Friday, September 14, 2007

The Variance of Proof Issues Inside Olivito's Selling Brief at the Southern District Last Fall: Part I

When asked to show cause last fall as to why his southern district of Ohio federal law license ought not be suspended in the same manner that the Ohio State Supreme Court did last summer, [a one year actual suspension and one additional year by conditional status w/ approval] Olivito argued several critical elements and theories based on clearly established long standing federal precedent as to why his federal license ought not to be suspended in the exact same 'reciprical' manner as it was in the State court system.

Several items are clearly delineated within these federal cases relating to such a federal court review of state lawyer disciplinary proceedings and findings and rulings. Among them are issues of whether or not the state proceedings were careful with the fact finding mechanism of the underlying state hearing process .

Another item that the federal courts can review is whether or not the underlying state supreme court proceedings are properly affording respondent attorney litigants their entire and proper due process within these types of formal state lawyer disciplinary hearings. i.e. defendant or accused lawyers can point out any seroius due process violations that occured within the state proceedings that would create a manifest miscarriage of justice if it were to be relied upon inside the federal forum to simply mimic the same punishment at the federal court, which otherwise does NOT hear much less weigh the actual allegations in light of all the evidence pertaining to the alleged lawyer misconduct.

The first issue Olivito raised distinquished the basic numerous 'findings of facts' which the State Supreme Court either deliberately got wrong on purpose or chose to ignore or simply chose not to consider but were clearly contained on the well developed record of the state proceedings.

One of the main legal standards that allows or permits a federal court to vary or digress
completely apart from a State Supreme Court lawyer disciplinary sanction is what is called
the "variance of proof" standard when considering whether or not to impose such a sanction
created by the state court system inside their own federal court system inside what is termed
a "reciprical disciplinary case review".

Under this well settled legal doctrine established nearly a hundred years ago in a significant U.S. Supreme Court case which arose out of the State of Louisiana's supreme court process,
the Federal high court clearly stated that the Federal Courts are NOT bound to follow the
State Supreme Court in imposing reciprical disciplinary sanctions; The U.S. Supreme Court
in Radford v. Selling [and other related cases] clearly stated the various federal Courts are completely UNFETTERED by the state court's
final conclusions and findings and the same federal courts can modify the same state supreme court's findings and/or they even could choose to not impose such a state court created sanction whatsoever when reviewing the same sanction for its application to its own lawyer system of ethical oversight for individual lawyer misconduct.

This case which was clearly cited repeatedly inside both Attorney Olivito's written briefs to Judge Sandra Beckwith and also inside two long oral arguments called and held by the district administrative judge of the Southern District last fall was clearly something which set a serious lawful and highly relevant legal floor or foundation for what Attorney Olivito was trying to communicate and even educate both the northern district and the southern district courts
in regards to imposing State Supreme Court derived case sanctions.

The Radford v. Selling case held that although the federal courts ought to carefully note and clearly carefully consider a State Supreme Court's findings and rulings in such ethical disciplinary matters, the same state court disciplinary hearings outcomes are clearly NOT binding on any federal court at any time or place.

It also held that the federal courts are clear to fashion their own findings in their own independent final decision as a matter of law when reviewing any application by a state disciplinary system for the lawyer to have his federal license suspended or completely disbarred inside a reciprical federal disciplinary system's hearing.

Included in this same analysis established by long standing federal precendent is the
notion that a federal Court can find that there were "such variances of proof" between what the state supreme court proceedings findings conclude and what an independent judicial review could reveal before imposing the same state created sanction inside a federal forum.

If such a variance derived within the state disciplinary system is found to exist, then to rely upon the same to impose reciprical discipline in the federal court system against a lawyer under such serious scrutiny and review would be to exhibit a clear injustice and reliance upon the same raises important concerns of a due process nature.

To impose such a flawed state procedure's conclusions and sanctions would be to otherwise further a clearly improper set of findings of critically mistaken, flawed or simply seriously imbalanced and supposed 'carefully determined' and officially 'weighed facts'.




The U.S. Supreme Court years ago addresssed this potential for abuse of the state lawyer disciplinary system so as to prevent the same flawed processes from being utilized within the federal courts themselves to acheive seriously flawed, incorrect, if not seriously constitutionally infirm results.

The Selling case and its progeny strongly suggests that the federal courts ought to conduct their own independent review, where requested by the lawyer under review, de novo, of the entire record of the State Supreme Court's disciplinary system to see whether or not serious and material 'variances of fact' exist inside any given disciplinary case in which the reciprical disciplinary process is triggered.

But this standard does not seem to be the way federal courts, in this or other circuits, are viewing their role in the reciprical disciplinary process, today. There are some good reasons given as to why and procedural rules indicate another modified standard but that will be addressed later in this series of blogs.

The second critical basis that Selling sets forth as a legitimate independent basis
for a federal court to find in order to NOT impose the same sanction that the state disciplinary process did, is where there is found by an independent federal review a clear "lack or violation of due process" occuring within the state disciplinary system in reaching or obtaining its state court decided conclusions and judgment.

i.e. this exception is often noted as the "Due Process" issue as noted within the standard of review afforded to the federal system of state court disciplinary proceedings. This must be a significant and material due process violation which would render the underlying state court's findings inapplicable within the federal court due to a particular failure by the state court's procedural failings towards the individual lawyer or his underlying disciplinary case.

Having stated two of the critical independent basis of any federal court review of a state's lawyer system of ethical review and its opinions concerning a given individual lawyer state disciplinary case result, we now turn to what happened inside of Attorney Richard Olivito's own state disciplinary case developed over the past three years.

The case was brought against Mr. Olivito by the Mahoning County Bar association in 2004 arising out of alleged facts which occured in 2003. It involved a couple named the Accolas and their seeking legal services from Olivito in order to obtain among a few things, a bankruptcy that year. [Mr. Olivito had earlier worked hard on their only' son's small personal injury case and had obtained a favorable result for him so he recommended his parents to him for their bankruptcy.]
They came to his office in May of 2003 and sought representation for restoring the driving privileges of Mr. Accola and to seek a bankruptcy for both of the couple's debts.

Mr. Olivito clearly set to work early on for Mr. Accola's privlieges and he began to work with the couple's creditors, seeking information and generally gathering facts related to their parse records and very confusing financial situation throughout the summer of 2003.

But by Labor day weekend of the same summer, 03, with the assistance of an experienced paralegal, Mr. Olivito created and completed the couple's bankruptcy petition. As Ms. Wright
testified she recollects Mr. Olivito expressly supervising the work on the petition and she clearly recollects Ms. Accola stating she "was very happy and satisfied" with the final product or petition.

Mr. Olivito took control over the Accola file from his Warren paralegal and took it to his Boardman office. He then expected the Accola's to be excited about getting the petition completed and to come into his office and finalize the petition and file the same.

By mid Setpember, Mr. Olivito sought by phone payment of his balance due of the funds he stated were due and owing him in spending the extra time and effort in creating the same petition, prior to his filing of the same. This effort went on from right after Labor day 03 to early to mid- October.

After about a month delay occasioned not by Olivito but first by an odd non- response by the couple and then later a dispute raised by the husband over this additional modest fee request, made in writing to the Accola's after the petition was completed, in a letter created and sent to him by Ms. Higgins, as she testified to the Board panel hearing, Mr. Olivito then met with an upset Mr. Accola in his office in mid October, after Mr. Accola had received this professionally drafted letter indicating that after the fee was finalized the petition could be filed. The letter requested an additional $300.00 in fees for the completion of the work on the bankruptcy.

On the early evening of October 15th, Mr. Accola came into the office in a furious manner, when only a young secretary, Jessica Anderson was present. He demanded to know where Mr. Olivito was and he wanted a confrontation even with the young secretary.

After a very tense meeteing, where Mr. Accola hurled insults at Mr. Olivito's secretary and used foul language on both his young secretary working well past 6 pm, and towards Mr. Olivito, who was on his way back to Boardman from Warren working late in relation to the police cases there, these two came to an agreement on the remaining balance and the petition's filing date.

After agreeing to pay Mr. Olivito the next day after work, Mr. Olivito then agreed to file the bankrptcy petition the next day, on October 17, 2003. Mr. Olivito expressly recollects asking Mr. Accola to go over the bankruptcy petition with him at this same office meeeting, the only office meeting held between Mr. Accola and Mr. Olivito individually, during their six months representation which last another sixty days after this mid-October evening meeting in the
Boardman Ohio office.

The young Jessica Anderson was both present and listening carefully to the originally heated discussion and then the two reaching a common understanding and agreement being concluded with a handshake and invite to dinner being held out by Mr. Accola in order to pay Mr. Olivito, the next evening after work.

