The N.C. State Bar v. Megaro ( 2022 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    2022-NCCOA-718
    No. COA22-135
    Filed 1 November 2022
    Wake County, No. 18 DHC 41
    THE NORTH CAROLINA STATE BAR, Plaintiff,
    v.
    PATRICK MICHAEL MEGARO, Attorney, Defendant.
    Appeal by Defendant from order entered 27 April 2021 by the Disciplinary
    Hearing Commission of the North Carolina State Bar. Heard in the Court of Appeals
    7 September 2022.
    The North Carolina State Bar, by Deputy Counsel David R. Johnson, Counsel
    Katherine Jean, and Deputy Counsel Carmen Hoyme Bannon, for
    Plaintiff-Appellee.
    Patrick Michael Megaro, Pro se, Defendant-Appellant.
    COLLINS, Judge.
    ¶1         Defendant Patrick Michael Megaro appeals from an order of discipline entered
    by the Disciplinary Hearing Commission of the North Carolina State Bar (“DHC”)
    suspending his law license for five years and allowing him to seek a stay of the
    balance of the suspension after three years if he complies with certain conditions.
    Because there is substantial evidence to support the DHC’s findings of fact, and
    because the findings of fact support the conclusions of law, we affirm.
    N.C. STATE BAR V. MEGARO
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    Opinion of the Court
    I.   Procedural History and Factual Background
    ¶2         In 1983, brothers Henry McCollum and Leon Brown were convicted of the rape
    and murder of 11-year-old Sabrina Buie and sentenced to death. On appeal, the
    North Carolina Supreme Court granted McCollum and Brown new trials. See State
    v. McCollum, 
    321 N.C. 557
    , 
    364 S.E.2d 112
     (1988). McCollum was retried and again
    convicted of first-degree rape and first-degree murder. The trial court arrested
    judgment on the rape conviction and sentenced McCollum to death for the murder
    conviction. At sentencing, the jury found as mitigating circumstances that McCollum
    “was mentally retarded, that the offense was committed while he was under the
    influence of mental or emotional disturbance, that he is easily influenced by others,
    and [that] he has difficulty thinking clearly under stress.”
    ¶3         Brown was retried, convicted of first-degree rape, and sentenced to life in
    prison. In the trial court’s judgment, it recommended Brown receive psychological
    treatment in prison. On appeal, this Court found no error, but the opinion included
    the trial court’s order denying a motion to suppress which found that Brown “has an
    I.Q. variously tested between 49 and 65, but has been generally classified as suffering
    from mild mental retardation[.]” State v. Brown, 
    112 N.C. App. 390
    , 393, 
    436 S.E.2d 163
    , 165 (1993).
    ¶4         In April 1995, McCollum was represented by Kenneth Rose, an attorney with
    the Center for Death Penalty Litigation, and attorneys from Wilmer Hale, in filing a
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    motion for appropriate relief (“MAR”).       The MAR alleged that an incriminating
    statement made by McCollum was unreliable due to his intellectual disabilities,
    which were established by opinions from four mental health professionals.
    ¶5         In January 2002, Rose represented McCollum in filing an amended MAR
    “based on [McCollum’s] subaverage intellectual functioning and significant
    limitations in adaptive functioning.” In support of the MAR, McCollum submitted a
    2002 affidavit of Dr. Rogers in which Dr. Rogers averred that “in her 1995 testing
    McCollum had a full-scale IQ of 68 and significant subaverage intellectual
    functioning that placed him in the lowest 2-3 percent of the population in overall
    intellectual functioning.” McCollum also submitted a 2002 affidavit of Dr. Rumer,
    who averred that McCollum “had a history of subaverage scores on intellectual
    testing with full-scale scores of 56, 61 and 69, and adaptive functioning deficits.”
