We must decide whether a federal district in California may impose reciprocal discipline by disbarring an attorney on the basis of his disbarment from practice in New York.
I
In 1998, Steven Kramer was disbarred from practice in the State of New York. The misconduct that gave rise to his disbarment is described in
In re Kramer (“Kramer I”),
After a hearing, the Committee recommended disbarment. The Appellate Division agreed, noting that over the course of
*723
eleven years, Kramer had been “sanctioned, criticized, or otherwise disciplined 38 times for professional misconduct involving numerous clients.... ”
In re Kramer (“Kramer II
”),
Shortly after New York disbarred Kramer, the Central District of California acted to impose reciprocal discipline on him pursuant to then-controlling Local Rule 1.9 which provided that
[u]pon receipt of reliable information that a member of the Bar of this Court ... has been ... disbarred from the practice of law by the order of ... the Bar, Supreme Court, or other governing authority of any State, ... this Court shall immediately impose an order of suspension or disbarment.
This Court’s order of suspension or disbarment shall be filed by the Chief Judge without the necessity of any notice to the affected attorney or any hearing....
C.D. Cal. Local Rule 1.9. In accordance with this rule, the district court entered an order disbarring Kramer. Kramer appealed, arguing that the district court’s rule failed to provide him due process.
We agreed with Kramer. In
In re Kramer (“Kramer III”),
[fjrom the sparse record available to us here, it does not appear that the district court, prior to disbarring him, gave Kramer any notice, conducted any hearing or issued him an order to show cause. There is also no evidence that the district court engaged in an independent review of the New York court’s record. Instead, Kramer’s disbarment appears to have been based solely on the New York court’s order.
Id.
at 1133. We opined that this approach was inconsistent with the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Selling v. Radford,
On remand, the district court issued Kramer an order to show cause why he should not be disbarred. Kramer was allowed to submit a brief in response to the order. Moreover, after granting Kramer’s various requests for continuances spanning nine months, the district court held a hearing on the order to show cause, at which Kramer testified. After the hearing, and after considering “the papers filed by Mr. Kramer, the argument and testimony at the hearing and the record from the proceedings in New York,” the court found that Kramer had not shown that his New York disbarment suffered from any of the three infirmities identified in Selling. Accordingly, it issued an order imposing reciprocal disbarment upon Kramer, based on his New York disbarment. Kramer timely filed this appeal.
II
As we explained in
Kramer III,
under
Selling,
a federal court’s imposition of reciprocal discipline on a member of its bar based on a state’s disciplinary adjudication is proper unless an independent review of the record reveals: (1) a deprivation of due process; (2) insufficient proof of misconduct; or (3) grave injustice which would result from the imposition of such discipline.
Kramer III,
While this court has not yet spoken on the issue, those courts that have generally have concluded that in reciprocal discipline cases, it is the respondent attorney’s burden to demonstrate, by clear and convincing evidence, that one of the
Selling
elements precludes reciprocal discipline.
See, e.g., In re Calvo, 88
F.3d 962, 967 (11th Cir.1996) (“The burden is on the disbarred attorney to show good cause why he should not be disbarred, and the district court is not required ‘to conduct a
de novo
trial in the first instance of [the attorney’s] fitness to practice law.’ Instead, it must determine whether ‘the record underlying the predicate state disbarment ... reveal[s] the kind of infirmities identified in
Selling.’
”);
In re Hoare,
Kramer argues for the inverse result. Relying principally upon
In re Crayton,
We therefore hold that, in cases where a federal court seeks to impose reciprocal discipline on a member of its bar based on discipline imposed on the attorney by another court or disciplinary authority, it is the attorney’s burden to demonstrate, by clear and convincing evidence, that one of the Selling elements precludes reciprocal discipline.
Ill
A
Turning to the merits, we observe that Kramer raises a swirling miasma of arguments against the propriety of reciprocal disbarment. Kramer first contends that the district court failed to make an independent examination of the record of his New York disciplinary proceedings, in violation our admonition in Kramer III. The district court’s order imposing disbarment, however, disposes of this contention. In that order, the court stated that it reviewed the record; Kramer offers no evidence that the court’s order is mendacious.
B
Kramer next argues that reciprocal disbarment would violate the first prong of Selling, because he was deprived of due process in various ways in connection with the proceedings that gave rise to his New York disbarment. He challenges both the New Jersey suspension proceedings, which formed part of the basis for the finding of misconduct in Kramer I, and the New York penalty hearing before the Committee, which resulted in his disbarment in Kramer II.
Kramer first contends that although the Committee’s recommendation of disbarment in New York was based largely on its consideration of the various instances throughout his career in which courts imposed sanctions on him, he was not informed that these instances would be considered in determining the appropriate sanction for his misconduct. Accordingly, he argues that he was deprived of notice *726 and an opportunity to be heard with respect to his prior disciplinary history. Kramer, however, misapprehends the function of the 3685 penalty phase. His principal error is his repeated characterization of his prior instances of sanctions as “additional offenses” of which the Committee decided he was guilty, and his concomitant conclusion that he deserved notice and an opportunity to be heard on those “offenses.” Kramer I decided Kramer’s substantive guilt before the penalty phase began. Kramer’s prior instances of sanctionable conduct were thus not separate offenses to be charged and tried, but instead, indicators considered in determining the proper sanction for the misconduct of which he was found guilty in Kramer I. Findings by numerous courts that Kramer violated applicable ethical and procedural rules unquestionably are probative on the question of what kind of discipline was adequate to punish Kramer and to deter future unethical conduct. Kramer thus had no right to relitigate his disciplinary history.
