In re Kestenband

366 F. App'x 305
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 22, 2010
DocketNo. 08-9012-am
StatusPublished

This text of 366 F. App'x 305 (In re Kestenband) 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 Kestenband, 366 F. App'x 305 (2d Cir. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER OF GRIEVANCE PANEL

By order filed in January 2008, this panel referred Jeffrey C. Kestenband to the Court’s Committee on Admissions and Grievances (“the Committee”) for investigation of the matters described in that order and preparation of a report on whether he should be subject to disciplinary or other corrective measures.

Prior to holding a hearing on this matter, the Committee, in March and April 2008, served Kestenband with two orders to show cause why he should not be subject to disciplinary or other corrective measures. Although Kestenband later acknowledged receipt of both orders, he failed to timely respond to either. After the Committee reached Kestenband by telephone in May 2008, and granted an extension of time to respond to its orders, he submitted a written response one day after the new deadline. At the hearing, held in September 2008, Kestenband presented sworn testimony in response to the Committee’s questions and had the opportunity to address the matters discussed in this panel’s January 2008 order. Presiding over the hearing were Committee members Evan A. Davis, Esq., Deirdre M. Daly, Esq., and David B. Fein, Esq. Kes-tenband represented himself during the Committee’s proceedings. In February 2009, the Committee filed with the Court the record of the Committee’s proceedings and its report and recommendations. Thereafter, the Court provided Kesten-band with a copy of the Committee’s report, and Kestenband responded.

In its report, the Committee concluded that there was clear and convincing evidence that Kestenband had engaged in conduct warranting the imposition of discipline. See Report at 10. After noting the presence of various aggravating and mitigating factors, id. at 10-12, the Committee recommended that Kestenband be publicly [306]*306reprimanded, barred from representing clients in this Court in his capacity as a Criminal Justice Act (“CJA”) panelist for a two-year period, and subject to certain reporting requirements, id. at 12-13. In his response to the Committee’s report, Kestenband, inter alia, agreed with the two-year CJA bar, but requested that the Court impose a private rather than public reprimand, that the Court not issue a decision in this matter until after his briefing deadline in United States v. Johnson, 08-5245-cr, to allow him to demonstrate his commitment to meet such deadlines in the future, and that the Court not require him to submit a copy of the final decision in the present matter to the CJA Panel and Chief Judge of the District of Connecticut. See Response at 1-2. Kestenband stated that he would prefer to resign from the district court’s CJA Panel rather than be required to submit a copy of the final decision to that court’s CJA Panel and Chief Judge. See id. at 2.

Regarding the proceedings in United States v. Johnson, 08-5245-cr, we note that Kestenband’s brief was timely submitted, but was found defective since Kesten-band had not filed an index, a CD-ROM appendix, or a pdf version of the brief. See 08-5245-cr, notice filed Apr. 30, 2009. Kestenband cured the defect by filing the missing versions of the brief and appendix two weeks after the deadline and the required index a month after the deadline. See id., entries on May 14, and June 1, 2009. Thereafter, Kestenband was granted an extension of time to file a reply brief. See id., order filed Sept. 14, 2009. Two days after the new deadline for his reply brief, Kestenband filed another motion for an extension, which was granted. See id., motion filed Oct. 15, 2009, order filed Oct. 22, 2009. Kestenband’s reply brief, and a third motion for an extension of time, were received by the Court five days past the reply brief deadline; however, the requested additional extension was granted and the brief filed. See id., motion, order and receipt entries on Nov. 17, 2009.

Upon due consideration of the Committee’s report, the underlying record, and Kestenband’s submissions, it is hereby ORDERED that the Committee’s findings and recommendations are adopted by the Court, and Kestenband is PUBLICLY REPRIMANDED for the misconduct described in the Committee’s report, BARRED from representing clients in this Court pursuant to the CJA for a two-year period commencing with the filing date of this order, and directed to comply with the reporting requirements listed on pages 12 and 13 of the Committee’s report.1 However, Kestenband need not submit a copy of this order to the District of Connecticut’s CJA Panel or Chief Judge. We reject the alternative disciplinary measures suggested by Kestenband, aside from the modification noted in the preceding sentence, since those suggested measures would constitute inadequate discipline for his past misconduct.

However, Kestenband may continue any current CJA representation in any appeal now pending in this Court. Additionally, the present order does not bar Kesten-band from CJA representation of clients in the district courts and should not be perceived as requiring, or favoring, any particular reciprocal discipline by the district courts.

[307]*307The text of this panel’s January 2008 order and the Committee’s report are appended to, and deemed part of, the present order for the following disclosure purposes. Kestenband 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 Kestenband, this Court’s Committee on Admissions and Grievances, the attorney disciplinary committee for the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut, the Statewide Grievance Committee for the State of Connecticut Judicial Branch, and all other courts and jurisdictions to which this Court distributes disciplinary decisions in the ordinary course.

APPENDIX 1

Text of January 2008 order

For the reasons that follow, Jeffrey C. Kestenband is referred to this Court’s Committee on Admissions and Grievances for investigation of the matters described below and preparation of a report on whether he should be subject to disciplinary or other corrective measures. See Second Circuit Local Rule 46(h). We express no opinion here as to an appropriate disposition. The Committee may, of course, in the first instance, determine the appropriate scope of its investigation.

Kestenband was referred to this panel as a result of the proceedings in United States v. Abuasi, 03-1658-cr, which was an appeal from a criminal judgment sentencing Kestenband’s client to, inter alia, 30 months imprisonment, for attempting to export defense articles designed for military use. This Court’s records in that appeal reflect that Kestenband was appointed to represent the appellant pursuant to the Criminal Justice Act (“CJA”) and that a due date for the appellant’s brief was set for October 2004. See Abua-si, 03-1658-cr, order filed Aug. 6, 2004. However, no brief was filed by that date. Id. As a result, in December 2004, the Clerk’s Office requested, by telephone, that Kestenband submit a motion for an extension of time. Id., docket entry for Dec. 17, 2004.

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Bluebook (online)
366 F. App'x 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kestenband-ca2-2010.