    ¶6         In August 2014, Rose and Vernetta Alston, also an attorney with the Center
    for Death Penalty Litigation, filed an MAR alleging McCollum was innocent based in
    part on results of DNA testing done on a cigarette butt found at the scene of the
    murder; the DNA did not match either brother, but instead matched an inmate “then
    serving a life sentence for the murder of a woman in the same area as Buie, a month
    after Buie’s murder.” Brown filed a similar MAR through separate counsel. The trial
    court granted McCollum’s and Brown’s MARs, vacated their convictions and
    judgments, and released them from prison after having served 31 years.
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    Opinion of the Court
    ¶7         Attorneys Mike Lewis, Mark Rabil, and Tom Howlett agreed to represent
    McCollum and Brown on a contingency fee basis in civil litigation for the alleged
    misconduct of law enforcement officers involved in the investigation and prosecution
    of the brothers. Rose, Alston, and attorneys with Wilmer Hale agreed to represent
    McCollum and Brown on a pro bono basis to file pardon petitions with the governor
    and to seek compensation in the Industrial Commission as persons wrongfully
    convicted of felonies, pursuant to 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 148-84
    . On 11 September 2014,
    Rose and Alston filed petitions for pardons of innocence on behalf of the brothers. On
    15 September 2014, Rose and Alston received notice from the Clemency
    Administrator that “[a]ll necessary documents have been received and this request is
    now being processed. You will be notified when a decision has been made on this
    request.” After McCollum’s and Brown’s cases caught the attention of the media,
    “McCollum and Brown began receiving charitable donations and financial assistance
    from various sources[.]”
    ¶8         In January 2015, Kim Weekes and Deborah Pointer, who were not attorneys
    and who referred to themselves as “consultant advisors,” contacted Brown’s sister,
    Geraldine Brown Ransom, claiming they could help McCollum and Brown. Weekes
    and Pointer entered into an agreement with Ransom, who was not a guardian for
    either McCollum or Brown at that point, to serve as activists for the brothers and to
    assist with their pardon process. Weekes and Pointer notified Rose that they were
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    Opinion of the Court
    authorized to represent McCollum and Brown “in all and any of the Civil/Litigation
    of the Pardon/Fundraising of NC matters.”
    ¶9           Weekes and Pointer contacted Defendant about representing the brothers.
    Defendant “read news accounts of McCollum and Brown’s cases, reviewed transcripts
    of their MAR hearings that he found online, and did preliminary research on their
    cases.” Before Defendant met with McCollum and Brown, Pointer warned Defendant
    that Ransom requested that Defendant refrain from discussing money amounts in
    front of the brothers. Pointer also told Defendant that Ransom would give the
    brothers a monthly stipend. Defendant entered into a representation agreement with
    McCollum, Brown, and Ransom.       At the time they entered into the agreement,
    petitions for pardons had already been filed for McCollum and Brown.            The
    representation agreement provided the following: Defendant would collect a
    contingency fee of 27-33% of any monetary recovery from Robeson County, the Red
    Springs Police Department, and the State of North Carolina; McCollum and Brown
    were conveying to Defendant an irrevocable interest in net proceeds arising from any
    recovery; and Defendant was entitled to the contingency interest in the outcome of
    the case regardless of whether McCollum and Brown terminated the representation
    agreement.
    ¶ 10         Defendant began working with Multi Funding, Inc., to obtain “immediate
    funding through loans” for McCollum and Brown. Defendant advanced $1,000 cash
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    to each McCollum and Brown and facilitated the brothers each getting loans from
    Multi Funding for $100,000 at 19% interest, compounded every six months.
    Defendant ensured that Weekes and Pointer were paid $10,000 from the initial loan
    proceeds to the brothers. Defendant sent letters to Rose and Howlett, “warning them
    to never contact McCollum and Brown again as it would violate the ‘rules of ethics’
    and would be ‘actionable as tortious interference of contract.’”