Ms. Jessica Anderson clearly recounted this entire Mid October meeting, before the Board's panel hearing, during her hour long testimony in Columbus. She recalled the furious Ms. Accola accosting her in the office, unexpectedly, with foul language causing her to become very upset and then hearing the "agreement" and subsequent calm Accola 'invitation' to have a beer w/ Mr. Accola coupled with the statement he would then promise to pay Mr. Olivito the next evening.

Notably, she also clearly recollects Mr. Accola bringing the letter we sent him into the office with him and throwing it down or shaking it in his hand as he was yelling at her about me before I came into the office.

Thus, in this manner, the completed bankruptcy petition was both created and then filed the next day as agreed upon by Mr. Olivito, while expecting his balance payment the next evening after work.

It was this very same filed bankrpuptcy petition was then relied upon by the Northern District Bankruptcy Court, within ninety days or three month later, after it was filed by Mr. Olivito with Olivito paying the $200.00 filing fee out of the original $ 400.00 fee paid to him by the Accola's to fully discharge the Accola's debts as listed for the couple,

This petition was discharged without amendments as noted nor any reservations or any changes having to be made to the original petition, which was created for the Accola's by Mr. Olivito.

{It was also undisputed between the parties at the subsequent disciplinary hearings that the Accola's did still owe Mr. Olivito additional fees even when they filed their complaint against him, sixty days AFTER he created and filed their complaint on their behalf, in December of 2003, just weeks before it operated without amendment to fully discharge their serious debt load}

Thus, according to Ms. Elaine Graves, the federal magistrate who relied upon Mr Olivito's work product to grant the discharge of the Accola's full debt load, the bankruptcy otherwise "discharged on time". It had been filed in mid October and it was fully discharged by January 12th, 2004, well within the normative routine time for a bankruptcy to discharge in the area's local bankruptcy court system.

[See page 135, Magistrate' Greaves deposition submitted to the Supreme Court's Board of Commissioners and hearing panel in MCBA v. Olivito panel hearing]

And indeed, it did and it resulted again, in the discharge of their significant debts, fully without modification or amendment. Even prior to filing the petition, evidence clearly was
demonstrated to prove Mr. Olivito had protected the interests of the Accola's in terms of
both gathering additional creditor debt information apart from the Accolas and also
by protecting the Accola's financial interests in and through handling creditor phone calls
about their pending bankruptcy.

Yet, somehow and for reasons not quite clear, the Accola's sixty days AFTER the petition was filed and although NEVER making good to Olivito or his secretaries to pay the remaining balance, stated they became dissatisfied with Mr. Olivito and filed a complaint with the local bar in Younstown against Mr. Olivito concerning the manner in which Olivito worked or in their view "failed to" work or appear with them and sought to obtain this bankruptcy discharge for them.

[What is most unique is the complaint's couple, having filed a bankruptcy just five years prior, obtained another complete discharge for over $100,000.00 in debts, early in January of 2004, solely with and in reliance upon the efforts, the representation and work product of Mr. Olivito, alone, in less than seven months after retaining him for less than $400.00 for the bankruptcy, and in less than four months after he personally had filed the related bankruptcy petition and paid the filing fees upon filing the same, in October of 2003 for these clients. ]

It was common that such creditor hearings in a chapter seven bankruptcy at that time in 2003, in Youngtown's federal northern district bankrputcy court were NOT held until 60 days after the filing of a complaint, which in this case, was December 15th, 2003,
sixty days AFTER the filing date of October 17th.

[This hearing date schedule is completely controlled and set by the federal magistrate hearing the petition, by law, and not the lawyer who created and files the same. It is operational by law and rules of the bankruptcy courts themselves, not the individual lawyer representing the petitioners. Nonetheless, the bankruptcy that the Accola's sought and Mr. Olivito and his staff and assistant created was fully investigated, gathered and compiled and completed and finally discharged in early January, a month after the original December creditor's hearing, less than a full seven months, from start to finish.

Again, as stated above, Ms. Graves, duly noted, when asked about this discharge date at her deposition in relation to Mr. Olivito's disciplinary hearing, where much was being made
by the local prosecutor against him for "neglecting these client's bankruptcy and legal needs", the magistrate herself stated:

"in [Youngstown's] bankruptcy court, a typical bankruptcy petition of this nature, takes approximately six months...start to finish ..."

the Magistrate then added a single critical direct qualifying remark;

"depending on the level of cooperation the clients gave to the lawyer representing them and doing their petition..." [E. Greaves, dep, pages 135-136]


We will see how this latter but critically important experienced local federal magistrate clearly provided her expert demonstrative observation concerning the local bankruptcy's court's time frames for a 'normal' bankruptcy to discharge and then how this same clear proposition would be both ignored, covered up and then manipulated seriously by both the state disciplinary Board members, the local Youngstown bar official and then how it was decidedly simply disregarded as "unimportant" and "irrelevant" and simply buried by all seven of the Ohio Supreme Court justices to find against Mr. Olivito in an express manner on whether or not somehow he had materially delayed this bankruptcy and causing it to be not discharged in a timely manner and thus, enabling the state court to so find that he somehow had 'neglected the clients concerning their bankruptcy.'

All this evidence "shaping" and 'discounting' concerning this single issue, [among many others] was done first by the Youngstown bar lawyer and panel hearing officer herself, in Columbus, then the Board of Commissioners in their 'findings and conclusions of law' and then the Supreme Court of the State of Ohio, all of which evinces a clear"variance of proof" issue that is clearly contained on the underlying case's record.

What were then some of the issues that would trigger the application of such standards referenced above of a federal review to Mr. Olivito's 2006 state disciplinary case's final order which found several 'facts" upon which the Supreme Court of Ohio relied upon to sanction him so severely with a full one year actual suspension in light of this case's facts, the first such any disciplinary case ever brought against Mr. Olivito in his fourteen years of solo law practice?

[Also, another issue arises at this point; to be commented more fully later in these blogs, in view of whether or not this severe one year actual suspension sanction was in accordance with the Ohio Supreme Court's own internal consistent treatment of other lawyers for related or similar case precedent on such similar conduct as alleged in this Accola case against Mr. Olivito?]

These are issues we now turn our attention to.

The first issue Mr. Olivito raised before the Southern District Court was the 'variance of proof' standard issue which he believed the state supreme court record demonstrated a clear problem with within the same.

In this initial portion of his brief and argument, presented to Judge Sandra Beckwith first in a long solo hearing in September last fall, then again in another several hour hearing, in November of 2006, Attorney Olivito references the presentation at his state panel disciplinary hearing [taking place in July of 2005 before the Supreme Court in Columbus at his Board panel hearing] of his three then relevant solo law firm secretaries to this Accola Bankruptcy matter.

These three live witnesses were brought from Youngstown to Columbus, to testify, live and in person and under cross examination before the panel, in a strongly supportive manner that evinced a completely different narrative and account of that which the prosecution and the complaining parties were alleging against Mr. Olivito.

These three witnesses testimony lasted for over three hours. Ms. Jessica Anderson was not once effectively cross-examined by either the Mahoning County Bar prosecutor [not one question was asked when offered the opportunity to do so] or ANY of the three panel members.

Ms. Robin Wright was asked a very short and negative couple of questions by the Mahoning Bar counsel who was quickly and effectively negated by the clear and firm responses of Ms. Robin Wright, as she testified via a cell phone live connect.

She was then asked a follow up set of brief but important questions by the panel chairwoman, Ms. Sandra B Anderson of Vorys Sater, a large downtown Columbus corporate defense firm with strong ties to both the state FOP and the State Republican party office holders, including the Cheif Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court of Ohio.

Ms. Higgins, another part time secretary also took the stand and testified. She testified as to what she knew about some of the critical details that were being leveled against my office management and whether or not and how Attorney Olivito did or did not attempt to connect or communicate with both the federal magistrate and/or the clients during their representation periond from when Ms. Higgins first came to work for my office in October of 2003 on thru when she filed personally the motion to withdraw with the veteran Bankruptcy Judge who instantly granted the same for me, at my request for the same, on the last day of December, 2003.

All of these women's testimony was clearly and firmly stated and presented without reservation. They were my witnesses and they were witnesses who volunteered to come to testify on my behalf on what they felt collectively was a clear miscarriage of justice occurring within the local bar and the State proceedings.

They were all NOT presently employed by Olivito when they appeared before the official Board panel members in Columbus in July of 2005.

