Newspaper: Metropolitan News-Enterprise
Publication Date: Friday, January 30,
2009
Page No.: 11
Headline: END OF THE MONTH: Attorney
Fine, Facing Disbarment, Moves to Set Aside Contempt Finding...Judge Stotler
Takes Senior Status, Creating Third Vacancy on U.S. District Court...Former Superior Court Judge Dorn
Moves to Throw Out Ethics Charges
Byline: --
Body:
•Judges, Lawyers Under Scrutiny
Mervyn H. Wolf
Encino Attorney
Wolf, a lawyer for 40 years, is
scheduled for pretrial conference and trial setting on five felony embezzlement
counts on Feb. 5 before Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Bob Bowers Jr. The
case was continued from Jan. 20.
Wolf is accused of having taken
settlement funds from his clients in multiple personal injury, workers’ compensation,
and wrongful termination cases between June 2003 and June 2004. He allegedly
deposited settlement checks into his clients’ trust accounts, and then
embezzled the funds.
Wolf was placed on involuntary inactive
status by the State Bar Court July 10 of last year and faces discipline in
connection with several matters. He has had extensive contacts with the
disciplinary system, having been placed on three years’ probation in 1995 for
misconduct in three matters, suspended 45 days in 1998 for failing to comply
with a condition of the earlier probation, placed on inactive status for a
month in 2002 for failure to comply with MCLE requirements, and served a month
on suspension in 2004 for nonpayment of bar dues.
Richard I. Fine
Attorney
Fine, an attorney since 1973, was held
in contempt of court last week by Los Angeles Superior Court Judge David Yaffe,
who found that he refused to respond to questions at a judgment debtor
examination and held himself out as entitled to practice law after being placed
on involuntary inactive status by the State Bar Court.
Fine has moved to set aside the
judgment of contempt; a hearing on the motion is scheduled for Feb. 24.
Fine is facing possible disbarment
based on State Bar Court Hearing Judge Richard Honn’s finding in November 2007
that the lawyer engaged in a concerted campaign of litigation designed to
harass judicial officers who had ruled against him, in particular Los Angeles
Superior Court Commissioner Bruce Mitchell.
On Sept. 17 of last year, the State Bar
Court denied, without comment, Fine’s motion to dismiss the disbarment
proceedings on First Amendment grounds. Fine contends the State Bar is
retaliating against him for engaging in protected speech, which bar counsel
disputes, saying Fine engaged in moral turpitude by continuously relitigating
issues on which he had been ruled against.
Fine has since moved to reconsider that
ruling, citing, among other things, the Court of Appeal’s recent ruling that
payment of local judicial benefits to Los Angeles Superior Court judges is
unconstitutional. He contends that since the disbarment action is based, in
part, on litigation of suits in which he made the same argument, his actions in
those cases cannot be considered frivolous or to constitute harassment of
judicial officers whom he claimed had a conflict of interest in hearing cases
in which Los Angeles County was a party, while the county was paying them
benefits.
He is also suing State Bar officials in
federal court, challenging the constitutionality of the portion of the State
Bar Act that permits disbarment for acts of “moral turpitude” that are not
criminal offenses.
Roosevelt Dorn
Former Los Angeles Superior
Court Judge
Dorn, who served on the Inglewood
Municipal Court and the Los Angeles Superior Court from 1979 until his election
as mayor of Inglewood in 1997, pled not guilty on July 24 of last year, to
charges of conflict of interest and misappropriation of public funds. He is
alleged to have personally benefited from a loan program designed to assist
city employees in purchasing and improving housing within the city.
A pretrial conference and hearing on
Dorn’s motion to set aside the charges has been set for Feb. 24 at the Foltz
Criminal Justice Center.
Judiciary: Vacancies, Appointments
Federal Courts
Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
There has been a vacancy on the court
since Judge Stephen Trott took senior status Dec. 31, 2004. There is also a
newly created position as of Jan. 21.
U.S. District Court
Judge George Schiavelli resigned
effective Oct. 5, creating a second vacancy.
The Senate this month officially
returned to the president the nomination of Orange Superior Court Judge James
E. Rogan, a former congressman and Commerce Department official, to succeed
Judge Nora Manella, who resigned to become a justice of this district’s Court
of Appeal.
Rogan was unable to secure a
confirmation hearing because Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy,
D-Vt., has a “blue slip” policy under which a hearing will be held only if both
of the nominee’s home state senators approve. Sen. Barbara Boxer, who has
previously supported all candidates recommended by a bipartisan advisory
committee, opposes Rogan’s nomination, in part because of his role as one of
the prosecutors at the impeachment trial of President Bill Clinton.
A third vacancy was created when Judge
Alicemarie Stotler took senior status Jan. 5.
State Courts
California Supreme Court
There are no vacancies.
Court of Appeal
First District
Justice William Stein retired from Div.
