Attorney Grievance v. Hoerauf , 469 Md. 179 ( 2020 )


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  • Attorney Grievance Commission of Maryland v. Gwyn Cara Hoerauf, Miscellaneous
    Docket AG No. 7, September Term, 2019. Opinion by Biran, J.
    ATTORNEY MISCONDUCT — DISCIPLINE — DISBARMENT — Respondent
    Gwyn Cara Hoerauf violated Maryland Lawyers’ Rules of Professional Conduct 1.1
    (Competence), 1.2(a) (Scope of Representation), 1.3 (Diligence), 1.4(a) and (b)
    (Communication), 8.1(b) (Bar Admission and Disciplinary Matters), and 8.4(a), (c), and
    (d) (Misconduct). Respondent violated Maryland Attorneys’ Rules of Professional
    Conduct 19-303.3(a)(1) (Candor Toward the Tribunal), 19-304.3 (Dealing with
    Unrepresented Person), 19-308.1(a) and (b) (Bar Admission and Disciplinary Matters), and
    19-308.4(a), (c), and (d) (Misconduct). These violations arose from Respondent’s conduct
    in three separate client matters. Respondent facilitated an attorney-client relationship
    between her client’s alleged victim, a 16-year-old minor, and another attorney, and then
    misled the circuit court in an effort to conceal that relationship and conceal her efforts to
    dissuade the victim from cooperating with the prosecution. Additionally, Respondent took
    advantage of the minor victim by gaining her trust in an effort to weaken the prosecution’s
    case against her client. Respondent failed to file motions on a client’s behalf,
    misrepresented she had done so, and failed to communicate the scope and terms of her
    representation in the client’s six cases. In her dealings with Bar Counsel, Respondent failed
    to timely respond on three occasions, provided inflammatory and unprofessional
    statements about a complainant, and falsely testified about what she agreed to do for a
    client. Given these violations and the existence of several aggravating factors, the Court of
    Appeals held that disbarment was the appropriate sanction.
    Circuit Court for Montgomery County
    Case No. 468445V
    Argued: Argument waived/submitted on papers
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    Misc. Docket AG No. 7
    September Term, 2019
    ______________________________________
    ATTORNEY GRIEVANCE COMMISSION
    OF MARYLAND
    v.
    GWYN CARA HOERAUF
    ______________________________________
    Barbera, C.J.
    McDonald
    Watts
    Hotten
    Getty
    Booth
    Biran,
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Biran, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: June 26, 2020
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document
    is authentic.
    Suzanne Johnson
    2020-10-23 15:51-04:00
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    On June 20, 2019, Petitioner, the Attorney Grievance Commission of Maryland,
    acting through Bar Counsel, filed in this Court a Petition for Disciplinary or Remedial
    Action (“Petition”) against Respondent, Gwyn Cara Hoerauf, alleging violations of the
    Maryland Lawyers’ Rules of Professional Conduct (“MLRPC”) and the Maryland
    Attorneys’ Rules of Professional Conduct (“MARPC”).1 Petitioner subsequently filed an
    Amended Petition for Disciplinary or Remedial Action (“Amended Petition”). The
    Amended Petition concerned three separate complaints against Respondent and alleged
    violations of MLRPC 1.1 (Competence), 1.2(a) (Scope of Representation), 1.3 (Diligence),
    1.4(a) and (b) (Communication), 8.1(b) (Bar Admission and Disciplinary Matters), and
    8.4(a), (c), and (d) (Misconduct). Additionally, Petitioner alleged that Respondent violated
    MARPC 19-303.3(a)(1) (Candor Toward the Tribunal), 19-304.3 (Dealing with
    Unrepresented Person), 19-308.1(a) and (b) (Bar Admission and Disciplinary Matters), and
    19-308.4(a), (c), and (d) (Misconduct).
    On June 20, 2019, pursuant to Maryland Rule 19-722(a), this Court transmitted this
    matter to the Circuit Court for Montgomery County and designated the Honorable
    Christopher C. Fogleman (the “hearing judge”) to conduct an evidentiary hearing and make
    findings of fact and conclusions of law in accordance with Maryland Rule 19-727. On
    August 8, 2019, pursuant to Maryland Rule 19-723(a), Respondent was served with the
    following: Writ of Summons issued June 28, 2019, by the Circuit Court for Montgomery
    1
    Effective July 1, 2016, the Maryland Lawyers’ Rules of Professional Conduct were
    renamed the Maryland Attorneys’ Rules of Professional Conduct and recodified without
    substantive changes in Title 19 of the Maryland Rules. Respondent’s alleged misconduct
    occurred both before and after the recodification.
    County; Order of the Court of Appeals dated June 20, 2019; and both the Petition and
    Amended Petition. On August 30, 2019, pursuant to Maryland Rule 2-401(d)(2),
    Respondent was served with the following: Petitioner’s First Set of Interrogatories;
    Petitioner’s First Request for Document Production; and Petitioner’s Request for
    Admissions of Fact and Genuineness of Documents with Exhibits 1-37.
    On September 11, 2019, Petitioner filed a Motion for Order of Default after
    Respondent failed to answer the Amended Petition within 15 days of service. On October
    10, 2019, the hearing judge issued an Order of Default and scheduled a hearing for
    November 15, 2019. The Order notified Respondent that a default had been entered, and
    that she could move to vacate the Order of Default within 30 days. Respondent did not
    move to vacate the Order of Default.
    Respondent did not appear at the November 15, 2019 hearing, and the hearing judge
    admitted Petitioner’s exhibits into evidence. Petitioner submitted Proposed Findings of
    Fact and Conclusions of Law on December 9, 2019, based on the evidence admitted at the
    hearing. The hearing judge issued Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law on December
    30, 2019, based on clear and convincing evidence. Neither Petitioner nor Respondent filed
    any exceptions, and Petitioner recommended disbarment.
    On March 18, 2020, Petitioner filed a request to waive oral argument. This Court
    issued an Order on March 27, 2020, directing Respondent to show cause why oral argument
    should be held and stating that, if Respondent failed to show such cause by April 6, 2020,
    the Court would consider the case on the papers. Respondent did not respond to the Order
    to Show Cause, and on April 9, 2020, this Court granted Petitioner’s request to waive oral
    2
    argument. On April 24, 2020, we issued a per curiam order disbarring Respondent.
    Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Hoerauf, 
    468 Md. 321
     (2020), 
    2020 WL 1969945
    , at *1
    (Md. Apr. 24, 2020). We explain in this opinion the reasons for that action.
    I
    The Hearing Judge’s Findings of Fact
    We summarize here the hearing judge’s findings of fact.
    Background
    Respondent was admitted to the Maryland Bar on December 12, 2000. At all times
    relevant hereto, Respondent maintained an office for the practice of law in Montgomery
    County, Maryland.
