In re Kauffman ( 2021 )


Menu:
  •                                        31
    Submitted on the briefs April 19, application for admission to practice of law
    denied December 2, 2021
    In the Matter of the Application for
    Admission to Practice Law:
    KEVIN RICHARD KAUFFMAN,
    Applicant.
    (SC S067932)
    499 P3d 801
    Following its investigation of applicant’s character and fitness to practice
    law, the Board of Bar Examiners recommended that applicant be denied admis-
    sion to the Oregon State Bar; applicant contended, instead, that he had met his
    burden to show that he possesses the good moral character to practice and that
    he therefore should be admitted, even if only conditionally. Held: Applicant had
    not established by clear and convincing evidence that he has the requisite good
    character to practice law.
    The application for admission to the practice of law is denied.
    Application for admission to the practice of law in Oregon.
    Kevin Kauffman, Portland, filed the briefs pro se.
    Susan R. Cournoyer, Assistant Disciplinary Counsel,
    Tigard, filed the brief for the Oregon State Bar.
    PER CURIAM
    The application for admission to the practice of law is
    denied.
    32                                             In re Kauffman
    PER CURIAM
    In this lawyer admission proceeding, the Board of
    Bar Examiners (board), represented by the Oregon State
    Bar (Bar), recommends that applicant be denied admission
    to the Bar, following its investigation of his character and fit-
    ness to practice law. Rule for Admission of Attorneys (RFA)
    6.05. Applicant contends that he has met his burden to show
    that he possesses the good moral character to practice, as
    required by ORS 9.220(2)(a), and that we therefore should
    admit him, even if only conditionally. On de novo review, we
    agree with the board that applicant has not met his burden
    and we deny his application for admission.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Applicant applied to become a member of the Bar
    in 2018 and again in 2019. The board’s adverse recommen-
    dation is based on a number of considerations, most nota-
    bly certain omissions from his applications; ensuing devel-
    opments relating to both those omissions and the board’s
    further requests for information; and applicant’s responses
    during an interview with a small panel of board members.
    See generally In re Halttunen, 
    367 Or 360
    , 362, 478 P3d 488
    (2020) (court has charged board with investigating and eval-
    uating applicant character and fitness (citing RFA 2.10(2);
    RFA 6.05)). We first briefly describe the key omitted infor-
    mation and then summarize other material from the appli-
    cations and related factual and procedural background.
    A.   Omitted Information—Ohio Employer and Related
    Matters
    In 2016 and 2017, applicant worked in Idaho for an
    Ohio data company (Ohio employer) in a fraud-reporting
    unit. According to applicant, while employed there, he
    was subject to harassing treatment by a supervisor and
    he reported having been subject to further mistreatment
    after reporting the harassment. He also observed business-
    related conduct that he thought troublesome and sought to
    report it. The employer eventually suspended him and ulti-
    mately, in July 2017, discharged him. Throughout the sus-
    pension and discharge process, the employer accused appli-
    cant of misconduct; for his part, applicant refused to sign
    Cite as 
    369 Or 31
     (2021)                                     33
    documentation that he thought inaccurately described his
    conduct.
    Following his discharge, applicant complained about
    the Ohio employer on various websites. In September 2018,
    one of the employer’s executives, Miller, filed police reports
    with the City of Columbus, stating that applicant had sent
    her multiple emails and social media communications, with
    some causing her to fear for her safety. Based on those
    reports, applicant was charged in municipal court with two
    misdemeanors—menacing by stalking (mental distress) and
    telephonic harassment—with accompanying arrest warrant
    notices. The employer also obtained a civil restraining order
    against applicant, apparently related to the same or similar
    communications. For his part, by this time living in Oregon,
    applicant grew concerned about certain conduct directed
    toward him in Oregon that he thought that the employer
    or its attorney had instigated, and he reported at least one
    such incident to local law enforcement.
    B.   Applicant’s 2018 and 2019 Bar Applications
    1. Information about employment and criminal matters
    Applicant graduated from law school in 2009 and
    first applied for admission to the Bar in April 2018. Among
    other things, the Bar application asks for “yes” or “no”
    answers to several questions, with direction to supplement
    “yes” answers with additional information. Two such ques-
    tions raised issues here: (1) whether applicant ever had been
    cited, arrested, charged, or convicted of a criminal offense
    (“criminal matters question”); and (2) whether applicant
    ever had been discharged or asked to resign from employ-
    ment (“discharge question”). Additionally—and also raising
    an issue here—an applicant must list the applicant’s cur-
    rent and previous five employers and supervisors, including
    volunteer work (“employer question”).
    On his 2018 application, applicant answered “yes”
    to the criminal matters question, listing three incidents: a
    2000 arrest for a domestic disturbance involving a romantic
    partner (either no charge filed or dismissed); a 2004 arrest for
    disorderly conduct (involving the same partner; dismissed);
    and a 2009 or 2010 misdemeanor charge for reckless driving
    34                                                       In re Kauffman
    (plea), with brief explanations.1 He also answered “yes” to
    the discharge question, but he identified only a cellular com-
    pany as an employer that had discharged him (in early 2018);
    he did not name the Ohio employer. Finally, when answer-
    ing the employer question, applicant listed a combination
    of three current and three former employers and volunteer
    organizations, generally covering the years 2014 to 2018. He
    did not, however, list the Ohio employer. Applicant took, but
    did not pass, the July 2018 bar examination.