Although every one of these witnesses testimony went well beyond ANY thing that was ever asked of any of them on cross examination in the limited scope such any cross examination was conducted mainly by the one panel chair woman, Sandra Anderson towards them, nonetheless, by far, the ONLY portion of their testimony which ended up being commented upon and utilized and made a basis for the very severe and out of balanced and blatantly false "findings of fact" were the very few questions asked of Ms. Higgins and Ms. Wright about very limited subjects and scope.

None of the Board hearing's findings nor any official conclusions, from the panel hearing members to the Board of Commissioners, on up to the final Supreme Court's official record and adoption of its lower Board 'findings and conclusions' and its final orders contained ANY reference to the hour long testimony given by Ms. Jessica Anderson, without ANY cross examination being done of her, whatsoever and none that was ever utilized against the respondent, Richard Olivito.

Ms Anderson also testified as did Ms. Higgins that both law office secretaries continously sought to contact the Accolas AFTER September and in particular AFTER the law office had filed the petition in mid October but to no avail.

They even had appointments set up with these clients but they continously and stubbornly refused to not only keep their appointments but they became very difficult to either speak to or merely reach by telephone, even when the secretaries knew the Accola's were home during the various phone calls made to their residence between October and December 12th, 03.

This in turn produced an office concern about their final payment and whether or not Mr. Olivito ought to remain on their case prior to the scheduled creditor's hearing in mid December.

Ms. Higgins also notes they sought to make appointments with the Accolas in order to have them come into the office and speak w/ Mr. Olivito. All such efforts resulted in failure and simple no shows or stubborn silent refusals to speak.

No complaints were filed against Mr. Olivito by the Accola's during this same significant period of time between October and December 12th. The petition was already created and filed and a creditor's hearing was scheduled on the same for December 15th.

Considerable law office time was being spent on just trying to either contact these client's by phone and/or have them make and keep office appointments.

Ms. Higgin's stated under oath before the Supreme Court of Ohio she told the Accola's directly by phone and left messages by phone that they could come to the office and pick up a copy of their petition.

Again, no payments were made to the office or secretaries and no explanation was provided as to why it was not being done by the clients.

Why was any of this significant? We shall explore this a little later in detail but remember the 'variance in proof" standard discussed above and the due process issue of "right and wrong"as it ought to obtain and pertain to any serious legitimate federal review of state disciplinary proceedings of a solo lawyer?

These live witnesses testimony and what they had to say and what in the end, was "allowed" into the record so as to "fit" the outcome sought by the panel and the MCBA [Youngstown Bar Association] is going to be something to further develop below.

But the broad ranged, hours long direct live testimony of ALL three respondent or defense witnesses which was highly probative and uncontroverted and very favorable to the respondent, did not appear in any way in its significant portions and most critical fair and objectively reasonable and very favorable aspects, inside either the Board's findings and/or even later, within the State Supreme Court own adopted findings.

The Court actually went even further in regards to these various favorable witnesses of Attorney Olivito and completely ignored or disregarded their cross examined sworn testimony before its Board, when making a very one sided, completely imbalanced series of 'findings' with respect to the underlying case's facts, completely contra the actual very clear and completely uncontroverted three secretaries live testimony where their testimony clearly contradicted and destroyed the numerous false allegations leveled against Mr. Olivito by the Mahoning County Bar counsel Ronald Slipsky and then adopted by the panel chair first, Sandra Anderson and then later by those at the full Board and beyond.

These three live witnesses's sworn testimony, particularly one of them, Ms. Jessica Anderson, was simply and wholly ignored and either never fully entertained or actually relied upon
or it was simply intentionally taken in extremely tiny measure and piecemeal aspects, by the Court and its reviewing board, both choosing to take such very limited one line or one sentence aspects of a couple of minutes of otherwise, hours long probative testimony and twist the same limited tidbits, into what they felt would "fit" their already programmed outcomes which were based on biased assumptions about Mr. Olivito and his law abilities and practice.

The court in its final opinion not only wholly adopted a entirely bizarre "omelet" version of such testimony but they had actually worked hard to disregard all but the most limited few sentences as indicated to make it all neatly square with their 'matrix' of a predetermined set of mental impressions regarding Attorney Olivito and then simply discarded those salient and relevant portions of the same live witnesses testimony which was not either at all challenged during the same "due process hearing"in Columbus and that majority portion which completely did NOT square with either their desired outcome or what they thought they had in a bizarre ethics prosecution over a one time, isolated, minor technical signature issue which got blown all out of proportion into something completely unrecognizable but neatly suited for the ends and means of those sitting in Youngstown and Columbus who could derive some type of benefit from doing just this kind of serious ripping of the due process rights of Mr. Olivito and mischaracterization of his actual work and professional representation two very difficult clients who were acting very strange inside a federal bankruptcy proceeding, just like the state disciplinary Board's proceeding became equally a theater of serious disregard for the truth regarding the legal representation of these clients and this fully discharged and otherwise timely sought and obtained bankruptcy.


In this brazen manner, procedurally, none or most of this strongly probative and favorable testimony from three separate live witnesses, was afforded any relevant or equal value or even its due weight by any Board member or at any part of the process afforded to Mr. Olivito, much less was this critical testimony even mildly considered by the State Supreme Court in its final Disciplinary decision regarding in its opinion the relevant and operative facts pertaining to those strongly marshalled facts Mr. Olivito's raised in his own defense of these related ethical allegations.

Where such marshaled testimony and evidence threatened the 'matrix' view of the "official party line" that somehow Mr. Olivito "must have neglected the clients" and then, equally rather bizarrely "improperly withdrew without due regard for the best interests of the clients", as the Supreme Court has found, in support of the Bar association's dutiful false smear campaign, without any true probative and relevant evidence to genuinely show such one fact in support of the same kind of allegations, this kind of actual objective, clear and strongly favorable evidence was easily and immediately dispensed with by every state official involved in this process at every critical "due process", so called, stage of the alleged process itself;

In the end, when it could not be attenuated, qualified, discredited, denounced or rendered in admissable or irrelevant...such clear and probative if not striking evidence was simply ignored by these state employed lawyers and the Supreme Court and its boards acted as if had not been actually obtained nor stated on its open own court's proceedings' record.

IN fact, they collectively as a whole, as a major supreme effort, were so in denial of these humble three live witnesses actual proportionate and objectively demonstrated and extrinsically supported testimony that they even gave a nice commendation to Ms. Higgins for being a "seemingly honest person"...but then dutifully described her one single lapse of memory occurring from something two years before in critical detail and made it sound as if this reduced the rest of her live testimony on much more significant and probative and material issues to nothing but unreliable babble.

As stated above, Ms Jessica Anderson's unequivating and determined and unchallenged whole testimony was simply wholly dismissed. Not one comment, not one negative or positive description and no distinguishing of this witnesses's statements or facts; as pure and whole and truthful as it could be read and listened to, it was equally as determinedly snuffed from the later determination of so called "facts and conclusions of law" in the Board of Commissioners and even twice more forgotten by the Supremes.

First, the secretaries materially challenged thru their testimony that Mr. Olivito was somehow negligent, if at all, concerning the Accola bankruptcy and that he acted at all times
relevant in a considered, professional and ordinary lawyerly way towards clients that were both very confusing if not very peculiar but also difficult and "complex" persons who made it a game of 'catch me if you can' as to getting back in touch w/ Attorney Olivito contra to Ms. Accola's testimony that she had herself a very difficult time to get in touch with Mr. Olivito.


What Ms. Accola did not admit or express or tell the Board via her deposition was that
she 1] had clearly the wrong starting date as to when the professional relationship began
between her and Mr. Olivito...admitting that she was "terrible with dates" she then tries
rather anemically and very revealing manner, why she can state contra to her immediate
prior statement of being "terrible in my memory w/ dates" that she can "clearly remember
when she came to my office; and w/whom she spoke...it was "one of those people" i.e.
a black female from Warren, Ohio...that Mr. Olivito had employed at the time, in his office, who was a woman, she admits to calling and clearly testifies to: "I spoke to an ..black woman and i know it was March of that same year because we spoke of his work on "those people's cases" in Warren and how Mr. Olivito was "working only apparently on those cases"....

Indeed, Ms. Accola the wife of the chief complainant and the chief witness for their seriously flawed prosecution, clearly testified "i know when it was because i recall the female i spoke with and her....odd sounding voice...you know.."

...by which Ms. Accola meant, a "black person's" voice...

thus, Ms. Accola and the MCBA [the Mahoning Bar Association] thought Olivito would be confused by this and not remember exactly at this point who she was talking about;

Ms. Accola was correct; Attorney Olivito had employed part time a black female receptionist in my small solo Boardman Ohio law office; yet the fact would hardly support their stated position and argument as to when the first date of representation begun between Ms. Accola and Mr. Olivito. They claimed it was March of 2003 and this fit their allegation of negligence claim.

i.e. if they could establish March of 2003 as the beginning date of the legal representation, then there would be a better case for finding some negligence on the part of Olivito in simply getting to the bankruptcy filing, in the objective sense; instead of a six month period from start to finish it would have been eight months, not a significant development but one that could inure to their case's 'narrative' against that stated by Mr. Olivito.