    Complaint of Peggy Lyles/Representation of Stacy Simmons
    In December 2015, Peggy Lyles retained Respondent to represent her son, Stacy
    Simmons, in two criminal cases pending in the District Court of Maryland for Montgomery
    County (“District Court”).2 Respondent agreed to represent Mr. Simmons for a flat fee of
    $1,000, and required a $300 initial payment before she would enter her appearance or visit
    Mr. Simmons in jail. Ms. Lyles made the initial $300 payment to Respondent on December
    17, 2015, and provided Respondent with a post-dated check for January 1, 2016 for the
    remaining $700. Respondent represented Mr. Simmons in these two cases without issue,
    and they were resolved on January 4, 2016, through a plea agreement.
    2
    State v. Stacy Terrell Simmons, District Court Case No. 4D00333029, filed on May
    18, 2015; and State v. Terrell D. Lyles, District Court Case No. 1D00347418, filed on
    September 19, 2015 (charging Mr. Simmons under an alias).
    3
    On or about January 4, 2016, Ms. Lyles asked Respondent what the fee would be to
    represent Mr. Simmons in a third criminal case;3 a hearing had been scheduled in that case
    for January 12, 2016. Respondent advised Ms. Lyles that she would appear at the January
    12 hearing for $250, but that the fee needed to be paid in advance; Ms. Lyles agreed to this
    arrangement. Respondent visited Mr. Simmons in jail on the evening of January 11, 2016.
    Mr. Simmons confirmed that he wanted to retain Respondent as counsel for this third case.
    At 10:30 p.m. on January 11th, Respondent sent a text message to Ms. Lyles stating:
    I went to see Stacey [sic] earlier tonight and he would like me to appear
    tomorrow and his traffic matter scheduled for February. As for tomorrow, I
    am agreeing to appear and argue a motion to dismiss for $250. If I win or a
    loss is followed by a plea, that is my whole fee for tomorrow. If I have to
    come back or try the case, my fee will be an additional $250. Per our
    discussion earlier, u were going to bring a check tomorrow for the minimum
    fee.
    Ms. Lyles responded to Respondent’s text at 6:15 a.m. the next day, January 12, and
    stated, “Gwyn[.] We have appointments this morning (last minute from appointment
    yesterday)[.] I will meet you at your office as soon as we are done without fail….” At 8:45
    a.m., Respondent replied, “I have an emergency with my son. Stacey [sic] wanted me to
    come to argue the motion to dismiss. He should b [sic] entitled to a postponement. If he
    can get one he should.” Respondent did not have an emergency with her son on January
    12, 2016. Respondent did not appear at the hearing, and the State entered a nolle prosequi
    to Mr. Simmons’s charges.
    3
    State v. Terrell D. Lyles, District Court Case No. 5D00348430, filed on November
    13, 2015.
    4
    On March 3, 2016, Ms. Lyles filed a complaint against Respondent with Bar
    Counsel. Bar Counsel forwarded the complaint to Respondent on March 23, 2016, and
    requested a written response within 15 days. Respondent failed to respond. Bar Counsel
    wrote to Respondent again on April 29, 2016, and requested a response within 10 days.
    Respondent replied by letter dated May 17, 2016, and stated, “[Ms. Lyles] is only angry
    now that her intended theft of my services did not succeed.” Respondent also made the
    following statements:
    From the outset of our interaction, Ms. Lyles impressed me as dishonest and
    untrustworthy. When she first retained me, she indicated that she could pay
    my fees, in part, by “selling” me some of the purses her son had stolen during
    his theft spree. When I expressed my surprise and disapproval at such a
    proposal, Ms. Lyles tried to suggest it was “a joke.” I have no doubt she has
    acted as her son’s accomplice in his theft scheme….
    Peggy Lyles is a malicious and disingenuous person. She apparently acts as
    a broker for her son’s stolen property, which makes her just as guilty of theft
    as her son.
    On July 22, 2016, Bar Counsel forwarded Respondent’s letter to Ms. Lyles. On
    August 22, 2016, Ms. Lyles provided Bar Counsel with her written comments and attached
    copies of text messages between her and Respondent. On September 21, 2016, Bar Counsel
    wrote to Respondent, requesting a written response to Ms. Lyles’s August 22 letter.
    Respondent failed to respond. On October 18, 2016, Bar Counsel sent another letter to
    Respondent, requesting that she respond to Ms. Lyles’s letter of August 22. Respondent
    replied to Bar Counsel by letter dated November 1, 2016, and stated the following
    regarding her decision not to appear at Mr. Simmons’s January 12 hearing after having
    received Ms. Lyles’s text about having a last-minute appointment: “Rather than get into a
    5
    debate about whether she was in fact going to honor our agreement, I informed her that I
    also was involved in an emergency and that if her son wanted me to represent him, he could
    ask for a postponement.”
    Respondent also made the following statements in her November 1 letter to Bar
    Counsel:
    My descriptions of Ms. Lyles’ veracity and character have been civil, despite
    that I find her to be a despicable and vindictive individual. She should be
    relieved that Stacy Simmons, her son, despite his many short-comings, does
    not exhibit her bad character….
    So, in the interest of candor, I do resent being required to defend myself from
    frivolous complaints like Ms. Lyles’. It is not a reflection of my lawyering
    as she suggests, but rather on my generosity and desire to help people.
    Unfortunately, some of those people are unscrupulous, ungrateful, and likely
    sociopaths. As the saying goes, “no good deed goes unpunished.” Ms. Lyles
    embodies that principle….
    She now seems to backtrack on her earlier claims that a “young white male”
    entered my office, right in front of her and me, and used drugs. She now says
    it is “possible” that I did not see him use across from my desk. It was not
    possible for me to have seen the “young white male” do anything in my office
    because there was only one young white male present and he was obviously
    a figment of Ms. Lyles’ imagination. He was not visible to those of us whose
    perceptions were still governed by reality. If that is insulting, it was meant to
    be. I believe I also retain my rights to insult people who attack my
    professional competence and integrity through insults and false accusations.
    I will not apologize. It is all I can do to refrain from using the language I
    believe would be far more appropriate for the likes of Ms. Lyles….
    I hope in the future, when allegations can be tested by the public record, you
    use your considerable resources to do an investigation than put the entire
    onus on people like myself to prove their innocence when faced with
    preposterous claims.
    On November 22, 2016, Bar Counsel requested by letter that Respondent provide
    proof of the emergency that prevented her from being able to attend and represent Mr.
    6
    Simmons at the January 12, 2016 hearing. Respondent failed to respond. On December 21,
    2016, Bar Counsel again wrote to Respondent, requesting a written response to Bar
    Counsel’s November 22 letter. On or about January 2, 2017, Respondent sent a letter to
    Bar Counsel, which stated: “My ‘emergency’ was that I was not hired for the case and was
    not going to allow Ms. Lyles to steal services with fraudulent representations.”
    On or about September 28, 2017, Respondent and Bar Counsel entered into a
    Conditional Diversion Agreement (“CDA”) under Maryland Rule 19-716. The Attorney
    Grievance Commission approved the CDA on November 15, 2017, and stayed the
    underlying disciplinary matter. In the CDA, Respondent conceded that she violated
    MLRPC Rule 8.1(b) when she failed to timely and completely respond to Bar Counsel, and
    that she violated MLRPC Rule 8.4(d) when she made disparaging comments about Ms.
    Lyles. The terms of the CDA provided that Respondent would obtain professional liability
    insurance and maintain it through the CDA’s duration, have her law practice monitored for
    two years, and consult with the Maryland State Bar Association’s Lawyer Assistance
    Program. The CDA contained an express condition that Respondent not engage in further
    conduct that would constitute professional misconduct. Respondent failed to comply with
    the CDA. As discussed in greater detail below, Respondent knowingly and intentionally
    provided a false statement under oath to Bar Counsel on September 19, 2018, in connection
    with its investigation of Respondent into a complaint filed by Valerie Brown.
    On May 28, 2019, Bar Counsel sent written notice to Respondent, through counsel,
    of its intention to declare a proposed default of the CDA based on Respondent’s false
    testimony. On July 2, 2019, Bar Counsel filed a Petition to revoke the CDA under
    7
    Maryland Rule 19-716(h). Respondent did not file an opposition to the Petition. On July
    24, 2019, the Attorney Grievance Commission found Respondent to be in material default
    of the CDA, revoked the CDA, and lifted the stay of the disciplinary proceeding against
    Respondent relating to Ms. Lyles’s Complaint.
    Complaint of Valerie Brown/Representation of Samuel Goldenberg
    Respondent represented Samuel Goldenberg in six criminal cases in the Circuit
    Court for Montgomery County (the “Circuit Court”) and/or the District Court.4 On
    September 21, 2012, Mr. Goldenberg was charged with theft in District Court; the case was
    forwarded to the Circuit Court on December 5, 2012 (“Case One”). On December 28, 2012,
    Respondent entered her appearance on behalf of Mr. Goldenberg in Case One. Mr.
    Goldenberg agreed to pay Respondent’s standard District Court fee of $1,000 to $1,500.
    4
    Case One: State v. Samuel Goldenberg, District Court Case No. 1D00282164,
    filed on September 21, 2012; case forwarded to the Circuit Court on December 5, 2012,
    Case No. 121810C.
    Case Two: State v. Samuel Goldenberg, District Court Case No. 0D00282373, filed
    on October 4, 2012; case forwarded to the Circuit Court on February 11, 2013, Case No.
    122195C.
    Case Three: State v. Samuel Goldenberg, District Court Case No. 3D00301787,
    filed on June 1, 2013.
    Case Four: State v. Samuel Goldenberg, District Court Case No. 0D00311262, filed
    on July 26, 2013; case forwarded to the Circuit Court on August 29, 2013, Case No.
    123428C.
    Case Five: State v. Samuel Goldenberg, District Court Case No. 4D00294151, filed
    on September 2, 2013; case forwarded to the Circuit Court on October 30, 2013, Case No.
    123774C.
    Case Six: State v. Samuel Goldenberg, District Court Case No. 6D00308125, filed
    on November 17, 2013; case forwarded to the Circuit Court on December 12, 2013, Case
    No. 124083C.
    8
    On October 4, 2012, Mr. Goldenberg was charged in District Court with one count
    of credit card theft and four counts of fraud; the case was forwarded to the Circuit Court
    on February 11, 2013 (“Case Two”). Respondent entered her appearance on behalf of Mr.
    Goldenberg in Case Two on February 12, 2013.
    Mr. Goldenberg subsequently accepted a plea agreement resolving both Cases One
    and Two. On April 1, 2013, Mr. Goldenberg was sentenced in Case One to an 18-month
    suspended sentence and two years of supervised probation. He received a concurrent
    18-month suspended sentence and term of probation in Case Two.
    On June 1, 2013, Mr. Goldenberg was charged in District Court with seven theft-
    related counts, three fourth-degree burglary counts, and one marijuana possession count
    (“Case Three”). Respondent represented Mr. Goldenberg in Case Three, and on August 13,
    2013, a nolle prosequi was entered as to each charge.
    On July 26, 2013, Mr. Goldenberg was charged in District Court with one count of
    possession with intent to distribute a controlled dangerous substance (“CDS”), one count
    of dispensing a prescription drug, and one count of drug paraphernalia possession; the case
    was forwarded to the Circuit Court on August 29, 2013 (“Case Four”). These new charges
    were potentially a violation of Mr. Goldenberg’s probation in Cases One and Two.
    On September 2, 2013, Mr. Goldenberg was charged in District Court with six theft-
    related counts and two counts of rogue and vagabond; the case was forwarded to the Circuit
    Court on October 30, 2013 (“Case Five”).
    Mr. Goldenberg wanted Respondent to represent him in his pending cases (Cases
    Four and Five) but was unable to pay her fee. In or around October 2013, Mr. Goldenberg’s
    9
    mother, Valerie Brown, contacted Respondent and asked her to represent Mr. Goldenberg.
    Ms. Brown told Respondent that she would pay her fee any way she could.
    On November 17, 2013, Mr. Goldenberg was charged in District Court with one
    count of first-degree burglary, six theft-related counts, two CDS possession counts, and
    one drug paraphernalia count; the case was forwarded to the Circuit Court on December
    12, 2013 (“Case Six”).
    At Ms. Brown’s request, Respondent agreed to represent Mr. Goldenberg in Cases
    Four, Five, and Six, as well as his probation violation in Cases One and Two, for a flat fee
    of $5,000. Respondent did not enter into a written fee agreement with Mr. Goldenberg or
    Ms. Brown with respect to any of the six cases. Ms. Brown paid Respondent the following:
    $800 by check dated October 28, 2013; $200 by check dated November 2, 2013; $50 by
    check dated January 26, 2014; and a book of garden photographs taken by Ms. Brown as
    payment in kind.
    On May 7, 2014, Ms. Brown emailed Respondent asking about the value she gave
    to four canvas photographs that Ms. Brown had also given to Respondent as payment in
    kind. Ms. Brown suggested a total value of $1,000 for the four canvases, noting that she
    sells such photographs for $375 apiece. Respondent did not reply to Ms. Brown’s email,
    but admitted to crediting Ms. Brown $1,000 for the four canvases.