    Applicant again applied for admission in 2019, sub-
    mitting his application in March. On the criminal matters
    question, he listed the same three incidents as in his 2018
    application and added two more: a 2002 disorderly conduct
    citation (again involving the same partner as in other inci-
    dents); and a 2018 traffic citation. He also disclosed that
    the 2009 or 2010 reckless driving incident had included a
    charge for driving under the influence of intoxicants. On the
    discharge question, he repeated the 2018 cellular company
    employer information and added another 2018 discharge,
    from a merchandising company, but again did not list the
    Ohio employer. And, on the employer question, applicant
    again did not list that employer. He did, however, include
    one vague reference to that employer in a different part of
    his application—immediately following his attached nar-
    rative descriptions about his criminal charges—where he
    wrote:
    “2018-2019. In dispute with former employer. I have not
    sued yet, still gathering evidence. The exchanges have
    become tense including requiring me to file reports.”
    Applicant provided no additional detail and did not identify
    the employer.
    2. Other information provided to support applicant’s
    2019 application
    Applicant provided other information on his 2019
    application, or in later supplements, in an effort to show
    his good character and fitness to practice. As to his legal
    academic background, applicant passed all his law school
    1
    Applicant submitted his 2018 application before the conduct that prompted
    the Ohio criminal charges was alleged to have occurred.
    Cite as 
    369 Or 31
     (2021)                                   35
    courses with no misconduct incidents; he took but did not pass
    the California bar examination (in 2010, 2013, and 2015),
    although he did receive a favorable moral character review
    (in 2011). Applicant also provided references showing favor-
    able employment and rental history, and he described a long
    history of participating in tennis as a player, teacher, and
    athletic director, with favorable references and no conduct-
    related complaints. Finally, after the 2018 Oregon bar
    examination, applicant participated in the Bar’s “ReBar”
    program, which helps law school graduates retaking the
    examination and required completing sessions with the
    Oregon Attorney Assistance Program (OAAP).
    C. Additional Factual and Procedural Background
    1. Fall 2019 communications with admissions staff
    Applicant passed the July 2019 bar examination. In
    September, before the results were released, the Admissions
    Coordinator, Hansen, notified him that his character and
    fitness investigation was not complete, and applicant pro-
    vided information that he understood to be missing, but
    none related to the Ohio employer. On or around October 10,
    Hansen asked applicant for information about the “Ohio
    matters” to which he cryptically had referred in his 2019
    application, and he confirmed that he would respond in
    writing. In the meantime, applicant began emailing an
    Assistant City Attorney in Columbus, Phillips, regarding
    the Ohio criminal matters. At some point, according to
    applicant, Phillips told him on the phone that the criminal
    case was “closed.”
    On October 14, 2019, applicant submitted an adden-
    dum to his 2019 application, which summarized the “Ohio
    Matters” as follows: (1) Applicant had started to resolve
    harassment charges against him; (2) he was in a civil dispute
    with the Ohio employer; (3) during his employment, he had
    been harassed by a supervisor, in part relating to his sexual
    orientation, and he had been harassed after reporting that
    conduct; (4) also during that employment, he had reported
    employer misconduct relating to certain business pro-
    cesses; (5) after he had reported “the continued misconducts
    against me,” the employer started the discharge process,
    36                                                         In re Kauffman
    but applicant had refused to sign inaccurate documentation
    alleging misconduct on his part; (6) he had learned that the
    employer had filed a restraining order against him and had
    reported him to Ohio law enforcement, but he never had
    been to Ohio nor been contacted by Ohio law enforcement;
    (7) based on his communications with Phillips, he thought
    that “the case [was] closed”; and (8) he had filed his own
    police report (in Oregon) against the employer, regarding
    a purportedly troubling incident that he thought that the
    employer had instigated. In his addendum, applicant again
    did not identify the Ohio employer, although he provided a
    hyperlink to a website purportedly containing complaints
    about one aspect of the employer’s business. In response
    to the addendum, Hansen asked for additional documents
    relating to the Ohio matters and applicant confirmed that
    he would gather and provide them.
    Over the next two days, however, applicant engaged
    in a series of email exchanges with both Hansen and the
    Bar’s admissions manager, Wood, in which applicant
    became increasingly resistant, pejorative, and hostile. For
    example, he asserted that Hansen’s requests for information
    were unwarranted and inappropriate, stated that he did not
    need to comply, and suggested that Hansen had a conflict
    of interest. Eventually, after Wood repeated the requests2
    and also reminded applicant that his communications with
    the board and admissions staff were relevant to the board’s
    character and fitness determination, applicant provided
    some additional information. He stated that the Ohio mat-
    ters had involved “legal and criminal proceedings,” in which
    the Ohio employer—which he finally identified by name—
    and its executive who had filed the charges, Miller, were the
    “criminals.” And, in an email containing some confusing and
    nonresponsive passages, he added that he had “answered
    the questions posed and given the information needed,”
    and again questioned Hansen’s motives. In response, Wood
    2
    Among other things, Wood requested (1) specific information about the Ohio
    employer (including identifying the employer and providing relating reports);
    (2) specific information about applicant’s interactions with Ohio and Oregon law
    enforcement related to the employer; (3) copies of applicant’s written communica-
    tions with Phillips; and (4) narratives explaining his conduct, the events leading
    to criminal charges, and why the charges had not been disclosed on his 2019
    application.
