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ethical stumbles

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Lawyers' Ethical Stumbles Increase Online

Tresa Baldas

The National Law Journal

May 11, 2010

Steven Belcher was defending a wrongful-death case in 2006 when he had a bad idea. Belcher,

then a temporary attorney at Paule, Camazine & Blumenthal in St. Louis, e-mailed a photograph

of the overweight deceased, lying naked on an emergency room table, to a friend, along with his

own lewd and disparaging commentary.



The firm, which monitored work e-mails, turned him in to the state disciplinary counsel, and he

was slapped with a 60-day suspension, stayed pending probation. Belcher, who is still licensed to

practice law but has joined the Army, admits he made a "stupid" mistake. "I had my head up my

butt," he said.



Because he was licensed to practice in Illinois and Virginia as well as Missouri, more than one

bar counsel heard about his case. And they wondered whether there was more here than one

lawyer's bad decision.



"It got our eyebrows up," said James Grogan, chief counsel of the Illinois Attorney

Registration and Disciplinary Commission and a past president of the National Organization

of Bar Counsel. "We thought, 'Wow, are we going to see more of these?' Well, I think it's clear

we are starting to see more."



Grogan, also chief counsel of the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission,

said the sense among his disciplinary brethren is that "more investigations are being generated

for lawyers misusing electronic communications and the internet."



Numbers are hard to come by; no one agency tracks the number of lawyers facing discipline for

online behavior. But social networking by attorneys and all its potential dangers is being closely

monitored in nearly every corner of the legal profession. Disgruntled clients, lawyers outing

other lawyers, and bar counsel themselves are sparking investigations. Law firms host seminars

and webinars on it. And bar counsel and bar associations bring it up at nearly every meeting. The

American Bar Association's Commission on Ethics 20/20 has on its agenda, among other 21st

century issues, whether existing ethics rules adequately address social media use by lawyers.



It's not as if lawyers never misbehaved before. But now they're making the same old mistakes --

soliciting for sex, slamming judges, talking trash about clients -- online, leaving a digital trail for

bar counsel to follow.



Legal ethics expert Michael Downey said lawyers' tendency to be risk-averse seems to fade away

on the internet. "They're disclosing confidences, talking about pending matters, they take

potshots ... like everyone else," said Downey, immediate past chairman of the American Bar

Association's Ethics and Technology Committee and a member of the ABA Center for

Professional Responsibility.

At the ABA, Downey, a partner in Chicago-based Hinshaw & Culbertson's St. Louis office, said

the focus is on whether new misdeeds require new ethics rules. He suspects the current rules "are

probably adequate."



Downey routinely lectures to law firms and bar associations on the ethical concerns lawyers face

in the worlds of Twitter, Facebook, and blogs. "Someone just suggested yesterday that I do a

program on this."



The following stories may explain why.

SEX IN THE FILES

It was a want ad with a twisted twist in the "Adult Gigs" section of Craigslist. Now it could get

Chicago immigration lawyer Samir "Sam" Chowhan disbarred.



In May 2009, Chowhan was seeking a dual secretary/sexual partner, according to a complaint

filed with the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission. His ad read: "Loop

law firm looking to hire am [sic] energetic woman for their open secretary/legal assistant

position. Duties will include general secretarial work, some paralegal work and additional duties

for two lawyers in the firm. No experience required, training will be provided."



The ad asked for a résumé and a few pictures, "along with a description of your physical

features, including measurements."



A woman identified in the complaint as Debbi responded. Chowhan e-mailed her back: "[I]n

addition to the legal work, you would be required to have sexual interaction with me and my

partner, sometimes together sometimes separate. This part of the job would require sexy dressing

and flirtatious interaction with me and my partner, as well as sexual interaction. You will have to

be comfortable doing this with us."



Debbi was not comfortable.

The woman filed a complaint with the attorney discipline board. Chowhan initially denied he

wrote the ad, claiming someone with "malice" set him up, but in September he fessed up. He

appeared for a sworn statement at the disciplinary commission and, under oath, "acknowledged

that he posted the May 28, 2009 Craigslist advertisement and sent the May 29, 2009 responsive

e-mail."



His penalty is pending. Chowhan, who also faces discipline over his handling of immigration

matters, now practices at Chowhan Law in Fort Wayne, Ind. He did not return calls seeking

comment.



FACEBOOK FOLLY

Susan Criss, a Texas state trial judge in Galveston County, is a fan of social media. As an elected

judge, she finds Facebook a good way to connect with voters. It also helps her keep tabs on

lawyers.



Criss has busted more than one lawyer in a sticky situation online. Last year, a prosecutor sought

and received a weeklong continuance to attend a funeral, but her daily Facebook postings

showed her drinking and riding motorcycles. When the prosecutor returned, Criss called her on

the less-than-funereal activities -- and denied the prosecutor's request for another, monthlong

continuance.



"She was embarrassed," the judge said.

More recently, Criss said, another prosecutor in a case before the judge took pictures of a crime

scene and posted them on her Facebook page, along with comments from law enforcement

talking about the crime and crime scene. Criss was baffled. "Y'all are not thinking one bit about

the fact that when you're asked to provide discovery to the other side in litigation ... this is going

to count," she said.



Criss, who spoke about social networking mishaps at the American Bar Association's annual

conference last year, said, "I see a lot of venting about judges. I see a lot of personal information

being posted, like, 'Let's go get drunk tonight' or 'Let's go meet at the bar.' ... You see these

things and say, 'What are you thinking?'"



On a positive note, she believes her Facebook bustings have had some impact. "I'm starting to

see a lot more lawyers using common sense," she said. "They're reading about people getting

caught, and they're seeing the consequences."