    On December 19, 2013, Respondent entered her appearance in Cases Four, Five,
    and Six, and on February 11, 2014, Mr. Goldenberg pled guilty under the terms of a global
    plea agreement. On May 1, 2014, Mr. Goldenberg appeared for sentencing in Cases Four,
    Five, and Six, and for the violation of probation in Cases One and Two. He received
    10
    concurrent sentences totaling 10 years of executed jail time, as well as five years of
    probation. Following sentencing, Respondent informed Mr. Goldenberg that she would file
    a motion for modification of sentence, which pursuant to Maryland Rule 4-345(e)(1), was
    required to be filed 90 days after sentencing. Respondent failed to file the motion for
    modification of sentence, and failed to advise Mr. Goldenberg that she did not file the
    motion.
    On or about October 20, 2014, Mr. Goldenberg wrote Respondent and requested
    that she obtain the property seized from him during his arrest, including his cell phone and
    $455 in cash. Mr. Goldenberg told Respondent that she could keep the $455 as part of her
    fee, but asked that the other property be returned to his mother. Respondent did not respond
    to Mr. Goldenberg’s letter. On or about December 11, 2014, Ms. Brown exchanged text
    messages with Respondent about the return of Mr. Goldenberg’s property, in which Ms.
    Brown stated that she wanted Respondent to have the money but that she wanted Mr.
    Goldenberg’s phone back to facilitate canceling his cellular service with Verizon.
    Following sentencing, Mr. Goldenberg and his mother asked Respondent to file a
    motion for drug treatment. On December 11, 2014, Respondent and Ms. Brown exchanged
    the following text messages:
    Ms. Brown: Were you able to file forms
    Respondent: I mailed then [sic] in yesterday so they will b docketed
    by Friday
    The motion for trea[tm]ent
    11
    Respondent never drafted or filed a motion for drug treatment. The hearing judge found
    that Respondent knowingly and intentionally misrepresented to Ms. Brown that she had
    filed such a motion.
    On March 2, 2015, Respondent requested that the State return the $455 seized from
    Mr. Goldenberg and, on April 7, 2015, she received a check in that amount made payable
    to Samuel Goldenberg, c/o Gwyn Hoerauf. Respondent kept the $455 as payment of her
    fee for representing Mr. Goldenberg. Respondent did not request the return of Mr.
    Goldenberg’s other property, nor did she inform Mr. Goldenberg or his mother that she
    had failed to request the return of Mr. Goldenberg’s cell phone.
    On August 25, 2017, Ms. Brown filed a complaint with Bar Counsel against
    Respondent. On September 1, 2017, Bar Counsel forwarded the complaint to Respondent,
    through counsel, and requested a written response.
    On September 19, 2018, Bar Counsel took Respondent’s statement under oath in
    connection with Ms. Brown’s complaint. Respondent knowingly and intentionally falsely
    testified that she did not inform Mr. Goldenberg or his mother that she would attempt to
    secure the return of Mr. Goldenberg’s personal property that was seized during his arrest.
    When asked how much she charged and collected as a fee for each of Mr. Goldenberg’s
    cases, Respondent was unable to articulate the amount of fees charged and paid by Mr.
    Goldenberg or his mother in cash or in kind. Respondent never prepared any written
    retainer agreements, invoices, or accountings in connection with her representation of Mr.
    Goldenberg.
    12
    Complaint of April Ademiluyi/Representation of Eric Solomon
    In or about November 2016, Eric Solomon retained Respondent to represent him in
    a case pending in the District Court, in which he was charged with crimes relating to
    allegations that he sexually assaulted K.J., his 16-year-old minor cousin.5
    During the pendency of the case in the District Court, Respondent invited and met
    with K.J. at her office. K.J. was 17 at the time and accompanied by her parents, but
    Respondent insisted on meeting with K.J. alone. During the meeting, K.J. told Respondent
    that she did not want her family to know about her sexual history and drug and alcohol use.
    Respondent advised K.J. of the types of cross-examination questions that might be asked
    if the case went to trial, and told K.J. that her personal information could be admitted into
    evidence through her testimony, including the fact that K.J. had asked her sister and cousin
    for a ride to CVS to purchase a Plan B pill. Additionally, Respondent told K.J. that she had
    difficulty believing that K.J. had been raped, that her statements did not evidence criminal
    assault but rather inappropriate and embarrassing behavior, and that K.J. was blaming
    someone else because that is what young women do when they regret their decisions about
    sex. Respondent also discussed topics with K.J. that were unrelated to the alleged incident,
    including gender discrimination and cultural issues. Respondent encouraged K.J. to take
    advantage of her American residency, educate herself, and work on shedding all the shame
    and discrimination that, Respondent believed, defined K.J.’s experience.
    5
    State v. Eric A. Solomon, District Court Case No. 1D00362769, filed on September
    20, 2016.
    13
    K.J. responded warmly to Respondent and seemed to appreciate talking to
    Respondent because she felt that Respondent would not judge her. K.J. told Respondent
    she had not trusted the adults in her life, and asked Respondent to tell Mr. Solomon that
    what happened between them was wrong and that he should seek counseling. Respondent
    agreed to relay K.J.’s message to Mr. Solomon. K.J. also told Respondent she did not want
    to go trial and asked Respondent how she could get out of it. Respondent exchanged
    personal text messages with K.J. after their meeting.
    With respect to the meeting between Respondent and K.J., the hearing judge found:
    Respondent’s true purpose for meeting with K.J. was not to investigate her
    client’s case, but rather to improperly dissuade K.J. from participating in the
    criminal prosecution of her client, Mr. Solomon. In speaking with K.J.,
    Respondent intentionally emphasized the potential embarrassment she might
    suffer if the case proceeded to trial and took advantage of a vulnerable
    minor’s insecurities. Respondent intended for her comments to discourage
    K.J. from cooperating, which, by no coincidence, would have benefitted her
    client. Furthermore, Respondent intentionally obfuscated her role as counsel
    for K.J.’s alleged abuser by initiating a personal conversation with K.J.
    involving subjects unrelated to the criminal case, such as gender
    discrimination and cultural issues, and then exchanging personal text
    messages with her after the meeting. In doing so, Respondent gained K.J.’s
    trust and misled her to believe that she was an advocate for her best interest.
    Respondent’s actions were intended to benefit her client, the person accused
    of assaulting K.J.
    On December 23, 2016, the State entered nolle prosequi on all counts in the District
    Court case against Mr. Solomon. Mr. Solomon subsequently was indicted in the Circuit
    Court based on the same allegations of sexual assault of K.J.6 On March 16, 2017,
    Respondent entered her appearance in the Circuit Court on behalf of Mr. Solomon.
    6
    State v. Eric A. Solomon, Case No. 131311C, filed on March 2, 2017.
    14
    During the pendency of the Circuit Court case, K.J.’s parents asked Respondent to
    recommend an attorney to represent K.J. Respondent had a pre-existing professional
    relationship with attorney April Ademiluyi and, on or about September 30, 2017,
    communicated with Ms. Ademiluyi about the possibility of Ms. Ademiluyi representing
    K.J. “for the limited purpose of discussing the victim’s rights.” Respondent informed Ms.