    Cite as 
    369 Or 31
     (2021)                                     37
    wrote that applicant’s failure to fully cooperate could be con-
    sidered in the board’s admission determination. Applicant
    immediately responded by vaguely comparing admissions
    staff’s “unrealistic requests” to “ ‘war’ ” and asserting that
    he would “stand firm on [his] rights and how [he would] be
    treated.”
    The following day, in an email entitled, “RE: The
    ‘investigation’ created by * * * Wood and * * * Hansen,” appli-
    cant sent Wood some additional information and copies of
    documents relating to the Ohio employer. Applicant added
    that he had been the victim of criminal conduct perpetrated
    by the employer; that he had been stalked and harassed;
    and that he should have obtained a restraining order him-
    self. The attachments included a May 2018 letter from
    applicant to the United States Attorney’s Office in Dayton,
    reporting fraud and other misconduct by the employer and
    certain employees, and three letters that applicant had
    sent to attorneys for either the employer or Miller, or both,
    reporting that Miller had broken laws and directed others
    to stalk and harass him.
    Through a public records request, admissions staff
    confirmed the September 2018 Ohio criminal charges
    against applicant—as noted, menacing by stalking (mental
    distress) and telecommunications harassment—with indi-
    cators that both were in “closed” status. By November 2019,
    staff obtained more detailed records, showing allegations
    from Miller that, since May 2018, applicant had sent her
    more than 50 harassing emails and social media commu-
    nications, with the nature of some communications causing
    her to fear for her safety.
    2. December 2019 small panel interview
    The board asked applicant to appear for an inter-
    view with a small panel composed of four board members
    (“panel”), which took place in December 2019. RFA 6.05(2).
    During that interview, the panel asked about the Ohio mat-
    ters and applicant’s failure to disclose them on his 2019 appli-
    cation, as well as his employment history, earlier arrests
    and criminal charges, and the tone of his emails to Hansen
    and Wood. Applicant answered all the panel’s questions, but
    38                                           In re Kauffman
    many answers were contradictory, unclear, or incomplete, as
    summarized next.
    First, applicant acknowledged that, on the employer
    question, he had not listed the Ohio employer as one of his
    previous five employers, but he denied any deceptive intent.
    Applicant confirmed that he had listed an older employer for
    whom he had not performed any work since 2015; he also
    disclosed to the panel yet another employer who had dis-
    charged him in 2018 and another short employment in 2018,
    neither of which had been listed on his 2019 application. The
    panel observed that, had the older employer from 2015 been
    omitted, the more recent Ohio employer chronologically
    would have been included, and it questioned whether appli-
    cant intentionally had listed only “positive” employment
    experiences. Applicant responded that, in response to the
    employer question, he had listed employers with whom he
    had had good working relationships.
    Second, applicant acknowledged that he “definitely”
    should have included the Ohio employer on the discharge
    question. After initially appearing surprised that he had
    not included it on his 2018 application, he stated that he was
    not sure why he had not included it on the 2019 application,
    adding that he had no “exact answer” as to why he omitted
    it. Applicant also said that he may not have listed the Ohio
    employer because the related issues had been complicated
    and he did not know how much detail to provide. ``
    Third, when asked about the Ohio criminal charges,
    applicant provided unclear or contradictory responses about
    the nature of the underlying conduct, the date when he had
    learned about the charges, and the efforts that he had made
    to resolve them. As to the underlying conduct, applicant ini-
    tially stated that it might have involved some argumentative
    communications with the Ohio employer’s attorney. But he
    also acknowledged that he had complained, though not in a
    “threatening” manner, about the employer on his own social
    media accounts and in comment sections on other busi-
    nesses’ websites, and he acknowledged sending two emails to
    Miller. As to when he had learned of the Ohio charges, appli-
    cant varyingly stated that (1) he had learned about them
    Cite as 
    369 Or 31
     (2021)                                            39
    “last fall [or] last winter,” but did not know for certain; (2) he
    had tried to get more information but never had been con-
    tacted by Ohio law enforcement; (3) he had “confirmed” the
    charges “this year” but had still been “piecing it together”
    when he had filed his application (in April 2019); (4) he was
    scared to contact Ohio officials; and (5) he definitively had
    learned about the charges when Hansen had asked about
    them. As to resolving the charges, applicant reported that
    Phillips had told him that the matters were closed, but then
    a county clerk more recently had told him that he needed to
    appear. Applicant added that Phillips had conveyed that, if
    he had any issue with Ohio law enforcement, then he should
    file a claim with the police bureau.
    As to the Ohio employer matters generally, the fol-
    lowing exchange is representative of applicant’s responses
    during his panel interview:
    “[Q:] So * * * here’s what we’re getting at[.] [The Ohio
    employer]—you’ve already said [that was] the biggest, * * *
    most stressful, most frustrating experience you’ve had in a
    job, getting terminated, * * * several workplans and repri-
    mands, * * * is that fair to say?
    “[A:] Hmm. Hmm. [affirmative response]
    “[Q:] That was all very memorable. [Then,] you have
    two bar applications that expressly ask whether you’ve
    been terminated, and you didn’t include that in either one.
    You also have two applications in which they asked if there
    has ever been any civil proceeding, or have you ever been
    charged with any crimes, * * * and you don’t mention that.
    The most you mention, the most you reference, [is] a very
    vague, ‘in dispute with former employer’—who you don’t
    name, and you don’t name the city and town—that you have
    not sued yet, you are still gathering evidence, exchanges
    have become tense, including requiring you to file reports.
