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Note: We had intended to present this
to Alberto Gonzales for his previous sycophantic support of official
torture but a new candidate appeared and is much more meritorious.
ed
Allegations
Against Survivors’ Lawyer
N.J. ethics office claiming Fagan misappropriated more than
$400,000 from accounts
January 7, 2005
The
Jewish Week
by Stewart Ain
Edward Fagan, the first
lawyer to sue Swiss banks for hoarding the money of Holocaust
victims and who championed survivors’ rights in insurance and art
cases, has been charged by the New Jersey Office of Attorney Ethics
with looting more than $400,000 from the trust accounts of two
survivors he represented.
Disciplinary action ranges
from an admonition to disbarment.
“The knowing
misappropriation [of funds] is a disbarable offense,” said John
McGill III, the deputy ethics counsel who is overseeing the case.
McGill said state rules
allow his office to refer cases to law enforcement “if a crime has
been committed,” and that it would not be necessary to wait until
the complaint process is completed. It usually takes about a year.
McGill said no referral has been made “at this point.”
Fagan said he had not seen
the complaint. “As soon as I see the information I will retain
counsel and respond,” he said.
When he was interviewed by
McGill’s office last year, Fagan was working from an office in
Short Hills, N.J. A secretary at that office said Tuesday that Fagan
has not worked there for six months.
McGill’s office sent a
certified letter to the Short Hills office, but it was returned
unopened this week. McGill said the post office provided an address
for Fagan in Morris Plains, N.J., and that he has sent another
certified letter, as well as a regular letter, to the attorney
there. McGill said he will give Fagan until Feb. 4 to respond.
If Fagan has not responded
by that date, McGill said he would send another letter giving Fagan
five days to either respond or be found in default.
If Fagan contests the
charges, a three-member panel of the Ethics Committee will hold a
hearing. Its recommendation would be offered to the nine-member
Disciplinary Review Board, whose decision would then be submitted to
the New Jersey Supreme Court for final action.
The allegations against
Fagan include that he deliberately misled the New York State
attorney disciplinary committee when it questioned him about charges
brought by a former client and survivor, Gizella Weisshaus. She
claimed that Fagan had stolen funds from an escrow account
established in the name of her deceased cousin, Jack Oestreicher.
Weisshaus said she
entrusted the funds to Fagan because the attorney told her that he
could get a higher interest rate on the $82,583 in the account.
The New Jersey complaint
alleges that Fagan withdrew money from that account for matters
“unrelated to the Oestreicher client matter. At the time [Fagan]
invaded the Oestreicher estate funds … he knew he lacked the
authority to do so.”
When New York authorities
questioned Fagan in June 1998 about the Oestreicher account, the
complaints said Fagan produced a bank statement from another account
“as proof that the integrity of the estate funds had been
maintained.”
In fact, the complaint
alleges, Fagan showed state investigators a bank statement from
another trust account he controlled. That account was in the name of
Estelle Sapir, a survivor whose complaints against Swiss banks led
them to settle with her for $500,000.
“By providing a copy of
his Summit trust account bank statement … [Fagan] attempted to
deceive the New York disciplinary authorities into believing that he
had maintained the integrity of the Oestreicher estate funds,
knowing that the only funds in that account at the time were those
for the Sapir matter,” according to the complaint.
It is alleged that Fagan
then used Sapir’s money “without authority” to pay a court
judgment against the Oestreicher estate.
“From May 18, 1998, the
date the Sapir settlement funds were deposited into [Fagan’s]
Summit trust account, to April 15, 1999, the date of Sapir’s
death, [Fagan] made 37 disbursements totaling $302,750 by checks
payable to cash and wire transfers to his Summit business account
from Sapir’s funds,” the complaint said. “[Fagan] made the
disbursements … knowing that he lacked the authority to do so.”
The complaint alleges that
other than $1,500 Fagan gave Sapir in June 1998 and $7,300 he
allocated to cover Sapir’s funeral expenses, Sapir systematically
looted her account. In the five months after her death, it is
alleged that Fagan withdrew $124,750 from Sapir’s account that was
paid either in cash or to his own business account.”
It is further alleged that
in August 1999, in order to cover the disbursement of $190,000 to
Sapir’s relatives when he only had $3,330.94 in the Sapir account,
Fagan borrowed $225,000 from a former client and friend.
A spokeswoman for the Sapir
family said she hopes Fagan “comes forward and does the right
thing for everyone if there is money owed to any of the family. This
issue brought up such emotional distress, and this is only adding to
it.”
Weisshaus said Fagan never
“had the right to switch my money.” She said she initially
believed in him, even working in his office for eight months without
pay because “I thought he was working for us.”
McGill said any action
taken against Fagan would be forwarded to New York State
authorities, whose First Department Departmental Disciplinary
Committee would then be expected to submit the decision to the
Appellate Division for its consideration.
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