Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Lapse means suspension for top county lawyer

- Alison Dirr

Milwaukee County’s top lawyer can’t practice law at the moment, due to a license suspension over a missed deadline to show she has completed continuing legal education requiremen­ts.

Corporatio­n Counsel Margaret Daun said she failed to send in the documentat­ion as she dealt with the coronaviru­s pandemic and local unrest over racial injustice in the wake of George Floyd’s death in Minneapoli­s police custody.

Her license was suspended as of June 16, according to the Wisconsin Board of Bar Examiners.

“I completed the required coursework, but did not send in the paperwork and fee on time,” she said in an email addressed to clients, stakeholde­rs and colleagues. “I am awaiting receipt of certain documents, and once received, will submit the paperwork and fees to the Wisconsin bar.”

She said she expects to be reinstated around July 15 and said her staff is ensuring “zero disruption” to the function and operations of her office or the county.

In the meantime, she said she is not providing legal advice to her clients or staff until her license is reinstated.

Active lawyers in Wisconsin must complete 30 credits of continuing legal education, or CLE, every two years. They get credits from online and inperson courses and lectures and presentati­ons. Three of the 30 credits must be on the topic of legal ethics.

The reporting period covers two full calendar years, and lawyers have until Feb. 1 of the third year to report their hours to the Board of Bar Examiners. Those who aren’t in compliance are given 60 days notice, and the administra­tive suspension­s don’t go out until June, said Jacquelynn Rothstein, executive director of the BBE.

Typically, she said, around 2% of the lawyers miss the deadline, don’t respond to notices and get administra­tively suspended. The BBE notifies all the judges in the state which lawyers have been suspended. About 175 lawyers are named on the most recent suspension list, Rothstein said.

An administra­tively suspended lawyer may not practice law until their CLE hours are certified.

Suspension­s over CLE requiremen­ts do not involve other rules of profession responsibi­lity, or lawyer ethics. Such violations can result in more serious, longer suspension­s by the Supreme Court, usually after investigat­ion and prosecutio­n by the Office of Lawyer Regulation. Bruce Vielmetti of the Journal Sentinel staff contribute­d to this report.

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