Pubdate: Tue, 14 Dec 1999 Source: Legal Times (DC) Copyright: 1999 NLP IP Company Contact: 1730 M St., N.W. Suite 802, Washington, D.C. 20036 Fax: (202) 457-0718 Website: http://www.legaltimes.com/ Author: Jon Groner PANEL REJECTS DRUG DEFENSE LAWYER SOUGHT LENITY BECAUSE OF COCAINE ADDICTION The D.C. Board on Professional Responsibility, the arm of the D.C. Court of Appeals that handles lawyer discipline, has recommended that cocaine addiction not be treated as a mitigating factor in ethics cases. The BPR's recommendation came in a sharply worded 13-page brief in a case involving a lawyer who used the proceeds of a personal injury settlement check to buy cocaine, then concealed his actions from the client and bar counsel. If found liable, the lawyer could be disbarred. But he is arguing that the court should impose a lesser punishment because he stole the client's money as a direct result of cocaine addiction. In 1987, the court ruled that alcoholism can reduce the punishment in D.C. disciplinary cases. That reasoning was later extended to addiction to prescription drugs and to depression. The board urged in this case that the appeals court not apply that reasoning to cocaine. The board's views in the case of Matthew Marshall do not have the force of law, but will doubtless be highly influential in the court's eventual ruling. The nine-member BPR concluded that "from the standpoint of the victimized client, it makes no difference whether the culpable attorney is addicted to cocaine or not," according to its unanimous recommendation written by member Daniel Rezneck. Marshall's law license has been suspended pending the outcome of the disciplinary case. His lawyer, D.C. solo practitioner Steven Polin, says Marshall has been in addiction recovery since 1995. In its recommendation, the BPR drew a distinction between the 1987 alcoholism case, In re Kersey, and the Marshall case, pointing out that cocaine, unlike alcohol, is an illegal drug. If a mitigation argument is accepted, the BPR wrote, "a lawyer who commits a criminal act by possessing an illegal drug and steals from his client, even if only to feed his habit, would be better off in the disciplinary system than a lawyer who misappropriates client funds but does not commit the additional illegal act of possessing cocaine." The board said this "paradox" should not be countenanced. The board expressed its views in response to the court, which apparently is prepared to take up for the first time the issue of extending Kersey to cocaine. A hearing is expected early next year. Acting Bar Counsel Wallace Shipp Jr., who prosecutes disciplinary cases before the BPR and the court, says his office will soon file a brief supporting the BPR and that Ross Dicker, a lawyer in his office, will argue the case before the court on behalf of the BPR. Polin says a cocaine mitigation doctrine would be "a logical extension of Kersey. The fact that it's cocaine should not be a reason to deny someone mitigation." He adds that in the Americans With Disabilities Act, Congress "provided civil rights protections" to drug addicts. "That's the public policy of this country," Polin says. And in an amicus brief filed late last month before the Court of Appeals, the Lawyer Counseling Committee of the D.C. Bar wrote that limiting Kersey to alcoholism would be contrary to that case's reasoning and "arbitrary in its practical effect." Furthermore, in the counseling committee's view, a decision against Marshall "would likely have a serious adverse effect on the rehabilitation of lawyers." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk