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Florida Bar floated an off-kilter proposal to drop an oath from complaints about lawyers, but avoided the real problem

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It’s hard to tell from this Roadmap, but the Attorney Consumer Assistance Program is really the Florida Bar, an arm of the Florida Supreme Court that screens and investigates complaints against lawyers and, if charges are deemed necessary, serves as the prosecutor in a trial before a referee. The Bar’s Board of Governors sends recommendations to the final arbiter of lawyer discipline, the Florida Supreme Court. Photo: The Florida Bar

By Noreen Marcus, FloridaBulldog.org

When longtime attorney Robert Kerrigan set out to file his first ever misconduct report against another lawyer, he hit a snag that he believes artificially limits the number of complaints the Florida Bar investigates.

He resolved to do something about it. But before Kerrigan could formulate a proposal for change, and without his knowledge, a Florida Bar committee grabbed one of his emails to Bar staff complaining about the problem and repurposed it into an unworkable “proposal,” then unanimously shot it down.

Oops!

On March 27 the Bar’s Disciplinary Procedure Committee considered doing away with the mandatory oath on lawyer-complaint forms affirming that the contents are “true, correct and complete.” The oath troubles Kerrigan, a Pensacola trial lawyer, but he doesn’t want to drop it, he wants to supplement it. 

Falsifying a claim in an ethics complaint is perjury. Eliminating the oath might encourage anybody with a beef against a lawyer to file a fabricated complaint, knowing there would be no penalty for lying.

Kerrigan wants to add language to the oath aimed at preventing lawyers accused of misconduct from fighting back with false perjury claims.

“This is an embarrassment,” Kerrigan said when Florida Bulldog showed him the minutes of the March 27 meeting. The Bar shared them with the news outlet in response to questions raised by Kerrigan’s story.

Attorney Robert Kerrigan

Bar spokeswoman Jennifer Krell Davis defended the committee’s action, saying it “considered the correspondence sent by Mr. Kerrigan and the relevant rules.” Asked if the committee would admit an obvious error, she replied, “The committee considered what was provided.”

SEE SOMETHING, SAY SOMETHING

Overall, Kerrigan’s attempt at reform has been a strange encounter with the Florida Bar’s rule-tweaking process. That’s one of the Bar’s functions as the Supreme Court’s official investigator of unethical conduct.

In a self-regulating system, lawyers must report suspicious conduct – if they see something, they’ve got to say something.

“A lawyer who knows that another lawyer has committed a violation of the Rules of Professional Conduct that raises a substantial question as to that lawyer’s honesty, trustworthiness, or fitness as a lawyer … shall inform the appropriate professional authority,” says Rule 4-8.3 of the Florida lawyers’ ethics code.

What Kerrigan didn’t know, up until he filed his misconduct report this year, was that he’d be required to swear the report was “true, correct and complete.” If it wasn’t, he could face a perjury prosecution.

Kerrigan balked at signing the oath because he felt it would invite the accused lawyer to make a bogus perjury claim, he recounted in interviews with Florida Bulldog.

“If the goal is to protect the public from lawyer abuses, this requirement is having the opposite effect,” Kerrigan wrote to a Bar counsel. “Reaching a conclusion that no one would ever be prosecuted for reporting unethical conduct by their lawyer might have been true in the past. It isn’t now.”

Kerrigan had been approached by the grandfather of a 21-year-old man who thought he was treated unfairly in a wrongful death case. (Florida Bulldog is not identifying the case or the lawyer to protect their privacy.)  In February he sent the Bar a detailed report of the suspicious conduct he’d uncovered plus 23 pages of documentation.

Kerrigan claimed the young man hadn’t heard from his lawyer for the six years that a complaint based on his mother’s wrongful death was pending. After a trial the jury awarded him nothing and gave his two half-brothers, who unlike him had testified, $2 million apiece.

‘TRUE, CORRECT AND COMPLETE’

Kerrigan found the Bar’s response surprising: His report would be tossed unless he swore his statement was “true, correct and complete.” Or, the young man he had been retained to help could sign the same oath and file his own complaint.

Florida Bar spokeswoman Jennifer Krell Davis

Kerrigan is fine with the “true” part. But he says the “correct and complete” language is ambiguous and thrusts lawyers into Catch-22 territory. They’re duty-bound to file a misconduct report yet if they do, or if they encourage a client to swear out a complaint, the oath-taker could get slammed with a perjury allegation.

“The accused lawyer could claim the complaint wasn’t ‘complete’ and cause the complaining party to be criminally charged,” Kerrigan said.

“The accused lawyer could usually find some error of a fact cited or that the sequence of events reported was not ‘correct,’ “ he said.

“The client felt he got poor treatment by his lawyer. He reports it to the Bar by signing the oath they require and then he gets criminally charged or indicted.

“Bottom line: Exercise great caution before you file a sworn complaint against a lawyer with the Florida Bar,” Kerrigan said.

A Bar counsel indicated his report would disappear unless he signed the oath.

“If you do not complete and return the oath form to us, this office will be unable to proceed with the investigation and the file will be closed,”  Francisco-Javier Digon-Greer wrote in an April 1 email to Kerrigan.