    ¶ 11         After the governor granted pardons of innocence to the brothers, Defendant
    filed a joint petition in the Industrial Commission seeking compensation for
    McCollum and Brown, pursuant to 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 148-84
    . The attachments to the
    petition were almost exclusively the work product of Rose and Alston. Defendant also
    filed suit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of North
    Carolina on behalf of the brothers against various parties alleged to be responsible
    for their wrongful conviction and incarceration. In August 2015, Brown, who suffers
    from bi-polar disorder and schizophrenia, was hospitalized after a breakdown.
    Defendant filed a petition in Cumberland County to have Brown declared
    incompetent and proposed that Ransom be appointed Brown’s guardian.
    ¶ 12         On 2 September 2015, after a brief hearing, McCollum and Brown were each
    awarded $750,000, the statutorily mandated amount of compensation under 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 148-84
    . Defendant was issued a check for $1.5 million; Defendant took
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    $500,000 as a contingency fee. The brothers were left with $500,000 each, and of this
    money:
    Defendant used nearly $110,000.00 each of McCollum and
    Brown’s     Industrial Commission     award,    totaling
    $220,000.00, to repay the loans he facilitated their
    obtaining . . . .
    Defendant charged a combined total of $21,173.88 in costs
    and expenses to McCollum and Brown for the Industrial
    Commission process. These charges included costs related
    to the pardon process and related to Brown’s incompetency
    proceeding.
    Defendant used $25,972.14 of the Industrial Commission
    award to repay money he and his firm advanced to
    McCollum and Brown prior to their Industrial Commission
    award[.]
    ¶ 13         After these deductions, Defendant disbursed $358,363.28 to McCollum. After
    McCollum spent all the funds, Defendant helped McCollum obtain a second loan for
    $50,000 at 18% interest, compounded every six months.          Defendant facilitated
    McCollum obtaining a third loan for $15,000 at 18% interest, compounded every six
    months. After Ransom was removed as Brown’s guardian for mismanaging his funds,
    Defendant helped Ransom “get a $25,000.00 loan from [Multi Funding] against any
    future recovery made by Brown, with the loan proceeds sent to [Ransom] purportedly
    for Brown’s rent.” As a result of the loan, Multi Funding perfected a lien for $25,000
    against any future recovery made by Brown.
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    Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 14         On 1 February 2017, Derrick Hamilton, a friend of and occasional videographer
    for Defendant, wired Defendant $30,000 – $20,000 of which was for McCollum’s
    benefit and $10,000 of which was to serve as a loan for Defendant’s benefit.
    Defendant failed to disburse the $10,000 intended for him from the trust account in
    a manner that identified the funds as Defendant’s loan proceeds.
    ¶ 15         During settlement discussions with the Town of Red Springs, counsel for the
    Town of Red Springs raised McCollum’s competence to enter into a settlement
    agreement. In anticipation of submitting a settlement proposal, Defendant engaged
    Dr. Thomas Harbin to evaluate McCollum’s competency to enter into a settlement
    agreement. Despite contrary findings in an earlier report, Dr. Harbin concluded that
    “McCollum was able to manage his own financial and legal affairs, and to make or
    communicate important decisions concerning his person and finances.”
    ¶ 16         In April 2017, Defendant submitted a settlement proposal for McCollum and
    Brown’s civil suit for $500,000 each to the federal District Court. Defendant claimed
    that the brothers were competent to enter into the representation agreement and the
    settlement agreement and asked the Court to approve the settlement and
    Defendant’s 33% fee. The proposed settlement provided that the liens securing the
    Multi Funding loans would be paid out of the settlement proceeds, leaving McCollum
    with $178,035.58 and Brown with $403,493.96. During a hearing related to approval
    of the proposed settlement, federal District Court Judge Terrance Boyle rejected Dr.