    “But here’s the concern we have, it seems like when you
    are applying and you * * * see the nature of these questions,
    you would know that that was something that we would
    need to know about and consider in evaluating your appli-
    cation. It feels like you intentionally excluded those so that
    it wouldn’t have a negative effect on your application. * * *
    [W]e can’t think of another explanation, and that’s why
    we’re asking you if there is one.
    40                                                  In re Kauffman
    “[A:] There was no intent in mind. It, you know, * * *
    I’ve talked about [the Ohio employer] quite a bit here, I’ve
    talked to other people about [that employer.] When I’ve had
    that come up on job interviews, I’ve talked about it. So,
    * * * you know, * * * all I can do is apologize for that—that’s
    something that should be on there and [I] apologize for it,
    I don’t know what else to offer. Other than, I understand
    what you are saying, it’s been said to me by all of you, so I
    get it, and I apologize, I’m acknowledging it should be on
    there, * * * that’s something that’s important, but I’ve been
    willing to talk about it and discuss the events that have
    happened there, discuss it now, or answer any questions
    relating to it. * * * I don’t know what else I can do.”
    The panel also asked applicant about several of his
    emails to Hansen and Wood. Applicant acknowledged that
    some had been aggressive or hostile, uncivil, and reflective
    of impulsivity—recounting his frustration that his admis-
    sion had been stalled after he passed the bar examination
    and his confusion about the process. He reported meeting
    with an OAAP counselor to discuss those communications
    and how to avoid sending similar ones in the future.
    At the close of the interview, the panel asked appli-
    cant to submit certain documents and other information.
    3.   Additional procedural background and board recom-
    mendation
    In December 2019, applicant emailed an apology
    to Hansen. But, at some point, he learned from a different
    applicant that that applicant’s investigation process had dif-
    fered from his own in certain respects, which prompted him
    to think that he had been treated unfairly. In late January
    2020, he wrote to Hansen and others, copying the Bar’s
    General Counsel, accusing Hansen of treating him differ-
    ently from the other (unidentified) applicant and character-
    izing a recent email from Hansen as a “threat.” On the same
    day, applicant submitted an expanded supplemental state-
    ment that added the following brief information about the
    Ohio employer:
    “I have received various information but trying to confirm
    what is true and not. I reported some of the things to police.
    This former [Ohio] employer has also involved the police,
    Cite as 
    369 Or 31
     (2021)                                        41
    the [latter] has not contacted me directly. My attempts to
    gather accurate information have mostly been ignored.”
    His statement also acknowledged yet another criminal
    charge that he had disclosed in his panel interview but
    not included in his applications, involving a 1996 physical
    altercation with a sibling (dismissed). Further, admissions
    staff—on its own—confirmed that applicant also had been
    cited for aggravated theft in 2003 (apparently dismissed),
    which he had not disclosed at any time.
    Over the next several weeks, applicant sent many
    emails to Hansen, Wood, the Bar’s General Counsel, and
    others. In response to outstanding requests for his 2018
    emails and social media communications involving the Ohio
    employer, he did provide one communication to the employer,
    from 2017. Otherwise, he insisted that he already had dis-
    closed all pertinent information. He also questioned Wood’s
    authority and spoke in a pejorative manner to Hansen.
    Applicant also asserted that—as a minority based on his
    sexual orientation—he was being treated differently from a
    “white male heterosexual applicant,” due to “ ‘entitled’ white
    privilege” and that staff had acted with a bias reflecting a
    desire to prevent a gay man from practicing law.
    Meanwhile, admissions staff had asked Phillips—
    the City of Columbus attorney whom applicant had contacted
    in October 2019—for information about their conversations.
    Phillips responded by letter in March 2020, attaching four
    emails from applicant (and Phillips’s responses). The first
    three emails were from October—emails that Wood repeat-
    edly had asked applicant to provide, but he had not. During
    his panel interview, applicant had characterized his October
    communications with Phillips as his attempt to confirm the
    status of the Ohio criminal charges, with Phillips suggest-
    ing that he file a claim with the police bureau. But the three
    emails showed that applicant had threatened legal action
    against the city and any officers involved; vaguely alleged
    reckless and dishonest police conduct; and ultimately threat-
    ened to sue Phillips. In the fourth email, which applicant
    had sent to Phillips in late January 2020 after his panel
    interview, applicant made vague and incoherent references
    to negligence and criminality.
    42                                                         In re Kauffman
    In May 2020, the board notified applicant that it
    had determined that he neither had met the essential eligi-
    bility requirements for admission, RFA 1.20 - 1.45, nor had
    established that he had the good moral character required
    by ORS 9.220(2)(a). See RFA 6.05(5) (setting out notice
    requirement for adverse recommendation). The board also
    told applicant that he could request an evidentiary hear-
    ing, RFA 9.01, and that, if he did not do so, the board would
    recommend denial. See generally RFA 9.35 - 9.45 (describing
    character and fitness review proceeding). Applicant did not
    request a hearing; instead, after the board filed its adverse
    recommendation in this court, applicant sought to oppose
    it. We then directed the board to file the record on which it
    had based its recommendation; applicant to file a petition
    under RFA 9.60(1); and both parties to file briefs, for res-
    olution of the matter without oral argument. See generally
    In re Zielinski, 
    341 Or 559
    , 564-65, 146 P3d 323 (2006) (simi-
    lar procedure, involving applicant petition filed in this court
    following adverse board recommendation and no eviden-
    tiary hearing below).
    II. PRELIMINARY MATTERS
    We first address two preliminary matters that
    applicant has raised.
