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Tag Archive for: Lars K Soreide Soreide Law Group

The Ohio Supreme Court Denied Law License for Law School Graduate with $170,000 in Student Loans

October 12, 2012

Many law school graduates are all too aware of their accumulating pile of debt, but few may realize it can prevent them from practicing law and destroy any hopes of paying down their loans, wrote Susanna Kim of abcnews.com in a recent article.

The highest court in Ohio denied recent law school grad, Hassan Jonathan Griffin, his bar application because he didn’t have a plan to pay back $170,000 in school debt.

The Ohio Supreme Court, on January 11, said Griffin lacked a “feasible plan to satisfy his financial obligations.”  Griffin’s debts include $150,000 from law school, $20,000 from his undergraduate studies and $16,500 in credit card debt.

The Ohio Supreme Court, which regulates admission to the practice of law in Ohio, requires that an applicant be at least 21 years old, have a bachelor’s degree and law degree, and pass the Ohio bar examination.

The state’s rules specify that prior to taking the bar exam, applicants must demonstrate they possess “the requisite character, fitness, and moral qualifications for admission to the practice of law.”

Griffin, 40, had applied in November, 2009, for the February, 2010 bar exam, but his increasing financial obligations led to an investigation by the state’s Board of Commissioners on Character and Fitness.

Griffin graduated from Arizona State University in 2004 when he was 34 and worked full-time as a stockbroker for over five years before attending The Ohio State University Mortiz College of Law.

It was reported that since completing his first year of law school, Griffin has worked 24 to 32 hours a week at the Franklin County Public Defender’s Office.  Though he graduated from law school in 2008, he has been unable to obtain a full-time job and still earns $12 per hour at the public defender’s office.

The board recommended that the court reject Griffin but permit him to reapply for the February, 2011 bar exam. Griffin confirmed he is re-applying for the February exam and said his financial matters are now in better order.

Many law school grads are unemployed,  but it is rare they fail the character and fitness test because of their personal finances.

In April, 2009, the Texas Court of Appeals revoked the probationary law license of a man in Houston with undergraduate and law school loans of around $90,000 plus interest and $58,000 in “unsecured loans.”

“We handle about 100 contested hearings a year, and very rarely is financial responsibility the subject of the hearing, and even more rarely is the situation where the board decides to deny” the license,  the Texas Board of Law Examiners’ executive director Julia E. Vaughan told The Texas Lawyer.

The New York state appellate court rejected the license application of Robert Bowman in April 2009, according to a story in the New York Times. A court subcommittee cited student debt of over $430,000 belonging to the University of California’s Hastings law school graduate.

The Education Department recently decided that Bowman’s debts will be recalculated and he is not in default, allowing him to re-apply for his license.

Kim writes that the American Bar Association (ABA) reported that the average amount borrowed for law school was $91,506 for private schools and $59,324 for public schools in 2008.  A committee from the ABA wrote in a report that these figures do not include debt from students’ undergraduate years and an average law school student will graduate with debt “well in excess of $100,000.”

But among law graduates from the class of 2008, 42 percent of graduates had an annual salary of less than $65,000. And the ABA report said prospects are even bleaker now, with students competing for half as many jobs at top law firms.

“Far too many law students expect that earning a law degree will solve their financial problems for life,” the ABA committee wrote. “In reality, however, attending law school can become a financial burden for law students who fail to consider carefully the financial implications of their decision.”

Attorney Lars Soreide, of Soreide Law Group, PLLC, represents those seeking admittance to the Florida Bar, and existing lawyers, for both Investigative Hearings and Formal Hearings in front of the Florida Bar. For more information about our services please call (888) 760-6552 or visit: www.floridabarhearing.com.

https://www.floridabarhearing.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/soreide-logo-300x183.png 0 0 Editor https://www.floridabarhearing.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/soreide-logo-300x183.png Editor2012-10-12 10:02:432012-10-12 10:02:43The Ohio Supreme Court Denied Law License for Law School Graduate with $170,000 in Student Loans

The Florida Supreme Court Summaries of Orders Issued between May 21– June 28, 2012

August 29, 2012

On The Florida Bar’s website, it was announced that the Florida Supreme Court in recent court orders, has disciplined 22 attorneys, disbarring 10, and suspending eight. Some of the attorneys received more than one form of discipline. Three of the attorneys were placed on probation; four attorneys were publicly reprimanded.