Kramer makes a similar misstep when he argues that his disbarment in New York violated due process because it violated the First Amendment. He contends that because the Committee took into account a statement he made to the press concerning his misconduct when determining the appropriate sanction, the penalty recommended by the Committee and imposed by the Appellate Division violates his right to freedom of speech.
2
In support of this argument, Kramer cites myriad cases in which courts have held that an attorney cannot be punished for speaking out where the statement does not interfere with the attorney’s obligation to conduct a fair trial or in some way present a clear and present danger to the administration of justice.
E.g., In re Snyder,
Kramer also complains that each of two panel members missed some of the two-day penalty phase hearing before the Committee in New York. Kramer has not shown, however, that this violated his due process rights. The hearing was fully transcribed. Further, each panel member put his name on the panel’s final recommendation, indicating that the document represented the views of the entire panel.
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Finally, Kramer argues that one of the panel members in the New Jersey disciplinary proceedings was biased because he opposed Kramer in other court proceedings. Our precedents, however, foreclose this argument.
See Yagman,
C
Kramer further argues that there was insufficient proof of his misconduct in connection with his New York disbarment, and thus, that reciprocal disbarment would violate the second prong of Selling. Again, however, he does not attack Kramer I’s conclusion that he was guilty of misconduct, but only tries to recharacterize or to explain away the adjudicated instances of ethical violations that the Committee (and in turn, the Appellate Division) weighed in determining the appropriate punishment for his misconduct.
Faced with a similar claim, the Second Circuit recently responded as follows:
[The respondent attorney] also claims that “[t]here was such an infirmity of proof establishing the alleged misconduct as to give rise to the clear1 conviction that this court could not, consistent with its duties, accept as final the conclusion of the other court.” While it is true that, should [he] prove the above state of affairs by clear and convincing evidence, this Court would not impose reciprocal discipline, [he] must do more than state the existence of his defense to carry that burden. [The respondent attorney] presents no evidence in support of his statement and, in fact, admits to engaging in the conduct for which he was disbarred.... Therefore, this Court finds that [he] has failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that there was any infirmity of proof whatsoever establishing the alleged misconduct....
Committee on Grievances of the United States Dist. Ct. for the Eastern Dist. of New York v. Feinman,
D
Finally, Kramer argues that the imposition of reciprocal disbarment in the Central District of California would result in grave injustice, in conflict with the third prong of Selling. He contends that disbarment was excessive punishment for his misconduct in New York and New Jersey. We are unpersuaded.
In reviewing a reciprocal disbarment, we do not re-try an attorney for misconduct.
See Feinman,
IV
In Kramer III we set forth the procedure that a district court should follow in imposing reciprocal discipline upon a member of its bar, based on discipline imposed on that attorney by another disciplinary authority or court. On remand, the district court followed our instructions to the letter, and beyond: it issued Kramer an order to show cause, allowed him to submit briefing, and even held a hearing, at which Kramer testified. After reviewing the New York disbarment proceedings the court determined that reciprocal disbarment was appropriate. We agree. Kramer has not demonstrated at all — let alone by clear and convincing evidence — that reciprocal disbarment is inappropriate under any of the Selling factors. Accordingly, the district court did not abuse its discretion by reciprocally disbarring him.
AFFIRMED.
C.D. Cal. Local Rule 83-3.1.9. The rule change has no real impact on this case because, as we shall explain, the district court actually followed this new procedure on remand.
Notes
. The Central District of California has amended its reciprocal disbarment rule in a way that incorporates our teachings in Kramer III. The new rule, effective October 1, 2001, provides:
Upon receipt of reliable information that a member of the Bar of this Court ... has been ... disbarred from the practice of law by ... the Bar, Supreme Court, or other governing authority of any State, ... this Court shall issue an Order to Show Cause why an order of ... disbarment should not be imposed by this Court.
If the attorney files a written response to the Order to Show Cause within the time specified stating that he contests the entry of an order of suspension or disbarment, then the Chief Judge or other district judge who may be assigned shall determine whether an order of suspension or disbarment shall be entered. Where an attorney has been suspended or disbarred by another Bar, ... the attorney in his response to the Order to Show Cause, must set forth facts establishing one or more of the following: (a) the procedure in the other jurisdiction was so lacking in notice or opportunity to be heard as to constitute a deprivation of due process; (b) there was such an infirmity of proof establishing the misconduct as to give rise to a clear conviction that the Court should not accept as final the other jurisdiction’s conclusion(s) on that subject; (c) imposition of like discipline would result in a grave injustice; or (d) other substantia] reasons exist so as to justify not accepting the other jurisdiction's conclusion(s)....
. During the penalty phase hearing, the Committee considered an article that appeared in Lawyer’s Weekly USA, in which Kramer was quoted as describing the findings of his numerous ethical violations as being “for chicken-shit stuff.” In the article, Kramer compared himself to a superstar athlete who is willing to risk breaking the rules although he is sometimes penalized. Sanctions, he explained, are merely a necessary cost of playing the game zealously. When the Committee questioned him about these statements, Kramer stood by them, explaining that in his view, his conduct was wholly appropriate, and was simply “part of being a tough litigator.”