    A.   Board’s Reliance on Phillips’s March 2020 Letter
    Applicant first challenges the board’s reliance on
    Phillips’s March 2020 letter, sent to the board, because
    he did not know about that letter until the board filed its
    adverse recommendation in this court—which expressly
    referred to the letter and attached it.3 He contends that
    the board improperly considered that letter in making its
    adverse recommendation, when it did not provide him with
    3
    The board had not expressly referred to Phillips’s letter in its May 2020
    notice sent to applicant.
    Applicant challenges only the content of Phillips’s letter to the board—not
    the four emails from applicant that Phillips had attached. As noted earlier, Wood
    repeatedly had asked applicant for the first three emails (from October 2019),
    and applicant had purported to summarize his conversations with Phillips in
    that time period during his panel interview. The fourth email was sent by appli-
    cant after his interview—as were many other emails that the board provided as
    part of its record, to which applicant does not object.
    Cite as 
    369 Or 31
     (2021)                                                      43
    a copy or an opportunity to respond. In his view, that course
    of events implicates procedural due process protections.
    This case reaches us in an unusual posture, in that
    applicant did not request a character and fitness hearing,
    which would have “afford[ed] both parties an opportunity
    to engage in discovery, to disclose to the other parties doc-
    uments on which a party intends to rely, and to offer and
    object to evidence, and otherwise provide[d] an orderly
    means of making a reliable record.” Zielinski, 
    341 Or at 566
    ;
    see also 
    id.
     (on adverse recommendation and applicant peti-
    tion with no hearing below, court considered all documents
    that parties submitted without objection; court did not con-
    sider one document to which the applicant had objected,
    for reasons not applicable here); RFA 9.35 - 9.45 (describing
    hearing procedure). We conclude that it is unnecessary to
    further consider Phillips’s March 2020 letter or any argu-
    ments related to it because, as explained below, even without
    that letter, the record amply supports the board’s adverse
    recommendation.
    B.   Board’s Purported Disparate Treatment of Applicant
    Applicant also asserts that, in aspects of its char-
    acter and fitness investigation, the board treated him dif-
    ferently from other similarly situated applicants with-
    out any rational basis, in violation of his equal protection
    rights.4 He asks that we “correct” those procedural errors,
    to ensure equal treatment. The Bar responds that applicant
    was treated fairly; the board acted rationally and consis-
    tently with the rules; and admissions staff and the board
    ensured that applicant had received multiple opportunities
    to provide accurate information in response to the board’s
    concerns.
    Based on the limited information that applicant
    provides, we reject his equal protection argument. Applicant
    4
    Applicant cites four instances of disparate treatment, after having con-
    sulted with one other unidentified applicant who had a small panel interview. He
    contends that, unlike that other applicant, (1) his own panel had four members
    (the other had three); (2) he was not given advance notice about who would be on
    his panel; (3) he was required to obtain a court order to secure certain documents
    from admissions staff; and (4) prior to his interview, admissions staff had shared
    with the panel one or more of his emails expressing his frustration with staff,
    casting him in a negative light.
    44                                          In re Kauffman
    purports to base that argument on different treatment
    afforded to another applicant, but he offers no supporting
    evidence—in the form of any affidavit or declaration or
    otherwise—of such treatment. We therefore have no basis
    for assessing his contention. See generally In re Gatti, 
    330 Or 517
    , 534-35, 8 P3d 966 (2000) (rejecting equal protection
    claim for lack of supporting evidence).
    III.   ADMISSION ANALYSIS
    A.   Legal Standards
    Our task on de novo review is to determine whether
    applicant should be admitted to the practice of law, denied
    admission, or conditionally admitted. RFA 9.60(5). Several
    legal standards govern that determination. Most notably,
    under ORS 9.220(2)(a), an applicant must show that the
    applicant “[i]s a person of good moral character and fit to
    practice law”; conversely, under ORS 9.220(2)(b), a “lack of
    ‘good moral character’ may be established by reference to
    acts or conduct * * * which would cause a reasonable per-
    son to have substantial doubts about the individual’s hon-
    esty, fairness[,] and respect for the rights of others,” and
    for state and federal law. Additionally, various Rules for
    Admission set out requisite standards, essential eligibility
    requirements, and potentially disqualifying conduct that
    justifies further inquiry into character and fitness. See RFA
    1.20 (attorney should have record of conduct demonstrating
    “a level of judgment” and diligence that will result in ade-
    quate client representation, “and that justifies the trust of
    clients, adversaries, courts, and the general public”); RFA
    1.25 (listing essential eligibility requirements, including
    the ability to “[c]ommunicate honestly, candidly, and civilly
    with clients, attorneys, courts, and others”; to [d]emon-
    strate regard for the rights * * * and welfare of others; and
    to comply with requirements of applicable law and the Rules
    of Professional Conduct); RFA 1.30 (listing potentially dis-
    qualifying conduct, including “[m]aking or procuring any
    false * * * statement or omission of relevant information in
    connection with any bar application”; acts involving mis-
    representation; and acts “demonstrat[ing] disregard for the
    rights or welfare of others”). Finally, applicants for admis-
    sion have certain obligations, including a duty to cooperate
    Cite as 
    369 Or 31
     (2021)                                                       45
    and comply with board requests, and a continuing duty
    to promptly report any change, addition, or correction to
    application information, including facts “that could reason-
    ably bear upon the character and fitness of the applicant.”
    RFA 4.25.
