204 Pa. Code r. 83.214 - Attorneys convicted of crimes
(a) An attorney convicted of a crime shall
report the fact of such conviction within 20 days to the Office of Disciplinary
Counsel. The responsibility of the attorney to make such report shall not be
abated because the conviction is under appeal or the clerk of the court has
transmitted a certificate to Disciplinary Counsel pursuant to subdivision
(b).
(b) The clerk of any court
within the Commonwealth in which an attorney is convicted of any crime, or in
which any such conviction is reversed, shall within 20 days after such
disposition transmit a certificate thereof to Disciplinary Counsel, who shall
file such certificate with the Supreme Court.
(c) Upon being advised that an attorney has
been convicted of a crime, Disciplinary Counsel shall secure and file a
certificate of such conviction with the Supreme Court.
(d)
(1)
Upon the filing with the Supreme Court of a certified copy of an order
demonstrating that an attorney has been convicted of a crime, the Court may
enter a rule directing the respondent-attorney to show cause why the
respondent-attorney should not be placed on temporary suspension, which rule
shall be returnable within ten days.
(2) If a rule to show cause has been issued
under paragraph (1), and the period for response has passed without a response
having been filed, or after consideration of any response, the Court may enter
an order requiring tempo-rary suspension of the practice of law by the
respondent-attorney pending further definitive action under these
rules.
(3) Any order of temporary
suspension issued under this rule shall preclude the respondent-attorney from
accepting any new cases or other client matters, but shall not preclude the
respondent-attorney from continuing to represent existing clients on existing
matters during the 30 days following entry of the order of temporary
suspension.
(4) The
respondent-attorney may at any time petition the Court for dissolution or
amendment of an order of temporary suspension. A copy of the petition shall be
served upon Disciplinary Counsel and the Board. A hearing on the petition
before a member of the Board designated by the Chair of the Board shall be held
within ten business days after service of the petition on the Board. The
designated Board member shall hear the petition and submit a transcript of the
hearing and a recommendation to the Court within five business days after the
conclusion of the hearing. Upon receipt of the recommendation of the designated
Board member and the record relating thereto, the Court shall dissolve or
modify its order, if appropriate.
(5) At any time before a plea or verdict or
after a guilty plea or verdict of guilt in the criminal proceeding,
Disciplinary Counsel and the respondent-attorney's may file with the Court a
joint petition for temporary suspension of the respondent-attorney's on the
ground that the respondent-attorney's temporary suspension is in the best
interest of the respondent and the legal system.
(e) A certificate of a conviction of an
attorney for a crime shall be conclusive evidence of the commission of that
crime in any disciplinary proceeding instituted against the attorney based upon
the conviction.
(f)
(1) Upon the filing of a certificate of
conviction of an attorney for a crime, Disciplinary Counsel may commence either
an informal or formal proceeding under Enforcement Rule 208, except that
Disciplinary Counsel may institute a formal proceeding before a hearing
committee or special master by filing a petition for discipline with the Board
without seeking approval for the prosecution of formal charges under
Enforcement Rule 208(a)(3). If a petition for discipline is filed, a hearing on
the petition shall be deferred until sentencing and all direct appeals from the
conviction have been concluded. The sole issue at the hearing shall be the
extent of the discipline or, where the Court has temporarily suspended the
attorney under subdivision (d) of this rule, the final discipline to be
imposed.
(2) Notwithstanding the
provision of paragraph (1) that a hearing shall not be held until sentencing
and all appeals from a conviction have been concluded, a respondent-attorney
who has been temporarily suspended pursuant to this rule shall have the right
to request an accelerated disposition of the charges which form the basis for
the temporary suspension by filing a notice with the Board and Disciplinary
Counsel requesting accelerated disposition. Within 30 days after filing of such
a notice, Disciplinary Counsel shall file a petition for discipline, if such a
petition has not already been filed, and the matter shall be assigned to a
hearing committee for accelerated disposition. The assignment to a hearing
committee shall take place within seven (7) days after the filing of such a
notice or the filing of a petition for discipline, whichever occurs later.
Thereafter the matter shall proceed and be concluded by the hearing committee,
the Board and the Court without appreciable delay. If a petition for discipline
is not timely filed or assigned to a hearing committee for accelerated
disposition under this paragraph, the order of temporary suspension shall be
automatically dissolved, but without prejudice to any pending or further
proceedings under this rule.
(g) An attorney suspended under the
provisions of subdivision (d) may be reinstated immediately upon the filing by
the Board with the Court of a certificate demonstrating that the underlying
conviction has been reversed, but the reinstatement will not terminate any
formal proceeding then pending against the attorney.
(h) As used in this rule, the term "crime"
means an offense that is punishable by imprisonment in the jurisdiction of
conviction, whether or not a sentence of imprisonment is actually imposed. It
does not include parking violations or summary offenses, both traffic and
non-traffic, unless a term of imprisonment is actually imposed.
(i) For the purposes of this rule,
Enforcement Rule 203(b)(1) and Enforcement Rule 402, "conviction" means any
guilty verdict, whether after trial by judge or jury, or finding of guilt, and
any plea of guilty or nolo contendere that has been accepted
by the court, whether or not sentence has been imposed.
Notes
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