ORDER
The memorandum disposition filed March 29, 1995, is redesignated as a per curiam opinion.
OPINION
Facing pending attorney disciplinary proceedings in California, each appellant filed suit in federal court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging deprivation of various constitutional rights. The district court granted the government’s motions to dismiss. We affirm.
I. Background
A. The California Attorney Disciplinary System
Under California law, attorney disciplinary matters are handled by the State Bar Court (“Bar Court”), an administrative agency affiliated with the California State Bar Association (“State Bar”). Calif.Bus. & Prof.Code § 6086.5. The Bar Court is divided into a Hearing Department and a Review Department. Id. §§ 6079.1, 6086.65. Disciplinary proceedings are commenced by serving the accused attorney with a Notice to Show Cause. The Hearing Department then conducts a formal adversarial hearing during which the accused attorney and a State Bar prosecutor present evidence before a Bar Court judge. The Hearing Department makes findings and a recommendation regarding appropriate discipline. The attorney may appeal to the Review Department, which reviews the Hearing Department’s findings de novo and makes its own recommendation. The attorney may then file a petition for
B. The Federal Suits
Each of the suits named as defendants the Justices of the California Supreme Court, the State Attorney General, the State Bar, the Bar Court, and the respective Bar Court judges and prosecutors involved. The appellants sought an injunction to stop the pending disciplinary proceedings, a declaratory judgment that the disciplinary system is unconstitutional, and monetary damages based on alleged deprivations of state and federal constitutional rights. The complaints allege that the disciplinary system deprives appellants of various constitutional rights, including due process, equal protection, the right to vote, and the right to court access. The district court dismissed each case on the ground that Younger v. Harris,
II. Abstention from Granting Injunctive and Declaratory Relief
A. Requirements for Abstention
Younger and its progeny generally direct federal courts to abstain from granting injunctive or declaratory relief that would interfere with pending state judicial proceedings. Id. at 40-41,
1. Ongoing State Proceedings
Each appellant faced ongoing disciplinary proceedings when he brought suit in federal court. See Beltran v. State of California,
The ongoing proceedings were judicial in character. Under California’s discipline system, the Hearing Department conducts a formal hearing and makes findings, the Review Department conducts a de novo review of those findings, and the Supreme Court retains inherent jurisdiction over the proceedings, including power to review the Bar Court’s findings. Appellants point to no relevant distinction between this procedure and that held to be judicial in nature in Middlesex,
2. Important State Interests
California’s attorney disciplinary proceedings implicate important state interests. See Middlesex,
3. Opportunity to Present Federal Claims
The California Constitution precludes the Bar Court from considering federal constitutional claims. See Calif. Const. art. III, § 3.5. However, such claims may be raised in judicial review of the Bar Court’s decision. This opportunity satisfies the third requirement of Younger. See Ohio Civil Rights Comm’n v. Dayton Christian Schools, Inc.,
Appellants contend their opportunity for judicial review is inadequate because it is wholly discretionary.
The California Supreme Court’s rules state that Bar Court decisions will be reviewed “when it appears ... necessary to settle important questions of law.” Calif.Court Rule 954(a). The court has considered federal constitutional challenges to the attorney disciplinary procedure. See, e.g., Lebbos v. State Bar,
B. Applicability of Exceptions to Abstention
1. Bias
Although a federal court is normally required to abstain if the three prongs of the Younger test are satisfied, abstention is inappropriate in the “extraordinary circumstance” that the state tribunal is incompetent by reason of bias. See Gibson v. Berryhill,
Appellants contend California Supreme Court justices and Bar Court judges have a direct and substantial financial interest in the outcome of disciplinary hearings. See Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Lavoie,
The fact that fines imposed in attorney disciplinary proceedings are paid to the treasury of the State Bar does not establish an impermissible financial interest. Although the State Bar pays the salaries of the Bar Court judges, the salaries are set by statute, see Cal.Bus. & Prof.Code § 6079(d), and no evidence suggests that they are in any way dependent on the amount of fines collected or that the State Bar would be unable to pay the salaries of Bar Court judges without the money collected in disciplinary proceedings, which totals less than 1% of the State Bar’s revenues.
Appellants offer only conjecture in support of their claim that Supreme Court justices are impermissibly biased because they appoint Bar Court judges. As the district court noted, district court judges are not deemed incompetent to review the findings of magistrate judges whom they participate in appointing. Compare Vanelli v. Reynolds Sch. Dist. No. 7,
The absence of a mandatory statutory re-cusal mechanism applicable to justices of the California Supreme Court does not make a showing of bias unnecessary. The case upon which the appellants rely, Flangas v. State Bar of Nevada,
Finally, appellants suggest the disciplinary process is tainted by bias because the State Bar has both investigative and adjudicative functions. However, the Supreme Court has rejected the contention that such a combination necessarily creates an unacceptable risk of bias. Such decisionmakers are still entitled to a presumption of honesty and integrity whén serving as adjudicators. See Withrow,
2. Patent Unconstitutionality
We reject appellants’ contention that abstention is inapplicable because the California disciplinary system allegedly involves an unconstitutional delegation of power, violates separation of powers, and deprives appellants of a right to vote.
III. Dismissal of Claims for Monetary Relief
All of the defendants are immune from liability for monetary damages.
The individual defendants are also immune in their individual capacities. The justices of the California Supreme Court have absolute immunity for their role in reviewing the recommendations of the Bar Court. See Rosenthal v. Justices of the Supreme Court of California,
The Bar Court judges and prosecutors have quasi-judicial immunity from monetary damages. Administrative law judges and agency prosecuting attorneys are entitled to quasi-judicial immunity so long as they perform functions similar to judges and prosecutors in a setting like that of a court. Butz v. Economou,
Finally, the California Attorney General is entitled to absolute prosecutorial immunity for his limited role in the disciplinary system. See Imbler v. Pachtman,
IV. Espinoza’s Recusal Motion
Judge Huff did not abuse her discretion by denying the motion for recusal. She is not a member of the State Bar and noted that the California Constitution forbids such membership. Cal. Const, art. VI, § 9. Although Judge Huff occasionally participated in State Bar activities, she was not paid, except for reimbursement of expenses. We reject Espinoza’s contention that, “a reasonable person with knowledge of all the facts would conclude that [Judge Huffs] impartiality might reasonably be questioned.” Yagman v. Republic Ins.,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. If no petition for review is filed, the Bar Court's recommendation becomes a final order of the California Supreme Court, although the Supreme Court may review the recommendation on its own motion. Id. § 6084; Calif.Court Rule 953(b).
. Hirsh also argues that the California Supreme Court’s summary denial of his interim motion precluded judicial review of his federal claims. This contention is meritless — Hirsh can raise those claims in his petition for review following the conclusion of disciplinary proceedings in the Bar Court and has stated his intention to do so. See Mason v. Departmental Disciplinary Comm.,
. This fact distinguishes the present case from In the Matter of Ross,
. It is unclear whether any of these claims state a violation of a federal, as opposed to a state, constitutional guarantee. We need not reach that issue.
. The district court relied on Younger abstention as its basis for dismissing the monetary claims. However, the applicability of Younger abstention to appellants' monetary claims is unclear. Compare Mann v. Jett,
