Parting Thoughts: An Interview with Jerry Sternberg
Concluding 16 years as BAPR administrator, Jerry Sternberg
reflects on his role and legacy. He left BAPR late last year to
prosecute nursing home abuse cases for the Wisconsin Department of
Health and Family Services.
By Dianne Molvig
Sitting in the den of his Madison home, Jerry Sternberg looks
upon his job as administrator of the Wisconsin Supreme Court Board of
Attorneys Professional Responsibility (BAPR) from a new vantage point -
one of hindsight. Sternberg left the agency last November, after almost
16 years. "I suppose it was a complex job," Sternberg says. He smiles,
and a fleeting expression on his face hints that the meaning of those
words may be sinking in deeper now that he's outside of BAPR, rather
than in the thick of its activities.
As BAPR administrator, Sternberg supervised all investigations of
alleged misconduct or medical incapacity involving Wisconsin lawyers,
whether the investigation was conducted by staff in BAPR's Madison and
Milwaukee offices, or by any of 16 grievance committees - consisting of
both lawyers and nonlawyers, located around the state. Sternberg himself
prosecuted several discipline cases brought before a referee appointed
by the state supreme court, and also supervised other prosecutors. He
also supervised the investigation of reinstatement cases. Added to that
were media relations, a mix of administrative duties - and lots of
listening.
"Sometimes lawyers who had grievances filed against them called me
just to vent," Sternberg says. "And the same thing with complainants.
Even if their complaint got dismissed, they still wanted someone to hear
them out, to give them their day in court. So it was a balancing act.
You had to listen to everybody - complainants, respondents, the public,
and the legal profession."
Many who are unfamiliar with the inner workings of BAPR may hold
misconceptions about what his role was, Sternberg says. "I think some
believe I had more power than I really did," he says, "and that I made
all the decisions. But I only had authority to a certain point: to
dismiss grievances and to make recommendations on discipline cases to
the BAPR board. Then the 12 board members are very free to decide what
they want to do." Eight lawyers and four nonlawyers, appointed by the
supreme court, make up the board, which ultimately decides whether or
not to prosecute a case.
Nonetheless, as the overall administrator of the state agency that
disciplines lawyers, Sternberg can't shake the image of being the "Big
Bad Cop" who kept a watchful eye on the legal profession. Did that
bother him? "No," he says, "because I never saw myself or the job as
being the big, bad, mean anything. I always tried to treat people with
respect. I didn't go after lawyers I was prosecuting in a personal way.
I just tried to do a job, and to do it as well as I could, with the help
of the staff, the committees, the board - the whole team."
Coming to Wisconsin
The path that led Sternberg to his BAPR career can be traced to one
day in 1982, when he was working as legal counsel for the New York City
Police Department. Sternberg and his wife, Merle, had been considering a
move to somewhere better suited to raising a family, and where Jerry
wouldn't spend two-plus hours a day commuting to his office.
"One day I got home from work," Sternberg recalls, "and there were
three red checks next to this job announcement in the Federal Bar
Bulletin. So I applied." After a couple rounds of interviews with the
BAPR board, Sternberg was hired as the new administrator.
"I didn't go after lawyers I was prosecuting in
a personal way. I just tried to do a job, and to do it as well as I
could, with the help of the staff, the committees, the board -- the
whole team." |
A key motivation in taking the job, Sternberg says, was that Vic
Miller, George Steil Sr. of Janesville, and other board members "showed
me an example of public service that I admired and was willing to make a
move for." Sternberg himself had followed a public service direction in
his career, having served two stints as a VISTA volunteer, followed by
working as assistant corporation counsel in Mt. Vernon, N.Y., where he
prosecuted discipline cases involving public works employees, mostly
police, before his job in NYPD's legal department.
With his background, a job involving lawyer discipline was a logical
next step. But throughout his tenure at BAPR, Sternberg viewed his job
as being more than chief disciplinarian. He also took on the role of
educator. BAPR doesn't "just wait for people to trip up," he says. "I
can't tell you how many speeches I made to county bars throughout the
state and before the State Bar telling lawyers how to avoid grievances.
And it's been not just me, but the BAPR board members, too, and some of
the supreme court justices. Everybody has tried to supplement the
enforcement function of the agency with the educational part. I think
you have to put those together and educate lawyers so they don't
trip."
Sternberg's education efforts didn't stop with giving speeches or
writing articles for legal publications. He made himself available to
answer lawyers' personal questions after his seminar presentations, or
to respond to attorneys, and even judges, who called his office for rule
clarification. "I don't think there's anyone who felt we did not have an
open-door policy," he says.
Staying approachable was a high priority to Sternberg - yet not an
easy stance to maintain when you're the disciplinarian of your peers. A
pitfall for many in such a position is to become separated, isolated. "I
didn't have this view of myself as having to be a loner," Sternberg
says. "In fact, instead I immersed myself in projects that were
cooperative." One example was his involvement in the Wisconsin Lawyers'
Assistance Program (WisLAP), which tries to help lawyers conquer
personal problems, such as addiction or emotional troubles, before they
lead to professional misconduct. Not only does WisLAP aid troubled
lawyers, Sternberg points out, but its efforts also translate into
better protection of the public, which is BAPR's chief mission.
