In Re Ervin

694 S.E.2d 6, 387 S.C. 551
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 25, 2010
Docket26816
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 694 S.E.2d 6 (In Re Ervin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Ervin, 694 S.E.2d 6, 387 S.C. 551 (S.C. 2010).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

In this disciplinary matter, the Office of Disciplinary Counsel (ODC) brought formal charges against Respondent William Grayson Ervin following his arrest for pointing and presenting a firearm. The Panel recommended Respondent be suspended for two years retroactively, pay the costs of the proceeding, and attend counseling for two years. We believe a lesser *553 sanction is warranted and suspend Respondent for six months retroactive to the date of his interim suspension.

I.

Respondent graduated from college in 2004 and then worked as a police officer in Horry County for a year and a half. Following his graduation from law school in 2007, Respondent began working as an assistant solicitor with the Ninth Circuit Solicitor’s Office.

This case arises from a road rage incident. On February 15, 2008, Respondent was arrested and charged with pointing and presenting a firearm after he allegedly pointed his gun at a driver (“female driver”) in another vehicle while driving. Respondent was immediately fired from the solicitor’s office and placed on interim suspension.

The female driver informed law enforcement that she was alone in her vehicle when Respondent, without provocation, displayed a firearm. While Respondent exercised extremely poor judgment warranting a sanction, the facts are not as reprehensible as reported by the female driver.

The record reveals the following facts. Respondent was driving from Charleston to Myrtle Beach on February 15, 2008. As he was merging onto the Ravenel Bridge, he drove behind a vehicle traveling around twenty miles-per-hour. Respondent testified the vehicle was “zigzagging” in the lane, so he attempted to get around it. Respondent admitted he was following the vehicle too closely. As he tried to pass the vehicle, Respondent testified the female driver and her male passenger extended their middle fingers and shouted at him. Respondent testified he tried to pass them a couple of times, but they cut him off each time. When Respondent was eventually able to get in front of the car, he tapped his brakes, apparently in an attempt to frustrate the driver.

The female driver then pursued Respondent and passed him. As the couple’s vehicle passed Respondent’s vehicle, the male passenger held up a gun, put his middle finger up, and yelled at him. Respondent passed them, took his gun from the center console, 1 and said: “What the hell are you doing, I *554 have one too.” This concluded the road rage incident, and the female driver exited the highway. The female driver called 911 claiming to be a victim of road rage. The female driver provided information concerning Respondent’s vehicle. Shortly thereafter, the police stopped Respondent’s vehicle and arrested him.

Respondent and the female driver disputed the events leading up to the incident. According to the incident report, the female driver claimed she was by herself in the vehicle, and as she was driving on the highway, Respondent’s vehicle came up behind her at a high rate of speed. The female driver stated that as he passed her, Respondent was yelling and pointing a gun at her. The female driver denied any road rage conduct on her part, as well as the presence of a male passenger in her vehicle.

After investigating the matter, the Attorney General’s Office offered Respondent the opportunity to enter into pre-trial intervention (PTI) in exchange for the dismissal of the charge. 2 After Respondent successfully completed PTI, the charge was nol prossed and expunged from his record.

For reasons not known, law enforcement never investigated Respondent’s claim that a male passenger had first pointed a firearm at Respondent and threatened him. Law enforcement simply accepted the female driver’s claim that she was alone. The truth came to light at the Panel Hearing. The female driver’s call to 911 was recorded. The 911 recording proves the presence of a male passenger in the vehicle. The voice of the male passenger is heard relaying identifying information about Respondent’s vehicle, such as his license plate number. Additionally, Respondent submitted affidavits from the female driver’s landlord stating she saw the driver and her husband— the male passenger — after the incident and the driver told her “they” had a problem with someone on the bridge. Respondent also submitted an affidavit from the property manager of *555 the female driver’s residence. He asserted that the female driver told him about the incident and that both she and her husband were in the vehicle. A day later, she told the property manager the person involved in the incident was a solicitor and “we (she and [her husband]) are going to sue him for ‘a lot of money.’ ”

The true facts concerning the road rage incident in no manner exonerate Respondent, yet the facts mitigate the degree of his misconduct. Respondent exercised extremely poor judgment in participating in this road rage incident. Respondent could have removed himself from the situation after the initial contact, but he chose to further engage the couple in the other vehicle. Respondent was then confronted and threatened by the male passenger with a firearm. The female driver lied to law enforcement, and when law enforcement merely accepted her claims without any scrutiny, she saw an opportunity to leverage Respondent in a civil lawsuit. If law enforcement had simply listened to the 911 transmission, the falsity of the centerpiece of the female driver’s claim would have been revealed.

The Panel questioned Respondent regarding his counseling sessions. Respondent admitted he perhaps had unresolved issues as a result of a prior shooting incident when he was a police officer. Respondent was candid with the Panel and took full responsibility for his actions.

In their report, the Panel adopted Respondent’s version of events as a matter of fact, specifically finding that the driver lied when she told police she was alone in the vehicle. We concur in this assessment. The Panel found Respondent violated Rules 8.4(a) and 8.4(b), Rules of Professional Conduct, Rule 407, SCACR. As mitigating factors, the Panel found Respondent made full disclosure to ODC, he demonstrated genuine remorse for his conduct, and he had no disciplinary history. Respondent has been on interim suspension since his arrest. The Panel recommended Respondent be suspended for two years retroactively, pay the costs of the proceeding, and attend counseling for twenty-four months.

II.

This Court has the sole authority to discipline attorneys and to decide the appropriate sanction after a thorough *556 review of the record. In re Thompson, 343 S.C. 1, 10-11, 539 S.E.2d 396, 401 (2000). This Court “may accept, reject, or modify in whole or in part the findings, conclusions and recommendations of the [Panel].” Rule 27(e)(2), Rules for Lawyer Disciplinary Enforcement, Rule 413, SCACR.

III.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
694 S.E.2d 6, 387 S.C. 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ervin-sc-2010.