IN THE MATTER OF SHERRI JEFFERSON.
S19Y0527
SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA
OCTOBER 7, 2019
307 Ga. 50
PER CURIAM
FINAL COPY
This disсiplinary matter is before us on the State Disciplinary Review Board’s report and recommendation that this Court disbar Sherri Jefferson (State Bar No. 387645) from the practice of law.1 The formal complaint upon which these disciplinary proceedings were based alleged that Jefferson, who has beеn a member of the Bar since 2003, violated Rules 3.3, 4.2, 8.1, and 8.4 set forth in the Georgia Rules of Professional Conduct. See Bar Rule 4-102 (d). The maximum sanction for a violation of each of the relevant rules is disbarment.
Jefferson filed, in response to the formal complaint, an answer and other pleadings. After the resolutiоn of some preliminary matters, including Jefferson’s challenges to the competency, qualifications, and impartiality of the special master, Patrick E. Longan, discovery was initiated. However, Jefferson failed to respond to discovery, and the State Bar moved to sanction Jefferson for her fаilure. The special master granted the motion for sanctions after a hearing at which Jefferson appeared but refused to testify on the grounds that she would be “pleading the Fifth Amendment.” In its order, the special master struck Jefferson’s answer, found her in default, and deemed the allegations of the complaint to be admitted. See former Bar Rule 4-212 (a) (facts alleged and violations charged in formal complaint shall be deemed admitted if respondent fails to file an answer).
In summary, the facts as found by the special master based on Jefferson’s default show the following. Jefferson represented an individual from 2008 to 2010 in a custody modification action; during the representation, Jefferson and that individual were romantically involved. This relationship led to the filing of a disciplinary matter against Jefferson, but the matter was subsequently dismissed by this Court in 2014. During the pendency of that disciplinary matter, Jefferson’s former client began dating another woman and, following the dismissal of that matter, Jefferson hired a private investigator to conduct an investigation including surreptitious surveillance of the former client, his son, and the other woman. Additionally, Jefferson falsely disparaged the other woman to the woman’s employer, including making false and misleading statements about the custody proceeding.
Jefferson’s actions led the former client and the other woman to file applications for criminal warrants against Jefferson on charges of stalking and defamation. During the warrant proceedings initiated by the former client, Jefferson made false statements to the Magistrate Court of Houston County that she was bound to continue having contact with her former client due to being his attorney in a pending court case; that a visit to her former client in December 2014 was
During the warrant proceedings initiated by the other woman in the Magistrate Court of Fulton County, Jefferson submitted writings in response, some of them sworn, including bаseless and disparaging statements about the former client and the other woman and false statements about her communications with them and others. Jefferson also filed two verified complaints against the Georgia Governor and Attorney General in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia challenging the constitutionality of the Georgia statutes authorizing the warrants described above. In the first complaint, she alleged that, as an attorney, she had conducted a child custody investigation involving the other woman, and that the other woman had filed a falsified police report seeking a warrant. The allegations were false, except for Jefferson being an attorney, and Jefferson knew they were false. After the first complaint was dismissed, Jefferson made similar false allegations in a second complaint. Jefferson also communicated directly with the other woman concerning the disputes between them, despite Jefferson’s knowledge that the woman was represented by counsel in connection with the warrant application as well as the bar grievance that she had made against Jefferson.
Based on Jefferson’s conduct, the special master concluded that Jefferson had violated Rules 3.3 (a) (1) (knowingly making false statements to a tribunal), 4.2 (a) (knowingly communicating with a person represented by counsel), and 8.4 (a) (4) (engaging in professional conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation). The special master also found that Jefferson had violated Rule 8.1 (a) (knowingly making false statements of material fact in connection with a disciplinary matter) in that she had made knowing misrepresentations of material fact in the course of the disciplinary proceedings by falsely representing to the special master that she did not receive the Bar’s discovery request in May 2017 and that she did not receive the Bar’s motion for sanctions until September 2017.2
In recommending discipline, the special master considered the American Bar Association Standards for Imposing Lawyer Sanctions, see In the Matter of Morse, 266 Ga. 652, 653 (470 SE2d 232) (1996), and found that the presumptive sanction for her conduct was disbarment. The special master also found the following aggravating factors, including: the existence of prior discipline, specifically, Jefferson’s receipt of an Investigative Panel Reprimand in two cases in 2006; a selfish and dishonest motive, as Jefferson made misrepresentations to multiple tribunals with the intent to deceive and communicated with the other woman with the intent to intimidate her and otherwise affect the outcome of the relevant proceedings; a pattern of misconduct and the existence of multiple violations; bad faith obstruction of, and the submission of false statements in, the disciplinary proceеdings; and the refusal to acknowledge the wrongful nature of her conduct. The only factor in mitigation recognized by the special master was the remoteness in time of Jefferson’s prior disciplinary violations, and the special master excluded those prior violations from consideration in recommending sanctions. The special master recommended that Jefferson be disbarred.
Jefferson asked that the Review Board review the report and recommendation of the special master.3 In its report and recommendation to this Court, the Review Board approved the special master’s order on motion for sanctions striking Jefferson’s answer to
Notwithstanding the motion for sanctions resulting in her default, Jefferson now contends that, in light of
In her exceptions to the Review Board’s report,7 Jefferson contends, among
In light of Jefferson’s default, the facts alleged in the complaint were deemed admitted. See former Rule 4-212 (a); In the Matter of Hawk, 269 Ga. 165, 166 (496 SE2d 261) (1998) (as the special master struсk respondent’s answer for intentionally or consciously failing to act under the discovery rules, the facts alleged and violations charged in the formal complaint were deemed admitted). The factual findings of the special master, as approved by the Review Board, are consistent with the allegations of the complaint and the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom. See Stroud v. Elias, 247 Ga. 191, 193 (1) (275 SE2d 46) (1981) (a default on the part of the defendant serving to eliminate his answer to the complaint admits only the definite and certain allegations of the complaint and the fair inferences and conclusions of fact to be drawn therefrom).
We agree with the Review Board that these admitted facts support a finding that Jefferson violated Rules 3.3 (a) (1), 4.2 (a), and 8.4 (a) (4), a violation of any one of which is sufficient to support disbarment. Having reviewed the record, we agree with the Review Board that disbarment is the apрropriate sanction. See In the Matter of Koehler, 297 Ga. 794, 796 (778 SE2d 218) (2015) (disbarment was appropriate sanction where lawyer repeatedly asserted frivolous claims in multiple tribunals and made materially deceitful and misleading statements in court filings); In the Matter of Minsk, 296 Ga. 152, 153 (765 SE2d 361) (2014) (disbarment was appropriate sanction where lawyer had pattern of making knowingly fаlse statements to his client, the court, and third parties); In the Matter of Jones-Lewis, 295 Ga. 861, 862 (764 SE2d 549) (2014) (disbarment was appropriate sanction where lawyer made false statements to juvenile court). It is hereby ordered that the name of Sherri Jefferson be removed from the rolls of persons authorized to practice law in the State of Georgia. Jefferson is reminded of her duties pursuant to former Bar Rule 4-219 (c).8
Disbarred. All the Justices concur, except Benham, J., not participating.
DECIDED OCTOBER 7, 2019.
Disbarment.
Paula J. Frederick, General Counsel State Bar, Jenny K. Mittelman, William Van Hearnburg, Jr., Assistant General Counsel State Bar, for State Bar of Georgia.
