In re David Rodki

381 F. App'x 1
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 4, 2010
Docket18-25
StatusUnpublished

This text of 381 F. App'x 1 (In re David Rodki) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re David Rodki, 381 F. App'x 1 (2d Cir. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER OF GRIEVANCE PANEL

By order filed on December 3, 2009, this panel directed David Rodkin to show cause why he should not be removed from the bar of this Court, or subject to other disciplinary or corrective measures, based on the conduct described in that order, Rodkin was directed to respond to the order within twenty-eight days of its filing date, but has failed to do so. For present purposes, we confine our consideration to the allegation in the December 2009 order that Rodkin failed to disclose, in his application for admission to the bar of this Court, his prior suspension from the bar of the State of New York and his *2 prior reciprocal suspension by the Executive Office for Immigration Review. As noted in our prior order, this Court’s application for admission to the Court’s bar requires a representation from the applicant that he has not been disbarred or suspended from practice in any court.

We do not consider the present disposition to be equivalent to an ordinary disbarment. Depending on the precise circumstances, a similar misrepresentation in a different type of court filing might not warrant disbarment. However, a material misrepresentation in the very instrument by which an attorney seeks membership in this Court’s bar, without a showing of mistake or mitigating circumstances, renders that instrument defective and requires vacatur of the bar admission obtained through that instrument. 1

The text of this panel’s December 2009 order is appended to, and deemed part of, the present order for the following disclosure purposes. Rodkin must disclose this order to all clients in cases currently pending in this Court and to all courts and bars of which he is currently a member, and as required by any bar or court rule or order. Furthermore, the Clerk of Court is directed to release this order to the public by posting it on this Court’s web site and' providing copies to members of the public in the same manner as all other unpublished decisions of this Court, and to serve a copy on Rodkin, this Court’s Committee on Admissions and Grievances, the attorney disciplinary committee for the New York State Appellate Division, First Department, and all other courts and jurisdictions to which this Court distributes disciplinary decisions in the ordinary course.

APPENDIX 1

Text of December 2009 order

For the reasons that follow, David Rod-kin is ordered to show cause why disciplinary or other corrective measures, including removal from this Court’s bar, should not be imposed on him pursuant to Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure 46(b) and (c) and Second Circuit Local Rule 46.1.

In August 2005, Rodkin was suspended for a period of six months by the New York State Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Department, for, inter alia, aiding the unauthorized practice of law by participating in “an established system where ‘travel agencies[,]’ advertising themselves as providers of legal services but staffed by nonlawyers[,] served as the primary advisors to illegal Chinese aliens seeking political asylum.” In re Rodkin, 21 A.D.3d 111, 112, 798 N.Y.S.2d 430 (2005). That suspension order further noted that Rodkin had been previously disciplined for the same misconduct in January 2000, for which he received a letter of admonition. Id. at 113, 798 N.Y.S.2d 430. Based on the 2005 suspension, Rodkin was reciprocally suspended for a six-month period by the Executive Office for Immigration Review. See In re Rodkin, No. D2005-188 (BIA Jan. 30, 2006). However, in his application for admission to this Court in April 2006, Rodkin inaccurately stated to this Court that he had “been neither disbarred nor suspended from practice in any court.” See Rodkin Statement and Certification in Support of Admission Application, dated 4/26/2006.

Review of this Court’s docket has provided the following additional information concerning Rodkin. In June 2008, this *3 Court issued the following warning to Rod-kin regarding his briefing in Li Guo Zhu v. Mukasey:

The serious deficiencies in the representation provided by Zhu’s attorney, David J. Rodkin, compel us to express our concern. Rodkin’s briefing was of extremely poor quality. The arguments presented were completely without merit, the brief did not present any arguments as to the motion to reopen that is under review, and counsel’s statements regarding the filing of a new motion to reopen with the BIA could not be verified. Thus, we hereby warn Rodkin that continuing conduct of this nature could result in the initiation of disciplinary proceedings against him. See Fed. R.App. P. 46(b), (c).

Li Guo Zhu v. Mukasey, Dkt. No. 07-4049-ag, summary order filed June 11, 2008 at n. 4.

Further review of the 44 additional cases in this Court in which Rodkin is listed as attorney of record indicates a pattern in which Rodkin has either raised claims in this Court that had not been exhausted at the agency level, waived dis-positive issues in this Court by failing to address them in his briefs, or failed to present sufficient argument on’ issues raised in this Court. In three cases where Rodkin was the attorney of record before both this Court and the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”), this Court denied the petitions for review because dispositive issues had not been raised at the agency level. See Steevenez v. Gonzales, 476 F.3d 114 (2d Cir.2007) (per curiam) (order filed Feb. 6, 2007, under Dkt. No. 06-2114-ag) (denying petition because, inter alia, a challenge to the decision of the immigration judge (“IJ”) that the petitioner could safely relocate had not been raised before the BIA); Zainidar v. Gonzales, Dkt. No. 06-2117-ag, summary order filed May 31, 2007 (denying petition because the petitioner had not exhausted his challenge to a finding of the IJ that was dispositive of his withholding application); Sutrisno v. Mukasey, Dkt. No. 08-0209-ag, summary order filed Aug. 18, 2008 (denying petition, in part, because petitioner had “failed to argue before the agency that he was eligible for asylum based on a pattern or practice [of] persecution”). Notably, in Steevenez, the petitioner had submitted his brief pro se to the BIA but Rodkin filed a notice of appearance several days later, indicating that a more “detailed brief’ would be forthcoming; however, no such brief was ever submitted.

In at least two cases in which Rodkin was the petitioners’ attorney before both the BIA and this Court, Rodkin’s brief in this Court failed to address dispositive issues. In Khatun v. Filip, Rodkin filed a petition for review challenging the BIA’s denial of a motion to reconsider, yet devoted his brief to challenging the findings the BIA had made in denying the petitioner’s separate motion to reopen, which was not properly before this Court. See Dkt. No.

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Related

In re Rodkin
21 A.D.3d 111 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2005)

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Bluebook (online)
381 F. App'x 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-david-rodki-ca2-2010.