Matter of Farr

557 A.2d 1373, 115 N.J. 231, 1989 N.J. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 26, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 557 A.2d 1373 (Matter of Farr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Farr, 557 A.2d 1373, 115 N.J. 231, 1989 N.J. LEXIS 62 (N.J. 1989).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Nine years ago respondent became involved in a bizarre incident in which he committed serious ethical infractions. The District XIII Ethics Committee (Committee) recommended a private reprimand, and the Disciplinary Review Board (DRB) recommended a suspended two-year suspension. In February 1982 respondent voluntarily suspended himself from the practice of law, except for pro bono work. Under the unique circumstances of this case, we are persuaded that an additional six-months’ suspension is both necessary and adequate.

Respondent was admitted to the bar in 1977, and in 1978 he became an assistant prosecutor in Somerset County. Described by his superiors in the prosecutor’s office as “one of the most-committed” and “hardest-working” prosecutors, he was also characterized as naive, immature, and susceptible to manipulation by others. Against that background, he became involved with Pamela Rutledge and Thomas DeFeo, who served as informants in an investigation of a residential-treatment center for disturbed youths. Both informants were described as “street-wise,” and Mr. DeFeo was a convicted criminal. In the course of his involvement with the couple, respondent became infatuated with Ms. Rutledge. To ingratiate himself with her, he committed a series of gross improprieties. We need not belabor the details of the sordid incident. Suffice it to *234 say that while respondent thought he was manipulating the informants, they were also manipulating him.

On one occasion, respondent removed some marijuana and phencyclidine (PCP) from the prosecutor’s office. The informants smoked this marijuana at respondent’s home. Although the record is not clear whether respondent joined them on this occasion, he had smoked marijuana with them previously.

On another occasion when the police discovered marijuana and other controlled dangerous substances in the informants’ apartment, the police arrested them. Ms. Rutledge called respondent, and he stopped the search of the apartment. His explanation is that he thought, under the circumstances, a search warrant was required. He then obtained approval to draw the warrant. Thereafter he embarked on a course of conduct in which he simultaneously sought to accommodate Rutledge and fulfill his obligations as a prosecutor. Although he assured Rutledge that he would try to reduce the bail for her cohort, DeFeo, respondent urged the court to increase the bail. His motivation was to have more time alone with Rutledge. Although he purported to help Rutledge and DeFeo with the motion to suppress the contraband seized in their apartment, he wrote a supplemental trial brief to sustain the search. When the trial court suppressed the contraband, respondent wrote an appellate brief that led to the reversal of the suppression order.

While DeFeo was in jail, respondent took Rutledge out to dinner. Respondent received a telephone call from a municipal police department concerning a search warrant, and he invited Rutledge to accompany him to police headquarters, where he introduced her as a legal intern in the prosecutor’s office. He repeated the introduction to the police at the premises being searched.

The DRB summarized the details of respondent’s conduct:

As this sorry state of affairs reveals, respondent betrayed the confidence reposed upon him, as a prosecutor, by the members of the public, whose *235 interests he swore to protect. By developing a personal relationship with Rutledge and DeFeo, a relationship which exceeded the bounds reasonably necessary to obtain cooperation from an informant, respondent’s responsibilities to the public were greatly compromised.
He knew the Prosecutor’s Office prohibited attorneys to be directly involved with informants, without the aid of detectives, who are specially trained to conduct investigations. Yet, he deliberately violated that policy, refusing to comply therewith even after an admonition by the then Prosecutor.
He deliberately placed his personal interests above the duties required of him as an attorney and as a public official. He repeatedly forsook his client, the public, for his own interests and those of Rutledge and DeFeo, criminal defendants from whom he had the duty to protect the public. He breached the public trust when he traded loyalties and turned counsel for Rutledge and DeFeo by assisting them in the preparation of their motion to suppress; when he vigorously pursued the reduction of DeFeo’s bail and played “musical courts”, thereby deceiving the judicial system; when he personally made it possible for DeFeo to be released by providing his bail money; and when he stole evidence — illegal substances — from the State, for his own use and that of his friends.
Even when his conduct might have been perceived as zealous by a less watchful observer, respondent abdicated his responsibility to honor and uphold the system. When he suggested to the screening officer that DeFeo’s bail be set at a high amount; when he twice opposed the bail reduction application by the Public Defender; when he diligently and properly obtained a search warrant; when he redrafted the brief prepared by the legal assistant to oppose the motion to suppress; and when he vigorously pursued an appeal from the trial court’s decision to grant the motion to suppress, respondent did not have the State’s interest at heart, but his own. As conceded, he was impelled by one improper motive: to ensure that DeFeo be kept away from Rutledge so that he, respondent, could substitute for DeFeo in Rutledge’s affections. His ultra vires use of the judicial system for his own personal motives tarnished its image held by the members of the public.
Respondent committed other serious offenses as well. He promised to bury in his desk drawer a murder warrant on DeFeo (that he believed or knew the warrant did not exist is irrelevant to the promise); he threatened DeFeo with severe consequences in his criminal case, in the event that DeFeo did not accede to his demands to see Rutledge more frequently; he stole evidence from the evidence room; he used and distributed the stolen evidence, which consisted of controlled dangerous substances; he destroyed the remainder of the evidence; he lied on Rutledge’s credit card applications when he misrepresented that she was employed by one of his father’s companies; he counselled DeFeo to “go underground” after his release on bail; and he lied to the Attorney General’s Office when he denied his use and possession of controlled dangerous substances. [Transcript references omitted.]

*236 His conduct becomes somewhat more understandable, if not excusable, on considering the concurrence of several unrelated events in his personal life. As the DRB explained:

At the time of the transgressions, respondent was a young and inexperienced attorney, having been a member of the bar for only three years. Pursuant to the testimony of the then Prosecutor and of respondent’s immediate supervisor at that time, the Deputy First Assistant Prosecutor in charge of investigations, respondent was very naive, often immature in his responses to life situations and, therefore, capable of being manipulated by individuals with stronger personalities.

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Bluebook (online)
557 A.2d 1373, 115 N.J. 231, 1989 N.J. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-farr-nj-1989.