    Applicant bears the burden of demonstrating good
    moral character by clear and convincing evidence. See
    Zielinski, 
    341 Or at 561
     (describing the applicant’s burden
    by quoting and applying the clear and convincing evidence
    standard set out in an evidentiary hearing provision, RFA
    9.45(6), when reviewing an adverse recommendation with
    no hearing below). “Stated differently, applicant must show
    that it is ‘highly probable’ that [he] has the good moral char-
    acter and fitness to practice law.” Halttunen, 
    367 Or at 361
    (internal citation omitted). Any substantial doubt about an
    applicant’s character must be resolved in favor of protecting
    the public. 
    Id. at 377
    .
    B.    Analysis
    After reviewing the record de novo, and as explained
    further below, we conclude that applicant’s omissions from
    his 2019 application and his conduct throughout the board’s
    investigation support the board’s recommendation to deny
    admission.5
    5
    In addition to the conduct just summarized, the Bar focuses on applicant’s
    general criminal history and, as to the Ohio matters, his conduct toward the Ohio
    employer and the resulting criminal charges. The Bar adds that applicant has
    not sufficiently shown rehabilitation under RFA 1.40. Applicant counters that
    his conduct relating to the Ohio employer amounted to unproven facts; that none
    of his arrests or criminal matters related to deceit or moral turpitude; and that
    none bore any rational connection to the practice of law, as required under ORS
    9.220(2)(b).
    Because we conclude that applicant’s conduct in omitting certain information
    from his 2019 application, coupled with his conduct throughout the board’s inves-
    tigation, supports the board’s adverse recommendation, we need not address the
    parties’ contentions about his criminal history or his conduct toward the Ohio
    employer, or whether he has shown sufficient rehabilitation since those events.
    See generally In re Bernath, 
    327 Or 422
    , 426, 
    962 P2d 685
     (1998) (declining to
    consider each specific allegation proffered by the board, because the applicant’s
    failure to disclose material information on his application and making false rep-
    resentations to the board—each standing alone—were sufficient grounds to deny
    admission, such that discussion of other allegations would not benefit the bench
    or bar). We limit our consideration of those additional matters to the context that
    they provide in understanding the problematic conduct that we have identified.
    46                                                        In re Kauffman
    1.   Omissions from applicant’s 2019 application
    We begin with applicant’s omissions from his 2019
    application, most notably pertaining to the Ohio employer
    and related matters.6 As part of submitting a Bar applica-
    tion, an applicant is required to attest that the admission
    determination depends on the truth and completeness of the
    answers provided in the application, together with informa-
    tion furnished with the application. And, as already noted,
    conduct that may disqualify an applicant from admission
    includes omitting relevant information in connection with a
    Bar application. RFA 1.30(c).
    As to the Ohio matters, applicant included on his
    2019 application only a cryptic narrative comment that he
    was in a dispute with an unidentified “former employer”
    and had not yet sued but was “gathering evidence,” with
    tense exchanges “including requiring me to file reports.”
    (Emphasis added.) He did not identify the Ohio employer
    on either the discharge or employer questions, and he did
    not include the Ohio charges—of which he acknowledged
    he had been at least generally aware at the time of his
    application—on the criminal matters question. As the panel
    members pointedly observed, his application appeared
    designed to conceal unfavorable information about his
    employment with the Ohio employer in 2016 and 2017, his
    discharge in 2017, and the ensuing criminal charges and
    civil restraining order in 2018. That misleading approach
    was punctuated by applicant’s listing of an earlier employer
    for whom he had performed no work since 2015, as well as his
    comment that he had been required to file reports against
    an unidentified former employer, while misleadingly not
    also mentioning that the employer had been required to file
    “reports” against him, in the form of a restraining order and
    a criminal complaint.
    At his panel interview, applicant offered varying
    justifications for omitting information related to the Ohio
    employer. He allowed, at one point, that the omissions may
    6
    As recounted earlier, applicant also omitted information about (1) another
    recent employment; (2) yet another employer who had recently discharged him—
    later disclosed in his panel interview; and (3) additional criminal history—some
    disclosed in his interview, and some discovered by admissions staff.
    Cite as 
    369 Or 31
     (2021)                                           47
    have been due to his concern about the ongoing complicated
    issues; at another point, he offered that he had listed only
    those employers (on the employer question) with whom he
    had good working relationships, although he did also list
    one other employer (on the discharge question) who had dis-
    charged him. He also stated that he had no specific explana-
    tion for omitting the information, which “definitely” should
    have been included at least on the discharge question, but
    that he had acted with no deceptive intent.
    The Bar contends that applicant’s stated justifi-
    cations were neither logical nor credible, and we agree.
    Applicant clearly deliberated about whether to include any
    reference to the Ohio employer on his 2019 application,
    because he ultimately decided to include the vague reference
    to an unidentified former employer. He also clearly deliber-
    ated about which information to include when answering
    the three questions at issue, because he decided to include
    an employer for whom he had not performed any work since
    2015, as well as a different employer who had discharged
    him about seven months after the Ohio employer had dis-
    charged him. Thus, applicant affirmatively acted in a man-
    ner designed to deter the board from considering informa-
    tion that may have raised concerns about his character.
