Committee on Professional Ethics & Conduct of the Iowa State Bar Ass'n v. Ramey

512 N.W.2d 569, 1994 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 24, 1994 WL 54091
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 23, 1994
Docket93-1245
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 512 N.W.2d 569 (Committee on Professional Ethics & Conduct of the Iowa State Bar Ass'n v. Ramey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Committee on Professional Ethics & Conduct of the Iowa State Bar Ass'n v. Ramey, 512 N.W.2d 569, 1994 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 24, 1994 WL 54091 (iowa 1994).

Opinion

HARRIS, Justice.

The allegations in this attorney disciplinary case are extremely serious. Although issue is also joined on a serious claim of nondisclosure, by far the more critical charge involved a courtroom statement, personally attested by counsel, that proved to be false. Respondent, an experienced prosecutor in the Polk County attorney’s office, was confronted with a chain-of-custody problem during the trial of a criminal case. He stated he had personally examined a serialized list of monies and could guarantee they matched up. They did not match up so that the statement was false.

I. The crucial question is whether the false statement was: (1) deliberately misleading so as to call, for disbarment; (2) made in reckless disregard of the true facts so as to call for not less than license suspension; or (3) negligently made during the confused heat of trial. The commission concluded that the case fell somewhere between the second situation and the third. A majority (three commission members) found in accordance with the second alternative and recommended a suspension of not less than three months. A minority (two commission members) found in accordance with the third alternative and recommended a reprimand. On our de novo review we are however convinced that the case falls somewhere between the first situation and the second; the serious concern is whether the license should be revoked or suspended.

Absolute integrity is so fundamentally crucial to the role of an attorney that there is an initial reluctance to even consider explanations under these circumstances. We have nevertheless become convinced that the respondent made a terrible mistake in a grave matter. He appears at first blush more culpable than he really is. We accordingly agree with the recommendation for a suspension.

James W. Ramey, the respondent-attorney, has been licensed since 1975. After two years in private practice he began an extended career as a prosecutor. Although he worked for a time in the office of Iowa’s attorney general, he has served mainly as a prosecutor in the office of the Polk County *570 attorney. He is now chief of the major offenses bureau.

Ramey’s present difficulty is rooted in the execution of a search warrant at the Des Moines residence of Ernie Draper and Marilyn Wilson. Ronald White and Dennis Sor-enson, police officers executing on the warrant, seized property that included currency. On April 25,1991, during trial of Draper and Wilson on controlled substance charges, it was discovered that currency then being offered into evidence by the State did not entirely match the currency seized at the residence, as shown by photographs taken at the time. A $100 bill with its serial number clearly visible in the .photograph was not among the $1000 seized from the bedroom of the residence. It was also discovered that a fifty dollar winning lottery ticket shown in the photographs was missing. It was learned that the'wife of officer White had redeemed it. A mistrial was declared.

Another result of the missing items was that the presiding judge released the exhibits to officials so that the remaining currency was inventoried and the serial numbers were recorded. This inventory became the beginning point in the ehain-of-custody problem that developed later. A second discrepancy, the one involved in this proceeding, developed the following day. Identification technicians unsuccessfully checked the bills for fingerprints and also compared the serial numbers on the inventory with those appearing on the bills. There were discrepancies. One fifty dollar bill was listed twice and three existing bills (two twenty dollar bills and one ten dollar bill) were not listed. The discrepancies were documented.

During a resulting internal police investigation White denied knowledge of any missing property. When shown the lottery ticket and signature, White’s wife admitted to officers that she cashed the ticket. She told them she found the ticket on her porch. White was charged with third-degree theft.

Ramey prosecuted the White case. The trial atmosphere was highly charged, greatly more so than usual even in a high profile case such as the White case. The case excited considerable news attention and was subject to expanded media coverage. Ramey perceived that he faced an unusual level of hostility in undertaking the prosecution. White was represented by attorneys Alfredo Parrish and Maggi Moss. Moss was a former bureau chief in the Polk County attorney’s office. She had been discharged in 1990, following an election defeat of the former county attorney. While a bureau chief, Moss supervised narcotics cases and approved the search warrant in the Draper and Wilson case.

Ramey felt especially pressed because another officer, Timothy Lynch, who had also been present at the Draper-Wilson search, was quoted to him as saying he would sabotage the State’s ease. Ramey reported this to the court in the presence of Parrish and Moss during a trial recess. At the same time Ramey alluded to a purported romantic relationship between Lynch and Moss. Ramey mentioned that the State might impeach its own witness. Sorenson, having been separately charged as a result of the same incident, was also represented by Moss and Parrish.

During White’s trial Ramey offered the $1000 cash as a State exhibit. Parrish objected on the ground that a complete chain of custody had not been established following the time of the Draper-Wilson trial. Outside the presence of the jury Ramey stated:

I can lay some additional foundation if we need to go through that process, and that is the fact that the money was inventoried, not just by count, by each and every serial number written down. That inventory was signed by ... Ron Foster, Steve Foritano, from our office, and Judy Proska ... Judge Bergeson’s [the presiding judge in the earlier trial] court attendant.... The serial numbers are a list here and I’ll use that as an exhibit, as well. I will show the serial numbers to be, in fact, the' same serial numbers and denominations on the money that is now in [the] State’s exhibit....

Ramey further stated:

[0]n April 26, 1991, ... Ron Foster ... Steve Foritano ... along with the court attendant from Judge Bergeson’s court, opened State’s exhibit 2 [from the Draper- *571 Wilson trial] sat down and serialized the money. We have that list right here, a list of serialized money. We can compare it with the money that’s in there. I have in fact done that myself and that’s — that money’s in there and that money that’s on the list is the same. I don’t think we can suggest it subject to alteration. The serial numbers are the same day [sic] as they were then. The denominations and serial numbers are all listed here. Do you want to get a copy of it and check it?

Parrish declined Ramey’s offer and, when asked by the court if he had any objections, stated: “I have some problems with it, but if that’s the representation he’s making, your honor, I’m willing to accept that that money wasn’t altered.” Parrish also raised another chain-of-custody concern: that Ramey himself had taken the exhibit with him when the trial recessed the previous day. Ramey, somewhat affronted, stated he had taken the money directly in his own locker.

The presiding judge, Arthur E. Gamble, told Ramey that “to eliminate any chain-of-custody problems”

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Bluebook (online)
512 N.W.2d 569, 1994 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 24, 1994 WL 54091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/committee-on-professional-ethics-conduct-of-the-iowa-state-bar-assn-v-iowa-1994.