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© Copyright, 2000 to  2010,  by Leonard  Bucklin.

REPORTING PROFESSIONAL MISCONDUCT  

Rule 8.3 of the Model Rule of Professional Conduct is the model from which many states have taken their rule for lawyers to report misconduct.

(a) A lawyer having knowledge that another lawyer has committed a violation of these rules that raises a substantial question as to that lawyer's honesty, trustworthiness, or fitness as a lawyer in other respects shall ....(inform the appropriate professional authority; initiate proceedings under the North Dakota Rules of Disciplinary Procedure; etc.]

As an example of how this is interpreted in practice, the New York State Bar says that each of the following four prerequisites  must be met before a lawyer needs to report a violation:

  • 1. the lawyer must have a 'clear belief, or possess actual knowledge, as to the pertinent facts.

  • 2. the lawyer cannot have received his knowledge as a result of a confidence.

  • 3. the conduct must have violated a disciplinary rule.

  • 4. the violation must raise a substantial question as to the lawyer's honesty, trustworthiness or fitness to practice law in other matters than the one involved in the violation.