STATE of Oklahoma, ex rel. OKLAHOMA BAR ASSOCIATION, Complainant, v. Harvey Russell WRIGHT, Jr., Respondent.
OBAD No. 825. SCBD No. 3477.
Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
May 8, 1990.
794 P.2d 1171
ORDER
Upon consideration of the above styled and captioned cause, THE COURT FINDS THAT:
1) The respondent, Harvey Russell Wright, Jr., was indicted on 26 counts of distributing and possessing cocaine and distributing and possessing marihuana. After a plea bargain agreement was reached, Wright pleaded guilty to one count of distributing cocaine to two friends in a social setting in Cause No. CR-87-97-D in the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma. This Court issued an order of interim suspension on February 3, 1988.
2) This admission demonstrates his unfitness to practice law within the meaning of
3) Wright agrees that suspension is warranted. He requests a suspension of two years or less to begin retroactively from June 10, 1987, the date he pleaded guilty. This case is distinguishable from State ex rel. Oklahoma Bar Assoc. v. Armstrong, 638 P.2d 1127, 1128 (Okla.1982) in which the attorney was disbarred for the distribution of cocaine. In Armstrong, the respondent was convicted of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and marijuana; aiding and abetting in the possession with intent to distribute; and possession with intent to distribute. He was sentenced to nine years in prison. Armstrong was requested to show cause why the final order of discipline should not be made. Unlike Wright, he failed to respond to the order, and consequently, no evidence was presented by Armstrong in mitigation of the disciplinary matter. Wright was convicted of one count, was sentenced to two years of prison and did respond to the show cause order. At the show cause hearing, attorneys and former clients testified that they would employ Wright as an attorney when he was reinstated to practice law. A former sheriff testified that during Wright‘s term as a District Attorney, he had been the most effective person to serve during the sheriff‘s term in office.
4) Wright‘s action demands discipline. We find that suspension from the practice of law rather than disbarment is an adequate indication that this Court will not condone such behavior. State ex rel. Oklahoma Bar Assn. v. Denton, 598 P.2d 663, 665 (Okla.1979). We also find, after a de novo review of the record, that
5) Even so, we note that reinstatement is not automatically granted upon the expiration of the suspension. Before any person is readmitted to the practice of law both the welfare of the public and the Bar must be considered. The process is a difficult one and the burden of proof rests with the applicant. The applicant must demonstrate that he has been rehabilitated before he can be readmitted. Reinstatement of Cantrell, 785 P.2d 312, 313 (Okla.1989).
6) The respondent is directed to pay the costs of these proceedings.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that the respondent is suspended from the practice of law for two years and one day from the date of this order and ordered to pay the costs assessed in this proceeding.
HARGRAVE, C.J., and HODGES, LAVENDER, ALMA WILSON, KAUGER and SUMMERS, JJ., concur.
OPALA, V.C.J., and SIMMS and DOOLIN, JJ., dissent.
OPALA, Vice Chief Justice, with whom SIMMS, Justice, joins, dissenting.
I dissent from the lenient discipline visited by today‘s decision. The gravity of the respondent‘s criminal misconduct prevents me from joining the court‘s order that imposes a two-year-and-one-day suspension. I would order the respondent disbarred.
The respondent, admittedly a drug user from 1983 to 1986, became a state district attorney in January 1987. On April 13, 1987 he was charged by indictment in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma with the crime of possession of cocaine (6 counts) and marijuana (9 counts); distribution of cocaine (8 counts) and marijuana (1 count); the felonious use of a telephone to arrange for the sale and distribution of cocaine (1 count), and the use of intimidation in an attempt to hinder communications between a federal law enforcement officer and another person relating to the commission or possible commission of a federal offense (1 count), in violation of
Our primary task in disciplinary cases is to protect the public and to preserve its confidence in the legal profession as well as in the judicial authority that licenses lawyers. The maintenance of high standards of the Bar‘s fitness—intellectual and ethical—is one of this court‘s heavy constitutional responsibilities. Every licensed practitioner is held out to the public as a person worthy of confidence in the performance of legal services. If the licensee becomes unfit, it is this court‘s duty to withdraw from him (or her) its official endorsement for the public‘s immediate protection.1
In Armstrong2
No lawyer who has been so recently discredited publicly, both as a State official in law enforcement service and as a licensed legal practitioner, should gain eligibility status for re-entry into the profession less than five years after fulfilling the terms of a criminal sentence for a serious federal offense that renders him unfit for practice. Maintenance of public confidence in this court as a licensing authority for lawyers and in the Bar as a whole demands a far more severe sanction to be imposed on Wright. The constitution‘s mandate, which calls upon this court to act in faithful stewardship of public interest, strongly counsels that the action taken today be with utmost concern for the people‘s safety. Any other philosophical approach to the duty that is ours alone would inevitably allow the Bar‘s reinstatement process to degenerate into passing convicted lawbreakers through a routine of revolving-door re-admission.
Because respondent‘s adjudicated criminal misconduct seriously undermines general public confidence in the Bar as a community of law-abiding professionals and in his own fitness for the practice, it warrants no less than disbarment.