CRITICAL LINE

It seemed like the perfect venting tool, a courthouse blog. Florida criminal defense attorney Sean

Conway couldn't resist the temptation.



Conway wrote that Broward County Circuit Judge Cheryl Aleman was an "evil, unfair witch"

with an "ugly, condescending attitude." He also suggested she was "seemingly mentally ill." His

beef? The judge allegedly wasn't giving defense lawyers enough time to prepare for trials.



Repercussions? You bet.

The Florida Bar reprimanded Conway in April 2009 and fined him $1,200 for violating five

ethics rules, including impugning a judge's qualifications or integrity.



Conway argued that it was his constitutional right to criticize a judge. He contended that, outside

a courtroom, a lawyer's speech cannot be restricted any more than anyone else's. But the Florida

Supreme Court declined to hear his case.



Sure, Conway admits now, his words were harsh, but he had to use powerful words to get his

point across. "She was doing something that was blatantly unfair ... and I had to expose it," said

Conway, who still encourages attorneys to vent online. "Just don't sign your own name ... .Just

do it from hiding."



Conway recently started his own solo defense practice in Hollywood, Fla. He said he only visits

blogs now; he doesn't comment in them.



TRASH TALK

If she'd confined her blog posts to her hobbies, bird watching, and photography, her supervisor

likely wouldn't have minded. But Kristine Ann Peshek, an assistant public defender in

Winnebago County, Ill., also wrote about her clients -- quite candidly.



According to a complaint filed last August with the Illinois Attorney Registration and

Disciplinary Commission, she disclosed confidential information about them. On March 28,

2008, she wrote of one client: "This stupid kid is taking the rap for his drug-dealing dirtbag of an

older brother because 'he's no snitch.' ... My client is in college. Just goes to show you that higher

education does not imply that you have any sense."



Peshek hid clients' names, but spoke freely about their cases. In another 2008 post, she wrote:

"'Dennis,' the diabetic whose case I mentioned in Wednesday's post, did drop as ordered. ...

Guess what? It was positive for cocaine. He was standing there in court stoned, right in front of

the judge."



Peshek, according to the complaint, also criticized judges, calling one an "a..hole" and another

"Judge clueless."

In April 2008, Peshek's supervisor learned of her blog. She was terminated that month. The

disciplinary commission has recommended a 60-day suspension. A final decision from the

Illinois Supreme Court is expected within weeks.



Peshek, now in private practice at Peshek & Rabbitt in Beloit, Wis., declined to comment.

ALL PUFFED UP

Dennis Hernandez identified four lawyers with his firm who were not -- to get technical about

this -- licensed to practice law in the state of Florida. Since Dennis Hernandez & Associates is

based in Tampa, the Florida Bar was not pleased. And since the four were named on his website

under "Our Attorneys," the evidence of Hernandez's misstatements wasn't hard to find.



The Florida Supreme Court last August disciplined Hernandez for, among other things, making

statements that were "potentially false or misleading" about the lawyers working at his firm.



According to a complaint filed with the Florida Bar, Hernandez on his website provided

biographies for four individuals not licensed to practice law in Florida.



One of them had been disbarred elsewhere. Harry M. Walsh Jr. was licensed to practice law in

Maryland until September 2004, when he was decertified and prohibited from practicing law. He

was disbarred in 2005.



The other three were Massachusetts lawyer Lori E. Eisenschmidt, Tennessee lawyer Christopher

Lee Denison and Georgia lawyer Alan Austin Gavel, who had been suspended in Georgia from

July 15, 1996, through Sept. 16, 2002. Hernandez was billing clients a senior associate rate of

$300 per hour for these three.



Gavel said, "When I was asked to do things that I thought were inappropriate, I left."

In August, Hernandez was suspended for 90 days, ordered to attend ethics school and required to

pay restitution totaling $19,766 to six clients who were misled.



NO COMMENT

Sometimes the judge herself ends up in the online hot seat.

Judge Shirley Strickland Saffold of the Cuyahoga County, Ohio, Common Pleas Court is

refuting claims that she posted anonymous, snarky comments about some of her own cases. The

more than 80 comments -- posted by one "lawmiss" on Cleveland.com, the website of The Plain

Dealer -- were linked to Saffold's personal e-mail account. Saffold was outed by the paper,

which had obtained public records showing the browsing history of her courtroom computer.



Despite Saffold's insistence that she did not write about her cases online -- and the fact that her

daughter has copped to the postings -- the judge was recently yanked off a serial-killer trial. The

Ohio Supreme Court removed her from the case on April 22 to avoid "even an appearance of

bias, prejudice or impropriety."



Ohio Chief Justice Paul Pfeifer wrote, "[T]he nature of these comments and their widespread

dissemination might well cause a reasonable and objective observer to harbor serious doubts

about the judge's impartiality."



So what exactly did "lawmiss" say? Here are some excerpts from The Plain Dealer.

In a November 2009 post, she called a defense lawyer in a vehicular manslaughter case a

"buffoon" and wrote, "If only he could shut his Amos and Andy style mouth."



About a 2008 triple-murder case that ended in a life-without-parole sentence, lawmiss wrote, "If

a black guy had massacred five people then he would've received the death penalty. ... A white

guy does it and he gets pat on the hand. The jury didn't care about the victims. ... All of them

ought to be ashamed."



Saffold, meanwhile, has gone from judge to defendant to plaintiff. She is suing The Plain Dealer

for $50 million, claiming it violated its own online privacy policy by outing lawmiss.





Ellyn S. Rosen



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