As an official arm of the Florida Supreme Court, The Florida Bar and its Department of Lawyer Regulation are charged with administering a statewide disciplinary system to enforce Supreme Court rules of professional conduct for the 93,000-plus lawyers admitted to practice law in Florida. (This information was obtained on the Florida Bar website.)

Lars Soreide, of Soreide Law Group, PLLC, will represent those seeking admittance to the Florida Bar, and existing lawyers, for both Investigative Hearings and Formal Hearings in front of The Florida Bar. For more information about our services please call for a free consultaion: (888) 760-6552 or visit: www.floridabarhearing.com.

https://www.floridabarhearing.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/soreide-logo-300x183.png 0 0 Editor https://www.floridabarhearing.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/soreide-logo-300x183.png Editor2012-08-29 11:23:322012-08-29 11:23:32The Florida Supreme Court Summaries of Orders Issued between May 21– June 28, 2012

Can Undocumented Immigrant Be Accepted to Florida Bar?

April 16, 2012

In an April 15, 2012, article from South Florida’s Sun Sentinel, Rafael A. Olmeda writes that there is now a question of whether or not an immigrant without a green card get a Florida Bar card?

The aspiring lawyer, Jose Godinez-Samperio, 25, a Tampa-area resident, is hoping the answer is yes. A native of Mexico who entered the United States legally with his parents 16 years ago on a tourist visa, Godinez-Samperio is a graduate of the FSUCollege of Law, the valedictorian of the Armwood High School class of 2004, an Eagle Scout — and an undocumented immigrant. The last quality may keep him from achieving his dream.

Olmeda writes that the Florida Board of Bar Examiners, which grants membership to the Bar, has asked the state Supreme Court to determine whether it can accept someone who is not in the country legally. The Supreme Court flagged the case as “high profile” last week.

Tom Fitton, president of the conservative watchdog group Judicial Watch, said, “He can’t practice as a lawyer,” Fitton said. “He is not legally able to work in the United States. … It seems to me that it would be an absurdity to give him a Bar card at this point.”

The Sun Sentinel article adds that similar applications are pending for students in California and New York. But Godinez-Samperio, who once described himself as “undocumented, unapologetic and unafraid,” has influential allies who believe his immigration status should not keep him from getting a license to practice law, even though federal statutes would forbid him using that license to earn a living.

Godinez-Samperio has been candid about his status at every opportunity, disclosing it on college and law school applications (his application to law school included an essay titled “The Consequences of my Criminal Childhood,” although being in the country illegally is a civil infraction, not a crime).

Immigration advocates have lobbied Congress to pass the Development, Relief, and Education of Alien Minors (DREAM) Act, which would provide a path to citizenship for undocumented children who were brought to this country by their parents and raised in the United States. Congress has yet to pass such a law.

The Board of Bar Examiners began requiring exam-takers to submit proof of immigration status in 2008, but waived that policy for Godinez-Samperio, who disclosed his status and argued that documentation was not required as a rule for admission to the Bar.

There’s no way of knowing whether any undocumented immigrant was accepted before 2008, and Godinez-Samperio is the first to apply for membership since. Some have suggested Godinez-Samperio can practice law in Florida if he takes on cases pro-bono.

Olmeda concludes his article in saying that Godinez-Samperio, who declined to be interviewed for the Sun Sentinel article, also has the support of his local congresswoman. U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor, D-Tampa, wrote in a letter to the Supreme Court that taxpayers are already investing time and money by educating undocumented students during and after high school. “To deny these students the opportunity to become doctors or lawyers or practice another profession is to deny the state of Florida and all of our neighbors an educated and talented workforce,” she wrote.

Attorney Lars K. Soreide, of Soreide Law Group, PLLC, represents those seeking admittance to the Florida Bar, and existing lawyers, for both Investigative Hearings and Formal Hearings in front of the Florida Bar. For more information about our services please call (888) 760-6552 or visit: www.floridabarhearing.com.

https://www.floridabarhearing.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/soreide-logo-300x183.png 0 0 Editor https://www.floridabarhearing.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/soreide-logo-300x183.png Editor2012-04-16 07:40:342012-04-16 07:40:34Can Undocumented Immigrant Be Accepted to Florida Bar?
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