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    Opinion of the Court
    Harbin’s evaluation as unpersuasive and appointed Raleigh attorney Raymond
    Tarlton as Guardian Ad Litem for McCollum. Tarlton filed a motion asking the Court
    to determine whether Defendant’s representation agreement with McCollum was
    valid based on McCollum’s incapacity. Defendant filed a motion to discharge Tarlton
    as Guardian Ad Litem and to halt any further inquiry as to McCollum’s competency.
    Judge Boyle entered an order directing Dr. George Corvin to conduct a competency
    evaluation for McCollum.
    ¶ 17         Dr. Corvin submitted a comprehensive report, finding that McCollum “clearly
    suffers from psychological and intellectual limitations impairing his ability to
    manage his own affairs and make/communicate important decisions regarding his
    life without the assistance of others.” Judge Boyle entered an order finding that
    McCollum was incompetent to manage his own affairs and that the representation
    agreement between Defendant and McCollum was invalid. The Court approved the
    settlement proposal, but not Defendant’s fee.           Defendant was terminated as
    McCollum’s counsel by Tarlton. Defendant’s law partner filed a motion challenging
    Tarlton’s authority to terminate Defendant. The federal District Court ordered
    Defendant removed from the case for good cause shown. On 29 January 2021, Dr.
    Corvin evaluated McCollum to determine whether McCollum was competent to enter
    into a representation agreement with Defendant, and whether McCollum was
    competent to enter into loan agreements with Multi Funding. Dr. Corvin found:
    N.C. STATE BAR V. MEGARO
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    Opinion of the Court
    McCollum has a well-documented and extensive
    psychosocial history, and he continues to exhibit
    considerable evidence of his well-established intellectual
    developmental disorders.        McCollum’s intellectual
    disorders are known to be static in nature, meaning there
    is no known treatment to reverse the cognitive limitations
    inherent in such conditions;
    McCollum continued to display evidence of impaired
    executive functioning (above and beyond that associated
    with his known intellectual developmental disorder)
    stemming from his previously diagnosed neurocognitive
    disorder.   McCollum tends to make decisions about
    circumstances (and people) in a rather impulsive manner
    without consideration of (or adequate understanding of)
    the subtleties and complexities that are most commonly
    associated with such decisions;
    McCollum continues to experience symptoms consistent
    with a diagnosis of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
    stemming from his prior lengthy incarceration on death
    row after having been convicted of a crime that he did not
    commit. McCollum experiences intense physiological and
    psychological reactivity (i.e., flashbacks) when he sees
    police officers in his community, stating that when he sees
    them ‘it makes me think of what happened to me, it scares
    me. It reminds me of what happened out there’;
    McCollum has been unable to pass the written portion of
    the test to obtain a driver’s license. McCollum agreed to
    ‘sign the papers’ to engage Defendant’s representation
    because ‘he gave us money. I agreed to sign the papers for
    him to handle my pardon and civil suit – because he gave
    us money, found me a better place. But he had me fooled.’
    Regarding Defendant, McCollum ‘thought he was doing a
    good job, but I didn’t know that he was taking that much
    money. I had no idea how much money they were supposed
    to take’; and
    McCollum remains unable to make and communicate
    important decisions regarding his person and his property,
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    without the regular assistance of others. McCollum met
    the statutory definition of ‘incompetent adult’ as detailed
    in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 35A-1101(7) at the time that he entered
    into the representation agreement with Defendant and
    when he entered into the loans with [Multi Funding].
    ¶ 18         On 20 September 2018, the North Carolina State Bar filed a disciplinary action
    against Defendant alleging that Defendant had engaged in professional misconduct
    in his representation of McCollum and Brown. The case was tried before the DHC,
    and the DHC concluded that Defendant violated the Rules of Professional Conduct
    involving, inter alia, “dishonesty, excessive fees, [and] conduct prejudicial to the
    administration of justice.” The order of discipline (“Order”) suspended Defendant’s
    law license for five years and allowed Defendant to seek a stay of the balance of the
    suspension after three years if he complied with certain conditions, including a
    $250,000 restitution payment to McCollum and Brown. Defendant filed notice of
    appeal.
