Saturday, October 31, 2009

Recent disciplines void of area attorneys

The Florida Bar recently announced that the Florida Supreme Court in recent court orders disciplined 23 attorneys, disbarring six, suspending 13 and placing six on probation. None of the attorneys on the current discipline list are members of the Jacksonville Bar Association or from the Northeast Florida area. Some attorneys received more than one form of discipline. Four attorneys were reprimanded.

The following lawyers are disciplined:

• John Bruce Thompson of Coral Gables was permanently disbarred without leave to apply for readmission, effective 30 days from a Sept. 25 court order. Thompson is charged with extensive misconduct and a complete lack of remorse. In five separate cases over a three-and-a-half year period, Thompson engaged in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation.

• Adenet Medacier of Weston was disbarred for five years, effective 30 days from an Oct. 23 court order. In numerous instances, Medacier failed to apply client trust fund money for its intended purpose and failed to maintain minimum trust account records.

• Loel Seitel of New York, N.Y. was disbarred retroactive to Oct. 22, 2007, following a Sept. 18 court order. In September 2007, Seitel was found guilty of conspiracy to make a false statement, a felony, and sentenced to five months imprisonment, followed by two years probation and a fine of $30,000.

• Steven M. Siegel of Hollywood was disbarred for five years, retroactive to April 24, following an Oct. 8 court order. In February, Siegel was found guilty of attempting to solicit a minor over the Internet, a felony.

• Jessica Kathleen Miller of Holiday was disbarred for five years, retroactive to Jan. 15 following a Sept. 18 court order. In August 2007, Miller was arrested on a contempt of court charge for violating an order to appear. She had already violated two prior orders to appear on behalf of clients in a guardianship proceeding. In other instances, Miller failed to account for and deliver client trust funds and after being retained to represent several clients, she failed to do so and neglected to return the fees.

• Thomas Green Watkins III of Phoenix, Ariz. was disbarred effective 30 days from an Oct. 16 court order. Watkins, also a member of the State Bar of Arizona, was disbarred in that state in February, 2007, due to a conflict of interest in a case in which he was a patent lawyer who also claimed to be an inventor.

• Jeffrey A. Blau of Tampa was suspended for 90 days, effective 30 days from a Sept. 11 court order. Upon reinstatement, Blau is further placed on probation for three years. In December 2006, Blau was arrested after police found small amounts of marijuana and drug paraphernalia in his car and law office desk.

• Ronald Wayne Davis of Pensacola was suspended for 90 days, effective retroactive to June 11 following an Oct. 8 court order. Davis is further placed on probation for three years. In January 2004, Davis pleaded no contest to two felony counts of possession of cocaine and two felony counts of possession of a controlled substance without prescription. He was also found guilty of one misdemeanor first offense of Driving Under the Influence and sentenced to 11 months and 15 days in jail.

• Brook Eugene Fisher of West Palm Beach was suspended until further order of the Court, effective immediately, following a Sept. 22 emergency order. According to the petition for emergency suspension, Fisher appeared to be causing great public harm by misappropriating client trust funds or property. Fisher’s trust account had significant and ongoing shortages throughout a Florida Bar 18-month audit, ranging from $78,492.72 to $463,301.98.

• Eric D. Hightower of West Palm Beach was suspended until further order of the Court, effective immediately, following a Sept. 22 emergency order. According to the petition for emergency suspension, Fisher appeared to be causing great public harm by converting and or misappropriating client funds. A Florida Bar compliance audit found that Hightower had persistent trust account shortages during a Florida Bar 12-month audit, ranging from $4,880 to $20,583.

• Jeffrey Merrill Leukel of Sanford was suspended until further order following an Oct. 20 court order. Leukel was sentenced to 60 days in jail, 12 months probation and 100 hours of community service for a DUI charge. In another instance, he accepted $1,000 toward his fee to represent a client and neglected to do so. Finally, after requesting the hearing time, Leukel failed to appear in court to represent a client.

• David Mogul of Fort Lauderdale was suspended until further order of the Court, effective immediately, following an Oct. 3 court order. According to the petition for emergency suspension, Mogul appeared to be causing great public harm by misappropriating client trust funds or property for his personal use. An audit determined he withdrew $110,349.53 from his trust account during the audit period, exceeding the total deposits of funds from personal sources by nearly $42,000.

• Abad Perez of Manalapan, N.J. was suspended for 91 days, effective 30 days from an Oct. 8 court order. In February, Perez was suspended from the New Jersey Bar for 90 days for misconduct. In 2006, he was indicted for making false statements while under oath, discharged from his prosecutor position and admitted to a pretrial intervention program.

• Jack Barry Phillips of Roebling, N.J. was suspended for three years, effective 30 days from an Oct. 23 court order. Phillips was hired to represent clients in immigration matters and he failed to communicate with them, resulting in rulings against them.

