bar discipline case involving how he charged a client.
▪ Peter Fellows of Miami has been disbarred for a conflict of interest in a case involving his baby’s mother and, in a separate matter, lying to Bar investigators. Fellows cases were detailed in this Miami Herald story.
Full Article & Source:
One lawyer used client funds for Heat tickets, another was in a $3.25M scam. Then, trouble
1 comment:
Is there a national registry of disbarred lawyers so they don't just move and start up again?
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