We are called upon to consider a Report and Recommendation of the Board on Professional Responsibility that respondent be disbarred from the practice of law in the District of Columbia. The Board unanimously found that respondent violated five disciplinary rules in the Code on Professional Responsibility: DR 1-102(A)(4) (dishonesty and misrepresentation); DR 9-103(A) (commingling of client’s funds); DR 9-103(A)(2) (misappropriation of client’s funds); DR 9-103(B)(3) (failing to maintain proper client records); and DR 9-103(B)(4) (failing to pay client’s funds promptly). A majority of the Board recommended that *692 respondent be disbarred because his ethical violations involved misappropriation and intentional dishonesty. Two Board members concurred with the majority’s recommendation of disbarment, but recommended as a sanction the imposition of a six-month suspension, with the balance of the disbarment period stayed, and a provision that respondent be placed on probation for two years. One Board member dissented, recommending that the Board suspend respondent for two years.
We accept the Board’s findings of fact as supported by substantial evidence, and incorporate Parts I and II of its Report. In accordance with the en banc decision in
In re Addams,
Given the holding of
Addams,
the mitigating factors in this case — the relatively small amount of money, the relatively short period of time during which the client was denied the misappropriated funds, the absence of financial harm to the client, the fact that the misappropriation involved a single client, the relative inexperience of respondent, the absence of a prior disciplinary record, and the character testimony offered on respondent’s behalf — are insufficient to overcome the presumption of disbarment.
See In re Addams, supra,
So ordered.
Separate statement by MACK, Senior Judge:
Although I would have opted for a less drastic sanction, I am bound by this court’s en banc decision in In re Addams.