Delivering messages
Sternberg doesn't kid himself; he knows those four letters, BAPR, are
enough to stir fear in the hearts of many lawyers. That fear is largely
baseless, Sternberg likes to remind his colleagues. The highest number
of public discipline cases he's seen in one year is 69, plus the board
issues 20 to 40 private reprimands a year (usually for less serious,
one-time incidents resulting in minor harm). "That's at most about 100
lawyers a year affected by discipline, out of 19,000," Sternberg notes.
"Most grievances get dismissed. To have this great fear is not really
justified. We're not out for skulls."
Just having a grievance filed against them is enough to cause some
lawyers to respond like "deer frozen in headlights," Sternberg
acknowledges, which then puts them at risk for another professional
grievance, one that BAPR categorizes as "failure to cooperate." What may
have been a minor matter thus becomes major. "That's why failure to
cooperate makes no sense," Sternberg emphasizes. "If an attorney answers
a grievance thoroughly, the great probability, at least in terms of the
statistics, is that it's going to be dismissed."
Clearly, that's one message Sternberg hopes more attorneys grasp as
they become more familiar with what BAPR does and how it works. The
overriding message he hopes he's conveyed to lawyers over the past 16
years comes down to this: Practice with honesty. Communicate with
clients fully. And should you get a grievance filed against you, don't
run scared.
"The other thing is, we're all going to make mistakes," Sternberg
says, "because we're human beings. Fess up to those mistakes. Don't try
to give excuses or point the blame at others. If you practice honestly
and deal openly with clients, opponents, and the courts - and not play
games or take on the Rambo style - you're going to do a better job. It's
as simple as that."
Another oft-repeated message Sternberg hopes has hit home with
lawyers over the years is that practicing according to professional
conduct rules serves dual purposes. "Not only does it keep you out of
trouble with BAPR," he notes, "it also helps you develop more satisfied
clients, which is good business. Clients like it when you communicate
well with them, when you're honest and consistent."
"One of the most important things for lawyers to do from the
get-go when they meet with clients," Sternberg adds, "is to say, 'This
is the way I charge.' Bite the bullet; don't put it off. Because if you
suddenly hit clients with a big bill, they're angry and file a
grievance. Also, show what you did. It's aggravating to get a bill that
says 'worked on the file.' That doesn't mean anything to the client. Be
specific. There are so many commonsense ways to avoid grievances and to
make your clients more satisfied. Those go hand in hand."
Leaving a legacy
What overall impression does Sternberg hope he's left behind? "The
thing I'm proudest of is the fact that people were treated evenhandedly
and extremely fairly," he responds. "In tandem with that goal, I also
tried to run the agency with the utmost integrity. We were
straightforward; we took our lumps when we had to. If we did something
wrong, we explained we made a mistake. That's the way I see my legacy
with the agency."
He also worked hard over the years to get quicker dispositions on
cases, which is better for all involved, Sternberg notes. "People's
memories are better; the outcomes are more meaningful to them," he says.
"So quicker dispositions were a priority, but that had to be consistent
with the seriousness of the case and with fairness."
He'd also like to be remembered as an administrator who took great
care to preserve confidentiality while grievance investigations were
pending and in cases that resulted in dismissals. "During my
administration," he says, "I don't remember anybody ever saying that we
leaked something to the media. I worked hard to make sure that we
honored the public records requests, which we had to under public
records law. But at the same time, on the cases that were confidential -
those that had no merit and were dismissed, or the minor ones that
resulted in private reprimands - people didn't get to know about
them."
Sternberg also cites specific accomplishments during his tenure of
which he's proud. One was working several years ago with a State Bar
committee chaired by Dan Hildebrand to consider adopting the ABA Model
Rules, including trust account rules. What had been two separate trust
account rules were consolidated into one, and the language made clearer
to spell out exactly what lawyers must do when acting as fiduciaries for
clients. "The committee saw it as necessary to protect the public, and
to make sure the lawyer had substantiation for what he or she was
doing," Sternberg says. "So it was a two-way win."
More key changes to the trust account rule took shape in 1998 through
the work of a joint BAPR/State Bar committee chaired by Dan Shneidman.
Lawyers now can invest trust account monies in places such as investment
institutions, enabling a higher rate of return. The rule now covers
estate accounts, as well as trust accounts. It also sets up a system for
overdraft notification, in effect as of Jan. 1, 1999. If a check on the
account bounces, the bank notifies the lawyer and BAPR. Motivations for
this change were to spot recordkeeping problems earlier and to nab
thieves sooner. "What we found in prosecuting some misappropriation
cases," Sternberg explains, "was that there had been numerous bounced
checks on some of those accounts for two years. If we'd known earlier,
we could have protected the public better."