    II.     Discussion
    ¶ 19         Defendant first contends that, “utilizing the whole record test, the findings of
    fact and conclusions of law in the [Order] were not supported by clear, cogent, and
    convincing evidence[.]” (capitalization omitted).
    ¶ 20         Appeals from orders of the DHC are limited to “matters of law or legal
    inference.” 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 84-28
    (h) (2021). We apply the “whole record test,”
    “which requires the reviewing court to determine if the DHC’s findings of fact are
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    supported by substantial evidence in view of the whole record, and whether such
    findings of fact support its conclusions of law[.]” N.C. State Bar v. Livingston, 
    257 N.C. App. 121
    , 126, 
    809 S.E.2d 183
    , 188 (2017) (citation omitted).
    Such supporting evidence is substantial if a reasonable
    person might accept it as adequate backing for a
    conclusion. The whole-record test also mandates that the
    reviewing court must take into account any contradictory
    evidence or evidence from which conflicting inferences may
    be drawn. Moreover, in order to satisfy the evidentiary
    requirements of the whole-record test in an attorney
    disciplinary action, the evidence used by the DHC to
    support its findings and conclusions must rise to the
    standard of clear, cogent, and convincing.
    N.C. State Bar v. Talford, 
    356 N.C. 626
    , 632, 
    576 S.E.2d 305
    , 309-10 (2003) (brackets,
    quotation marks, and citations omitted). “Clear, cogent[,] and convincing describes
    an evidentiary standard stricter than a preponderance of the evidence, but less
    stringent than proof beyond a reasonable doubt.” N.C. State Bar v. Sheffield, 
    73 N.C. App. 349
    , 354, 
    326 S.E.2d 320
    , 323 (1985) (citation omitted). “It has been defined as
    evidence which should fully convince.” 
    Id.
     (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    The whole record test must be applied separately to the adjudicatory phase and the
    dispositional phase. Talford, 
    356 N.C. at 634
    , 
    576 S.E.2d at 311
    .
    A. Findings of Facts and Conclusions of Law
    ¶ 21         Defendant first argues that “Charges 7, 8, 12, and 19” are not supported by a
    list of “implicit factual findings” contrived by Defendant. As Defendant’s “implicit
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    factual findings” are not facts found by the DHC, we cannot review them to determine
    if they were supported by the evidence.
    ¶ 22          Defendant does appear to argue that Finding of Fact 28 was not supported by
    the requisite evidence. Defendant does not challenge any of the remaining 129
    findings of fact, stating that “[t]he word limit under the Rules prevents further
    dissection of all the factual findings in the Order of Discipline.” The remaining
    findings of fact are thus binding on appeal. N.C. State Bar v. Key, 
    189 N.C. App. 80
    ,
    87, 
    658 S.E.2d 493
    , 498 (2008). Finding of Fact 28 states, “McCollum and Brown had
    been consistently diagnosed as mentally retarded with adaptive skills deficits and
    were unable to understand their confessions[.]”
    ¶ 23          The unchallenged findings of facts include the opinions of four mental health
    professionals establishing McCollum’s intellectual disabilities in support of the 1995
    MAR:
    Psychologist Dr. Faye Sultan, Ph. D., concluding, inter alia,
    that McCollum was mentally retarded with intellectual
    functioning falling in the range of an eight to ten-year-old,
    had poor reading comprehension, and was highly
    suggestible and subject to the influence of others,
    particularly authority figures;
    Neuropsychologist Dr. Helen Rogers, Ph. D., concluding,
    inter alia, that McCollum was mentally retarded with
    neuropsychological testing showing he scored in the
    ‘impaired’ or ‘seriously impaired’ range, his ability to
    understand verbal communication was severely impaired,
    he had cognitive impairment beyond that expected for his
    level of mental retardation, and he was strongly
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    suggestible and generally not capable of understanding
    and weighing the consequences of his choices;
    Psychologist Dr. Richard Rumer, Ph. D., concluding, inter
    alia, that McCollum was mentally retarded with severely
    limited cognitive functioning, was susceptible to the
    influence of others, and demonstrated weakness in his
    ability to plan and carry out complex activities; and
    Dr. George Baroff, Ph. D., Professor of Psychology at the
    University of North Carolina, concluding, inter alia, that
    McCollum suffered mental retardation – placing him at the
    bottom 3 percent of the general population – and a
    neuropsychological impairment, and that he had a reading
    level of third grade and a listening comprehension level at
    first grade.