• John Robert Sawyer of Pensacola was suspended for 91 days, effective Oct. 31, following a Sept. 18 court order. In July 2002, Sawyer was suspended for 90 days and placed on probation for two years. Subsequently, during that period, he consumed alcohol, in violation of his Florida Lawyers Assistance rehabilitation contract.

• Richard Brian Simring of Miami Beach was suspended until further order of the Court, effective 30 days following a Sept. 9 court order. Simring pled guilty in the U.S. District Court in Richmond, Va., to one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and money laundering, a felony.

• John Francis Tague III of Bronxville, N.Y. was suspended for two years, effective 30 days from an Oct. 16 court order. In August 2006, Tague, also a member of the New York Bar, was suspended from practicing law there for two years because of misconduct related to client funds.

• Mario A. Ruiz De la Torre of Miami, suspended for 18 months, retroactive to Oct. 4, 2007, following an Oct. 16 court order. De la Torre is further placed on probation for three years following the suspension. In March 2000, De la Torre pled no contest to five criminal charges, including two felonies. He failed to notify the Bar as required by Bar rules until August 2007.

• Dewey Homer Varner Jr. of suspended for one year, following a Sept. 25 order. Varner voluntarily dismissed a client’s worker compensation case without informing him and falsely testified that he had the client’s authorization.

• Richard W. Bassett of Boynton Beach, to receive a public reprimand from The Florida Bar’s Board of Governors at a date and time to be determined by the board, following a Sept. 11 court order. While representing defendants, Bassett sent a letter to the plaintiffs, who were not represented by counsel, threatening to bring criminal charges if they did not settle. The matter was referred to The Florida Bar by the presiding judge.

• Peter Randel Mayer of Lakeland received public reprimand from The Florida Bar’s Board of Governors, following an Oct. 16 court order. Mayer is further placed on probation for two years, effective retroactive to Oct. 17, 2007. In January 2006, Mayer was charged with battery, a first-degree misdemeanor. The charge was later dismissed after Mayer completed terms of a deferred prosecution agreement.

• Jacob Addington Rose of West Palm Beach to receive a public reprimand following an Oct. 8 court order. Rose is further placed on probation for one year, effective immediately. In numerous instances, Rose neglected to handle cases for clients because of health reasons, but he failed to inform them.

• Adam Ira Skolnik of Coral Springs, to receive a public reprimand following a Sept. 11 court order. Skolnik is further placed on probation for three years. In June 2007, Skolnik was hired to represent a client in a civil matter. He accepted a $1,000 legal fee but took little action in the case. Skolnik also failed to respond as required to The Florida Bar’s inquiries.

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Saturday, October 24, 2009

DUI Lawyer Scottsdale launches new website to sort out DUI cases

DUI Lawyer Scottsdale

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 While there is any drug or metabolite in the person’s body.In Arizona, a DUI charge is a serious matter and the penalties can be severe.  For this purpose, an experienced, aggressive attorney is required to represent the case.

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This new website duilawyerscottsdale.net could prove very helpful to people who do not want to go through the hassle of resolving their DUI cases in Arizona.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Heather Locklear: Goodbye DUI, Hello 'Melrose Place'?

Heather Locklear should probably buy a lottery ticket, because her luck is running pretty hot so far this year. TMZ reports that the DUI charges against the 47-year-old actress stemming from a September 2008 arrest in Montecito, California, have been dismissed.

Locklear was suspected of driving under the influence of a controlled substance at the time. Though blood tests did show prescription drugs in her system, the troubled thespian—who underwent treatment in an Arizona rehab facility in June—pleaded no contest to a mere reckless-driving charge. In exchange, she'll be placed on three years informal probation, pay a $700 fine, and attend a mandatory 12-hour drug-education course.




Locklear's attorney in the matter, Blair Berk, has worked similar wonders in the past for such celebrities as Mel Gibson, Lindsay Lohan and Mackenzie Phillips.

Heather has reason to celebrate outside of the courtroom, too; according to  E! Online, she's being heavily wooed to reprise her role as Amanda Woodward in the upcoming Melrose Place revamp.

"The CW is courting Heather Locklear," says a source. "I don't think anyone else from the original has been approached yet."

Good luck on the comeback trail, Heather! But, uh, if the network offers you a driver, by all means accept.

by Celebuzz

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Heather Locklear is certainly fortunate to have Blair Berk as her lawyer.

EWU coach misses game following arrest

Eastern Washington men's basketball coach Kirk Earlywine was arrested late last week on suspicion of drunken driving, The (Spokane) Spokesman-Review reported.

Earlywine, who did not coach EWU in its game against Boise State on Monday, said Thursday that a legal issue prevented him from attending Monday's game, according to the report. The university, in a statement issued during Monday night's game, said Earlywine was not available to coach because he was attending to a "personal matter."

