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March
2022

A report on where
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Patricia Guerrero Confirmed, Sworn In As Justice of California Supreme Court …Court of Appeal Justice Maria Stratton Nominated to Post of Presiding Justice …Judge Fred W. Slaughter Confirmed by Senate as District Court Judge



Judges, Lawyers Under Scrutiny


Michael J. Avenatti
Attorney/Convict

Michael J. Avenatti

The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has before it California lawyer Michael Avenatti’s contention that subjecting him to a second trial on 10 counts of wire fraud in connection with allegedly siphoning nearly $10 million in client funds would constitute double jeopardy.

The first trial in the U.S. District Court of the Central District of California came to a halt on Aug. 24 when Senior Judge James Selna declared a mistrial because prosecutors withheld potentially exculpatory financial data gleaned from Avenatti’s law firm’s servers. On Oct. 4, Selna rejected Avenatti’s motion to dismiss based on double jeopardy, finding that the motion lacked merit, under case law, because the Brady error was not the result of misconduct and prosecutors had not “goaded” Avenatti into seeking a mistrial.

The lawyer, acting in pro per, filed an interlocutory appeal, and the Ninth Circuit denied a motion to dismiss it.

State Bar disciplinary charges were filed July 29, 2019. He was placed on interim suspension on June 4, 2020 based on his Feb. 14 conviction in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York on attempted extortion and wire fraud counts.

The case, tried before a jury in Judge Paul G. Gardephe’s courtroom, stemmed from Avenatti’s effort to exact a sum of about $25 million from Nike by threatening to blacken its reputation in litigation if it did not comply. On July 8, 2021, Avenatti was sentenced to two-and-a-half years in prison by Gardephe.

Avenatti is slated to be sentenced on May 24 in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York in another case. He was convicted on Feb. 4 of Gardipe wire fraud and aggravated identity theft in connecting with cheating former client Stormy Daniels out of nearly $300,000.

The money Avenatti pilfered was an advance to Daniels in connection with her book, “Full Disclosure,” in which she tells of her affair with then-President Donald Trump. Avenatti forged her signature on a letter to her literary agent, directing that payments be sent to a bank account he controlled. Avenatti represented himself in the proceeding.

The lawyer handled a number of high-profile cases, including representation of Daniels—whose actual name is Stephanie Clifford—in her actions against Trump in an effort to skirt a 2016 nondisclosure agreement she signed in connection with a $130,000 pay-off to her for agreeing not to talk publicly of their 2006 affair. He also handled her action against the then-president for defamation.

Thomas V. Girardi
Former Practicing Lawyer

Thomas V. Girardi

The California Supreme Court has before it the Jan. 10 recommendation by the State Bar Court former premier personal injury attorney Thomas V. Girardi be disbarred.

The State Bar of announced on Jan. 24 that it will intensify its efforts to determine whether disciplinary action against Girardi was averted, through the years, by virtue of Girardi’s influence and the connections he had within the organization.

Girardi, 82, is a conservatee, is no longer practicing law, is in bankruptcy, is being divorced by his trophy wife, actress/singer Erika Jayne, and has moved from his Pasadena mansion into an assisted living facility. His reputation is irredeemable based on litigation in which it is claimed that he and his firm stole millions of dollars in clients’ settlement funds.

The downtown Los Angeles law firm of Halpern May Ybarra Gelberg LLP has been hired to conduct an investigation into the question of possible overlooking of the lawyer’s persistent ethical breaches.

An earlier peek at the matter led the State Bar to admit in July that an internal review “revealed mistakes made in some investigations over the many decades of Mr. Girardi’s career going back some 40 years and spanning the tenure of many Chief Trial Counsels.” The bland admission of “mistakes” was widely seen as inadequate absent any elaboration.

 A statement by State Bar Board of Trustees Chair Ruben Duran, who heads Best Best & Krieger LLP’s Ontario office, suggests the State Bar is now set to dig more deeply than before. He said:

“Mark our words: we will go wherever the evidence leads us.”

Duran also commented:

“The State Bar Board leadership and staff take very seriously the immense harm done by Thomas Girardi to innocent victims. We have been proactively doing everything in our power to learn from the past and do better in the future to prevent harms like this from recurring.

“This necessarily includes assessing whether intentional wrongdoing by anyone associated with the State Bar may have influenced how complaints against Girardi were handled.”