Since he hasn’t done so, presumably no one at the Bar has reviewed Kerrigan’s report and documentation. And the young man’s former lawyer can go about his business free of a worrying Bar investigation.

THE PROBABLE CAUSE TEST

Tallahassee appellate lawyer Philip Padovano criticized how the Bar uses the oath requirement in an interview with Florida Bulldog.

“I don’t agree with that at all. That’s the wrong approach,” said Padovano, a retired appellate court judge.

“The Bar has a duty to investigate” reports and complaints of lawyer misconduct if they meet the low threshold of probable cause, as with police, prosecutors or any other investigative body, he said.

“The authority to investigate doesn’t depend on the input of citizens,” Padovano said.

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Attorney Philip Padovano

He called the Bar’s refusal to investigate alleged misconduct that passes the probable cause test because of an unsigned oath “troublesome.”

“It’s fair to conclude that this makes it harder for people who are out there on the ground observing these things to make Bar complaints,” Padovano said.

JUDICIAL-PROTECTION OATH

Kerrigan was admitted to the Bar in 1971. He known for his pro bono work and for his role on the so-called “dream team” that in 1998 secured Florida’s $13-billion share of a national settlement with Big Tobacco meant to recoup the healthcare costs of smoking.

When the oath issue stalled Kerrigan’s report, he didn’t publicly “disparage” the Bar — a possible ethics code violation all by itself. He suggested a rule change to solve the problem of stifling legitimate complaints against lawyers.

Kerrigan sent an email to Bar counsel Patricia Savitz on March 28 urging consideration of a more “appropriate” oath. It would incorporate part of the oath judges sign on their financial disclosure forms, apparently to avoid trouble for errors in reporting gifts.

The judge must swear “that the facts set forth … are true, correct, and complete to the best of my knowledge and belief,” according to Canon 6 of the Code of Judicial Conduct.

The phrase “to the best of my knowledge and belief” provides some leeway for judges to make honest mistakes and softens the “true, correct and complete” requirement. Kerrigan argues the same should hold true for complaints against lawyers.

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Elizabeth Clark Tarbert

Unbeknownst to him, on the day before Kerrigan sent his suggested fix to Savitz, the Bar’s Disciplinary Procedure Committee had rejected the idea of dropping the oath.

The committee apparently took Kerrigan’s so-called proposal from a March 5 email to a Bar counsel in which he criticized the oath generally.

WILL BAR GET IT RIGHT?

“The Bar is wrong,” Kerrigan wrote to Roland Sanchez-Medina Jr. “The Bar has created a Catch-22 choice for lawyers who learn of serious misconduct by a Florida lawyer. I filed a detailed report of unethical conduct that I believe to be accurate, as I was required to do.

“The fact that the Florida Bar won’t investigate absent a sworn statement that the facts are ‘true, correct and complete’ is a poor message to the public regarding the discipline of Florida lawyers who harm the public,” he wrote.

Weeks later on April 14, Elizabeth Clark Tarbert, director of the Bar’s Division of Lawyer Regulation, informed Kerrigan in an email that the committee had “reviewed your proposed amendments” and disposed of them with a 10-0 vote. That’s all she wrote.

The decision came out of nowhere. “I was never contacted by any member of the committee,” Kerrigan said.

Now that he knows exactly what committee members reviewed, he said, “my comments and suggestions were dismissed and mischaracterized.”

Kerrigan said he’d like to see the Bar committee correct the mistake. “It is the oath that’s the problem.”

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Comments

3 responses to “Florida Bar floated an off-kilter proposal to drop an oath from complaints about lawyers, but avoided the real problem”

  1. I credited Attorney Kerrigan for standing up for what he believes can make many people not report misconduct of an attorney.

    I, on the other hand had a different situation. I couldn’t get my attorney Eric Schurger from Pensacola to have that initial meeting with me be a phone call Zoom in person. The man was appointed to my criminal case November 1, 2024.
    When the court withdrew him from my case, April 23, 2025 I still have never personally talked with my attorney Eric Schurger.

    I contacted The Florida Bar on February 7, 2025 asking them for assistance in encouraging attorney Schurger to return my calls and have that “initial” meeting with me so I may understand the fabricated claims made against me. I didn’t disparage or besmirch Mr. Schurger in this call to ACAP. I was extremely professional and just stated the truth that I cannot get him to have that initial meeting or return my calls.

    Acap Attorney Eversole sent a letter to my attorney, Eric Schurger giving him until February 24 to get in touch with me. Florida Bar RFA
    25-7848 and instead Mr. Schurger wrote the most condescending disrespectful and unprofessional email back to her committing, perjury himself in this email stating that he has had more than enough communication with me being careful in his wording because he’ll only respond to my emails with one sentence words that never answer my questions or assist me in council.

