Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

FILING TARGETS Trump aide Conway.

- SARI HORWITZ

A group of law professors from around the country has filed a profession­al- misconduct complaint against White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, a graduate of George Washington University Law School who was admitted to the D. C. Bar in 1995.

The letter, filed with the office that handles misconduct by members of the D. C. Bar, said Conway should be sanctioned for violating government ethics rules and “conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misreprese­ntation,” the letter says.

The 15 professors, who specialize in legal ethics, cite several instances, including a television interview in which Conway made the “false statement that President Barack Obama had ‘ banned’ Iraqi refugees from coming into the United States for six months following the ‘ Bowling Green Massacre,’” and the use of her position to endorse Ivanka Trump’s products.

“We do not file this complaint lightly,” the professors said in their filing. “We believe that, at one time, Ms. Conway, understood her ethical responsibi­lities as a lawyer and abided by them. But she is currently acting in a way that brings shame upon the legal profession.”

The professors teach at law schools such as Georgetown University Law Center, Yale Law School, Fordham University and Duke University.

The White House did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The letter was sent to the D. C. Office of Disciplina­ry Counsel, the chief prosecutor for disciplina­ry matters that involve active or inactive attorneys who are members of the D. C. Bar. Conway is listed as a D. C. Bar member under her maiden name, Kellyanne Fitzpatric­k, but is a suspended member for not paying her dues, according to the disciplina­ry filing.

D. C. Disciplina­ry Counsel Wallace “Gene” Shipp said his office receives about 1,500 complaints a year but investigat­es only 400 to 500 of them. The actions that can be taken range from dismissal of the complaint to the prosecutio­n of charges and possible disbarment, he said.

Since she has been serving as counselor to President Donald Trump, Conway has been caught up in several controvers­ies. Last month, during an interview on NBC’s Meet the Press, she said the White House had put forth “alternativ­e facts” regarding the size of Trump’s inaugurati­on crowd.

“‘ Alternativ­e facts’ are not facts at all; they are lies,” the professors said in their filing.

Conway was also criticized for using her position during a Feb. 9 interview on Fox News to endorse Ivanka Trump’s fashion products.

“Federal rules on conflicts of interest specifical­ly prohibit using public office ‘ for the endorsemen­t of any product, service or enterprise, or for the private gain of friends, relatives or persons with whom the employee is affiliated in a nongovernm­ental capacity,’” the complaint said.

Abbe Smith, a Georgetown Law Center professor and director of the Criminal Defense and Prisoner Advocacy Clinic, said she has never filed such a complaint before and generally does not believe that lawyers should routinely face discipline under the broad rule they cited, which includes conduct outside the practice of law.

“But Ms. Conway’s conduct was so outside the norm for a member of the legal profession,” Smith said. “What prompted our complaint was a combinatio­n of the specific conduct that Ms. Conway engaged in plus the fact that she holds such a high public office.”

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