    Ademiluyi that K.J. had not been sexually assaulted, but rather had engaged in consensual
    sex with Mr. Solomon. Respondent told Ms. Ademiluyi that Mr. Solomon’s father would
    pay Ms. Ademiluyi’s $1,000 fee.
    Based on Respondent’s recommendation, K.J.’s family retained Ms. Ademiluyi.
    During Ms. Ademiluyi’s representation of K.J., Respondent and Ms. Ademiluyi continued
    to communicate and share information about the case. On or about October 7, 2017,
    Respondent and Ms. Ademiluyi had the following text message exchange:
    Respondent:       [K.J.] and her parents deliberately met with the state,
    despite my admonition that it would not stop the
    prosecution and would only make it more likely. We are
    requesting a postponement since we did not receive all the
    discovery timely.
    Ms. Ademiluyi: I’m not aware of any discovery you did not receive timely.
    I don’t have the state’s evidence. [K.J.] told me you saw
    all the text messages. I want to meet Eugene [Solomon] in
    person. Do you want to come?
    The state is very aggressive about this case. They will be
    arrest anyone who fails to appear at trial. Elizabeth
    [Haynos] is going to aggressively pursue. I told you this
    case is not under [K.J.]’s control.
    Respondent:       No. It is my understanding that you may have facilitated
    [K.J.] turning over more evidence to the state. The state
    just provided us with a shit ton of new txts with your email
    15
    on it. I referred [K.J.] to her own lawyer bc it was my belief
    she wanted to avoid the trial and I can’t advise her. If she
    just wanted my client to plea and go to jail (that’s what the
    state is asking for) she wouldn’t need her own lawyer. The
    state will happily ruin everyone’s family and privacy on
    the taxpayer dime. They typically don’t need help.
    (All sic in the original).
    Later in the same text message exchange, Respondent stated:
    I am Eric’s attorney. I have no duty to provide evidence to help bolster the
    states case, nor should I. I don’t think the evidence is relevant or admissible,
    but that is not the point. If [K.J.] doesn’t want to testify, it seems
    contradictory to provide the state more evidence to support her claims. It is
    not your role to suggest to my client’s family that he should plea to
    something. I trusted you to help this girl find a way out of this, which is what
    she indicated she wanted. Once you learned she is insisting on having been
    “forced” and that she would testify to that, and you helped and reinforced her
    belief towards that end you chose to take a position adversarial to my client
    and his family.
    What doesn’t make any sense is that you told me that she didn’t want to go
    forward. How have you helped her achieve that goal? …
    I did tell you about the legal shortcomings of the states case, which is how
    you were supposed to get [K.J.] out if this. She made conclusory statements
    about force and rape that are just not corroborated by the circumstantial
    evidence. When I spoke with her many months ago, she understood that.
    (All sic in the original).
    Based on the communications between Respondent and Ms. Ademiluyi and
    Respondent’s meeting with K.J., the hearing judge found that “Respondent was attempting
    to use Ms. Ademiluyi to further aid Respondent’s efforts to improperly dissuade K.J. from
    cooperating with the State in their prosecution of Mr. Solomon. The fact that Mr.
    Solomon’s father was willing to pay Ms. Ademiluyi’s fee is further evidence that Ms.
    Ademiluyi was being used to help Mr. Solomon.”
    16
    On the first day of trial, October 10, 2017, Respondent and her co-counsel requested
    a continuance because Mr. Solomon was in the hospital following a suicide attempt on the
    prior evening. During the hearing, the State argued that Mr. Solomon and his family were
    involved in a campaign to influence K.J. against cooperating in the case. The prosecutor
    represented that,
    since the beginning of this case, I’ve had extreme difficulty in meeting with
    the victim and her family in this case … I was never even able to do a meet-
    and-greet until this past Thursday, when the 17-year-old victim and her
    mother came into my office and we met. She was fully cooperative and
    willing to go forward, unlike what my impression had been before that.
    I never communicated this information to defense counsel; however, they
    somehow knew that I had met with the victim and her mother. I also came
    into contact last week and over the weekend with the victim’s attorney, who
    represents her, and through my contact with that attorney learned that there
    had been promises of money made to the victim in private conversations
    between defense counsel and the victim and her parents in exchange for her
    not going forward for this testimony, representations by defense counsel to
    the victim about the weakness of the State’s case, and in addition to that,
    promises by the defendant’s family of compensation to the victim in
    exchange for her not going forward with this trial.
    It became clear in my conversations with defense counsel that the impression
    was that these campaigns and these promises had been successful and that
    the victim was not going to go forward and that, to paraphrase, this was just
    going to be a nolle, and they were not prepared to go forward to trial today.
    I made it extremely clear that that was not the case, that the State was going
    to go forward, that the victim was cooperative and willing to testify, and prior
    to these conversations and to defense counsel becoming aware of the State’s
    conversations with the victim, I had not heard one word about a continuance.
    It was not until defense counsel became aware of the State’s conversations
    with the victim that the word continuance was ever mentioned. So to say that
    I view this hospitalization with skepticism is an understatement….
    17
    In response, Respondent stated:
    There were no promises, to my knowledge, made about anything. There was
    a number – obviously, me and my co-counsel have no control over what
    happens outside of our respective offices or in the presence of us and
    whatnot, and none of us is, as I have always understood it – there was never
    representations made to the victim about anything that she was going to get
    or not get that I have any knowledge of. This is the first I’m hearing of it.
    This attorney that she supposedly has, has only been involved in this case for
    I think less than a week, so I don’t know what knowledge she could possibly
    have about what transpired in the past.
    (Emphasis added.)
    The hearing judge found that Respondent’s statement to the court, italicized above,
    was a knowing and intentional misrepresentation:
    Respondent intentionally misled the Court regarding her interactions with
    K.J. and Ms. Ademiluyi. Contrary to Respondent’s statements to the Court,
    Respondent facilitated the attorney-client relationship between K.J. and Ms.
    Ademiluyi and provided Ms. Ademiluyi with information regarding the case,
    the victim and Mr. Solomon’s family dynamics.
    On or about October 18, 2017, the trial judge in Mr. Solomon’s case granted Mr.
    Solomon’s oral motion to strike Respondent’s appearance as his counsel, and on February
    20, 2018, Mr. Solomon pled guilty to sexual abuse of a minor.
    II
    The Hearing Judge’s Conclusions of Law
    Based on the record and the above-summarized findings of fact, the hearing judge
    concluded, by clear and convincing evidence, that Respondent violated MLRPC 1.1, 1.2(a),
    1.3, 1.4(a) and (b), 8.1(b), and 8.4 (a), (c), and (d), as well as MARPC 19-303.3(a)(1), 19-
    304.3, 19-308.1(a) and (b), and 19-308.4(a), (c), and (d). Neither Respondent nor Petitioner
    filed exceptions.