But Olivito remembered something extremely probative, relevant and critical to this female part time secretary's employment;

its true, Olivito had employed this woman, the only black female that year 2003; but there is one very grave problem with Ms. Accola's assertion that she spoke several times to 'this woman' and "thus I am certain it was March instead of May when we first retained Mr. Olivito..."

Why? Because the single black female about whom she spoke and testified about discussing the "Warren problem" i.e. my police civil rights cases in Warren which begun in the summer and became very high profile in the media that same summer and fall...only began to work for me AFTER the cases in Warren concerning the police issues first arose... which was early July

of 2003, that summer, not one day before, given the Lyndal Kimble incident occurred on June 28, 2003 and I did not have ANY clients in Warren prior to this date.

The girls' name is Jamie Harris and I met her in the immediate aftermath and intense media glare of the Kimble matter which I became involved with on or about June 30, 2003. She came to work for my Boardman law office later in July and early August, only. She gave an affidavit that she never knew me prior to this and only worked for this brief period of time, taking some of the intense load off of my small solo office practice in light of super intense national and regaionl media glare of the Kimble case Warren police events.

Ms. Accola stated this was what they had briefly spoken about... and she rested upon this very conversation to state

Indeed, "Mr. Olivito's secretary [black female] clearly spoke about the police problems with me during this first conversation I had with his office...sometime after we had just come in to
retain him for the same..."


But this places the conversation with either a non existent black female who never worked for me, at least in March or April or May or June of that same year because, I only came to know the one black female part time secretary AFTER JUNE 28, 2003....the same one I sometime later that summer employed in my office for receptionist duties related to the Kimble case events.

Thus, Ms. Accola was clearly about FOUR MONTHS OFF in her time recollection and reliance upon the "single black female conversation" as a basis for her "certainty in knowing that it was March , not May" that she had come into my office with her husband and had retained me to do the bankruptcy and driving privileges case for $400.00 combined.

Olivito clearly demontrated he had NOT been in Warren and began to represent his first significant black person's civil rights case in Warren, until AFTER june 28, 2003...

This was some FOUR MONTHS AFTER Ms. Accola at her deposition testified that she
"was certain of the time because i spoke to "one of those people..." at the time....

This black female provided both an affidavit which was submitted to the panel and Board of Commissioners and the Mahoning County Bar Association's bar prosecutor, but she also answered the call to attend the panel hearing itself, which she did, but very late in the day and she did not take the stand as a result.

The black female COULD NOT have spoken to Ms. Accola contra to the allegations of the complaining witness brought against me by the Mahoning County Bar ASsocition supremely because; I did NOT EVEN MEET her UNTIL AFTER JUNE 28,....

Thus, there is a significant 'variance of proof' between what the actual record demonstrated and my other secretaries could support and did testify to, and that of what "findings of fact" the Board and the Supreme Court actually chose to adopt and make it appear as if i were lying about this "commencement" date as between the Accola's and Mr. Olivito.

Why is this of any significance? Because the panel heard and as the Board found and the
Supreme Court also accepted as proven and "demontratedly clear", that somehow Mr. Olivito
had "neglected" the Accola's bankruptcy and therefore had violated an additional ethical
directive which makes it a violation to improperly and unduly neglect or delay a client's
case...

Is there any thing to this allegation and again eventual finding of the Supremes?

If so, one would think the commencement or starting date of any attorney cleint relationship would have to be first established; and in a backhanded manner, the Accola witness provided the one true indication of when Ms. Accola first spoke to me or my office by phone as she recollected; it was at least ONE month AFTER they initially came in, in May according to my records and recollection and by evidence, early May...

The Accolas starting date of their request for me to become their legal representative on two legal matters was of some interest then, if a neglect charge were to be made out against Mr. Olivito...or at least one would consider the same...

So, if the Supreme Court says they agree w/ the Board of Commissioners who all state
"indeed, Mr. Olivito did neglect these persons legal interests for which they retained him"
one would think then they simply adopted Ms. Accola' deposition testimony at face value
contra to the evidence presented by Mr. Olivito on this point;

Not so. Ms. Accola was made out to be either seroiusly creative or creatively lying about when she "was certain" when the legal relationship had began, in her poor memory's view because, she stated, "it was March when i spoke to this ...woman..."

AS clearly demonstrated at the time of the deposition and later thru the very person with whom she spoke stating, she had NOT met me until late June/ early July of
2003, Ms. Accola and the Supreme Court get lost anyways as to what then was the exact
time frame for when Mr. Olivito supposedly began this legal relationship and when
he was to supposed to have neglected it; the problem is, just from the start, given the clearly uncontroverted and 'time committed' statement of the cheif complaining testifying witness
on point, the relationship began supposedly four months prior to when she actually spoke with teh black female part time secretary Mr. Olivito had employed.

This was the first variance of proof issue; numerous others would follow.

What was odd, even when Mr. Olivito clearly blew away the cheif complaining witness's
allegations and "commencement date" of their attorney client relationship, nonetheless,
teh Supreme Court would simply forget to mention Mr. Olivito, his witnesses and his documentation and clearly stated evidence would completely vary and contradict this witnesses allegations as to her "certainty" they nontheless, simply forgot the importance it appears of establishing this "commencement date" for the purposes of PROVING by CLEAR AND CONVINCING evidence that indeed the neglect charge was based upon seroiusly flawed if not completely and seriously erroneous if not fabricating testimony missing the all important
commencement date of the attorney client relationship by at least four months as state above.

Nonetheless, when the Supreme Court of Ohio found through its adoption of the Board's findings that indeed Olivito had neglected his client's case because as we shall see later,
by ANOTHER series of VARIANCES OF PROOF factors which again clear, uncontroverted
favorable testimony of Mr. Olivito's three secretaries before the panel hearing clearly
chose to engage in with outright deliberate choosing to ignore, or collective and selective
amnesia.

Mr. Olivito's three secretaries testimony clearly and completely discounted ANY allegations of neglect in this manner:

Ms. Robin Wright, who Mr. Olivito utilized to prepare the bankruptcy clearly and unchallenged testified that she spoke to Ms. Accola about her bankruptcy in late August and early September of 2003 summer; She testified that Ms. ACcola did NOT produce all the necesssary documentation of their debtor status, has she had promised or believed she had
when Ms. Wright first began to work on this file.

Ms. Wright stated however that the office and Richard had not only directly supervised her
but that the office and herself had clearly worked to obtain entire sets of finanical records
of the clients without ANY assistance from the clients in obtaining critical debtor information
or documentation which was then used in the preparation of the key bankruptcy petition.

What is clear is this; the Accola's admit and clearly was corroborated by Ms. Wright and not just Mr. Olivito that the all important petition was created out of direct and express efforts
which were made on the client's behalf, throughout the summer and early fall by direct unilateral efforts of the lawyer and his staff who both could NOT have completed the client's petition without the same [but was admittedly NOT provided to the attorney by the client's even though it was THERE responsibility to obtain the same]

and it was clear, that the Clients were benefited by the same extra and unilateral effort
by Mr. Olivito and his staff, in taking the additional time and careful consideration to so find these additional numerous debts and accounts information which amounted to over 30,000
dollars in extra debts which were then eventually correctly placed on the petition and then discharged, PRECISELY BECAUSE MR. OLIVITO and his staff, thru his instruction had
clearly taken the limited additional time, because the Accola's had failed to produce the same critically necessary documentation themselves.

So far from being neglectful and delaying in nature, Mr. Olivito and his paralegal who prepared the actual petition for the clients were PROACTIVE and very much engaged in protecting both the client's creditor status and their debtor's petition and ONLY completed
the same, WHEN THEY THEMSELVES HAD DISOCOVERED LATE IN THE RELATIONSHIP
such related tens of thousands of dollars of additional debts which teh Accolas never had presented anything close to a coherent or conclusive and complete picture of AT ANY time,
from May thru August to their attorney they supposedly came to for a chapter seven bankruptcy.

What is clear there is a clear variance of proof on teh record of the proceeding thru direct
corrobarating witness evidence who testified "live" in person before the very fact finding
panel hearing as to what she knew, did and how she was clearly instructed, supervised and
ultimately directly engaged with Mr. Olivito in seeking and completing these non forthcoming
cleints in relationship to their bankruptc.

