In re Pistotnik

512 P.3d 729
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 8, 2022
Docket124868
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 512 P.3d 729 (In re Pistotnik) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Pistotnik, 512 P.3d 729 (kan 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

No. 124,868

In the Matter of BRADLEY A. PISTOTNIK, Respondent.

ORIGINAL PROCEEDING IN DISCIPLINE

Original proceeding in discipline. Opinion filed July 8, 2022. One-year suspension.

Matthew J. Vogelsberg, Chief Deputy Disciplinary Administrator, argued the cause, and Stanton A. Hazlett, Disciplinary Administrator, was on the formal complaint for the petitioner.

John J. Ambrosio, of Morris, Laing, Evans, Brock & Kennedy, Chtd., of Topeka, argued the cause, N. Russell Hazlewood, of Graybill & Hazlewood LLC, of Wichita, was with him on the answer to the formal complaint, and Bradley A. Pistotnik, respondent, argued the cause pro se.

PER CURIAM: This is an attorney discipline proceeding against Bradley A. Pistotnik, of Wichita. Pistotnik received his license to practice law in Kansas in April 1982.

On November 30, 2020, the Disciplinary Administrator's office filed a formal complaint against Pistotnik alleging violations of the Kansas Rules of Professional Conduct (KRPC). The complaint was amended on December 17, 2020, and respondent answered the amended formal complaint on February 1, 2021. On April 20, 2021, respondent entered into a joint agreement with the Disciplinary Administrator's office stipulating to violations of KRPC 8.4(b) (criminal act reflecting adversely on the lawyer's honesty, trustworthiness, or fitness as a lawyer) (2022 Kan S. Ct. R. at 434), KRPC 8.4(c) (conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation), and KRPC 8.4(g) (conduct that adversely reflects on the lawyer's fitness to practice law).

1 Respondent personally appeared and was represented by counsel at the complaint hearing before a panel of the Kansas Board for Discipline of Attorneys, which was conducted on April 22, 2021. During the hearing, the panel granted the motion of the Disciplinary Administrator's office to dismiss allegations of violations of KRPC 3.3 (candor towards tribunal) (2022 Kan. S. Ct. R. at 391) and KRPC 8.4(d) (conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice). After the hearing, the panel determined that respondent had violated KRPC 8.4(b), KRPC 8.4(c), and KRPC 8.4(g). The panel set forth its findings of fact and conclusions of law, along with its recommendation on disposition, in a final hearing report, the relevant portions of which are set forth below.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

"Findings of Fact

"13. The hearing panel finds the following facts, by clear and convincing evidence:

"14. In June 2014, the respondent left his former firm where he practiced law with his brother, Brian Pistotnik. The respondent formed his own firm, Brad Pistotnik Law, P.A.

"15. Dissolution of the respondent's former firm with his brother was contentious and involved a civil dissolution action filed in district court.

"16. In the dissolution action, the court ordered that the firm's website be converted into a landing page with links to new websites created for each attorney's respective new firm so that consumer traffic would be directed appropriately.

2 "17. On September 12, 2014, the respondent was contacted by D.D. via e-mail solicitation. D.D. offered the respondent services such as website development and Internet reputation management services.

"18. In a September 14, 2021, [sic] e-mail, D.D. volunteered to the respondent what he called his professional opinion that the respondent's brother was improperly directing web traffic at the landing page away from the respondent and was unfairly affecting search engine rankings.

"19. On September 15, 2014, the respondent engaged D.D. to build a website for the respondent's new firm and to prepare an expert report about the landing page for the dissolution action.

"20. The morning of September 19, 2014, an anonymous derogatory posting about the respondent appeared on a website called ripoffreport.com.

"21. Later that morning, the respondent met with D.D. about the expert report D.D. was preparing. During that meeting, D.D. recommended that the respondent regularly search his own name on the Internet for negative posts about himself.

"22. That evening, D.D. sent an e-mail to the respondent advising the respondent that D.D. had arranged for his friend, L.C., of InternetReputation.com of Denver, Colorado to manage the respondent's internet reputation for free, as a favor to D.D.

"23. On September 20, 2014, the respondent searched his name on the Internet and found the negative post on ripoffreport.com. The respondent believed at the time that his brother had written the post.

"24. That same day, the respondent sent an e-mail to D.D. linking the ripoffreport.com post asking D.D. how to get rid of it. D.D. responded not to worry about it and he would take care of it.

3 "25. On September 21, 2014, D.D. sent an e-mail to the respondent that stated in part:

'I spoke with [L.C.], he is going to pull all the neg reviews I give him into their queue to have them removed or deindexed . . . . I told him I'd give him a list of the reviews we want to target at that time. So by tomorrow I need you to send me a full list of links to review pages you want addressed.'

"26. At the time, the respondent did not fully understand what deindexing was, nor did he have knowledge prior to September 25, 2014, that D.D. intended to do anything unlawful.

"27. On September 25, 2014, D.D. initiated a flood of e-mails to the servers of leagle.com, ripoffreport.com, and the Jaburg Wilk law firm, which represented a company that owned ripoffreport.com, to influence these three entities to remove negative information about the respondent from the Internet. D.D.'s e-mails stated that the flood of e-mails would cease once the unfavorable information about the respondent was removed. D.D. threatened that if the information was not removed within four hours, he would 'start hitting [their] advertisers.'

"28. That same day the respondent received a phone call from Arizona attorneys Maria Speth and Adam Kunz. The phone call was recorded. During the call the respondent was advised that Speth was a lawyer for ripoffreport.com and said her firm was receiving spam e-mails demanding that the September 19, 2014, post about the respondent be removed from the ripoffreport.com website. Speth described the call as 'urgent' and said she thought the e-mails were 'intended to crash the [firm's computer] system.' Speth stated she had received 47 e-mails as of the time of the call and that the e- mails threatened to go after advertisers if the post about the respondent was not taken down.

"29. The respondent told Speth that he was not sending the e-mails to her firm and had not authorized or directed anyone to send those e-mails on his behalf.

4 "30. During the call, the following exchange occurred:

'SPETH: So my only question to you is, did you hire someone or ask somebody to help you with this problem? Because whoever you hired is breaking the law.

'RESPONDENT: No, I haven't asked anybody do that. If somebody is doing it, they're doing it on their own.

'SPETH: Well, can you think of anybody that would want to help you in this way? Because, again, we are—this is—this is very serious. I mean, I—this is my law firm's e-mail server that is going to crash if this continues to happen. And—

'RESPONDENT: I really—

'SPETH: —the only way—the only way I can stop it is take it up with my client, which I don't have the authority to do, take down the post about you.

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Related

In re Stewart
Supreme Court of Kansas, 2026
In re Pistotnik
541 P.3d 761 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
512 P.3d 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pistotnik-kan-2022.