The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHAT’S BEHIND WARNING ABOUT FAKE ATTORNEYS

Climate such that officials act to protect county’s foreign born.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

Police believe he set up shop at a flea market and, using multiple aliases, pretended to be an attorney.

He told one man he’d help his family get to the States legally and collected $6,000. He agreed to help a handful of foreign workers get legal status and collected $20,000. He promised someone else he’d assist with the immigratio­n process and collected $10,000 more.

But he never helped anyone, Gwinnett County police said. And he eventually disappeare­d.

The fugitive, who authoritie­s believe is named Eddi Confesore Bueno-Cabrera, was not a licensed attorney — and was not alone in allegedly taking advantage of vulnerable immigrants looking for help.

The unlicensed practice of law is a long-held but growing concern in immigratio­n population­s across the United States, and especially in places like Gwinnett County, where a significan­t chunk of the population is foreign-born. And while the number of prosecutio­ns, or even police reports, are often small in cases like the one involving Bueno-Cabrera, officials and advocates believe it’s happening more often. The ramificati­ons can be devastatin­g.

“Parents saying my son or daughter is about to be deported because this person promised them a green card and now we

can’t find them, these are stories that I hear on a regular basis,” Ethan Pham, a Gwinnett County attorney, said.

On Thursday, Pham joined Gwinnett County Solicitor Rosanna Szabo, other attorneys, law enforcemen­t officers and government officials for a press conference to, in their words, “speak out against scam lawyers who target the immigrant community.” They also released short videos in English, Spanish, Korean, Vietnamese and Chinese.

The message to immigrant residents? Verify that someone’s actually an attorney before taking legal advice, know your rights and report it if you’re scammed.

Police are still looking for Bueno-Cabrera.

The unlicensed practice of law is a misdemeano­r but often will carry felony charges like theft by deception along with it.

“There’s really no telling how widespread these practices are,” Szabo said, “without people reporting it.”

The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that between 2011 and 2015, 25 percent of Gwinnett’s residents were foreign-born. Demographi­c estimates from 2016 suggest nearly 21 percent of Gwinnett’s population — which has eclipsed 900,000 — is Hispanic. Another 12 percent is Asian.

Those two immigrant population­s tend to see the most cases of unlicensed practice of law, officials said Thursday.

In the Hispanic community, individual­s who get notary public licenses in the United States and portray themselves as “notarios” create many of the issues. A notario is a different profession that, in many Central and South American countries, does involve some legal training.

The practice has become so commonplac­e that the American Bar Associatio­n has a dedicated “Fight Notario Fraud” project. Just last month, the ABA’s Commission on Immigratio­n released a memo saying it was “deeply concerned” about such situations.

The issue has been a “chronic problem for decades,” the group said, but is “more important now than ever due to the uncertaint­y and fear resulting from the current immigratio­n climate.”

In Asian communitie­s, similar issues often arise with individual­s presenting themselves as “legal office managers” doing the work of attorneys.

“We are encouragin­g people to speak up,” Szabo said, “and we will follow up and prosecute.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Gwinnett County Solicitor Rosanna Szabo (right) speaks as State Rep. Brenda Lopez (left), herself an attorney, and attorney Ethan Pham listen during a press conference Thursday to educate the public — especially foreign-born residents — about fake...
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Gwinnett County Solicitor Rosanna Szabo (right) speaks as State Rep. Brenda Lopez (left), herself an attorney, and attorney Ethan Pham listen during a press conference Thursday to educate the public — especially foreign-born residents — about fake...
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@ AJC.COM ?? Gwinnett County Police Detective Nermin Cultarevic holds a photo of a suspect as he speaks during a press conference hosted by the Gwinnett County Solicitor’s Office. The event was held to educate the public about fake legal profession­als providing...
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@ AJC.COM Gwinnett County Police Detective Nermin Cultarevic holds a photo of a suspect as he speaks during a press conference hosted by the Gwinnett County Solicitor’s Office. The event was held to educate the public about fake legal profession­als providing...

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