While Duran expressed a resolve to determine what occurred when complaints about Girardi were received, he did not provide hope that much of what is learned will be shared with the public. To the contrary, he said:

“Details of the investigation, including details of past closed complaints and investigations, must remain confidential to comply with the law and to give this investigation the greatest chance of success.”

The probe will doubtlessly include questioning of Tom Layton who, while an investigator for the State Bar, acted as an aide to Girardi, frequently accompanying the high-profile lawyer at social events; attorney Walter Lack and former State Bar President Howard Miller, who worked with Girardi on a case that resulted in an ethics probe by the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (with a determination that Girardi and Lack had committed misconduct); and former State Bar Court prosecutor Dale G. Nowicki who had a clandestine professional relationship for more than a year with Girardi’s son-in-law, attorney David Lira.

Layton

The Los Angeles Times, in a July 13 article by Harriet Ryan and Matt Hamilton, reported:

“As an investigator for the State Bar of California, Tom Layton was responsible for policing the legal profession for rogue attorneys.

“But while collecting a salary as a watchdog for the public, Layton spent work hours advancing the interests and political connections of a lawyer with a long record of misconduct complaints: the now-disgraced trial attorney Tom Girardi, emails obtained by the Los Angeles Times show.

“During years when clients accused the attorney of stealing from them, Layton, the most high-profile investigator at the agency, was arranging dinner dates for Girardi with civic elites, such as then-Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck and billionaire developer Ed Roski, and otherwise acting as his personal assistant, political operative and, at times, chauffeur, according to the emails.”

Lack, Miller

Girardi’s firm, Girardi | Keese, in tandem with Lack’s firm, Engstrom, Lipscomb Lack, attempted to levy execution in the United States on a $489 million Nicaraguan default judgment against Dole Food Company. That company had not been named as the defendant but court documents were altered to make it appear that it had been. The firms’ bid in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California failed.

On July 6, 2005, Miller, of Girardi’s firm, a week before he was to orally argue the appeal before the Ninth Circuit, determined that the judgment was invalid and that the appeal should be dismissed. It was dismissed five days later.

However, the Ninth Circuit on Aug. 25, 2005, issued an order to show cause to Girardi, Lack, Miller, two Lack associates, and the two firms to show cause “why it or he should not be required to reimburse the appellees for fees and expenses incurred in defending this appeal, and why it or he should not be suspended, disbarred, or otherwise sanctioned.” The alleged conduct was described as “filing a frivolous appeal, falsely stating that the writ of execution issued by the Nicaraguan court named Dole Food Company, Inc. as a judgment debtor, falsely stating that the writ corrected mistakes in the judgment, and falsely stating that the notary affidavit constituted an accurate translation of the writ.”

The OSC was discharged on March 28, 2006, as to Miller.

Senior Judge Wallace A. Tashima was appointed as a special master. In a October 7, 2009 report (incorporating corrections to an earlier report), he declared:

“In a high stakes gamble to enforce a foreign Judgment of nearly a half billion dollars, Respondents initiated and directed years of litigation against Defendants. Respondents efforts went beyond the use of ‘questionable tactics’—they crossed the line to include the persistent use of known falsehoods….Respondents made these false representations knowingly, intentionally, and recklessly. Their actions vexatiously multiplied the proceedings at great expense to Defendants and required the Ninth Circuit to deal with a frivolous appeal.”

Tashima called for sanctions totaling $390,000, which were not contested.

A three-judge panel—comprised of Judges William A. Fletcher, Marsha S. Berzon, and N. Randy Smith—on July 13, 2010, said:

“As early as January 2003, respondents Lack and Girardi were aware that the Nicaraguan Judgment named the wrong defendant and that the discrepancy could doom any enforcement action in American courts.”

 The panel added that the “careful and detailed decision” by then-District Court Judge Nora Manella (now presiding justice of Div. Four of this district’s Court of Appeal) “should have given them pause in pursuing an appeal, as it laid bare the fundamental and fatal flaws in their enforcement action.”

The judges noted that Girardi had a “practice of authorizing the Lack firm to sign his name on briefs that turned out to contain falsehoods,” and concluded that his “proven conduct is at most reckless.” They declared:

“THOMAS V. GIRARDI is formally reprimanded.”

Lack and his associate Paul A. Traina—whom the panel said “cannot, like Girardi, rely on a claim of ignorance”—were suspended from practice before the Ninth Circuit for six months.

