Guest Editorial
Changes to Attorney Discipline System
Leave Unresolved Issues
While the system that is developing resolves some issues,
others remain, including evidentiary standards and prosecutorial
discretion, the fate of district committees, and whether and
when to hold additional public hearings on the proposed new rules.
By Gary L. Bakke
The outline of our new attorney discipline system began to
emerge at the Wisconsin Supreme Court's administrative conference,
which was held on Jan. 20 - 21. Although most of the functional
details related to the restructuring of the Board of Attorneys
Professional Responsibility (BAPR) still need to be worked out,
the structural elements are now known.
In January, the State Bar's BAPR Structure Committee
submitted to the court its recommendations, which had been approved
at the State Bar Board of Governors November 1999 meeting.
Possibly the most contentious issue still to
be addressed is whether and when to hold public hearings on the
proposed new rules. |
The Bar's proposal was based on the premise that the
bar and the public have a unity of interest in a system that
fairly and efficiently disciplines miscreant lawyers. This concept,
that attorneys do not want to protect other attorneys who are
dishonest or unethical, is second nature to us but meets with
skepticism by others.
During the administrative conference, the court considered
the Bar's recommendations and those from the ABA, BAPR Interim
Administrator James Martin, Marquette Law School, the U.W. Law
School, and others. The system that is developing in the court
adapts suggestions from many different sources.
Court accepts Bar's recommendation on client assistance
program
The State Bar is convinced that most of the public dissatisfaction
with the current system stems from the fact that there is no
mechanism to handle consumer disputes, rather than from BAPR's
handling of serious ethical violations. One major change proposed
by the Bar was to establish a client assistance program (CAP).
The court, without much discussion, unanimously adopted this
suggestion. A central intake system will be established and a
diversionary client assistance program will be developed to handle
those complaints that do not involve an ethics violation.
I anticipate that the CAP program will handle more than 95
percent of all complaints that are now filed. These complaints,
which do not involve serious ethical misconduct, still involve
an attorney/client problem that could benefit from third-party
assistance. Because the current system is designed to handle
only disciplinary cases, these minor matters now are summarily
dismissed from the system, leaving complainants frustrated and
angry. This new CAP program should benefit both lawyers and their
clients and greatly improve the public's acceptance of the
disciplinary system. Interim BAPR Administrator Martin has been
asked to convene a committee to develop the new intake and diversionary
system.
New 12-member board will determine cause to proceed
Another major change involves dividing much of the BAPR board's
current responsibilities between two new 12-member boards. There
will be a 12-member board that will review the results of an
investigation and determine whether to proceed with formal public
charges against an attorney. Once that board determines cause
to proceed, the prosecution will be handled by BAPR staff and
then presented to a referee, who then will recommend discipline
to the supreme court if warranted. This is the major role of
the current BAPR board and is very similar to the function proposed
by the Bar.
An important issue is yet to be decided: What is the evidentiary
standard to be applied by the charging board, and to what extent
does the board have prosecutorial discretion in the charging
decision? The present board applies a "clear-and-convincing"
evidentiary standard to proceed and retains prosecutorial discretion
in the charging decision. In the court's discussions the
standard for the new board was frequently referred to as "probable
cause," which is a lower standard than presently used, but
there has been no explicit decision on this issue by the court.
This evidentiary standard and discretionary authority are one
of the most important elements still to be determined.
A second 12-member administrative oversight board will monitor
the system and the operation of the district committees. In addition
to overseeing the system, this board will hold limited appellate
power to handle complainants unhappy with the resolution of their
case. As with the present board, both the charging board and
the administrative oversight board will be composed of eight
lawyer and four nonlawyer members appointed by the court.
Fate of district committees unclear
The local district committees, which were strongly supported
by the Bar's proposal, will continue, at least for the immediate
future. These committees investigate complaints against local
attorneys and make recommendations for discipline. The justices
agreed that these district committees need more uniformity in
their procedures and discipline recommendations. The court decided
that committee members will receive extensive training in the
attorney discipline system, which is consistent with the Bar's
recommendations.
There is some ambiguity about the process to determine the
long-range future of these local committees. The court plans
to review the effectiveness of the local committees in three
years. Some justices have referred to this as a "sunset,"
while others maintain that it is a "review." The difference
may be significant, but there is no apparent consensus on that
point yet.
The court decided that public members will comprise one-third
of all local committees. This is consistent with the Bar's
proposal. The Bar strongly supports public membership on the
statewide and local committees because public members offer valuable
insight and experience and their presence enhances the public's
perception of the system's fairness. I am concerned, however,
that an immediate increase in the public membership on the local
committees may drastically increase an already heavy load for
the lawyer volunteers. I am confident that the court understands
this issue and will give it careful consideration. The court
also decided to take on the task of appointing members to the
district committees, a task which now falls upon the State Bar
president. Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson suggested establishing
a selection committee, with a seat reserved for the Bar president,
but the justices did not resolve the new selection process.
Supreme Court Commissioner William Mann has been asked to
draft specific court rules by mid-March and these rules, or those
finally adopted by the court, may resolve these as-yet-undecided
issues.
Rule changes call for public hearing
Possibly the most contentious issue still to be addressed,
however, is whether and when to hold additional public hearings
on the proposed new rules. Some members of the court have suggested
that public hearings be delayed until a new system has been in
place for a few months. Because of the complex nature of the
current system and the extensive changes that are proposed, the
Bar will request that a hearing be held on any new proposed rules
before they are implemented. With the extensive proposed changes
there is a distinct possibility of unintended consequences unless
the rules are subject to public scrutiny and comment before they
are implemented.
Process leaves room for improvement
I am concerned about the process by which these changes have
occurred, rather than the substance. Many people who have advocated
for change have unfairly and unnecessarily criticized the current
system. Worse, the motives of the volunteers have been questioned.
Without doubt the current system has worked very well for the
purpose for which it was designed. More important, I know that
the volunteer participants, both lawyer and nonlawyer, have dedicated
thousands of hours to make the system work.
Gary L. Bakke, U.W. 1965, is a principal of Bakke
Norman S.C., New Richmond. He is State Bar president-elect and
cochair of the Bar's BAPR Structure Committee. |
Certainly we have to be open to the possibility that the system
can be improved; that can benefit us all. However, the possibility
of improvement is not a criticism of those who faithfully undertook
the task of operating the system designed by the court.
One way to assess the value of Wisconsin volunteers is to
compare the cost of our disciplinary system with those of other
states that depend totally on paid staff. Colorado has such a
system and its disciplinary costs increased by about $100 per
lawyer per year. For us that calculates to about $2 million per
year. We all owe a debt of gratitude to those volunteers who
have given so much to make our system work.
This review process has been a lengthy and intense one for
the court, BAPR, and the State Bar. It is my hope that these
changes to BAPR will create an attorney discipline system that
functions in the best interests of the public and the attorneys
who serve the public well.
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