We have reviewed the record and concur in the board’s findings that respondent violated DR 1-102(A)(4) and 7-102(A)(5). We also concur in the sanction recommended by the board and, thus, decline to impose the public reprimand now urged in respondent’s objections.
During oral argument, respondent claimed that his misconduct was most analogous to the disciplinary infractions committed in Disciplinary Counsel v. Schumann (1994),
Respondent calls to our attention several other cases in which we issued only public reprimands for an attorney’s deception of a client, and these cases may imply that we view this misconduct as a minor transgression. We do not. Dishonesty toward a client, whose interests are the attorney’s duty to protect, is reprehensible. And, as we continue to see such violations of DR 1-102(A)(4), we recognize that this misconduct may hereafter require more severe discipline than we have previously imposed.
But, distressed as we are by any attorney’s dishonesty toward a client, we find greater evil in an attorney’s deliberate attempt to deceive a court while under oath. That attorney perpetrates a fraud upon the judiciary and a corresponding, surreptitious fraud upon his or her unsuspecting client. Cf. Disciplinary Counsel v. Heffernan (1991),
For example, in Bar Assn. of Greater Cleveland v. Haffner (1977),
In Cincinnati Bar Assn. v. Wang (1991),
Finally, in Disciplinary Counsel v. Cordova (1993),
Of the cases cited by the parties, we find Disciplinary Counsel v. Lynch (1994),
Respondent’s affidavit was also a sworn he. Worse yet, he filed the affidavit in court, bearing the forged signature of a notary. His misconduct is thus more grievous than was the attorney’s in Lynch, and, for that reason, might have justified a more severe sanction. Accord Stark Cty. Bar Assn. v. Miller (1989),
Therefore, we accept the sanction recommended by the board. Respondent is hereby suspended from the practice of law in Ohio for a period of six months. Costs taxed to respondent.
Judgment accordingly.