Ms. Accola when confronted in her deposition about this fact; the Olivito law office and staff "going out" and finding entire sets of entirely new financial debts and accounts, which were NOT disclosed to him, at ANY time during the May thru August period, she admitted to the same
facts by curtly and arrogantly stating; "oh, yes, I did not supply those records to Mr. Olivito...either he or someone at his office had obtained those on their own..."

This was a direct and uncontroverted quote by the cheif complaining witness inside this
State Supreme Court Discilinary case and yet AGAIN it was both ignored and/or simply
swept under the rug and the Court acted as if again it WAS NEVER said inside a formel sworn deposition statement directly being on the most relevant issue affecting this cases'
neglect charge against Mr. Olivito.

What is amazing Ms. Wright clearly testified ALSO that the bankruptcy petition was DONE by labor day weekend of September 2003, even though the prosecutor for the Mahoning Bar
clearly tried to get her to state it was "late September was it not?"

She says, emphatially, "no, i clearly recall it was labor day weekend because i had taken it home"

The court's panel chair and panel hearing and later Board members then chose to simply again
openly and deliberately ignore such an unequivical favorable witness's testimony and simply
concluded "we find Mr. Olivito neglected these cleints at least by one month."

This was the adoption of the facts also by the State Supreme Court.

When this was brought to light by Mr. Olivito at the southern District as to just these two rather involved and twisting "factual allegations of neglect", and how the real, evidence clearly
evinces a completely different or 'varied' actual record and narrative, the Southern District Court also simply failed to apply their own federal precedent standard which requires such a
reviewing court to consider seriously such very "variances of proof" between the State proceedings and that of the Federal as those which are material and sufficiency enough to demonstrate that "something went wrong" at the lower court level.

Indeed, "something serious went wrong" as the federal precedent allows and instructs its reviewing federal courts to do about imposing the same discipline that a supreme court
has done itself after making less than true, genuine or merely truly fair and open and democratically valued live witnesses statements and opponent admissions which to any truly
independent judiciary would have no choice but to readily adopt a much different if not radically different view of these most basic "variances of proofs" and alleged "facts" and thereby
negate or find that the clear and convincing standard would NOT support a finding that the lawyer somehow had "neglected" these clients bankruptcy for 'at least one month'.

Such a statement can not be found or supported by any material evidence inside this
cases' real live testimony and documented evidence.

It is even crossed by the serious party opponent admissions to the contra as Ms. Accola admitted that "she did NOT obtain those records, [the additional 30,000 in debts] that those "must have obtained solely by Mr. Olivito and/or his office" sometime after we came to him

Da? Does any of this make any sense?

Write, let me know and I will continue this competely real life story of how the state supreme court of Ohio knowingly supported a record which was otherwise corrupted and lacking in integrety much less simply fair and honest and openly viewed in a true and geniunely balanced manner.

Saturday, September 8, 2007

What about the Federal Courts? The Main Argument Which Olivito Made to Northern /Southern District Courts In Re: His Suspension: Variance of Proof

The law license of Attorney Olivito was suspended by the Ohio Supreme Court
last summer [July of 2006].

In the fall, both the northern and southern district federal courts of Ohio heard what is called
show cause motions on why his license should NOT be suspended in the various related Federal Courts for the same period of time, in what is commonly referred to as a reciprical discipline
issue process.

The outcome in each of these districts resulted after some additional oral in person presentations were made respectively to each district administrative bodies and/or single court -in the southern district- as to why the same exact suspension that the State Supreme Court
ought NOT to be followed nor supported in the U.S. courts where Attorney Olivito had focused most of his practice and particularly his critical civil rights police and municipal liability claims.

Was there any basis for Olivito to so argue that his federal license ought NOT to be subjected to the same process and result that the state supreme court applied? Was there any standard of review that the federal courts ought to have followed and should follow in making any such reciprical disciplinary decision? Did those courts 'hear' this argument and apply the federal law of such review and the long established independent review required by the reciprical disciplinary federal case law, in this particular instance and in this case?

These are the questions and issues to now which this blogger will turn his attention and the focus of his arguments before both the Northern and Southern Districts of Ohio.

While the decisions were ultimately made against him on both counts, the manner in which these decisions were reached are both instructive and illuminating in exactly how the federal courts in Ohio have been defaulting their own independent judgment and oversight and even their own judicial independence to the State Supreme Court as a matter of course, without much thought, or legal understanding or even knowledge of the applicable standards, even according to their own administrative judges who heard such arguments, at least in one critical district.

We will explore this fact and how this revelation in turn played a pivitol role in the making of the decision against Olivito in the Southern District and how the very reviewing judge did not herself, even understand, much less apply the proper applicable standard, even according to the record of the two very lengthy oral hearings held in Cincinnati last fall, in relation to his particular show cause reciprical disciplinary hearings before her.

While this is true, there will be a clear focus on the merits of the case and how and why the court decided its decisions and whether or not they followed the facts, the proper reviewing standards and what if any, did these courts actually do in relation to the clear established law relating to the same, as it applied to the federal judiciary when it is to review a close case of state lawyer disciplinary actions.

In the process, even more interesting and noteworthy issues will be discussed as well and these along with the clear misguided legal findings and applications of their decision will be critiqued. Timing is everything as many say, in both the arts and entertainment fields.

The same can be said, in the experience of a veteran civil rights advocate and how the federal courts of Ohio timed their decisions in relation to Attorney Olivito's reciprical discipline, from a critical standpoint which was raised by Mr. Olivito particularly before Sandra Beckwith of the Cincinnati district administrative court in relation to his ongoing civil rights cases.

What were the arguments that Mr. Olivito utilized and openly presented inside a three hour hearing before Ms. Beckwith?

What were some of the legal standards sought to be applied and what were some of the critical due process concerns that Attorney Olivito raised within his motion contra the application of the state Supreme Court's heavy sanctions are matters which need a public airing and perhaps a another critical look or review.

The related motions created and used by Attorney Olivito will themselves will be posted by link here, soon. The various supporting documentation will also be noted. But first we will turn to the actual theories and arguments and the many factual variances which were clearly referenced, documented and presented inside each forum , but were either completely discarded, ignored and/or simply clearly miscontrued and muted inside each district's formal opinions and decisions.

One Kudro needs to be given to Sandra Beckwith, the Cincinnati district court; At least she allowed for two opportunities, at length, for Attorney Olivito to make a record and to detail his arguments orally and present his "case" before her, before simply ignoring most of what he argued effectively before her for hours, twice, first without ANY opposition or opposing counsel and the secod time, without any counsel from the Mahonining County Bar Association present, much less arguing on behalf of anything in defense of the State of Ohio's Supreme court's disciplinary decision related to the underlying issues which resulted in Olivito's 'two year, one year' actual suspension arising out of an isolated one time, signature issue case, involving a bankruptcy for clients who not only obtained everything they sought from the legal services of Mr. Olivito, for very little pay, but also had the same original bankruptcy petition prepared by Mr. Olivito and his staff, ---the very signatured document ---pass itself for the discharge inside a federal bankruptcy court and magistrate's review, with their clear and direct knowledge that the signature was that of Mr. Olivito's, signed in an derived manner, in furtherance of his clients interests.

There is much more, but what she did, is at least, allow for process; Ms. Beckwith findings are however something from a novel that does not seem to be written from the same facts that gave rise to the story. Its competely off center, imbalanced and does not do even some justice to Attorney Olivito's arguments of fact and the applicable law and appropriate standards of review which she obviously and admittedly was not even aware of, before Olivito educated
both her and the entire southern district itself as to the significant judicial independence that
the federal district and appellate courts have in making such decision as opposed to
'sucking up' administratively to oftentimes, wayward and niggardly produced state supreme court related [lawyer] disciplinary decisions.

Despite her adverse and strongly worded findings against his position, Attorney Olivito gives her recognition for one thing: in her adversity and obviously bizarre one sided findings, she did more for the "appeareance of fairness of propriety" of the administration of justice.....than did the northern district which simply forgot its own policies and its own administrative rules, much less the very applicable deep juriprudence and standard of review, in making its rush to judgment against Attorney Olivito, and issued its findings and decision, without ANY formal in court, final show cause hearing before the full court whatsoever, much less issue ANY formal opinion of why it applied the kind of related suspension it did, in a case which its own very Northern District Bankrutpcy Court of Youngstown's office did not find that this lawyer had done any thing remotely deserving of the kind of thing that the fop endorsed and supported process inside the local and state supreme court of Ohio did against Attorney Olivito.