    In short, applicant’s omissions from his 2019 appli-
    cation justified further inquiry, RFA 1.30(c), and his incom-
    plete and inconsistent responses during the board’s ensu-
    ing investigation, as discussed further below, continued to
    demonstrate a lack of good character. As this court wrote in
    In re Bernath, 
    327 Or 422
    , 427, 
    962 P2d 685
     (1998):
    “It is essential that every applicant to practice law in
    Oregon fully disclose to the Board all information relevant
    to the applicant’s character and fitness. Failure to disclose
    relevant information fully and candidly is a ground for the
    Board to recommend denial of admission. RFA 6.05(3). It
    also forms a basis for this court to deny admission. * * *
    Applicant was on notice of his obligation to disclose rele-
    vant information to the Board, both through the Rules for
    Admission of Attorneys and through the application itself,
    on which applicant acknowledged, by signature and under
    oath, his duty to disclose. Applicant’s [limited] disclosure
    fell short of the degree of disclosure that he acknowledged
    48                                                 In re Kauffman
    to be required of him. Because it raises significant doubts
    about his good moral character, applicant’s failure to dis-
    close his suspension * * * constitutes a sufficient ground for
    denial of his application to practice law in Oregon.”
    (Internal citations omitted.)
    2. Lack of candor and cooperation during board’s
    investigation
    An applicant for admission must “cooperate and
    comply” with board requests, and “report promptly * * *
    any change, addition[,] or correction to the information
    provided in [the] application,” including “any other facts
    or occurrences that could reasonably bear upon the char-
    acter and fitness of the applicant.” RFA 4.25; see also RFA
    1.35(g) (stating that, in considering prior conduct, candor
    in admissions process is a potentially mitigating or aggra-
    vating factor regarding present good moral character). The
    Bar argues that applicant demonstrated a persistent lack of
    candor, notwithstanding multiple opportunities to disclose
    all relevant facts. And, the Bar continues, when confronted
    with his deceptive tactics during his panel interview, appli-
    cant provided “nonsensical and unbelievable explanations
    as to how he purportedly reached his conclusion that the
    omissions or misstatements were actually truthful.” For
    his part, applicant reiterates that he did disclose, in his
    October 2019 addendum, the “crucial information” about the
    Ohio employer, including contextual information about the
    employment, a link to employer information, and his efforts
    to report purported misconduct by others and to resolve the
    criminal charges.
    We agree with the Bar that applicant failed in his
    obligation to cooperate and comply with the board in its
    investigation, and that—throughout his interactions with
    admissions staff and the board—applicant displayed a lack
    of candor. Although the Bar relates many examples, the fol-
    lowing are most illustrative.
    First, as a general matter, when Hansen and Wood
    repeatedly requested specific information and documents
    from applicant in October 2019, he responded by providing
    only a minimal amount of the requested information and
    Cite as 
    369 Or 31
     (2021)                                                 49
    otherwise challenged their authority to make the requests.7
    The panel similarly requested certain information at the
    close of the interview in December, but applicant again pro-
    vided only minimally responsive information and otherwise
    insisted that he had fully cooperated, when in fact he had
    not. Indeed, before this court, applicant continues to insist
    that he cooperated with the investigation, but the record
    shows that what cooperation he did offer was only partial in
    nature and, to a notable extent, self-serving.
    Second, applicant demonstrated a lack of candor
    when providing answers about his omissions during his
    panel interview. Although he responded to each question,
    many answers were incomplete, inconsistent, or contradic-
    tory. For example, when asked why he had omitted the Ohio
    employer from the discharge and employer questions, appli-
    cant varyingly stated that he was not sure why or had no
    explanation; that he had not been sure how much detail to
    include in light of the complex issues that had arisen; and
    that he had listed only those employers with whom he had
    had positive relationships.
    Third, applicant displayed a pronounced lack of
    candor in his panel interview when discussing his October
    2019 communications with Phillips about the Ohio crimi-
    nal charges. Applicant told the panel that Phillips had told
    him that the case was closed, but also that, if desired, he
    could file a claim with the police bureau—suggesting that
    Phillips had offered some form of resolution by referring to
    a claim process. Notably, though, notwithstanding repeated
    requests from admissions staff, applicant never provided
    the board with his written communications with Phillips.
    And, when Phillips himself later did so, the communica-
    tions showed that applicant repeatedly had threatened
    legal action against Ohio law enforcement and even against
    Phillips himself.
    For his part, applicant emphasizes his perspective
    that, in his interactions with the Ohio employer, he broke no
    laws and was merely standing up for himself; in doing so, he
    7
    Indeed, applicant did not even affirmatively identify the Ohio employer
    until after Wood repeated at least two earlier requests that he do so.
    50                                            In re Kauffman
    distinguishes cases involving applicants who had engaged
    in criminal conduct prior to admission. See, e.g., In re Taylor,
    
    293 Or 285
    , 290, 
    647 P2d 462
     (1982) (earlier crime of theft;
    applicant had stated in an underlying proceeding that he
    had forgotten to pay for a stolen item, but then stated during
    admissions process that he had intended to steal the item).
    But applicant misses the point of Taylor and other cases.
    The key question is not whether applicant engaged in illegal
    or other problematic conduct at the time of the Ohio mat-
    ters; instead, the question is whether he responded to the
    board’s investigation with cooperation and candor. That was
    precisely this court’s point in Taylor. See 
    id. at 296
     (perceiv-
    ing lack of candor in the applicant’s explanations of his ear-
    lier conduct and related proceedings, and emphasizing his
    “inconsistent, equivocal, and evasive” responses); see also
    In re Fine, 
    303 Or 314
    , 330, 
    736 P2d 183
     (1987) (“[Applicant]
    * * * continues to misstate the facts of [an earlier] crime and
    his involvement in it * * * to gain admission to the bar. * * *
    [He] has not shown himself to be a credible person.”).
