Office of Lawyer Regulation v. Matthew S. MacLean

2016 WI 45, 879 N.W.2d 767, 369 Wis. 2d 59, 2016 Wisc. LEXIS 153
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 2016
Docket2015AP001433-D
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2016 WI 45 (Office of Lawyer Regulation v. Matthew S. MacLean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Office of Lawyer Regulation v. Matthew S. MacLean, 2016 WI 45, 879 N.W.2d 767, 369 Wis. 2d 59, 2016 Wisc. LEXIS 153 (Wis. 2016).

Opinion

*60 PER CURIAM.

¶ 1. We review the report and recommendation of Referee Richard C. Ninneman that the license of Attorney Matthew S. MacLean be suspended for two years for professional misconduct and that Attorney MacLean pay the full costs of this proceeding, which are $3,573.11 as of January 28, 2016. The referee also recommends that, during the period of his suspension, Attorney MacLean continue participation in the Wisconsin Lawyers Assistance Program (WisLAP) monitoring program.

f 2. After careful review of this matter, we adopt the referee's findings of fact and conclusions of law. We agree with the referee that a two-year suspension of Attorney MacLean's license is an appropriate sanction for his misconduct. We further agree that the full costs of the proceeding should be assessed against the attorney, and we also agree that Attorney MacLean should be required to continue participation in the WisLAP monitoring program during the term of his suspension.

*61 ¶ 3. Attorney MacLean was admitted to practice law in Wisconsin in 1998. He has no prior disciplinary history. He is not currently practicing law and the State Bar of Wisconsin lists his license status as "inactive."

¶ 4. On July 17, 2015, the Office of Lawyer Regulation (OLR) filed a complaint alleging that Attorney MacLean committed four counts of misconduct. The complaint alleged that between June 1999 and March 2006, Attorney MacLean was employed by the law firm of Michael, Best & Friedrich, LLP, first as an associate and later as a contract partner. In 2006, Attorney MacLean became the general counsel and chief compliance officer for the investment firm Red Granite Advisors, LLC (Red Granite). In late 2011, Red Granite was acquired by Ziegler Lotsoff Capital Management, LLC (Ziegler). Red Granite continued as the wholly owned subsidiary of Ziegler. During Attorney MacLean's employment with Red Granite, he had access to and maintained the accounts payable records for the company.

¶ 5. The complaint alleged that between March 2006 and December 2014, Michael, Best & Friedrich sublet office space and several parking spaces at its Milwaukee location to Red Granite pursuant to a written sublease agreement. The complaint further alleged that in 2010, BrickStix LLC (BrickStix) was formed to commercialize a product designed by Attorney MacLean's minor son. The complaint further alleged that Attorney MacLean drafted the Articles of Organization for BrickStix, which listed Attorney MacLean, his wife, and another man as the organizing members.

f 6. In January 2011, Attorney MacLean and his wife opened a checking account at Park Bank, titled in *62 the name of BrickStix. Attorney MacLean wrote out substantially all of the deposits to and checks from the BrickStix account. The complaint alleged that Attorney MacLean failed to clearly and consistently keep the finances and credit card accounts associated with businesses in which he was involved separate and distinct from other businesses and from his and his family's personal finances.

¶ 7. The OLR's complaint further alleged that between March 2006 and September 2013, Attorney MacLean misappropriated more than $450,000 belonging to Red Granite and/or Ziegler. The complaint alleged that to facilitate and/or hide his misappropriation of funds from Red Granite and/or Ziegler, Attorney MacLean obtained a lock box and caused payments due from Red Granite and/or Ziegler to Michael, Best & Friedrich to be directed to the lock box, and he created and caused fraudulent invoices purporting to be from Michael, Best & Friedrich to be presented to Red Granite and Ziegler. The complaint alleged that Attorney MacLean caused checks to be issued by Red Granite or Ziegler payable to Attorney MacLean, BrickStix, or third parties, but falsely identified the checks in Red Granite's and Ziegler's accounts payable records as being payable to a legitimate vendor, including Michael, Best & Friedrich.

¶ 8. The complaint alleged that Attorney MacLean caused BrickStix to use more than $5,000 of misappropriated funds to pay BrickStix's expenses. In the summer of 2012, Attorney MacLean approached Ziegler's chief operating officer, S.R., about S.R. purchasing a membership interest in BrickStix, because BrickStix required additional capital, including funds for production and patent expenses. Be *63 tween July 2012 and March 2013, in furtherance of inducing S.R. to purchase a membership interest in BrickStix, Attorney MacLean provided S.R. with inaccurate and misleading information about Brick-Stix's financial condition. Relying on the misleading and inaccurate information, in March 2013 S.R. wired $50,000 into the BrickStix account. The money was intended as the purchase price for an LLC of which S.R. was president, to purchase a membership interest in BrickStix. The OLR's complaint alleged that if Attorney MacLean had provided accurate information regarding the financial condition of BrickStix and Attorney MacLean's actions related to the Brick-Stix account, S.R. would not have pursued purchasing an interest in BrickStix and would not have caused the LLC to do so.

¶ 9. The complaint alleged that Attorney MacLean, without authorization from the appropriate persons associated with Red Granite, opened a bank account at Guaranty Bank in the name of Red Granite to help facilitate or hide his misappropriation of funds. Between July 2013 and September 2013, Attorney MacLean caused several checks to be issued from the BrickStix account payable to Red Granite and then caused the checks to be deposited in the dummy account at Guaranty Bank. Attorney MacLean, as the general counsel of BrickStix, did not inform the managing member, the board of directors, or any other members that he deposited funds he misappropriated from Red Granite and/or Ziegler into the BrickStix account. He also did not inform the managing member, board of directors, or any other members of BrickStix that he had used the BrickStix account in furtherance of his course of conduct to *64 misappropriate funds from Red Granite and/or Ziegler, nor did he inform the managing member, board of directors, or any other members of BrickStix that he used funds he misappropriated from Red Granite for the benefit of BrickStix.

¶ 10. The OLR's complaint alleged that a company called Stifel acquired Ziegler and demanded $458,000 restitution from Attorney MacLean. On or about February 2015, Attorney MacLean and others paid Stifel cash and assigned common stock back to Stifel in the total amount of $404,750.04. Attorney MacLean withheld over $52,000, claiming entitlement under an April 2014 severance agreement. Neither Stifel nor Ziegler was aware of Attorney MacLean's misappropriations at the time the severance agreement was signed.

¶ 11. The OLR's complaint alleged the following counts of misconduct:

COUNT ONE: By (i) engaging in a course of conduct that included misappropriating funds belonging to Red Granite and/or Ziegler; and (ii) engaging in a course of conduct to hide his misappropriations and related wrongful conduct, [Attorney] MacLean violated SCR 20:8.4(c). 1

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Bluebook (online)
2016 WI 45, 879 N.W.2d 767, 369 Wis. 2d 59, 2016 Wisc. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/office-of-lawyer-regulation-v-matthew-s-maclean-wis-2016.