    Additionally, the unchallenged finding of fact detailing Dr. Corvin’s evaluation
    established in relevant part that
    McCollum has a well-documented and extensive
    psychosocial history, and he continues to exhibit
    considerable evidence of his well-established intellectual
    developmental disorders.        McCollum’s intellectual
    disorders are known to be static in nature, meaning there
    is no known treatment to reverse the cognitive limitations
    inherent in such conditions[.]
    Other relevant unchallenged findings of fact include:
    37. McCollum and Brown were easily manipulated and
    were particularly susceptible to manipulation and
    financial coercion, given their intellectual disabilities,
    decades in prison, and relative poverty.
    ...
    47. . . . In the second parapraph of the [Industrial
    Commission] petition, Defendant represented to the
    Industrial Commission: “At all time hereinafter
    mentioned, both men had and still have limited mental
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    abilities. Mr. McCollum’s Intelligence Quotient (IQ) has
    been scored at 56, while Leon Brown’s IQ has been scored
    at 54. Both of these IQ scores are within the intellectually
    disabled range, classified by some as mild retardation.
    ...
    54.    Defendant recognized the adaptive functioning
    deficiencies of his clients in Brown’s incompetency petition
    stating: ‘Both brothers need help with budgeting their
    monthly allowance because they are unable to understand
    the concept of paying utility bills and making purchases.
    One thing is clear: neither Leon Brown nor Henry
    McCollum have a concept of budgeting or spending limits,
    nor do they have any experience of budgeting money, let
    alone large sums of money.’
    ...
    103. As threshold matters, Judge Boyle, citing U.S.
    Supreme Court documentation a dissenting opinion in a
    U.S. Supreme Court decision denying a writ of certiorari
    that McCollum was mentally retarded, had an IQ between
    60 and 69, had a mental age of 9-years-old, and reads at a
    second-grade level, raised concerns about the competency
    of McCollum and Brown to enter into the settlement
    agreement and about Defendant’s conflict of interest by
    entering into representation agreements with clients who
    were incompetent.
    ¶ 24         Furthermore, the MAR transcript, which Defendant reviewed prior to meeting
    McCollum and Brown, supports this finding:
    Sharon Stellato, a staff member of The North Carolina
    Actual Innocence Commission, testified in extensive detail
    at the September 2, 2014 MAR hearing about the
    intellectual disabilities of McCollum and Brown.
    Consistent with the background of McCollum and Brown,
    Stellato noted that both had been diagnosed as mentally
    retarded. Testing in 1983 showed Brown’s full-scale IQ
    was 54. Testing of McCollum at age 15 showed his full-
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    scale IQ was 56 and his reading comprehension at the
    second-grade level.
    ¶ 25         Based on the whole record, clear, cogent, and convincing evidence supports the
    Order’s finding of fact that “McCollum and Brown had been consistently diagnosed
    as mentally retarded with adaptive skills deficits and were unable to understand
    their confessions[.]”