One at the end of August. Justice Linda M. Gemello retired from Div. Five Jan.
4. Justice Douglas E. Swager retired from Div. One Dec. 31.
This District (Second
District)
Justice Miriam Vogel retired July 3
from Div. One, which also has a vacancy as a result of Robert Mallano’s
elevation to presiding justice. Presiding Justice Candace Cooper retired from
Div. Eight Dec. 31.
Third District
Justice Fred Morrison is retiring
today. Justice Rodney Davis is retiring Feb. 16.
Fifth District
Justice
Thomas Harris died Nov. 12.
Seats in other districts are filled.
•Los Angeles Superior Court
Six newly elected judges were sworn in
Jan. 5—Hilleri G. Merritt, Michael O’Gara, Thomas Rubinson, Harvey Silberman,
Pat Connolly, and Michael Jesic.
They succeeded Judges Francis A. Gately,
who retired Nov. 30; Michael Duggan, who retired July 22; Wendell Mortimer Jr.,
who retired April 30; Tracy Grant, whose term is expiring; Gibson Lee, whose
term is also expiring; and Jack Hunt, who retired July 31.
The governor named seven new judges on
Jan. 22—Victor Greenberg and Maren E. Nelson, who had been commissioners;
Deputy District Attorney Geanene Yriarte; Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael
Terrell; and Los Angeles attorneys Huey P. Cotton, David S. Cunningham III and
Howard L. Halm.
Greenberg succeeds Judge Michael R.
Hoff, who retired July 31; Nelson fills the vacancy resulting from the death
of. Judge Deanne Smith Myers Aug. 20; Yriarte succeeds Judge Alexander Williams
III, who retired Sept. 15; Terrell fills a seat vacated by Judge Ray Hart, who
took disability retirement; Cotton fills the seat from which Judge David M.
Horwitz retired July 18; Cunningham, the son of a former Los Angeles
councilman, succeeds Judge Xenophon F. Lang Jr., who retired July 29; and Halm
fills a seat that has been vacant since Judge Leon Kaplan retired Aug. 1.
Remaining vacancies are a result of the
retirements of Rodney Forneret Dec. 5, Kenneth Black Nov. 5, Darlene Schempp
Sept. 30; and Coleman Swart and Suzanne Person Sept. 15; and the decision of
the Judicial Council to convert former Commissioner Ronald Rose’s seat to a
judgeship. Rose was among the 17 new judges named by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger
in November.
In addition, a newly created position
on the court was to have been funded as of last June 1, but legislation
designed to ease the state budget crisis postponed the effective date to June 1
of this year.
Judge Kathryne A. Stoltz, whose last
day on the bench was Dec. 19, officially retires Feb. 20.
Among those whose names have gone to
the State Bar Commission on Judicial Nominees Evaluation as possible appointees
to the court former Deputy District Attorney Christopher Darden, now in private
practice; former Assistant U.S. Attorney David P. Vaughn, now a managing
director of the litigation and consulting firm FTI Consulting, Inc.; criminal
defense specialist Steven Cron of Santa Monica; Los Angeles Assistant City
Attorney Gary Geuss, Los Angeles Deputy City Attorneys Richard Kraft and Edward
J. Perez; state Deputy Attorneys General Steven D. Matthews, E. Eugene Varanini
IV, Victoria Wilson, Paul Roadarmel Jr., Robert S. Henry and Kenneth Byrne;
Administrative Law Judge Robert Helfand, Deputy District Attorneys Steven I.
Katz, Alison S. Matsumoto, Shellie Samuels, Jeffrey Gootman, John D. Harlan II
and Laura Laesecke; Commissioners Henry Hull, John Slawson, Rocky L. Crabb,
Michael Convey, Joel Wallenstein, Dennis Mulcahy, Marilyn Kading Martinez, Mary
Lou Katz Byrne, Steven Berman, and Loren DiFrank; U.S. District Court attorney
Amy L. Lew; Irvine attorney Raymond Earl Brown; Deputy Federal Public Defender
Angel Navarro; Deputy Alternate Public Defender Jerome J. Haig; Securities and
Exchange Commission lawyer Martin Joseph Murphy, Los Angeles attorneys Michael
Wilner, Shan K. Thever, John L. Carlton, Adrienne Krikorian, Mark A.
Borenstein, Eulanda Matthews and Lawrence P. Brennan Jr.; Century City attorney
Howard S. Fredman, Pasadena attorney Warren Gilbert, Glendale attorney Mark J.
MacCarley, and Westlake Village attorney Michael Nebenzahl..
Feb. 10 will be the last day of service
for Commissioner Harold Vites. His official retirement date will be March 31
or April 1.
There are commissioner vacancies as a
result of Silberman, Greenberg, and Nelson becoming judges.
Commissioner William Dodson is on long-term
medical leave.