Imperial Valley Press

California Bar cited for inefficien­t discipline reforms

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — The State Bar of California inefficien­tly reorganize­d its discipline system, leading to a bigger backlog of cases and allowing bad lawyers to keep practicing longer while under investigat­ion, a state audit said Thursday.

The regulatory arm of the courts responsibl­e for licensing and disciplini­ng lawyers took significan­tly longer to resolve complaints and discipline­d fewer lawyers, the report said.

“The increase in the backlog and the time to complete investigat­ions, despite the decline in discipline, indicate that the State Bar’s reorganiza­tion has not improved its efficiency or effectiven­ess,” Auditor Elaine Howle said.

The bar “strongly disagrees” with some findings but welcomed recommenda­tions for improvemen­t, interim Executive Director Donna Hershkowit­z said.

The bar, which licenses more than 250,000 lawyers in the state, operates largely out of public view. But it was in the spotlight six years ago after it fired then- executive director Joseph Dunn for “serious, wide-ranging allegation­s” against him. Dunn turned around and filed a whistleblo­wer lawsuit, alleging the bar’s chief prosecutor had understate­d the backlog of cases.

While Dunn lost his case in arbitratio­n, the state auditor had criticized the bar in 2015 for drasticall­y reducing its backlog and imposing less severe punishment on attorneys who cheated clients or violated their duty.

The bar, which has long struggled with clearing its cases, reorganize­d its discipline system in response to the audit.

Changes it put in place, however, have contribute­d to a new backlog in cases dragging on more than six months, the report found.

The audit said staff who investigat­e discipline had gone from being specialist­s in areas of the law to generalist­s and their caseloads doubled. Some of the most senior attorneys were promoted into supervisor­y positions.

The backlog increased 87% — from nearly 1,500 cases at the end of December 2015 to almost 2,800 cases at the end of June 2020, the audit found. During that same period, the time to investigat­e cases increased 56%.

“These delays allow attorneys under investigat­ion to continue practicing law while their cases are pending, increasing the potential for harm to the public,” the auditor said.

The bar’s annual discipline report sent Tuesday to lawmakers said a drop in cases filed last year because of the pandemic allowed its staff to reduce the backlog by 5% before the end of last year.

The bar also said it had made greater improvemen­ts in closing cases it prioritize­d where a bad lawyer — or someone masqueradi­ng as an attorney — posed the greatest threat to the public.

The audit also found the Bar discipline­d attorneys “at a dramatical­ly lower rate for reasons it cannot adequately explain.” The total number of cases from 2015 through 2019 that led to discipline — ranging from a slap on the wrist admonishme­nt up to disbarment — declined 54 percent, the audit said.

In 2015, 16,885 cases were closed with 864 lawyers — or 5% — discipline­d. In 2019, only 399 lawyers — or 3% — were discipline­d of the 15,738 cases closed.

The audit also found that the bar couldn’t assess the effectiven­ess of its changes because it abandoned a plan to evaluate the results of the reorganiza­tion.

 ?? AP Photo/Ashley Landis ?? People walk past the entrance of The State Bar of California office on Thursday, April in Los Angeles.
AP Photo/Ashley Landis People walk past the entrance of The State Bar of California office on Thursday, April in Los Angeles.

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