    In sum, the record shows that applicant did not fully
    cooperate or comply with the board’s requests, as required
    by RFA 4.25. See also RFA 1.30(c) (when assessing charac-
    ter and fitness, misleading statements or omission of rele-
    vant information in connection with a Bar application may
    be treated as cause for further inquiry); Bernath, 
    327 Or at 428-29
     (during character and fitness investigation, appli-
    cant provided “no convincing explanation[ ]” for earlier mis-
    representations, which in turn did “nothing to resolve [the
    court’s] significant doubts regarding [his] moral character”).
    3. Nature of applicant’s communications with admis-
    sions staff and others
    Essential eligibility requirements for admission
    include the ability to “[c]ommunicate honestly, candidly, and
    civilly” with clients, attorneys, court, and others; and the
    ability to “[c]onduct oneself with respect for and in accor-
    dance with the law[.]” RFA 1.25(c)(i), (iii). Here, the record
    shows that admissions staff sent several clear and courte-
    ous requests to applicant, seeking supplemental informa-
    tion related to his 2019 application and his cryptic com-
    ment about an unidentified former employer, and that he
    Cite as 
    369 Or 31
     (2021)                                                       51
    responded with a pattern of accusatory, vitriolic, and hostile
    communications. Notably, applicant told the panel that he
    had come to realize that some of his communications had
    been aggressive and inappropriate, and that he was learn-
    ing how to engage more deliberately. Nonetheless, he con-
    tinued sending uncivil and accusatory emails—including to
    staff at the Bar and to Phillips—after acknowledging his
    need for improvement and reporting that he had made per-
    sonal strides in that area.
    In his briefing in this court, applicant claims that
    admissions staff “exaggerated” his behaviors and that, to
    the contrary, he conducted himself in a calm and patient
    manner, and provided requested information. We agree that
    applicant acted in a calm manner during his panel interview,
    and nothing in the record suggests that he acted uncivilly
    when communicating with others by phone. As extensively
    discussed, however, a significant amount of applicant’s
    ongoing email communications—sent both before and after
    his interview to admissions staff, others at the Bar, and
    Phillips—were accusatory, hostile, and uncivil, contrary to
    RFA 1.25(c)(i) and (iii).
    4. Applicant’s other arguments
    Applicant raises three other arguments. First, he
    contends that his conduct and statements were protected
    under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution
    because he was standing up to bigotry. Applicant does not
    elaborate on that constitutional claim, however, and nothing
    in the record suggests that any action taken by board or
    admissions staff bore any connection to applicant’s sexual
    orientation.8
    Second, applicant emphasizes that he made an
    additional disclosure of certain criminal matters to admis-
    sions staff, including incidents that the board had not
    known about otherwise, which went “above and beyond” and
    shows his “strong belief in honesty and full disclosure.” But
    the overarching purpose of the admissions process is for
    8
    To the extent that applicant contends that it is improper to rely on his con-
    duct during the Ohio matters because his First Amendment rights were somehow
    violated in Ohio, we reiterate that the underlying Ohio matters do not bear on our
    ultimate conclusion to deny applicant’s admission.
    52                                           In re Kauffman
    an applicant to provide complete and truthful information
    bearing on character and fitness that the board would not
    otherwise have. Applicant’s belated voluntary disclosure of
    a particular criminal matter does not weigh in his favor.
    Finally, applicant emphasizes the positive refer-
    ences that he provided to the board from all aspects of his
    life—including in employment, volunteerism, academics,
    sports participation, and housing. He argues that those
    references collectively establish a strong probability of his
    good moral character, notwithstanding mistakes during the
    admissions process. And he emphasizes his own motivation
    and passion to provide service to marginalized persons,
    arguing that denial of his application would amount to a
    “grave injustice.”
    We have no reason to doubt either the positive ref-
    erences that applicant provided or his sincerity in seeking
    to be an advocate for marginalized persons. The problem,
    however, is that his conduct in omitting certain information
    from his application for admission, his lack of candor and
    cooperation during the board’s investigation, and his ongo-
    ing hostile treatment of admissions staff and others all sig-
    nificantly detract from his effort to prove that he possesses
    the good character required to practice.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    We reiterate that, in deciding whether to admit an
    applicant to the practice of law, our primary responsibility
    is to the public, to ensure that those who are admitted have
    the requisite sense of “ethical responsibility” and “maturity
    of character.” Bernath, 
    327 Or at 429
    ; see also Taylor, 
    293 Or at 296
     (to same effect). As summarized in Taylor, 
    293 Or at 288
    , “[w]e cannot overstate the necessity that one who seeks
    admission to the Bar be of good moral character.”
    On de novo review of the record and materials that
    the parties have provided, we conclude that applicant has not
    established by clear and convincing evidence that he has the
    requisite good character to practice law, as required by ORS
    9.220(2)(a). See also Taylor, 
    293 Or at 296
     (“Reviewing the
    record, we are left with the impression that [the] applicant
    fails to appreciate the gravity of his conduct as it pertains
    Cite as 
    369 Or 31
     (2021)                                   53
    to his moral character [and] that [he] did not fully accept
    responsibility for his actions.”). We therefore agree with the
    board’s adverse recommendation and deny his application.
    The application for admission to the practice of law
    is denied.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S067932

Filed Date: 12/2/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/24/2024