Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Disbarred Mequon lawyer denied reinstatem­ent

- Bruce Vielmetti

A disbarred Mequon lawyer who stole more than $737,000 from his former firm and still owes untold thousands of dollars to it and former clients was denied reinstatem­ent Wednesday by the Wisconsin Supreme Court.

Brian Mularski, 43, argued that if he could practice law again, he could make more money to pay restitutio­n. But the court found that he had not met one of the strict requiremen­ts for getting his license back — showing just how much he’s paid back to which victims.

Mularski voluntaril­y gave up his law license in 2010, a year after the Office of Lawyer Regulation charged him with 13 counts of misconduct and was investigat­ing eight other grievances against him.

In 2012, he was charged with felony theft in a business setting, for the embezzleme­nt from his former firm, Eisenberg, Riley and Zimmerman, and pleaded guilty.

He avoided prison at his sentencing in January 2013 after convincing the judge he would make further payments on top of the $238,000 he had paid via a family loan and other non-lawyer earnings.

In 2017, not having made much headway on his various restitutio­ns, Mularski asked to rejoin the bar. The OLR opposed his reinstatem­ent, and after a public hearing, a referee recommende­d denial as well.

The referee concluded that nothing at the proceeding “gave any inkling that there was a plan to commence repayment.”

Mularski admits he hasn’t provided a proper accounting or satisfied his restitutio­n requiremen­ts, but claims it is impossible to create the required accounting out of the incomplete records available.

He was ordered to have no contact with his former firm, and some of his other clients have been repaid from a fund that covers victims of unethical lawyers. Mularski says its just impossible to know exactly how much he owes and to whom.

“We disagree,” the court wrote. “The record confirms that this is a challengin­g problem to unravel, but also demonstrat­es that there is more Attorney Mularski could do to respond to this court’s order and the requiremen­t for reinstatem­ent.”

Now Mularski can add another bill to whatever amount he still owes to former clients — the $6,000 costs of processing his reinstatem­ent petition.

According to court records, he also faces a $22,000 judgment in favor of We Energies.

Mularski, who was serving in the Wisconsin National Guard at the time of his sentencing, now operates a business calledM5 Defense, Inc. Its website shows a military helicopter firing rockets and says the firm provides advice on government procuremen­t and military sales, as well as drone video services.

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