In re Klayman

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 2022
Docket20-BG-583
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
In re Klayman, (D.C. 2022).

Opinion

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

No. 20-BG-583

IN RE LARRY E. KLAYMAN, RESPONDENT.

A Suspended Member of the Bar of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals (Bar Registration No. 334581)

On Report and Recommendation of the Board on Professional Responsibility

(17-BD-063; DDN-028-11)

(Argued June 16, 2022 Decided September 15, 2022)

Melissa Isaak for respondent.

Myles V. Lynk, Senior Assistant Disciplinary Counsel, with whom Hamilton P. Fox, III, Disciplinary Counsel, was on the brief, for petitioner.

Before BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY, Chief Judge, and BECKWITH and MCLEESE, Associate Judges.

PER CURIAM: The Board on Professional Responsibility concluded that

respondent Larry E. Klayman violated numerous District of Columbia Rules of

Professional Conduct during his representation of former client E.S. The Board

recommended that Mr. Klayman be suspended for eighteen months, with a

requirement that he show fitness before being permitted to return to the practice of 2

law. We accept the Board’s conclusion that Mr. Klayman violated the Rules of

Professional Conduct, and we adopt the Board’s recommended sanction.

I. Factual Background

In sum, the evidence presented by Disciplinary Counsel to the Hearing

Committee was as follows. The evidence largely consisted of E.S.’s testimony but

also included numerous documents, including written correspondence between E.S.

and Mr. Klayman.

E.S. met Mr. Klayman in 2009, while she was covering a story for Voice of

America (VOA). E.S. told Mr. Klayman that she was being sexually harassed by

her cohost and that after she reported the harassment to her supervisor, she was

transferred to a different position. Early in 2010, Mr. Klayman and E.S. agreed that

he would represent her in a case against VOA. E.S. did not believe that Mr. Klayman

provided her with a written document setting out the scope and nature of the

representation. Mr. Klayman and E.S. agreed that Mr. Klayman would work on a

contingent basis, receiving forty percent of any award E.S. won. Mr. Klayman later

unilaterally increased his fee to fifty percent. 3

Mr. Klayman initially attempted to negotiate a settlement with VOA. After

the negotiations were unsuccessful, Mr. Klayman encouraged E.S. to move from the

District of Columbia to Los Angeles, assuring her that he could get her transferred

to the VOA office in Los Angeles. Mr. Klayman paid for the move and for E.S.’s

living expenses in Los Angeles. E.S. and Mr. Klayman agreed that the money Mr.

Klayman was providing would be paid out of any award E.S. won, in addition to the

contingency fee. VOA denied E.S.’s request for a transfer, at which point Mr.

Klayman filed a civil suit against E.S.’s alleged harasser and supervisors.

E.S. had wanted her case to be “very quietly handled,” with as few people as

possible finding out about the harassment. She explained her concerns about

publicity to Mr. Klayman, and he initially respected her wishes. Mr. Klayman later

began to pursue a strategy designed to draw attention to E.S.’s case. For example,

shortly after filing suit against E.S.’s harasser and supervisors, Mr. Klayman filed

suit against the members of VOA’s governing board, the Broadcasting Board of

Governors (BBG). The BBG included prominent public figures, particularly then-

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. E.S. did not agree to the BBG suit,

worrying that the case “was getting too big” and preferring to focus on her harasser

and supervisors. Mr. Klayman subsequently filed motions to disqualify the district-

court judge who had been assigned to both of E.S.’s cases, arguing that the judge 4

was politically biased against him. Mr. Klayman also wrote numerous articles

mentioning E.S.’s case and providing confidential information about E.S. Although

E.S. was initially “completely against” the articles, she ultimately agreed to the

publicity after Mr. Klayman explained that it would help her case.

In April 2010, Mr. Klayman began to repeatedly express romantic feelings

towards E.S. Mr. Klayman told E.S. that he loved her, and E.S. replied that he was

her attorney and they could only be friends. For months thereafter, Mr. Klayman

kept saying that “he wanted to have a relationship with [E.S.] and [E.S. kept] saying

no, and it was ongoing and ongoing and it wouldn’t stop . . . it was very, very, very

uncomfortable” for E.S. For example, Mr. Klayman sent an email to E.S. saying

“You are . . . the only woman I’ve ever really loved. . . . [W]hen I walk down the

street . . . and see an attractive woman, my thoughts immediately flip to you. I see

no one else. . . . My loving you has given me true meaning in my life.”

E.S. believed that Mr. Klayman’s feelings for her were causing him to act

unprofessionally in his representation, which Mr. Klayman himself acknowledged

in writing several times. For example, in one letter, Mr. Klayman said that “I do

truly love [E.S]. . . . [A]nd my own emotions have rendered me non-functional even

as a lawyer.” In an email, Mr. Klayman said “It[’]s very hard to be a lawyer and feel 5

so much for your client.” In a second email, Mr. Klayman said that he had “not been

able to function lately, because [he was] out there so far emotionally and got nothing

back,” and that E.S. would “get better legal representation with someone else . . .

who does not have an emotional conflict and can keep his mind clear.”

In July 2010, E.S. wrote to Mr. Klayman and directed him to withdraw the

case against the BBG, which was by then the only active case. Several days later,

E.S. wrote to an executive at VOA stating that she had “instructed Larry Klayman

to withdraw any and all civil actions that he may have filed in my name and that he

is no longer representing me.” This letter was not sent directly to Mr. Klayman, but

by the next day he had received a copy. Mr. Klayman, however, did not dismiss the

entirety of the case against the BBG. He also continued to act on E.S.’s behalf. For

example, after the trial court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss the BBG case,

Mr. Klayman filed a motion to reconsider.

In November 2010, because Mr. Klayman continued to contact her about her

case, E.S wrote another letter to him reiterating his termination. That letter was

incorrectly addressed, and Mr. Klayman testified that he did not receive it. E.S.

wrote to Mr. Klayman a third time in January 2011, stating that he was “not

representing [her] in any way or shape.” Mr. Klayman replied to E.S., implying that 6

she had not written the email and explaining that he “[could not] allow her legal

rights and obligations to be compromised or lost altogether.” Several days later, Mr.

Klayman filed a notice of appeal in the BBG case, despite not having had any

communication with E.S. about filing the appeal. E.S. later personally filed a notice

of appeal in that case.

Mr. Klayman’s testimony was contrary to E.S.’s in many respects. Generally,

Mr. Klayman testified that E.S. was seeking revenge against him because she was

angry that her case had not gone well. Mr. Klayman denied having any romantic

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