ATTORNEY DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDING
Respondent failed to reduce a contingency fee agreement to writing, neglected a legal matter, failed to adequately communicate with a client, made false statements to a client and the Office of Disciplinary Counsel (“ODC”), and engaged in the unauthorized practice of law during a period of suspension. Respondent and the ODC have submitted a joint petition for consent discipline, seeking respondents disbarment. Having reviewed the petition,
IT IS ORDERED that the Petition for Consent Discipline be accepted and that Keelus Renardo Miles, Louisiana Bar Roll number 29723, be and he hereby is disbarred, retroactive to April 25, 2023, the date of the imposition of suspension in In re: Miles, 23-0028 (La. 4/25/23), 359 So. 3d 960. His name shall be stricken from the roll of attorneys and his license to practice law in the State of Louisiana shall be revoked.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that all costs and expenses in the matter are assessed against respondent in accordance with Supreme Court Rule XIX, § 10.1, with legal interest to commence thirty days from the date of finality of this courts judgment until paid.
I agree that disbarment is a commensurate sanction for respondents serious misconduct. However, I dissent from the majoritys decision to retroactively disbar respondent, beginning from the date of his most recent suspension (April 25, 2023) because it provides leniency for respondents subsequent violations, and, importantly, is inconsistent with our rules. I would therefore reject the petition for consent discipline.
Respondents history of misconduct spans nearly a decade. In 2014, respondent committed violations of the Rules of Professional Conduct, the sanction of which was participation in a diversion program and attendance at Trust Accounting School. In 2019, a majority of this Court accepted a joint petition for consent discipline and publicly reprimanded respondent for neglecting a legal matter, failing to communicate with a client, and failing to timely refund an unearned fee. Along with Justice Genovese, I dissented from the Courts acceptance of that joint petition for consent discipline, finding that a “mere public reprimand is inadequate discipline” under such serious circumstances. In re: Miles, 19-1279 (La. 10/21/19), 280 So. 3d 1135 (Mem.) (Crichton, J., dissenting).
More recently, this Court suspended respondent from the practice of law for three years in April, 2023, for additional blatant violations of the Rules of Professional Conduct, including failure to maintain necessary client and financial records, misusing his client trust account, converting client funds, failing to timely remit funds to his clients and their medical providers, and signing his clients’ names to the backs of settlement checks and releases without their authority and the notarizing the signatures. In re: Miles, 23-0028 (La. 4/25/23), 359 So. 3d 960.
Now, for a fourth occasion, respondent returns to this Court with yet more violations, including the unauthorized practice of law during his period of suspension, and this Court has accepted a joint petition for consent discipline to disbar respondent retroactive to his date of suspension (April 25, 2023). While I agree disbarment is an appropriate sanction, in my view, making respondents disbarment retroactive runs afoul of this Courts approach in Louisiana State Bar Assn v. Chatelain, 573 So. 2d 470 (La. 1991), which stated that when the underlying conduct occurs within the same period as the misconduct forming the basis of a previous disciplinary matter, the discipline imposed should be determined as if both proceedings were before the court simultaneously. In this instance, the underlying misconduct in this matter (occurring between 2022 and 2023) did not occur in the same time frame as the misconduct resulting in respondents suspension (from 2014 to 2018) and thus, retroactive disbarment effectively reduces respondents suspension and shortens the window within which respondent may apply for readmission. See also, La. Sup. Ct. Rule XIX, § 24(A) (allowing for retroactive suspension where a lawyer has been placed on interim suspension and is suspended for the same misconduct that was the ground for the interim suspension). Consequently, I find no legal basis to impose retroactive disbarment under these circumstances and in doing so, it deprecates the seriousness of his multiple and repeated violations and ignores respondents fervent dishonor of the disciplinary system and the noble practice of law.
Genovese, J., dissents and would conditionally reject the Joint Petition for Consent Discipline.
PER CURIAM
Crichton, J., concurs in part and dissents in part and assigns reasons.
Genovese, J., dissents and assigns reasons.