    ¶ 26         “Charges 7, 8, 12, and 19” do not correspond to any numbered allegations in
    the complaint, nor do they correspond to any findings of fact or conclusions of law in
    the Order. Construing Defendant’s brief liberally, however, “Charges 7, 8, 12, and
    19” refer to the violations of the Rules of Professional Conduct set forth in Conclusions
    of Law 2(b), 2(c), 2(f), and 2(k), and Defendant is arguing that the findings of fact do
    not support these conclusions. These conclusions state:
    By entering into a representation agreement with his
    clients when he knew they did not have the capacity to
    understand the agreement, Defendant engaged in conduct
    involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation in
    violation of Rule 8.4(c) and engaged in conduct prejudicial
    to the administration of justice in violation of Rule 8.4(d);
    By having McCollum sign off on a settlement agreement
    and representing to a court that McCollum had consented
    to the settlement when Defendant knew McCollum did not
    have the capacity to understand the agreement, Defendant
    made a false statement to a tribunal and engaged in
    conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or
    misrepresentation that was prejudicial to the
    administration of justice in violation of Rule 3.3(a), Rule
    8.4(c), and Rule 8.4(d);
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    By signing various Attorney Acknowledgements of
    Explanation of Terms to Plaintiff, Of Irrevocable Lien and
    Assignment to Multi Funding, Inc., claiming to Multi
    Funding, Inc. that he had explained the terms of the loan
    agreements to McCollum and Brown when they were not
    competent to understand those terms or enter into those
    agreements,      Defendant       made       a     material
    misrepresentation to Multi Funding, Inc. and thereby
    engaged in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or
    misrepresentation in violation of Rule 8.4(c);
    By entering into a retainer agreement with McCollum that
    was invalid due to McCollum’s lack of competency and then
    arguing that McCollum was competent in an effort to
    protect his fee despite such arguments potentially harming
    McCollum’s then-current claims against Robeson County,
    the Red Springs Police Department, and the State of North
    Carolina, Defendant engaged in a conflict of interest, as
    Defendant’s representation of McCollum was materially
    limited by Defendant’s personal interest in defending his
    fee, in violation of Rule 1.7.
    ¶ 27         The Order’s findings of fact support the conclusion that Defendant knew
    McCollum and Brown did not have the capacity to understand the representation
    agreement or settlement agreement. Defendant “read news accounts of McCollum
    and Brown’s cases, reviewed transcripts of their MAR hearings that he found online,
    and did preliminary research on their cases.” The MAR transcripts “revealed that
    McCollum and Brown had low IQs and were unable to understand the confessions
    they were coerced into signing[.]”     Defendant represented in his petition for
    compensation that “both men had and still have limited mental abilities.       Mr.
    McCollum’s Intelligence Quotient (IQ) has been scored at 56, while Leon Brown’s IQ
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    has been scored at 54. Both of these IQ scores are within the intellectually disabled
    range, classified by some as mild retardation.” Defendant also acknowledged that
    “neither Leon Brown nor Henry McCollum have a concept of budgeting or spending
    limits, nor do they have any experience of budgeting money, let alone large sums of
    money.” Dr. Corvin also concluded that McCollum “clearly suffers from psychological
    and intellectual limitations impairing his ability to manage his own affairs and
    make/communicate important decisions regarding his life without the assistance of
    others.”
    ¶ 28         Accordingly, clear, cogent, and convincing evidence supports the Order’s
    findings of fact, and the findings of fact support the DHC’s conclusions that it was
    dishonest for Defendant to enter into the representation agreement with McCollum
    and Brown; that it was prejudicial to the administration of justice for Defendant to
    have McCollum sign the settlement agreement and deceitful for him to represent to
    the Court that McCollum had consented to the settlement; and that it was dishonest
    for Defendant to claim to Multi Funding that he explained the terms of the loan
    agreements to McCollum and Brown.
    B. $250,000 Restitution Payment
    ¶ 29         Defendant alleges that the $250,000 restitution payment to McCollum and
    Brown is not supported by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence.