The northern district court dispensed with the notion it had any obligation to place its finding and legal conclusions in any formal opinion and just issued a "decision"drained of any publicly stated reasoning and granted its disciplinary decision mirroring the best intentions of a few particular judge[s] which innured to the stated purpose and ideas of a particular district court
inside the northern District of Ohio, in which various civil rights cases are being litigated against the City of Warren, Ohio.

The blog here will begin to detail this process; hold on, its a ride into the world of "A Civil action" 'Ohio' indeed but its just much more personal and even more hidden, than that sad tale itself, ever could make its readers imagine.

Just like the real world plaintiffs and the plaintiff's 'suffering' counsel came face to face with the literal "wall of injustice" and was confronted with the Kalfequese world of federal procedural short cuts, so does the experience of civil rights attorney Richard Olivito come into a similar
material clash with the real world of state and federal judicial nullification and masked
agendas and less then genuine realities of law, posing as impartial independent judicial
fact based decisions.

[Any mildly interested student of america's legal system, ought to read the book as a primer,
"A Civil Action" by Jonathen Herr...its a primer on how major plaintiff counsel and their client's needs will be subverted in their search for justice inside the highest and most unique and powerful courts of this nation which is supposedly a bastion for democratic search for egalitarian justice, if indeed, it is... ]

here it goes...

Sunday, September 2, 2007

Supreme Court of Ohio and its "Findings of Fact" in Mahoning County Bar Association v. Richard Olivito

The Ohio Supreme Court suspended my law license in the summer of 2006, in late July, July 28th to be exact, the exact same day the two open seat republican candidates for that high court were publicly endorsed by the state FOP. These two republican candidates would go on to win their seats on the Ohio Supreme Court with the backing of large corporate law firm donations, insurance company donations and the Chamber of Commerce as well as the statewide endorsement of the Ohio FOP three months later.

What the court's opinion wrote about the "facts" of the discipinary case which Mahoning County Bar association brought against Attorney Richard Olivito is something out of either a Kalfa novel or a page lifted from within an "Alice in Wonderland" kind of looking glass 'finding".

This blog post will attempt to detail first some of the findings of this Supreme Court's opinion which has been widely published in both print and news media but more fully on Google and other internet /legal websites.

One thing is clear: the findings of the Supreme Court in reliance upon its own Board of Commissioners 'findings' are but the creation of a process which is not only seriously flawed itself, lacking in fundamental due process but one which in a word, evinces a certain mysterious but obviously serious court bias and/or even a very distinct 'agenda' both
in the court's opinions' tone and result.

It not unlike the state had adopted apriori, the most unsubstantiated, negative and false and seriously misleading allegations based on mere inneundo, despite what the real facts, testimony and documents in evidence proved during the prior due process proceedings.

In a word, its findings were not only flawed in the legal and due process sense, but they seem to evince a motive other than that which the lawyer disciplinary process is supposedly designed to promote; the fair administration of justice among the people and public who rely upon this very system of laws.

The case arose back in 2004, when a client [the client was a day contractor who filed for bacnkruptcy and was a twice convicted felon] was somehow motivated to file a formal grievance against me for a signature issue inside a basic Chapter Seven bankruptcy case.

The details of the incident which are clearly stated on the record in part, inside the official case, because Richard Olivito did NOT challenge, or lie or even contest that his signature was that which he signed for the clients to assist in getting their bankruptcy filed in a timely manner.

In other words, he signed a bankruptcy petition, for these clients in place of their own signature at the federal bankruptcy court clerk's window at the time of the filing of the petition when he noticed that the bankruptcy petition was itself completed, but left unsigned by the clients.

It was a mistake to do this. Olivito readily admited to the magistrate in Youngstown at the very next court hearing, that indeed, this petition filed in person by Mr. Olivito, in the midst of an extremely busy day and time, contained his own signature for his clients, who had assisted directly in preparing the lengthy [50 plus pages] petition.

What is critical here is: Mr. Olivito never tried at any time to hide this fact, either then during the bankruptcy processing itself within the Federal Bankruptcy Court nor later at ANY time, within the investigation arising within the local bar association.

He did NOT attempt in any way avoid this fact nor did he at any time actually deceive anyone about this fact.

It was a simple inadvertance done in a busy and pressured moment which will be more fullly explained below in a follow up post.

Attorney Richard Olivito admitted it was wrong to do and so stated to both the court, the bar association, in his deposition on this issue and at the follow up hearings inside the Supreme Court. He painfully recounted the incident, acknowledged it as a serious but honest mistake, noting it was not involving others or any secretary nor was it repeated. He commented that it was not intended in any way to benefit himself nor did it nor could such an act do so; it only was intended to further the client's interests in getting their petition filed.

He also noted he never made any attempt to perpetrate any kind of real deception on the court or practice as evinced by his readily admitting when the issue arose at the bankruptcy magistrate's creditor's hearing that it was indeed his own signature for that of his clients.

He noted repeatedly in writing, both thru counsel and in his own deposition and in court testimony and arguments that the signature issue was a mistake. He only mentioned that he
did not actually gain nor did he intend to gain from it whatsoever and that there was a context to how it happened but this was not expressly given as any excuse for any violation fo the prohibition on such conduct.

Even the Mahoning County Bar Association agreed and stipulated openly before the hearing officer on the open public hearing on this issue, that Attorney Olivito did not "act out of any selfish motive". There was absolutely no evidence to this effect ever produced anywhere especially where the clients obtained the full discharge as later noted for a very small sum or fee.

Most lawyers who have done this kind of isolated thing, who do NOT damage their clients and do NOT engage in some serious pattern of related signature conduct, which otherwise results in a direct benefit to the lawyer themselves, usually have received very light sanctions, if any from the Ohio Supreme Court
disciplinary process.

In fact, at most, for a "first time", singular non-harmful inadvertant signature case, almost all Ohio lawyers have received either a public reprimand and/or a six months suspension, oftentimes, with the suspension sanction completely stayed. Actual time off is usually limited to the lower end of the court's sanction continuum where there is a first time, non material event which does not evince any true harm to the client or selfish motive on the part of the misconduct committed.

This is even true in much more direct and intentional 'deceiving' lawyer signature cases, where the lawyer was clearly either not forthcoming about his signing a document for the client and/or even where the signature actually has caused harm to the legal interests of the clients.

[One of the most important cases of this kind of conduct expressly cited often by Supreme Court Cheif Justice Moyers as setting the standard for this kind of case's review only held that the lawyer would be suspended for six months, in a case which had much more serious intentional consequence both for the client and the lawyer involved.]

What is most interesting however, is this very signature issue which was admitted to and never concealed by Olivito at any time and was completely done out of unselfish motives, because it involved ONLY forwarding the interests of the client, and NONE of any of Olivito's personal interests inside this process were even capable of being furthered by the signature issue, became the basis for one of the most serious such 'signature cases' sanctions in recent State Supreme Court history .

For this reason and in this manner, however, the Supreme Court thru its agents and Board of Commissioners motivated by interests far beyond this individual signature case, somehow reached a conclusion that Olivito somehow not only lied and deceived a court of law, but he had also somehow neglected seriously these clients' bankruptcy and caused a "substantial delay"
in the bankrputcy processing itself.

The record is simply devoid of any such supporting evidence and is actually contra the same as per the federal court who handled the underlying client's petition itself.

Finally, the Supreme court found that he somehow had also violated the disciplinary rule against an "improper withdraw" as counsel after the client's had requested and stated in open court that they wished to pursue the bankruptcy without my services any longer and did so.

What is missing, from this very bizarre and uneven and even oftentimes completely false factual finding and holding, is that the clients received their bankruptcy from the sole work product of Attorney Richard Olivito; that they received this according to the very magistrate who passed the petition prepared in the case for the client by Attorney Olivito "in a timely manner" and that all told, they obtained the bankrputcy discharge completely, fully and without any signficant delay, for over $103,000.00 in debts, by the sole work product of Attorney Richard Olivito for a total fee of less than $150.00 total!!

What was left out of the Ohio Supreme Court's findings also is that Attorney Richard Olivito paid the bankruptcy filing fees for these clients, well BEFORE this signature issue ever arose between them and the court, and that Attorney Olivito also fully protected the clients' debtor interests, at all times, and personally protected and sought out, unilaterally without the client's assistance many of the most significant and major debts, which took additional time and effort, all of which time and effort was NOT compensated by the clients, at ANY time before or AFTER the petition was filed.

The case's petition review and legal process once filed, took the standard 90 to 120 days to finalize and became itself, the instrument discharging the client's bankruptcy.

In otherwords, these clients did NOT have ANY other instrument, document, petition or legal filing done or produced or created for them AT ANY TIME AFTER they discharged Attorney Olivito over the alleged "signature" issue, during a magistrate's scheduled creditor's hearing.