    18
    III
    Standard of Review
    “This Court has original and complete jurisdiction in an attorney disciplinary
    proceeding and conducts an independent review of the record. The hearing judge’s findings
    of fact are left undisturbed unless those findings are clearly erroneous…. We review the
    hearing judge’s conclusions of law without deference.” Attorney Grievance Comm’n v.
    Edwards, 
    462 Md. 642
    , 682-83 (2019) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    Where, as here, neither party files any exceptions to the hearing judge’s findings of fact,
    we “may treat the findings of fact as established.” Md. Rule 19-741(b)(2)(A). We deem the
    hearing judge’s findings of fact to be established in this case.
    IV
    Discussion
    We now consider the hearing judge’s conclusions of law. For the reasons we discuss
    below, we hold that clear and convincing evidence demonstrates that Respondent violated
    MLRPC 1.1 (Competence), 1.2(a) (Scope of Representation), 1.3 (Diligence), 1.4(a) and
    (b) (Communication), 8.1(b) (Bar Admission and Disciplinary Matters), and 8.4(a), (c),
    and (d) (Misconduct). We also conclude that clear and convincing evidence exists that
    Respondent violated MARPC 19-303.3(a)(1) (Candor Toward the Tribunal), 19-304.3
    (Dealing with Unrepresented Person), 19-308.1(a) and (b) (Bar Admission and
    Disciplinary Matters), and 19-308.4(a), (c), and (d) (Misconduct).
    19
    MLRPC 1.1 (Competence)
    At the time Respondent represented Mr. Goldenberg, Rule 1.1 provided:
    A lawyer shall provide competent representation to a client. Competent
    representation requires the legal knowledge, skill, thoroughness and
    preparation reasonably necessary for the representation.
    In general, this Court will find a violation of Rule 1.1 “if an attorney fails to act or acts in
    an untimely manner, resulting in harm to his or her client.” Edwards, 
    462 Md. at 694
    .
    The record is clear that Respondent violated Rule 1.1 in the Brown/Goldenberg
    matter when she: (1) failed to file a motion for modification of sentence pursuant to Md.
    Rule 4-345, after informing Mr. Goldenberg she would do so, and then failed to advise him
    that she did not file such a motion; (2) failed to file a motion for drug treatment on Mr.
    Goldenberg’s behalf, then misrepresented to Ms. Brown that she had filed such a motion;
    (3) failed to request the return of Mr. Goldenberg’s personal property, specifically, his cell
    phone, despite informing Ms. Brown that she would do so; and (4) failed to inform Mr.
    Goldenberg or Ms. Brown that she had not requested the return of Mr. Goldenberg’s cell
    phone. These acts and omissions, taken separately or together, demonstrate by clear and
    convincing evidence that Respondent failed to provide competent representation to Mr.
    Goldenberg.
    MLRPC 1.2 (Scope of Representation)
    At the time Respondent represented Mr. Goldenberg, Rule 1.2(a) provided:
    Subject to paragraphs (c) and (d), a lawyer shall abide by a client’s
    decisions concerning the objectives of the representation and, when
    appropriate, shall consult with the client as to the means by which they
    are to be pursued. A lawyer shall take such action on behalf of the client
    as is impliedly authorized to carry out the representation. A lawyer shall
    20
    abide by a client’s decision whether to settle a matter. In a criminal case,
    the lawyer shall abide by the client’s decision, after consultation with the
    lawyer, as to a plea to be entered, whether to waive a jury trial and
    whether the client will testify.
    This Rule requires that an attorney inform a “client of the status of his or her case so the
    client has the ability to make informed decisions[.]” Edwards, 
    462 Md. at 697
     (internal
    quotation marks and citations omitted).
    We agree with the hearing judge that Respondent violated Rule 1.2(a) in the
    Brown/Goldenberg matter for the reasons discussed in reference to Rules 1.1 and 1.4.
    MLRPC 1.3 (Diligence)
    At the time Respondent represented Mr. Goldenberg, Rule 1.3 provided: “A lawyer
    shall act with reasonable diligence and promptness in representing a client.” This Rule “can
    be violated by failing to advance the client’s cause or endeavor; failing to investigate a
    client’s matter; and repeatedly failing to return phone calls, respond to letters, or provide
    an accounting for earned fees.” Edwards, 
    462 Md. at 699
     (internal quotation marks and
    citations omitted). “The same rationale that supports a [Rule 1.1] violation can support a
    [Rule 1.3] violation.” Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Bah, 
    468 Md. 179
    , 209 (2020) (citing
    Edwards, 
    462 Md. at 699
    ).
    We agree with the hearing judge that Respondent violated Rule 1.3 in the
    Brown/Goldenberg matter for the reasons stated in reference to Rules 1.1 and 1.4.
    21
    MLRPC 1.4 Communication
    At the time Respondent represented Mr. Goldenberg, MLRPC 1.4 provided:
    (a) A lawyer shall:
    (1) promptly inform the client of any decision or circumstance with
    respect to which the client’s informed consent, as defined in Rule
    1.0(f), is required by these Rules;
    (2) keep the client reasonably informed about the status of the
    matter;
    (3) promptly comply with reasonable requests for information; and
    (4) consult with the client about any relevant limitation on the
    lawyer’s conduct when the lawyer knows that the client expects
    assistance not permitted by the Maryland Lawyers’ Rules of
    Professional Conduct or other law.
    (b) A lawyer shall explain a matter to the extent reasonably necessary
    to permit the client to make informed decisions regarding the
    representation.
    This Rule requires that attorneys “communicate with their clients and keep their clients
    reasonably informed of the status of their case.” Edwards, 
    462 Md. at 699
    .
    We agree with the hearing judge’s conclusion that Respondent violated Rule 1.4(a)
    and (b) in the Brown/Goldenberg matter when she: (1) failed to advise Mr. Goldenberg
    that she did not file the motion for sentence modification and motion for drug treatment;
    (2) misrepresented to Ms. Brown that she had filed the motion for drug treatment; (3) failed
    to inform Mr. Goldenberg and Ms. Brown that she did not request the return of Mr.
    Goldenberg’s cell phone; and (4) failed to adequately communicate the scope of her
    representation, either in writing or orally, by failing to explain what services she would and
    would not provide. Respondent further violated Rule 1.4(b) in the Brown/Goldenberg
    22
    matter when she failed to communicate the terms of her representation in a written fee
    agreement, or otherwise, in any of Mr. Goldenberg’s six cases.
    MARPC 19-303.3 (Candor Toward the Tribunal)
    Rule 19-303.3(a)(1) provides that an attorney shall not knowingly “make a false
    statement of fact or law to a tribunal or fail to correct a false statement of material fact or
    law previously made to a tribunal by the attorney.” “This duty stems from the proposition
    that every court has the right to rely upon an attorney to assist it in ascertaining the truth of
    the case before it.” Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Ambe, 
    466 Md. 270
    , 295 (2019)
    (cleaned up) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Thus, this Rule requires that
    an attorney be candid at all times with a tribunal. 