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    ¶ 30         The DHC is given broad disciplinary discretion. “Misconduct by any attorney
    shall be grounds for . . . [s]uspension for a period up to but not exceeding five years,
    any portion of which may be stayed upon reasonable conditions to which the offending
    attorney consents[.]” 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 84-28
    (c)(2) (2021). “Any order disbarring or
    suspending    an   attorney   may      impose     reasonable   conditions   precedent   to
    reinstatement.” 
    Id.
     at § 84-28(c).
    ¶ 31         Defendant received $500,000 for preparing compensation petitions and
    attending the Industrial Commission hearing on behalf of McCollum and Brown.
    Defendant’s attachments to the petitions for compensation were almost exclusively
    Rose and Alston’s work product.         The transcript for the Industrial Commission
    hearing is seven pages long and “[t]he State did not oppose compensation for
    McCollum and Brown[.]” A contingent fee for the representation in the Industrial
    Commission was improper because McCollum and Brown were “entitled to the
    maximum compensation authorized by 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 148-84
    : $750,000 each.” The
    $250,000 restitution payment ordered by the DHC is a conservative estimate of the
    amount Defendant collected that he was not entitled to, and a generous assessment
    of the value of Defendant’s services in the Industrial Commission proceeding.
    ¶ 32         Based on the whole record, clear, cogent, and convincing evidence supports the
    $250,000 restitution payment to McCollum and Brown.
    N.C. STATE BAR V. MEGARO
    2022-NCCOA-718
    Opinion of the Court
    C. Discrepancies between Written Order and Oral Findings
    ¶ 33         Defendant contends that the written Order is at odds with the DHC’s oral
    findings. This contention lacks merit.
    ¶ 34         After deliberations, the chair of the hearing panel announced the discipline the
    DHC was imposing on Defendant:
    The license of Patrick Megaro is suspended for a period of
    five years. He may reapply after three years with the
    following terms and conditions:
    Number one, that he pay the costs of this action;
    Number two, that he pay restitution in the amount of
    $250,000 with $125,000 going to the guardian ad litem for
    each of Mr. McCollum and Mr. Brown;
    Number three, that prior to being readmitted into practice
    that he complete ten hours of ethical -- ethics continuing
    legal education;
    Number four, that upon application to reinstate his license,
    that Mr. Megaro be supervised by an attorney that is
    approved by the State Bar, and that that supervision will
    take place for at least two years.
    That’s the ruling of the panel.
    ¶ 35         There is no discrepancy between the chair’s announcement and the written
    Order, which imposes a five-year suspension with conditions for reinstatement and
    permits Defendant to apply for a stay of the remainder of the suspension after three
    years if he satisfies the reinstatement conditions. The oral announcement of the DHC
    decision was not a comprehensive recitation of the 24-page Order because “[a] trial
    judge cannot be expected to enter in open court immediately after trial the detailed
    N.C. STATE BAR V. MEGARO
    2022-NCCOA-718
    Opinion of the Court
    findings of fact and conclusions of law that are generally required for a final
    judgment.” Morris v. Bailey, 
    86 N.C. App. 378
    , 389, 
    358 S.E.2d 120
    , 127 (1987).
    ¶ 36         There is no merit to Defendant’s argument that the additional level of detail
    in the DHC’s written Order is a discrepancy.
    D. Equal Protection Argument
    ¶ 37         Defendant contends that the North Carolina State Bar violated his rights to
    Due Process and Equal Protection because “the Rules of Professional Conduct [we]re
    selectively enforced against [him].” This constitutional question was not raised in the
    lower tribunal and may not be raised for the first time in this Court. See Lane v. Iowa
    Mut. Ins. Co., 
    258 N.C. 318
    , 322, 
    128 S.E.2d 398
    , 400 (1962) (citations omitted).
    Defendant’s equal protection argument is not properly before the Court, and we
    decline to address it.
    III.     Conclusion
    The Order is affirmed.
    AFFIRMED.
    Judges DIETZ and CARPENTER concur.