Bribery: Still Illegal
Mary
Gallagher
Corporate Counsel, OCT-2003
Lawyers have many tactics at their disposal, but bribery
isn't one of them. That's the reassuring message from
the New Jersey Disciplinary Review Board, which this
summer recommended that a former in-house attorney be
suspended because he "essentially bribed" two plaintiffs'
lawyers not to sue his company.
Karel Zaruba worked in the law department of Warner-Lambert
Company until his retirement in 1999. (The drug manufacturer
has since merged with Pfizer Inc.) According to the
disciplinary board, Zaruba made a secret deal in 1997
with plaintiffs' lawyers Mark Hager and John Traficonte
that they would drop a planned class action against
Warner-Lambert over the effectiveness of its head lice
product, Nix. Under the settlement, Hager and Traficonte
received $225,000 in "fees and expenses," while their
90 clients got a maximum of $10,000 in refunds. The
two lawyers agreed not to disclose the deal, even to
their clients.
The New Jersey disciplinary board voted 5 to 4 to recommend
a one-year suspension for Zaruba. The majority wrote
in its July 29 opinion that efforts "to buy off plaintiffs'
counsel by secret agreements . . . will be viewed as
extremely serious." The board's dissenters had sought
a tougher three-year suspension. The case is one of
only a few involving a breach of Rule of Professional
Conduct 5.6(b), which bars settlement agreements that
restrict the right to practice law.
The case went directly to the board after Zaruba waived
a hearing. The 71-year-old attorney, who did not retain
counsel, admitted to the charges. In his written response
to the board, he said he would "accept any appropriate
sanction." Zaruba could not be reached for comment for
this story. The suspension order will be automatically
adopted by the state supreme court.
Hager, who formerly taught at the American University
law school in Washington, D.C., was suspended for three
years in December 2002 by the D.C. Court of Appeals.
No formal ethics complaint has been filed yet against
Massachusetts-based Traficonte, according to an official
with the state's Board of Bar Overseers.
Copyright
2003 ALM Properties, Inc. All rights reserved.
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