I.E. they not only obtained the bankruptcy full discharge by his sole work product, BUT THEY OBTAINED THE SAME WITH THE VERY SAME SIGNATURE ITSELF THAT WAS ALLEGED AND FOUND BY THE MAHONING COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION to be "fraudulent" and "deceitful".

SO, IN other words, an experienced federal bankruptcy magistrate AND a separate veteran bankruptcy Federal judge, knowing the facts of the signature issue, PERMITTED THE SIGNATURE AND DOCUMENT {THE PETITION}... which Attorney Olivito signed and admitted and disclosed to the same federal court, in December of 2003, BEFORE THE BANKRPUTCY DISCHARGE... TO BECOME THE INSTRUMENT AND SOLE BASIS FOR THE CLIENT'S DISCHARGE ITSELF a very few weeks later.

In the end, the Ohio Supreme Court handed Attorney Olivito one of the heaviest sanctions ever given to a lawyer, for a single, first time, isolated,inadvertant,
non -material- to- the- case damaging lapse which caused NO damage to the client economically, nor to the court materially and did NOT benefit him, in ANY way NOR COULD IT HAVE.

Yet, in light of such facts, the republican dominated state supreme court subjected Olivito to a two year suspension with one year 'stayed on conditions', [as found on google here] for signing a client's otherwise valid, properly executed and ultimately successful bankruptcy petition wherein the petition itself, signed by Olivito and admitted before the very bankruptcy court magistrate and judge, of the Northern District Of Ohio, competely accepted and discharged the client's $103,000 [that is one hundred and three thousand dollars] bankruptcy debts alone, WITHOUT FURTHER LEGAL ASSISTANCE BY ANY OTHER LAWYER.

This proper and valid and legally binding petition discharged for the Accola's debts, based upon the petition filed by Richard Olivito, occured, just two weeks AFTER Attorney Olivito HAD to, under the Code of Professional Responsibility, MANDATORILY withdraw from further representation of the clients when he offered continued representation inside a magistrate conference and was expressly declined by the clients to continue with them as their bankruptcy lawyer, even where all the work had been done by him to obtain their debts' dischargd.

[This all happened also, wherein he did NOT charge the clients any further, other than the original $150.00 dollars they originally paid six months prior for which he took much more time and effort on their behalf to successfully draft a solid petition which operated to discharge the clients' bankruptcy. ]

As stated above, Mr. Olivito personally had paid the $200 filing fee, in October of 2004, when he filed the petition, from my own funds, SEPARATE and apart from their bankrutpcy fees which he had prior to filing the client's petition, charged them in writing and yet the clients never fully remitted.

For this related conduct, as they court allegedly finds, the court said, this conduct was the kind that requires the most severe form of a lawyer sanction and subjected Olivito's license to the "higher sanction" because he allegedly had somehow, in Justice Moyer's eyes, "damaged" the clients, despite all evidence , records and federal bankruptcy courts' findings, to the contra

Adding, further, the clients, somehow, had suffered a form of undocumented, never in court produced, or even anywhere ever documented, noted and/or recorded 'damages.'

What kind of damages exactly demonstrated through ANY court testimony, document, or findings is not specified clearly except to say that Attorney Olivito somehow had caused "about a month" delay in the process when after the client's discharged him and then had their backruptcy hearing postponed.

This was as will be seen, was something which was not Olivito's fault or failure but was one of several decisions of the clients' own choosing.

Whatever the alleged finding's basis by the Supreme Court about Mr. Olivito causing "at least a one month delay", in the process, the federal local magistrate who actually processed the bankruptcy case herself, openly stated, when examined at her deposition, readily admitted, "this case was NOT SERIOUSLY delayed and it discharged on time". {Page 135 of Magistrate's Deposition} ESPRESSLY CONTRA TO THE OHIO SUPREME COURT'S "FINDINGS" -- ISSUED TWO AND HALF YEARS AFTER THE BANKRPUTCY DISCHARGED IN FEDERAL COURT.

Furthermore, even if a month delay occured, the clients were NOT HARMED BY THE SAME AND THEIR CREDITOR STATUS WAS PROTECTED BY THE WORK AND EFFORTS OF ATTORNEY OLIVITO AS FOUND INSIDE THE BANKRUPTCY CASE's OFFICIALLY STAMPED AND CERTIFIED FILE COPY.

Nonetheless, Moyers and the court also "found" that, simply because Attorney Olivito strongly denied and then fought the other flawed and undocumented Mahoning County Bar allegations, and presented a strong defense in his own behalf and had differed within various depositions inside the case's litigation,-- and at times locked horns with the local bar lawyer and prosecutor who oftentimes was making wild, personal, unsubstantiated serious allegations against him inside of depositions-- that Olivito's attitude towards the process was concluded to be therefore "uncooperative" by the Ohio Supreme Court, towards the investigation and process itself;

They found that he was "uncooperative", even where Attorney Olivito had retained Attorney Richard Koblentz out of Cleveland, the month the formal complaint was brought against him, in the amount of $10,000.00 and Olivito had Koblentz file a timely, consistent and clearly stated written formal answer and denial with his direct input and drafting of the same.

That all discovery was undertaken by Olivito himself and he personally conducted four depositions and presented four of his own witnesses in his all day hearing before the panel chair in Columbus and that he submitted to not only one sworn deposition but another sworn open hearing testimony which submitted him to cross examination again.

Later and at the end of the entire disciplinary case's process, six months prior to the Supreme Court issuing a final opinion, Attorney Olivito had retained the late Max Kravitz for a retainer fee of $25,000.00--- to file what is called an "objections brief" to the Boards' findings and then had noted Columbus Attorney Max Kravitz and his fine and respected law partner Paula Brown make the oral argument stating that he did nothing deceptive whatsoever before the bankruptcy court, nor with the investigators, nor to the panel in their careful review of the entire case's records and documented evidence, in representing his interests in regards to these allegations at any time.

In otherwords, Olivito was at such critical times, except during the panel process and parts of key discovery deposition process which lasted about a month on the case's record, represented by competent counsel of record [even wherein he had a serious disagreement arise between the first counsel Mr. Koblentz , just prior to the panel hearing] Attorney Olivito in short, paid over $35,000.00 in lawyer fees only to be called "uncooperative" by the Ohio Supreme court where he fully otherwise submitted and participated in the process of both defending himself, attempting to reach a stipulated settlement and then arguing in mitigation on his own behalf, after a full eight hour open public hearing, on this related $150.00 bankrutpcy signature issue which otherwise passed the federal bankruptcy court system two years prior without much of a problem except this noted signature issue which did not PREVENT the bankruptcy from discharging in any way.

The Court nonetheless, in a manner evincing something of a bias or motive other than true fact finding created an entirely new, post hearing "charge" or alleged "violation" of being "uncooperative" and "wasting time" was NOT presented on review for any KIND OF DUE PROCESS defense or argument or review or post Board finding briefing, at any time, by any of my lawyers or myself.

Yet, this very same conclusion and flawed factual "finding of uncooperativeness" by the Ohio Supreme Court, served their own needs to find another alternative and additional basis to 'elevate' the sanction inside an otherwise, singular non materially damaging, and otherwise isolated first time in an entire career, technical signature, ethical violation case.

WE will address this part in a second portion of this particular blog post. But suffice it to end this initial part by stating, Richard Olivito was handed the heaviest suspension in this modern court's history for a bankruptcy/legal signature case...

... wherein the clients themselves again 1] obtained a complete and TIMELY discharge of ALL of their debts within six months start to finish 2]WHERE the clients admittedly never did PAY COUNSEL ALL of his requested fees [$300.00] prior to filing their petition as is customary inside such bankruptcy cases and 3] Olivito admitted openly and quickly to the signature issue when asked by the magistrate about it and offered continued representation but was 4] declined by the clients, despite having completed ALL the necessary legal work and heavy lifting and legal filings and petitions associated with such a bankrputcy case months prior to this hearing. 5] The petition created by Attorney Olivito and his legal staff, was the ONLY instrument that was present on the bankruptcy case file and they had in fact, paid NO legal fees to ANY other lawyer to complete this matter.6] Attorney Olivito present four clear personal secretarial and legal assistant testimony which was basically uncontroverted on key material relevant points of contention during the open public hearing portion of the pre decision process which develops the underlying case's record and the prosecution did NOT present ANY live witnesses in rebuttal, in their case against Olivito.