In addition, Sternberg pushed for a new rule prohibiting sexual
contact between lawyers and their clients. The rule results in education
about and deterrence against inappropriate contact, Sternberg says, and
clarifies how the public is protected.
Victim restitution for attorney misconduct, whether due to
misappropriations or excessive fees, is another area Sternberg pursued
vigorously, as was recouping prosecution costs from disciplined lawyers.
The latter helped attain another goal: keeping a lid on the BAPR
assessment paid by Wisconsin attorneys. Because of recouped prosecution
costs and administrative cost cutting, "we've kept the assessment at
between $70 and $85 (per attorney) for several years," Sternberg
says.
As for future recommendations, Sternberg would like to see BAPR once
again undergo an evaluation by the ABA's Center for Professional
Responsibility, as was last done in 1986. "It's an independent point of
view," Sternberg says. "It's objective, and I think it would be a good
idea to do it again. You always have to look at ways to make things
better."
Upon cross-examination
If any Wisconsin lawyer could sit down with Sternberg and pose any
question he or she has always wanted to ask, what might some of those
questions be? Sternberg surmises one on many lawyers' minds is: Why does
BAPR prosecute small-firm attorneys and sole practitioners more than it
does large-firm attorneys?
Sternberg can't shake the image of being the
"Big Bad Cop" who kept a watchful eye on the legal profession. "I never
saw myself or the job as being the big, bad, mean anything. I always
tried to treat people with respect." |
Sternberg says BAPR has never targeted solos or small-firm
practitioners to watch for transgressions. Misconduct is misconduct; the
size of the errant lawyer's firm is irrelevant. That said, Sternberg
does feel that solos and small-firm lawyers are more vulnerable to
grievances, largely due to their lack of backup support. They don't have
an in-house ethics advisor, as some large firms do. They may have
insufficient personnel to handle bookkeeping, such as trust account
records. They lack adequate staff support to help take care of client
call-backs and other daily routines. These factors add up to prime
conditions for potential grievances: faulty trust account records,
ethical missteps, disgruntled clients who feel they're being ignored,
and so on.
Sternberg addressed those pitfalls at the State Bar's "Tools for the
21st Century: 1998 Midwest Small-Firm Success Conference" last May, just
as he's discussed them with lawyers in other seminars over the years.
"What I was trying to do in that speech was make it an even playing
field," Sternberg says. "I was trying to give them all the tips that I
thought the larger firms use." For example, have a tickler file to aid
your memory. Call people back the same day they call you. "Because,
number one, it shows you care," Sternberg points out, "and number two,
you're very unlikely to get a grievance if you call clients back the
same day. It just shows respect."
Two other questions lawyers might want to ask him, Sternberg says,
include: Why doesn't BAPR prosecute government lawyers? And why are
matters prosecuted that seem to be no more than errors of judgment? As
for the first, "Not true," Sternberg states. "I've prosecuted a number
of cases against government lawyers." In fact, he notes, he's gotten
several calls from other jurisdictions that have never prosecuted
prosecutors, asking him for advice on how to proceed.
As for the second question, Sternberg stresses that simple mistakes
by a lawyer resulting in minor problems generally are not prosecuted.
Prosecution enters in, "when lawyers let something go for a prolonged
period of time," he says. "The common excuse is 'the press of other
business got to me.' But if, for example, you don't call the personal
representative in an estate for two years, which I've seen in some
cases, that's neglect. That's not adequate representation. It shows
you're not taking care of business."
"Something like that has to be dealt with," he adds, "so it doesn't
happen again. And usually if it's one mistake, it would result in a
private reprimand - unless it's compounded by a lie."
From members of the general public might come an entirely different
question, or accusation, regarding BAPR, namely: Aren't all you lawyers
just watching out for yourselves? To that Sternberg responds a
resounding, "No." I think anyone who had contact with us over some
period of time got to know we were not there to protect lawyers who
committed misconduct. We were there to do an objective job, to find out
what happened, and to take fair and appropriate action."
Too lenient with lawyers? Too aggressive in prosecuting attorneys who
make mistakes? The claims and counterclaims always hover, as they do for
any agency delegated with the kinds of responsibilities BAPR has. "You
can never please everybody," Sternberg says philosophically. "You have
to have the guts to do the job, notwithstanding the fact that not
everybody loves you."
That brings us to one final question that may be on the minds of many
people. Why is Sternberg leaving BAPR after all these years? As of Jan.
4, he began working as legal counsel for the Wisconsin Department of
Health and Family Services, where he'll prosecute nursing home abuse
cases. When he was offered the position last October, he mulled over the
decision for several days before deciding the time was ripe for a
change. "But I had very mixed feelings about leaving," Sternberg says.
"I deeply loved the agency and the people with whom I was associated. So
it wasn't an easy decision. Not at all."
Dianne Molvig operates Access Information Service, a Madison
research, writing, and editing service. She is a frequent contributor to
area publications.
Wisconsin Lawyer