State Ex Rel. Oklahoma Bar Ass'n v. Lile

2008 OK 82, 194 P.3d 1275, 2008 Okla. LEXIS 84, 2008 WL 4272386
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 16, 2008
DocketSCBD 5191
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2008 OK 82 (State Ex Rel. Oklahoma Bar Ass'n v. Lile) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Oklahoma Bar Ass'n v. Lile, 2008 OK 82, 194 P.3d 1275, 2008 Okla. LEXIS 84, 2008 WL 4272386 (Okla. 2008).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

T1 The Oklahoma Bar Association (Bar Association), the complainant, filed a complaint against Stephen E. Lile, the respondent, alleging specific acts constituting professional misconduct in violation of the Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct (ORPC), 5 0.9$.2001, ch. 1, app. 3-A, Rule 84. Such a violation is grounds for disciplinary action pursuant to Rule 1, § 1.3 of the Rules Governing Disciplinary Proceedings, 5 0.9.2001, ch. 1, app. 1-A. The Bar Association recommended, and the respondent agreed, that a public reprimand was the appropriate discipline. The Professional Responsibility Tribunal recommends that the respondent be suspended for a period of two years and one day, and assessed the costs of this proceeding.

I. FACTS

T2 The parties filed joint stipulations regarding the facts. The Tribunal found that the joint stipulations as amended at the hearing were accurate and adopted them. Additional facts taken from the testimony of the witnesses before the Tribunal were also incorporated into their findings. These findings are as follows.

13 At some time before the acts alleged in the Complaint, the respondent experienced marital problems. During that time he renewed his relationship with Dawn Lu-kasic. She told him they had a son named Loren W., about whom the respondent had no previous knowledge. The young man had fourteen felony charges pending in Grady, Comanche and Stephens Counties. These felony charges included two counts involving drugs, numerous burglary counts, and two counts of concealing stolen property. The respondent retained three attorneys to represent his son, and he took an active role in his son's criminal cases through multiple communications with defense counsel and various Department of Corrections employees. From June 24, 2004, to October 29, 2004, he traveled to the facilities where his son was incarcerated, almost on a weekly basis, at the taxpayer's expense. The real purpose of the trips was to either visit his incarcerated son or to take care of legal and other issues involved in his son's incarceration. On some of the trips he was accompanied by Dawn Lukasic He filed travel claims seeking reimbursement for these personal trips, claiming he attended project conferences, projects, or meetings of the Regi *1277 mented Inmate Discipline (RID) Program offered by the Department of Corrections. But there were no RID project conferences, projects, or meetings on the dates for which he filed travel claims. These travel claims were signed by the respondent under oath and under penalty of perjury.

T4 The Tribunal also found that the respondent contacted one of the three judges who would be sentencing his son. In another county, he spoke with defense counsel between 35 and 50 times about his son's sentencing there. He caused pressure to be applied to another sentencing judge and involved himself in the sentencing process by requesting that RID employees testify on his son's behalf, The District Attorney also spoke with the sentencing judge regarding the respondent's son. After his son's formal sentencing, the respondent, in a letter on letterhead of the Court of Criminal Appeals, criticized the probation officer to a member of the Board of Corrections because the officer wrote an unfavorable report in his son's case.

1 5 The respondent hired Dawn Lukasic as his Administrative Assistant in August 2004, and she assisted him in remodeling his office. On August 25, 2004, he began submitting Expense Claim reimbursement requests. The claim forms were for purchases made by Dawn Lukasic and her daughter. Some of those claims were for personal items unrelated to the remodeling. These claims, also signed under oath, were false because the respondent was not legally entitled to reimbursement for them.

T6 The Lawton police arrested Dawn Lu-kasic on December 16, 2004, after stopping and searching her car, with her permission, in a known drug area of Lawton, Oklahoma. They had observed her make an illegal stop and pick up one of the two male passengers she had in her car at the time the police stopped her. Both of her passengers were known to the officers and had lengthy erimi-nal records. The officers located a pill bottle on the driver's side floor area where she was observed sitting and reaching down between her legs toward the floorboard. The pill bottle contained a plastic bag with a substance that subsequently tested positive for amphetamine. Dawn Lukasic advised the arresting officers that she was employed by the respondent and furnished them with his personal cell phone number and his home phone number. The police were able to reach him immediately and inform him of the situation. When the police contacted the District Attorney, he advised them he had been contacted by the respondent regarding the incident. He instructed the police to release Dawn Lukasic, but they declined. The District Attorney telephoned later to tell the police that a Lawton attorney would accept responsibility for her release. The District Attorney ultimately declined to file charges because he did not believe Dawn Lukasic's dominion and control of the illegal substance could be established. The respondent stipulated that he had created the perception of undue influence on the District Attorney to decline prosecution.

II. Rule 8.4 Misconduct

T7 Rule 84 of the Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct (ORPC), 5 0.8.2001, app. 3-A, provides:

"It is professional misconduct for a lawyer to:
"(a) violate or attempt to violate the Rules of Professional Conduct, knowingly assist or induce another to do so, or do so through the acts of another;
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"(c) engage in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation;
"(d) engage in conduct that is prejudicial to the administration of justice. ..." 1

{T8 The Professional Responsibility Tribunal made the following findings. As to Count I, the respondent admitted that he submitted requests for personal reimbursement of expenses that should not have been submitted and should not have been paid by the State of Oklahoma, and that this misconduct violated Rule 8.4(a), and (c) in that the *1278 respondent's conduct involved misrepresentations, fraud and deceit.

T9 In Count II, the Tribunal found that the respondent admitted that the travel claims he submitted were inappropriate, that the respondent's conduct involved misrepresentations when he asserted that his travel was for official court business. The travel was personal, and the claims should not have been submitted. The Tribunal concludes that this conduct violated Rule 8.4(a) and (c) of the ORPC.

110 In Count III, the Tribunal found that the respondent had discredited the legal profession by his attempts to influence the prosecution of the criminal cases of Loren W., which was an abuse of his position of his office as a judge of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals. The Tribunal concluded that this conduct violated Rule 8.4(a) and (d).

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Bluebook (online)
2008 OK 82, 194 P.3d 1275, 2008 Okla. LEXIS 84, 2008 WL 4272386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-oklahoma-bar-assn-v-lile-okla-2008.