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South Dakota, Louisiana Leaders Favor Medicaid Expansion

South Dakota Republican Governor Dennis Daugaard and conservative Louisiana Democratic Governor-Elect John Bel Edwards have come out in favor of the expansion of Medicaid in their states.

JR Ball, a columnist for Nola.com | The Times-Picayune, notes that Louisiana is on track to become the second state in the Deep South to adopt Medicaid expansion. Republican legislators, who control the Louisiana Legislature, have sharply reversed course, now favoring expansion now that there is a change in guard about to take place between Governor Bobby Jindal and Governor-Elect Edwards.

In South Dakota, Daugaard has pitched a plan to expand Medicaid to 55,000 low-income residents, The Huffington Post's Jeffrey Young reports. The governor said that expansion would cost less than what South Dakota expends for health care services American Indians receive outside of the Indian Health Service.

 

Family will share Laura Elliott-Engel’s ‘wonderful life’ through tribute

On a personal note, I'd like to share news of an event my family has organized in honor of our mother, Laura Elliott-Engel. I was always so proud of Mom for getting sober at the age of 28 and then spending the rest of her career helping people recover from addictions herself. We are holding a showing of It's A Wonderful Life in the Olean, New York, community where she was the executive director of the Council on Addiction Recovery Services for 13 years. Mom always said that movie's message of redemption helped save her life when she was still drinking.

This is the full text of the article that the local paper ran about the event:

Laura Elliott-Engel loved the message from the movie “It’s a Wonderful Life” so much that she often told her family that it likely saved her life.

Elliott-Engel’s love of the classic film inspired her children to name an upcoming holiday tribute to their late mother, “It’s A Wonderful Life: Remarks and a Film Showing in Honor of Laura Elliott-Engel.”

The public event, slated to begin at 6:30 p.m. Friday, will be held in Jamestown Community College’s CUTCO Theater at 305 N. Barry St. The event is free, but optional donations will be accepted in support of the Council on Addiction Recovery Services (CAReS), Inc., which provides counseling, intervention and prevention services in Cattaraugus County. Remarks and a film clip about about Elliott-Engel will begin at 6:40 p.m., followed by the movie “It’s a Wonderful Life.”

Elliott-Engel, who died in early November after a brief battle with cancer, was best known in the community as executive director of CAReS from 2002 to 2015. During her tenure with CAReS, Elliott-Engel expanded the agency in the county by adding offices in Machias and Gowanda. The agency also increased its homeless housing to include the Solutions to End Homelessness Program with jail-based services. Additionally, CAReS worked to improve the community’s health through Cattaraugus County’s Healthy Livable Communities Consortium.

Elliott-Engel was named a Woman of Distinction for 2002 by the New York State Senate for her contributions to society. She also received the 2009 Good News Award from the Greater Olean Area Chamber of Commerce.

Her daughter, Amaris Elliott-Engel, and her brother Jeremy, arranged the tribute, as their mother’s funeral services were held in her home community of Rochester. Since their mother spent so much of her professional life in Olean helping people in recovery, they wanted to share a celebration of her life with the community.

Amaris Elliott-Engel said her mother was the face of addiction recovery, as she had just celebrated 40 years of sobriety from alcoholism in June.

“The video we’re going to show of her is an interview when she talked about her experience about being in recovery,” Amaris Elliott- Engel said. “She talked about her sobriety and she didn’t keep it a secret, but I talked about it more than she did.”

She said her mother was her hero because of her candidness with her and others about the disease.

“Her alcoholism was so bad that when she was 28, she almost drank herself to death,” her daughter shared. “She came back from that and went on to have this career where she helped so many other people.”

When Laura Elliott-Engel was in the throes of alcoholism she believed “It’s a Wonderful Life” and the holiday classic’s message of hope and redemption saved her life.

“The message of that movie helped her to get sober,” Amaris Elliott-Engel added. “That’s why we want to show it — and she loved watching it every holiday season.”

Wyndham Settles Data Breach Charges in Precedent-Setting Agreement With FTC

The hotel chain Wyndham Worldwide Corp. has settled data breach charges with the Federal Trade Commission, Reuters' Jonathan Stempel reports. The case was precedent setting because it was a test of the FTC's power to regulate data breaches as unfair or deceptive trade practices.

In the settlement, Wyndham must "establish a comprehensive information security program designed to protect cardholder data including payment card numbers, names and expiration dates," Stempel reports. The regulatory action was taken for breaches in which customers' credit card numbers were stolen.

Supreme Court Justice Faces Discipline Over Porn Emails

Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice J. Michael Eakin is facing misconduct charges because he exchanged emails with images of nude women and jokes that were demeaning to religious groups, women and minorities, The Inquirer's Angela Couloumbis, Craig R. McCoy and Mark Fazlollah report. The Pennsylvania Judicial Conduct Board said those emails had the appearance of impropriety and brought the court into disrepute.

Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane, who is embroiled in her own fight to stay in office, was the one who raised the public profile of the fact that Eakin had exchanged pornographic emails with allegedly racial, misogynistic tones. The board already reviewed Eakin's messages and cleared him in the first review. But the JCB revisited the emails after Kane raised the issue again.

The emails were exchanged between judges, prosecutors, defense lawyers and other law enforcement officials, the Inquirer reports.

Climate Change Agreement Is Public Health Issue

Margaret Chan, director-general of the World Health Organization, opines in the Huffington Post today that achieving an international agreement to halt climate change is a public health issue: "Climate change degrades air quality, reduces food security and compromises water supplies and sanitation. WHO estimates that, each year, more than 7 million deaths worldwide can be attributed to air pollution. Climate change is also causing tens of thousands of yearly deaths from other causes."