But according to the report, Spokane police said Earlywine was arrested at 1:55 a.m. on Dec. 26 on suspicion of driving under the influence. He was released on bond later that day and was arraigned in municipal court on Monday afternoon.

Speaking to the newspaper from Phoenix, where he rejoined the team Tuesday night for Friday's game against Northern Arizona, Earlywine said he could not discuss the matter in greater detail.

"I wish I could say more, but I can't," he said, according to The Spokesman-Review. "I've got to kind of just work through this issue, and it's going to be a process. And until that process runs its course, I can't say much.

"I do, however, understand the gravity and seriousness of it," Earlywine said, according to the report. "But until the next step of the process takes place, I've got to devote my time and full attention to doing what I love, which is coaching these players and this basketball team."

Earlywine said he was scheduled to appear in court in February. Efforts to reach his attorney for comment were unsuccessful, according to the newspaper.

EWU athletic director Bill Chaves said the university is aware of Earlywine's situation, but said he could not comment further, according to the report.

"We're in the process of addressing it internally right now, and that's where I've got to leave it," Chaves said, according to the report. "It's a personnel issue, as well, which precludes me from further comment."

Source

Coaches such as Kirk Earlywine are still only human. They could still get in trouble from time to time. He should be careful next time though. Eastern Washington needs him.

Tyson in pink gear for jail term

Mike Tyson, resplendent in black-and-white striped jumpsuit and pink handcuffs and socks, has begun his one-day prison sentence for driving under the influence in Phoenix, Arizona. Tyson reported to jail today, an open-air facility near a dog pound and trash dump where the former heavyweight champion is being held in a secluded part of Tent City, apart from the 1500 other inmates.

Sheriff Joe Arpaio, who runs the jail, also said Tyson must wear jail-issue pink underwear.

Besides the day in jail, Tyson was sentenced to three years' probation. He also must perform 360 hours of community service and undergo drug testing.

The 41-year-old former fighter was arrested December 29 last year when he was spotted driving his black BMW erratically and nearly collided with a sheriff's office vehicle. Tyson had just left a nightclub in Scottsdale, Arizona.

There were 2.16 grams of cocaine in several bags in his possession at the time and traces of marijuana in his system, prosecutors told the court in September

Prosecutors had sought prison time for the embattled former fighter, saying he was a repeat offender with a violent past and that the court needed to send a strong message.

Tyson attorneys had argued for probation because the boxer had admitted his mistakes and was working to battle his addictions.

Since his arrest, Tyson had undergone treatment at a California rehabilitation centre and worked with kids preaching a message of staying sober and keeping off drugs. His attorney said in court he had passed 29 straight drug tests.

"If you do good deeds and you help other people recover, alternatives to imprisonment are the better route," Tyson's attorney David Chesnoff said outside the courthouse.

He faced a maximum of three years and nine months in prison for felony possession of drugs and another six months in jail on the misdemeanour DUI charge. Tyson pleaded guilty to the charges in September underan agreement with prosecutors.

Authorities said Tyson revealed his cocaine addiction during the arrest and admitted to using the drug that same day.

-with Reuters

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Looks like Mike Tyson has a new battle to fight. He should try to be good if he wants to avoid some more jail time and wear pink handcuffs.

Charles Barkley Arrested for DUI

According to reports by drunk driving lawyers in Los Angeles, former NBA player Charles Barkley was arrested Wednesday of allegedly driving under the influence after being stopped for running a stop sign.

According to reports Gilbert Police Lt. Eric Shuhandle stated an officer with the law enforcement task force who target drivers under the influence stopped Barkley for running a stop sign in the Scottsdale Arizona area, at approximately 1:30 a.m. The traffic stop and arrest took place in the Scottsdale Old Town vicinity in the Phoenix metro area.

Berkley submitted to field sobriety tests after the officer who stopped him smelled alcohol, which according to reports he failed. Barkley was then arrested for driving under the influence and refused to submit to a breath test. He was then given a blood test according to Lt. Shuhandler.

Lt. Shuhandler said that Barkley’s car was impounded and after he was processed and cited he was released, he went on to state this is the normal process with driving under the influence charges. The police Lt. Stated the traffic stop and arrest was without incident and the former NBA player was treated the same as any other driver arrested for an alleged driving under the influence charge.

During Barkley’s NBA career he played 16 seasons for the Philadelphia 76’s, the Houston Rockets, and the Phoenix Suns, he also played on Olympic teams in 1992 and 1996. Barkley who is now charged with allegedly driving under the influence was an 11 time NBA All-Star, league MVP in 1993 and in 1996 selected as one of the NBA’s 50 great players. The former player was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2006.

Injury Law Los Angeles
by Otto Smyth

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It's good to know that Charles Barkley's arrest occured without incident. A celebrity like him being arrested for DUI is quite the news.