    Id.
     An attorney “violates MARPC 19-
    303.3(a)(1) when he or she knowingly provides a court with false information.”
    Id.; Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Ward, 
    394 Md. 1
    , 32 (2006).
    The hearing judge found that Respondent violated Rule 19-303(a) in the
    Ademiluyi/Solomon matter when she knowingly and intentionally misrepresented to the
    circuit court that she did not know what knowledge Ms. Ademiluyi could have regarding
    past events in Mr. Solomon’s case. The hearing judge based this conclusion on the evidence
    presented at the hearing which showed that Respondent herself had provided information
    about the case, the victim, and Mr. Solomon’s family dynamics to Ms. Ademiluyi. The
    hearing judge further found that Respondent intentionally misled the court about Ms.
    Ademiluyi’s source of knowledge in order to conceal Respondent’s involvement in
    facilitating the attorney-client relationship between Ms. Ademiluyi and K.J., as well as
    Respondent’s efforts to dissuade K.J. from cooperating with the prosecution. The hearing
    23
    judge’s findings provide clear and convincing evidence to support the conclusion that
    Respondent violated Rule 19-303.3 through this conduct.
    MARPC 19-304.3 (Dealing with Unrepresented Person)
    Rule 19-304.3 provides:
    An attorney, in dealing on behalf of a client with a person who is not
    represented by an attorney, shall not state or imply that the attorney is
    disinterested. When the attorney knows or reasonably should know that
    the unrepresented person misunderstands the attorney’s role in the matter,
    the attorney shall make reasonable efforts to correct the
    misunderstanding.
    Comment 1 to this Rule explains that “[a]n unrepresented person, particularly one not
    experienced in dealing with legal matters, might assume that an attorney is disinterested in
    loyalties or is a disinterested authority on the law even when the attorney represents a
    client.” This Rule does not prohibit an attorney from contacting an unrepresented person
    in connection with a legal matter, but it does require that, in dealing with an unrepresented
    person, the attorney not mislead him or her about the attorney’s role in the matter.
    The hearing judge found that Respondent’s communications and interactions with
    K.J. in the Ademiluyi/Solomon matter violated Rule 19-304.3 because Respondent
    obfuscated her role in the matter. Respondent gave K.J. the impression that
    she was an advocate for K.J.’s best interest, instead of clearly stating that her
    role in the matter was to defend K.J.’s alleged abuser, Mr. Solomon.
    Respondent knew that K.J. appreciated talking to her because she did not feel
    judged, and Respondent continued to mislead K.J. about her role in the case
    when she exchanged personal text messages after their meeting.
    The hearing judge further found that “Respondent knew K.J. did not understand
    Respondent’s role in the matter and instead of correcting the misunderstanding, she
    perpetuated it in an effort to weaken the State’s case against her client.” The hearing judge’s
    24
    findings constitute clear and convincing evidence that Respondent violated MARPC 19-
    304.3 in her interactions with K.J.
    MLRPC 8.1/MARPC 19-308.1 (Bar Admission and Disciplinary Matters)
    Rule 19-308.1 provides:
    An applicant for admission or reinstatement to the bar, or an attorney in
    connection with a bar admission application or in connection with a
    disciplinary matter, shall not:
    (a) knowingly make a false statement of material fact; or
    (b) fail to disclose a fact necessary to correct a misapprehension known
    by the person to have arisen in the matter, or knowingly fail to respond to
    a lawful demand for information from an admissions or disciplinary
    authority, except that this Rule does not require disclosure of information
    otherwise protected by Rule 19-301.6 (1.6).
    An attorney violates Rule 8.1(a)/Rule 19-308.1(a) when he or she knowingly makes a false
    statement of material fact in a disciplinary matter. Ambe, 466 Md. at 296. An attorney
    violates Rule 8.1(b)/Rule 19-308.1(b) when he or she fails to respond to Bar Counsel’s
    lawful request for information. Edwards, 
    462 Md. at 705
    . “The rule does not distinguish
    between attorneys who fail to respond to lawful demands due to dilatoriness, on the one
    hand, and those on the other hand, who intentionally fail to respond.” 
    Id.
     (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). “Moreover, belated participation in a Bar Counsel
    investigation does not overcome a violation of failing to respond to Bar Counsel in the first
    instance.” 
    Id.
     (cleaned up) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    The hearing judge found that Respondent violated Rule 19-308.1(a) in the
    Brown/Goldenberg matter when she knowingly and intentionally misrepresented to Bar
    Counsel that she did not tell Mr. Goldenberg or Ms. Brown that she would attempt to obtain
    25
    the personal property seized from Mr. Goldenberg at the time of his arrest. The hearing
    judge found that Respondent violated Rule 8.1(b) and Rule 19-308.1(b) in the
    Lyles/Simmons matter when she failed to timely and completely respond to Bar Counsel’s
    correspondence dated March 23, 2016, September 21, 2016, and November 22, 2016. We
    agree with the hearing judge’s conclusions regarding these violations.
    MLRPC 8.4/MARPC 19-308.4 (Misconduct)
    Rule 19-308.4 provides, in part:
    It is professional misconduct for an attorney to:
    (a) violate or attempt to violate the Maryland Attorneys’ Rules of
    Professional Conduct, knowingly assist or induce another to do so, or do
    so through the acts of another; . . .
    (c) engage in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or
    misrepresentation;
    (d) engage in conduct that is prejudicial to the administration of justice[.]
    An attorney violates Rule 19-308.4(a) if he or she violates any other Rule under the
    MARPC. Edwards, 
    462 Md. at 706
    ; Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Framm, 
    449 Md. 620
    ,
    664 (2016). “Dishonest acts, in and of themselves are violative of [Rule 19-308.4(c).]”
    Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Gisriel, 
    409 Md. 331
    , 383 (2009) (citations omitted).
    Generally, an attorney violates Rule 19-308.4(d) “when [an attorney’s] conduct impacts
    negatively the public’s perception or efficacy of the courts or legal profession.” Attorney
    Grievance Comm’n v. Dore, 
    433 Md. 685
    , 696 (2013) (quoting Attorney Grievance
    Comm’n v. Rand, 
    411 Md. 83
    , 96 (2009)). Misconduct that constitutes a violation of Rule
    26
    19-308.4(c) may also violate Rule 19-308.4(d). Edwards, 
    462 Md. at
    706 (citing Attorney
    Grievance Comm’n v. Worsham, 
    441 Md. 105
    , 129-30 (2014)).
    Having violated several other Rules of Professional Conduct, Respondent violated
    Rule 8.4(a)/19-308.4(a). Framm, 
    449 Md. at 664
    .