Yet, the State Bar imposed no discipline on Girardi, Lack or Traina.

In light of Miller being State Bar president, a special prosecutor, Jerome Falk, was named. He found that no misrepresentations had been “intentional.” It later emerged that Falk had ties to Girardi and Lack; their law firms had been clients of his law firm.

Nowicki

It has also emerged that Nowicki, while a State Bar prosecutor, reported to a supervisor in the office who was overseeing the disciplinary proceedings against Girardi. At that time, Nowicki was moonlighting, practicing law with Lira, whose wife, Jacqueline Lira, is Girardi’s daughter.

When it came to light, the State Bar said it did not know of Nowicki’s moonlighting as a lawyer, noting that it was not reported to it, in violation of a policy. Nowicki resigned from his State Bar post on Oct. 4. He is now practicing law with an office in La Mirada.

Lira left Girardi | Keese—which is now shut down—on June 13, 2020, after a heated confrontation with Girardi over his cheating of clients. He’s presently with Engstrom, Lipscomb & Lack, the firm of which Walter Lack is managing partner.

Girardi, while he was still practicing law, often teamed with Lack in representing clients in court. Girardi provided theatrics and Lack understood the legal aspects.

With the current focus on the State Bar’s disciplinary system, the question is presented whether other high-profile attorneys who were subjects of publicly aired allegations of misconduct—such as the late Neil Papiano and former Los Angeles County Bar Association President Paul Kiesel—escaped State Bar actions based on their prominence and clout.

The Jan. 10 State Bar Court recommendation that Girardi be disbarred came as no surprise given that the ex-practitioner did not file opposition. Chief among the findings was that Girardi “committed an act of moral turpitude…by intentionally misappropriating $1,985,615.15” that belonged to the minor children of air crash victims.

Girardi and his firm represented four sets of plaintiffs—families, including minors—in multidistrict litigation in In Re: Lion Air Flight JT 610 Crash, assigned to the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. The case stemmed from a plane crash on Oct. 29, 2018, causing the death of all 189 persons who were aboard. A settlement was reached. In violation of court orders to electronically disburse settlement funds that were in his client trust account (“CTA”), Girardi held onto $2 million of the funds. According to the State Bar complaint:

“On or about September 3, 2020, the balance in respondent’s CTA was $239,396.25. On or about December 4, 2020, before respondent had disbursed any portion of the $2,000,000.00 from respondent’s CTA to, or on behalf of the minor plaintiffs, the balance in respondent’s CTA was $14,384.85.”

On Dec. 14, 2020, U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Durkin of the Northern District of Illinois found Girardi in contempt for violating his orders, directed entry of a $2 million judgment against him, and ordered that his assets be frozen.

The judge said of the plaintiffs:

“These are widows and orphans. Half a million dollars for any one of these families is a significant amount of money. Life changing, given the tragedy they went through.”

A Dec. 2, 2020 class action alleges that Girardi and Jayne embezzled the money to fund their “outrageous lifestyles…in the glitz-and-glam world of Hollywood and Beverly Hills.”

It is also alleged by the State Bar that Girardi “willfully and intentionally misappropriated at least $269,759.70” of a $504,400 settlement of a client’s suit for the wrongful death of her husband.

Girardi was relegated to involuntary inactive status by the State Bar on March 9. Disciplinary charges were filed against him on March 30 alleging 14 counts involving the large-scale cheating of clients.

His ability to pay damages is in doubt. Girardi now professes a lack of assets, saying in court papers last year:
“At one point I had about $80 million or $50 million in cash. That’s all gone. I don’t have any money.”

The trustee in the bankruptcy of Girardi’s dissolved law firm, is seeking $25 million from Jayne, asserting she knew that funds for gifts and “glam” services lavished on her were derived from settlements stolen from her husband’s clients.


Judiciary: Vacancies, Appointments




Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals

Judge Andrew Hurwitz, 74, will be assuming senior status on a date yet to be determined. The loquacious jurist is known to do most of the talking during oral arguments, often pontificating rather than listening to counsel. Appointed by President Barack Obama, he assumed office on June 27, 2012.

He was previously vice chief justice of the Arizona Supreme Court.

It was previously announced that Judge M. Margaret McKeown, 70, will assume senior status, also on a date to be determined. An appointee of then-President Bill Clinton, she assumed office in 1998.