The Client: Mr. Michael Accola{ THE TWICE CONVICTED FELON: THEFT BY DECEPTION KIND OF GUY

The main client in this disciplinary case, and the chief complainant, with whom Mr. Olivito had spoken with and had been originally retained by, was a Mr. Michael Accola. He never submitted to a deposition by the local bar association, he was never called by the Mahoning County Bar Association to the stand during the one day open hearing, and he was never made to swear an affidavit against Olivito, although several key allegations of the Bar Association's complaint were solely founded upon his false allegations of what he either was alleged to have done or said or what Olivito did or did not say to him.

In otherwords, much of the main prosecution's case from the Mahoning County Bar association is purely based on hearsay "evidence" and/or simple false inneundo.

While Mr. Olivito has often represented criminal clients and clients with strong felony backgrounds, he has not usually encountered the same kind of convicted felons when representing such individuals filing a federal bankruptcy petition. Perhaps, indeed, he ought
to have been more careful.

Mr. Olivito only discovered AFTER the formal bankrupcty was completed, AFTER the represenation had ended and even as the disciplinary process had begun against him, brought by the local bar association, over the alleged mistaken signature issue, that Mr. Accola was a local Youngstown twice convicted felon...

Accola had plead guilty to defrauding homeowners of work related homeimprovements in the area, taking fees but not producing the related work product; i.e Mr. Accola had been convicted of "theft by deception" several years prior to coming to Mr. Olivito's office and asking for his second bankruptcy in ten years.

Yet, this client's hearsay comments about Mr. Olivito and his solid office staff and legal assistants were taken as gospel truth while Mr. Olivito's unblemished legal career credibility was held in strict contempt by the Chief Justice and his cohorts at the Board of Commissioners of Ohio's Lawyer Disciplinary system.

Lets try to find out why...

There is more and this is only the beginning. But what is important, is Mr. Olivito's follow up attempt to not only fight the other than signature issues in a legal, strong and documented fashion within the proper due process hearings afforded to him, but also how and what he did and discovered along the way in appealing the findings of these Boards and even the Supreme Court 's final opinion findings of fact, about his conduct, later.

This very discipinary action has become subject to more twists and turns and eventual issues which are presently pending between Mr. Olivito and this present Disciplinary system of the Ohio Supreme Court. Some issues are beyond this present blog post scope in part;

But please, do not read the Opinion of the Ohio Supreme Court as if it is based on real, actual entirely "the whole truth and nothing but truth" based factual findings.

What is being posted and officially stated about my legal character and professionalism is nothing short of a very serious false light campaign to smear a lawyer's abilities, his legal background and his capacity to function on behalf of clients, even when the clients themselves are twice convicted felons who have repeatedly withheld critical information to their lawyer, subverted the process to maintain the semblance of open and honest due process and have engaged in a special form of cover up of at least their own issues, within the Youngstown's area and by its hard working Bar Association in making sure this lawyer is not able to continue on with his signficant legal work inside their region and local bar area.

The work of Richard Olivito on behalf of civil rights litigants and those who have suffered serious constitutional violations, has been and remained the main focus of most of his entire adult legal career; Mr. Olivito fought hard over the last fourteen years to bring important civil rights issues in hard to reach, out of the way, smaller communities, to high public attention and helped to litigate many serious real, serious citizen civil rights cases before the various courts of eastern Ohio and elsewhere.

This particularly solo bankrupcty case represents a problem in that while Mr. Olivito admitted to the serious but technical error and signature mistake and clearly denoted it as something that ought not to have happened and is not otherwise defensible, or a model for lawyer conduct, nontheless, it was and remained a
isolated, one time, inadvertant issue which came up inside a difficult client's case, wherein the timing of the same became a problem for him and his clients
.


Again, a solo lawyer can not benefit economically from signing his or her client's name inside such a modest and otherwise unremarkable bankruptcy petition in the selfish sense of the word.
This did not intend any economic or personal gain in ANY manner, for attorney Richard Olivito. His actions only furthered the client's petition and interests but mistakenly and inadvertantly so. He admitted to the same, more than once inside the formal process itself.

It also just happened to occur while he was in the midst of a national breaking news legal issue which was enveloping the City of Warren and causing major officials in Washington DC to take a critical look at what was happening in the Mahoning Valley region, including Youngstown and Warren police departments, where Mr. Olivito was then on the front page and headlines of every media organization for the immediate prior three months to this issue about the bankruptcy becoming a serious distraction to his important legacy and critical legal work and advocacy on behalf of those citizens and individuals.... whom the local area or state FOP do NOT want to have a dedicated and otherwise strongly ethical lawyer suing them in either a state or federal court anywhere or anytime.

Moreover, the FOP and the chamber of commerce of various Ohio municipalities, who both openly endorsed the Ohio Republican Supreme Court candidates and contributed heavily to their elections, even in 2004 and 2006, were also much less interested in having the Department of Justice in Washington DC coming into such regions and opening up federal investigations into their area's police departments mainly because the efforts of Attorneys like Richard Olivito have had a long and detailed competent history in eastern Ohio of doing just this kind of thing.... that in turn, helps to triggers such intense, very complex reviews by the Special Litigation unit of the Washington D.C. Civil Rights Section of the DOJ.

Taking A Moment to Breath and Ask Why?

The very outcome of this argument against this Ohio Supreme Court disciplinary case against Attorney Olivito brings to light several important questions.

Why would this kind of thing happen inside a lawyer discipline case in Ohio?

Has it ever happened to anyone else?

What would be the background and motives of a local bar association's interest in "getting" a non local originated lawyer and have him suspended from the practice of law?

Has this kind of thing occurred before, or elsewhere in Ohio?

Was there any potential conflict of interests that were being played out inside this otherwise singular, one time inadvertant technical violation case wherein the client got everything and more what they came to Mr. Olivito and paid him the sum total of about $150.00 for six months of work on their bankruptcy case.

The numerous 'found' allegations yet do not match up to the either the records, the sworn testimony and the plain certified copied documents and the defense of the claim on the grounds of "improper withdraw from representation" and "uncooperativeness" and most importantly, the "serious neglect" of a legal matter regarding the bankruptcy and the all important related lack of actual damages issue as addressed above.

Why would the court so suspend Attorney Olivito's license then for up to two years in such a case as this where the client's goals and aims were actually fullfilled by the subject lawyer's petition and work product, wherein the client got away without paying anything close to the market value of such legal services?

Another issue to be addressed is whether or not any one at the local bar of any status ever tell him anything about the nature of the prosecution which was being brought against him and how it was originally perceived?

Also, the follow up inquiry may ask if any courts in the Youngstown region ever mentioned this particular local Mahoning County Bar Association case while it still was pending and undecided by the Ohio Supreme Court, against him as a reason to not rule on important pending motion[s] before it on completely unrelated issues and unrelated clients but during signficant and continued important cases of any kind?

i.e. Did any Courts in the region ever use the pending issue of the Accola case against Mr. Olivito's clients, as a weapon against their best interests?

Also, as a practical matter, the question arises, why would the Accola's complain at all, since they obtained what they sought in the end, from his work product and efforts, --all that they could obtain----without paying Mr. Olivito much if anything, especially where the main party is a convicted felon locally.

Indeed, how did these clients' come into Mr. Olivito's solo busy law practice in the first instance?

Who are the powers behind the decision makers in this very disciplinary hearing process that came to such drastic conclusions that permitted or "caused" the Ohio Supreme Court to be able to make draconian and seriously false conclusions about Mr. Olivito and his character?

Did any of these important hearing officers inside this case have any interests or conflicts of their own which may have played a role inside of this hearing and Olivito's underlying case which ought to have been revealed as a matter of public policy, law and/or simple fairness and ethical conduct itself, before any such officer of the court made any judicial determination of the facts and/or law as it applied to Mr. Olivito's own presentation and representation of himself before the Board of Commissioner's one "due process" panel hearing.

Indeed, even the most basic question can be reviewed now in hindsight...

Did the Mahoning County Bar Association know who the Accola's were and what Mr. Accola's background was in the criminal sense of the word?

Was there any court in Youngstown that had actual knowledge or should have, of Mr. Accola's very serious problem with truthfulness?

This related blog posts will continue. The question which arises on the face of the disciplinary case which has issued suspending the law license of Mr. Olivito is Did the Ohio Supreme Court make its decision in this case related to Mr. Olivito and the bankruptcy matter in accordance with its own prior case precedent, and its own standards in finding a basis for elevating its sanctions for related conduct?

And finally, did it properly apply its OWN due process rules governing related disciplinary case sanctions and holdings for conduct of equal or even more serious value?

If not, what are some of the case decision of the same court which would say they did not....

...or have held completely varying opinions from Attorney Olivito's case on either similar or even much much worse lawyer conduct cases containing actual admitted criminal lawyer misconduct itself.

That is the topic to which the next related blog postings on this subject will address