Pollack v. Virginia State Bar

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 16, 2025
Docket250150
StatusPublished

This text of Pollack v. Virginia State Bar (Pollack v. Virginia State Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pollack v. Virginia State Bar, (Va. 2025).

Opinion

PRESENT: All the Justices

BRADLEY GLENN POLLACK OPINION BY v. Record No. 250150 JUSTICE STEPHEN R. McCULLOUGH October 16, 2025 VIRGINIA STATE BAR EX REL. SEVENTH DISTRICT COMMITTEE

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF SHENANDOAH COUNTY Dontae L. Bugg, Chief Judge Designate, David B. Franzen, and Carroll A. Weimer, Jr., Judges Designate

A three-judge panel concluded that Bradley G. Pollack, an attorney practicing in

Woodstock, Virginia, violated several of the Rules of Professional Conduct that govern the

conduct of attorneys. Specifically, the three-judge panel held that Pollack had violated Rule

3.3(a)(1), which governs an attorney’s duty of candor towards a tribunal; Rule 4.1(a), which

regulates truthfulness in statements to others; and Rules 8.4(b) and (c), which address

misconduct by attorneys. The panel revoked his law license. Pollack appeals from this order.

For the reasons noted below, we affirm the finding of misconduct as well as the disciplinary

sanction.

BACKGROUND

I. POLLACK’S INVOLVEMENT WITH KATHLEEN KEARNEY

In February of 2023, Kathleen Kearney sought Pollack’s help to address an issue with her

reverse mortgage and to investigate and recover funds Kearney thought she was owed from the

proceeds of a winning Powerball lottery jackpot. On July 6, 2023, Kearney granted Pollack a

written durable power of attorney, giving him broad authority over her affairs, including her

finances and property. At the time, Kearney was in declining physical health but appeared to be

in good mental condition. After Kearney granted Pollack the power of attorney, one witness testified, Pollack “and his wife, and maybe his child came to [Kearney’s] house and stayed for

approximately a week and there w[ere] some documents missing from her house.” According to

this witness, Kearney became “afraid of Mr. Pollack” and said “she feared him.” Kearney told a

local attorney, Keith Richards, that she did not want Pollack to act on her behalf or to have any

further involvement with him. Kearney’s neighbor and occasional caregiver, Tammy Barnett,

testified that Pollack had “overstepped big time.” Barnett was concerned that Pollack had placed

his name on Kearney’s bank accounts, was not allowing Kearney to answer the phone, and was

keeping Barnett at bay.

On July 12, 2023, less than a week after she had granted Pollack a power of attorney,

Kearney obtained Richards’ help to revoke it. Kearney also issued a “Notice of No Trespass” to

Pollack, which stated in part:

You . . . are notified not to trespass, enter upon, or in any manner come onto any of the property owned, leased, or rented by Kathleen E. Kearney.

.... Nor are you to assault, attack, threaten, intimidate, or harass or in any manner annoy Kathleen E. Kearney. This notice also forbids any telephone calls to Kathleen E. Kearney.

If you commit any of the above forbidden acts, you will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the applicable criminal laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia.

Pollack received this notice the following day, July 13.

Almost immediately upon receiving this notice, Pollack sent an email to Richards, stating

that he would “soon file a petition for the appointment of a guardian and/or conservator for

Kathleen E. Kearney.” A few days later, on July 18, Pollack circulated a draft petition to

Richards and others. Pollack indicated that he intended to file the draft Petition with the Clarke

County Circuit Court. This draft identified Richards as agent for Kearney in paragraph 6.

2 On July 21, Pollack filed a Petition with the circuit court. In it, he stated that he was

“Attorney in Fact” for Kearney, and that the “name, location, and post office address of agent

designated under purported durable power of attorney of which the respondent is the principal

was Bradley G. Pollack, Attorney at Law, 440 North Main Street, Woodstock, Virginia 22664.”

Unlike the draft Pollack circulated earlier, the Petition did not mention Richards as Kearney’s

agent. In the Petition, Pollack asked the court to appoint him as Kearney’s guardian and

conservator. The Petition had attached as Exhibit 2 a copy of the Power of Attorney signed by

Kearney on July 6. The Petition did not reference the Revocation or attach a copy of the

Revocation. The Petition did not state that Pollack was subject to the no trespass notice that had

been issued by Kearney approximately one week before Pollack filed the Petition with the circuit

court. Pollack never served the Petition. He testified that he filed the Petition to delay the sale

of Kearney’s house.1 Kearney did not understand why Pollack had filed the Petition. According

to Barnett, the Petition made Kearney “furious,” and she had the locks on her house changed.

At the time Pollack filed the Petition, persons who interacted with Kearney disagreed

about the state of her mental health. The record also establishes that Kearney made contradictory

decisions and could be influenced in her opinions based on her interactions.

A few weeks later, William B. Allen, III, counsel for Kearney in the Petition litigation,

filed a Motion to Dismiss. The Motion to Dismiss stated that Pollack’s Power of Attorney was

revoked on July 12, that Kearney was evaluated on July 28, and that she was found to have the

appropriate insight and judgment regarding her legal and financial affairs. The motion attached a

letter from a physician assistant. The letter stated that a cognitive assessment performed on July

1 The parties presented evidence at the hearing concerning whether Kearney opposed the sale of the house, so she could spend her final days there, or whether the sale of the house was necessary so she could qualify for Medicaid and receive proper care.

3 28 indicated that Kearney was “competent in making independent decisions pertaining to

finances, legal matters, and healthcare.”

The circuit court appointed Jason E. Ransom as guardian ad litem for Kearney in the

pending litigation. Ransom concluded that Kearney was not incapacitated. Ransom propounded

discovery upon Pollack, seeking information about the basis for the allegations Pollack made in

the Petition. Pollack received and reviewed the discovery requests on that day. The following

day, Pollack nonsuited the Petition.

The circuit court granted the nonsuit but retained jurisdiction to adjudicate the fees and

costs of the guardian ad litem. In connection with an upcoming hearing on the fees to be paid to

the guardian ad litem, Pollack or his agent tendered a check from Pollack’s general operating

account to the Clarke County Circuit Court, identifying himself as “Bradley G. Pollack, ATTY

AT LAW.” At the time the check was written, Pollack’s license to practice law in Virginia was

suspended for reasons unrelated to Pollack’s dealings with Kearney.

Pollack drafted an order in which he agreed to pay Ransom’s fees and costs. The order

stated that the Petition was filed in good faith and for the benefit of the Respondent. Neither

Ransom nor Allen objected to the language of the order or its entry. On February 28, 2024, the

Clarke County Circuit Court entered the Agreed Final Order, as drafted, in which Ransom’s fees

and costs were to be paid by Pollack. Both Allen and Ransom testified that they did not believe

that Pollack had brought the action in good faith, and that the language of the order was

incorrect.

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