The Senate on March 17 confirmed then-Orange Superior Court Judge Fred W. Slaughter as a District Court judge. He replaces Judge Andrew J. Guilford who went on senior status July 5, 2019.

There are five vacancies and one that’s imminent.

Judge John A. Kronstadt, 70, will retire Friday. An appointee of then-President Barack Obama, he assumed office in 2011, he is the husband of Court of Appeal Justice Helen Bendix of this district’s Div. One.

There are two nominations before the Senate.
A vacancy was created when Judge Manuel Real assumed senior status on Nov. 4, 2018, after 52 years on the bench (and died June 26, 2019). Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Sherilyn Peace Garnett has been nominated as his successor.

Judge James V. Selna took senior status on March 4, 2020, and Riverside Superior Court Judge Sunshine Suzanne Sykes has been nominated to take his place.

Two doomed nominations are those of Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Hernan D. Vera, chosen Sept. 20 for the seat previously occupied by Judge Margaret Morrow who went on senior status Oct. 29, 2015, and  U.S. Magistrate Judge Kenly Kiya Kato of the Central District of California, picked on Dec. 15 to assume the office of Judge Virginia Phillips, a former chief judge, who retired on Feb. 14, on her 65th birthday. The Senate Judiciary Committee did not report favorably on the nominations.

Judge Beverly Reid O’Connell died Oct. 8, 2017, at the age of 52. No successor has been named.



 

 

 

 

 

—A.P.

Patricia Guerrero, left, is sworn in as a member of the California Supreme Court on Monday by Gov. Gavin Newsom at the Stanford Mansion in Sacramento. She is joined by her sons Anthony, 15, left; Christopher, 14, holding a family Bible; and her husband, Joe Dyson.

Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Feb. 15 he would nominate Court of Appeal Justice Patricia Guerrero of the Fourth District’s Div. One as justice of the California Supreme Court. She was confirmed March 22 by the Commission on Judicial Appointments—comprised of Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye, Attorney General Rob Bonta and Court of Appeal Presiding Justice Manuel A. Ramirez of the Fourth District’s Div. Two, the state’s senior presiding justice—on March 23. She replaced Justice Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar, who resigned on Oct. 31 to become president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a “think tank.”

Second District

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday named Court of Appeal Justice Maria E. Stratton, 69, of this district’s Div. Eight as presiding judge of that division If confirmed by the Commission on Judicial Appointments—comprised of Cantil-Sakauye, Bonta and Court of Appeal Senior Presiding Justice Arthur Gilbert of this district’s Div. Six—she will replace Tricia Bigalow, who retired.

There are three vacancies. Justices Laurie Zelon of Div. Seven and Halim Dhanidina of Div. Three retired and Justice Jeffrey Johnson of Div. One was removed by the Commission on Judicial Performance based on a pattern of improper sexual advances and other misconduct.

Court of Appeal Justice Frank J. Menetrez of the Fourth District’s Div. Two has applied for a transfer to this district. Others under consideration for appointment here include former Los Angeles County Bar Association President Rex Heinke, 71.

Serving on assignment until April 30 are retired Court of Appeal Justice Miriam Vogel, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Michelle C. Kim, Alameda Superior Court Judge Noël Wise, San Luis Obispo Superior Court Judge Charles S. Crandall, and San Diego Superior Court Judge Albert T. Harutunian III. Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Upinder S. Kalra will be a pro tem justice through May 31.


Los Angeles County

Gov. Gavin Newsom on March 14 appointed four private practitioners and one government lawyer to vacancies on the Los Angeles Superior Court. They are Nicholas F. Daum, 47, a partner in Kendall Brill & Kelly LLP; Mark A. Davis, 57, a sole practitioner; Dean J. Kitchens, 69, a partner in Gibson Dunn & Crutcher; Tiana J. Murillo, 42, an assistant Los Angeles county counsel; and Bradley S. Phillips, 68, a partner in Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP.

Among Los Angeles Superior Court judges who are up for reelection this year and chose not to run to succeed themselves, thus creating open seats in the June 7 primary, are John P. Doyle, who retired March 10; Stephen M. Moloney, who plans to leave the court on June 3; and Judges Randall F. Pacheco and Bruce Marrs who have not specified retirement dates.

Judge Gloria White-Brown has said she will retire this year, but is running for reelection.

There are nine contests on the June 7 ballot.



 

 

 


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