    He also committed violation of HIPAA laws in this email and violation of attorney, client confidentiality all in an effort to not only discredit me but his second paragraph of this email states you just need to look at what she’s being charged with, giving to a sense that my own attorney believes I have committed those crimes.
    Which happens to be fabricated and false claims of me violating Florida statute 454.23, the UNAUTHORIZED PRACTICE OF LAW, which I never did. MY OWN ATTORNEY SAYS THIS IN HIS RESPONSE EMAIL …. and remember my phone call to ACAP said nothing bad about my attorney.
    So the month of February goes by and the month of March goes by and I contact The Florida Bar to see what’s going on because I still can’t get my attorney to return my calls only to find out that the case is closed by none other than the same attorney in your Kerrigan story, Francis Greer.

    I immediately shot off a complaint to Florida Bar Director Doyle and sent in a 25 page official complaint against attorney, Eric Schurger.

    I have asked this attorney to withdraw from my case November 19, 2024 after not hearing from him for three weeks when I had a pressing matter that needed to be handled. Instead, what this attorney has done is created an additional capias on me instead of protecting me and aggressively going after the prosecutor for her misconduct and bias motion to revoke my bond because I filed complaints in a civil, pleading about an unfit mother who has committed child abandonment child, abuse, and child neglect.

    I have written senators I have written the governor. I have written the attorney general. I’ve written the Florida Bar, DOJ and FBI. I also contacted the FDLE early on because of complaints against Walton County sheriffs department for creating probable cause and ignoring my complaints of child abuse that I filed before this woman filed these complaints against me for UPL. She did this in retaliation.

    I still haven’t heard from The Florida Bar and I’m guessing I probably won’t even though I accuse them of burying this complaint, and understanding that the impression they’ve given me now is that they are not really there to protect the public from unscrupulous attorneys they are there to protect the attorneys from the Public complaints about them and to bury the complaints.
    You would think a letter to the director Doyle would give me a letter back, reassuring me that they are on top of this and looking into this, but it’s been crickets. I’ve heard nothing.

  2. The Bar as presently constituted will not get it right. If you accept the assertion that the Bar exists to regulate lawyers and so protect the public, ask yourself, who is the Bar protecting here? Kerrigan’s understanding of the Catch-22 created by the oath has been made clear to the Bar, but the Bar has chosen to dismiss and ignore the problem identified. The Bar won’t get it right, because apparently the Bar has refused to take any action to get it right.

  3. Edward Crespo Avatar
    Edward Crespo

    This whole “oath/no oath” thing is TOTAL BULLSHIT right out of the starting gate! As one who has had a great deal of experience with the way the so-called “disciplinary” branch of the Florida Bar does things, which includes my dealings with Bar Counsel, Javier Digon-Greer and several others of his ilk, I can state with certainty that the Florida Bar is more about protecting their own than protecting the public! (great emphasis added). Debt collection lawyers, (Is chasing other people’s money really “practicing the law”?), and foreclosure mill lawyers, (It’s EASY TO WIN IN COURT when the vast majority of Defendants CAN’T AFFORD to retain counsel!), are the WORST and are most often the ones who GET AWAY with their Bar Rule violations…with ACAP’s help, of course!

    Most non-lawyer litigants DO NOT KNOW the proper way to file a Bar Complaint against an opposing lawyer, (Or sometimes…their own lawyer!), because they haven’t done their due diligence! But even when a pro se Bar Complaint is valid, properly filed, and well-supported with record evidence, the Bar will most likely SUMMARILY DISMISS IT…simply because they CAN! They got CAUGHT in California by way of a state audit, doing exactly what I just described, but it appears little, if anything, has changed! (Google it!).

    There are THREE circumstances which will compel action, or at least an investigation, by the Florida Bar: 1) When a lawyer STEALS MONEY from a client’s trust account. 2) When a lawyer is ARRESTED and charged with a crime. 3) When a lawyer files a Bar Complaint against another Florida lawyer. In the matter of the Florida Bar v. Roger Rathbun, the initial Bar Complaint was filed by Florida lawyer, Jay Lewis Farrow. Rathbun was first suspended for making threats against Farrow, then ultimately disbarred for continuing to practice law with a suspended law license. Jay Lewis Farrow was once MY lawyer. He LOST me all my federal claims against Bank of America due to nothing more than his FAILURE of due diligence! The Bar Complaint I filed was, of course, SUMMARILY DISMISSED!

    The best and most accurate description of the Florida Bar is…”ABSOLUTE POWER CORRUPTING ABSOLUTELY!” The Florida Bar’s methods and conduct are a matter of record, just like in California! (Google “Tom Geradi,” the once celebrated California lawyer).

    As I’ve said before, having one bunch of Florida lawyers, (Bar Counsels), supposedly disciplining a bunch of their FELLOW Florida lawyers is the same as “putting a bank robber on trial with a jury made up of nothing but OTHER bank robbers!”

    With Bar Complaints, having or not having to sign an Oath is IRRELEVANT BULLSHIT!!! The Florida Bar is going CONTINUE to do things the way they have ALWAYS done! Besides, once the errant lawyer knows the Bar Complaint against him/her has been dismissed, the subject lawyer would be STUPID to continue the matter by filing perjury or defamation claims against the filer! Nobody except the VICTIM cares anyway! CORRUPTION – CRONYISM – COVER UP!!! It’s been that way for DECADES!

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