    Respondent violated Rule 8.4(c) in the Brown/Goldenberg matter when she
    knowingly and intentionally misrepresented to Ms. Brown via text message that she had
    mailed the motion for drug treatment to the court, even though Respondent never prepared
    or filed such motion. The hearing judge found that Respondent made this misstatement to
    Ms. Brown with the intent to deceive her. We also agree with the hearing judge that
    Respondent’s violation of Rule 19-308.1(a) in the Brown/Goldenberg matter constitutes a
    violation of Rule 19-308.4(c). Respondent also violated Rule 19-308.4(c) in the
    Ademiluyi/Solomon matter when she made a knowing and intentional misrepresentation
    to the circuit court in order to conceal the extent of her efforts to dissuade K.J. from
    cooperating with the prosecution, including facilitating the attorney-client relationship
    between Ms. Ademiluyi and K.J. We also conclude that Respondent’s efforts to dissuade
    K.J. from cooperating with the prosecution, in a case in which K.J. alleged that she had
    been sexually abused, violated Rule 19-308.4(d). This conduct is prejudicial to the
    administration of justice in that it “tends to bring the legal profession into disrepute.”
    Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Reno, 
    436 Md. 504
    , 511 (2014) (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted).
    We further agree with the hearing judge that Respondent violated Rule 8.4(d) in the
    Lyles/Simmons matter based on Respondent’s untimely responses to Bar Counsel, which
    27
    included unprofessional and irrelevant statements about the complainant, Ms. Lyles. This
    conduct also tends to bring the legal profession into disrepute and is therefore prejudicial
    to the administration of justice.
    In sum, we conclude that there is clear and convincing evidence that Respondent
    violated Rule 8.4/Rule 19-308.4, as discussed above.
    V
    Aggravating and Mitigating Factors
    “Bar Counsel has the burden of proving the existence of aggravating factors by clear
    and convincing evidence.” Edwards, 
    462 Md. at 708
     (citation omitted). “The respondent
    in an attorney disciplinary proceeding must prove the presence of mitigating circumstances
    by a preponderance of the evidence.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    We recently enumerated the aggravating factors that, if found, are relevant to the
    appropriate sanction:
    (1) prior attorney discipline; (2) a dishonest or selfish motive; (3) a pattern
    of misconduct; (4) multiple violations of the [Rules]; (5) bad faith obstruction
    of the attorney discipline proceeding by intentionally failing to comply with
    the Maryland Rules or orders of this Court or the hearing judge; (6)
    submission of false evidence, false statements, or other deceptive practices
    during the attorney discipline proceeding; (7) a refusal to acknowledge the
    misconduct’s wrongful nature; (8) the victim’s vulnerability; (9) substantial
    experience in the practice of law; (10) indifference to making restitution or
    rectifying the misconduct’s consequences; (11) illegal conduct, including
    that involving the use of controlled substances; and (12) likelihood of
    repetition of the misconduct.
    Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Sperling, 
    459 Md. 194
    , 275 (2018) (citation omitted).
    Petitioner alleged the existence of the following aggravating factors in this matter:
    (1) prior disciplinary offenses; (2) dishonest or selfish motive; (3) pattern of misconduct;
    28
    (4) multiple offenses; (5) bad faith obstruction of the disciplinary proceeding by
    intentionally failing to comply with rules or orders of the disciplinary agency; and (6)
    substantial experience in the practice of the law.
    Respondent was suspended from the practice of law for 30 days by Order of the
    Court of Appeals dated June 4, 2014. Thus, the hearing judge correctly found that
    Respondent had committed a prior disciplinary offense. The hearing judge also correctly
    found that Respondent demonstrated a dishonest motive when she made knowing and
    intentional misrepresentations to the circuit court during her representation of Mr.
    Solomon, and that she further demonstrated a dishonest motive when she falsely stated to
    Ms. Brown that she had mailed the motion for drug treatment to the court on Mr.
    Goldenberg’s behalf. The hearing judge also correctly found that Respondent demonstrated
    a pattern of misconduct in all three matters and committed multiple offenses. Further, the
    hearing judge correctly concluded that Respondent engaged in bad faith obstruction of the
    disciplinary investigation when she failed to timely respond to Bar Counsel in the
    Lyles/Simmons matter and failed to participate in any manner in the proceedings before
    the hearing judge. Finally, the hearing judge correctly found that Respondent has
    substantial experience in the practice of law, having been admitted to the Maryland Bar on
    December 12, 2000.
    Respondent did not present any mitigating factors and, therefore, has not proven any
    mitigation.
    29
    VI
    The Sanction
    In deciding the appropriate sanction, “[w]e are guided by our interest in protecting
    the public and the public’s confidence in the legal profession.” Attorney Grievance
    Comm’n v. Lewis, 
    437 Md. 308
    , 329 (2014) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    “As a result, our purpose in deciding the appropriate sanction is not to punish the lawyer,
    but to protect the public, and deter other lawyers from engaging in similar misconduct.”
    Edwards, 
    462 Md. at 711
     (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “When
    determining the appropriate discipline, we consider the facts and circumstances of each
    case and order a sanction that is commensurate with the nature and gravity of the violations
    and the intent with which they were committed.” 
    Id. at 712
     (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted).
    Disbarment is the appropriate sanction for Respondent’s numerous and severe
    violations of the MLRPC and MARPC. Respondent exhibited dishonesty on multiple
    occasions. She brought the legal profession into serious disrepute through those acts of
    dishonesty, and through her attempts to dissuade K.J., an alleged victim of sexual abuse,
    from cooperating in the prosecution of her alleged abuser, Respondent’s client. We find it
    particularly troubling that Respondent engaged in misconduct relating to the
    Ademiluyi/Solomon matter while the disciplinary proceeding in the Lyles/Simmons matter
    was in progress, and after having previously been suspended from the practice of law for
    30 days in 2014. Based on the evidence presented at the hearing, which demonstrated a
    pattern of serious misconduct, we conclude that the public will only be sufficiently
    30
    protected through Respondent’s disbarment. See Bah, 
    468 Md. at 218
     (explaining that the
    attorney’s “multiple infractions involving multiple client matters warrant disbarment”);
    Edwards, 
    462 Md. at 712
     (finding a “pattern of dishonesty [involving multiple clients and
    multiple infractions] in and of itself warrants disbarment”); Attorney Grievance Comm’n
    v. Garrett, 
    427 Md. 209
    , 228-29 (2012) (same).
    For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we issued a per curiam order disbarring
    Respondent on April 24, 2020. Hoerauf, 
    468 Md. at 321-22
    , 
    2020 WL 1969945
    , at *1.
    31
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 7ag-19

Citation Numbers: 469 Md. 179

Judges: Biran

Filed Date: 6/26/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/30/2024