Currently, climate change negotiators are in Paris to try to achieve an accord that would limit emissions and thus curb global temperatures from rising no more than another two degrees Celsius.

CFPB: Panic Over Real Estate Disclosure Rule Unfounded

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Richard Corday says that new disclosure rules for mortgage lenders have not turned out to be a problem, HousingWire's Ben Lane reports. In a speech last week, Cordary compared the panic about the TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosures rule to the panic about Y2K. The disclosure rule did not paralyze the market when it came into effect in October, Corday added.

Second Circuit Clarifies Statute of Limitations for Debt Claims

Last month, the Second Circuit clarified when the statute of limitations begins to run under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, The New York Law Journal's Mark Hamblett reports. It is when the bank freezes a debtor's account, not when the notice of debt is served.

The plaintiff in the underlying case is suing attorney Todd Houslanger of Houslanger & Associates for freezing his account when it was allegedly another man with a similar name who was the judgment debtor.

Court Rules Minimum Wage Applies to Public Benefits Work Program

The New York Court of Appeals has ruled that minimum-wage protections apply to public assistance receipients.

New York state is entitled to seize lottery winnings from people who have received public assistance. Courthouse News' Rose Bouboushian reports that the court reasoned that a Vietnam veteran, who received public assistance, was entitled to keep his $10,000 lottery winnings. Taking those benefits would have meant the veteran earned less than minimum wage while he was enrolled in a work experience program. By participating in the program, he was entitled to receive cash assistance and food stamps.

Arson Science Debunked After Decades of Misuse

The ABA Journal's Mark Hansen has a cover story about how two decades of research into the cause of fires has shown that many criminal defendants have been wrongfully convicted of arson-related crimes because of faulty evidence admitted against them. Arson expert John Lentini estimates that there may be a few hundred innocent people in prison for arson.

Arson cases are "particularly difficult to undo," Hansen reports. "Arson cases are not like typical murder or rape cases, where DNA evidence may still exist that not only can establish one’s innocence but also implicate another. In arson cases, evidence is usually consumed in the fire. And a fire investigator can rarely rule out arson as the cause of a blaze, which is often a requirement for overturning a conviction.

Justin McShane, a Pennsylvania lawyer who has won one man's freedom from allegedly killing his mentally ill daughter in a fire, said Pennsylvania and other states should follow the lead of Texas and California in allowing defendants to get new trials if the underlying forensic science used to convict them is shown to be flawed.

Lawyers With Out-of-State Practices Can Run Afoul of UPL Rules

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Tue, 11/17/2015 - 07:53

I wrote a piece for the Connecticut Law Tribune about how telecommuting and taking conference calls from home can make lawyers run afoul of the unauthorized practice of law rules:

There are probably hundreds of lawyers who are licensed in New York and living in Fairfield County in Connecticut. It's become commonplace for these attorneys to log onto their home computers to work on legal documents on behalf of New York clients, to participate in late-night video­conferences from home, or to conduct other business as their commuter train rolls through Norwalk.

But now some lawyers are quietly voicing concerns that under Connecticut Practice Book rules they may be engaged in the unauthorized practice of law (UPL) if they live in Connecticut but are licensed exclusively in New York. One attorney recently told the Law Tribune he made sure to get sworn into the Connecticut bar because he has a home office in Greenwich out of which he serves New York clients.

So are lawyers with virtual offices in Greenwich violating Connecticut's Rules of Professional Conduct? How about someone who regularly telecommutes from a Stamford apartment and takes Metro-North to a Manhattan law firm only once a week? Does the definition of practice of law in Connecticut conflict with the modern realities of lawyering through videoconferencing and email?

"The Rules of Professional Conduct are lagging behind [technology]," said Dove A.E. Burns, a partner at Goldberg Segalla whose professional liability defense practice includes lawyers as clients.

Under Connecticut rules, "the practice of law is ministering to the legal needs of another person and applying legal principles and judgment to the circumstances and objectives of that person." Leslie Levin, a University of Connecticut School of Law professor who studies the legal profession and lawyer discipline, acknowledges that Connecticut does have a "very wide definition of what constitutes the practice of law," meaning that many work-related tasks a New York lawyer might perform from a Connecticut residence could be construed as practicing law.

Levin said that read in a commonsense way, the rule governing UPL, Rule 5.5, is addressing legal advice offered to Connecticut residents. But if it's taken literally, according to attorneys with expertise on ethics issues, many lawyers may be violating the rule. The good news, it would seem, is that disciplinary officials probably will not coming after them anytime soon.

There's no doubt attorneys can run afoul of the disciplinary rules if they are regularly giving advice to clients in a state in which they don't have a true presence, even if as a practical matter they only live a few miles across the border, said Burns. She pointed out that the Delaware Supreme Court recently suspended an attorney from practicing law for two years because he worked out of his home in Pennsylvania. His Delaware presence was a commercial space where his landlord's receptionist did little more than greet visitors and collect the attorney's mail.

Connecticut's UPL rule clearly bars attorneys from making false claims about their licensing status. You "can't hang up a shingle in Connecticut and hold yourself out as authorized to practice law in Connecticut," said Marcy Tench Stovall of Pullman & Comley, who represents attorneys in malpractice litigation and disciplinary matters.

From there, however, the matter becomes more nuanced, raising "philosophical questions," said Stovall, that lead lawyers to parse the meaning of words such as "continuous" and "temporary."

Consider this: In Connecticut, an attorney, even while just giving advice to clients in New York under his New York license, could violate Rule 5.5(b) of the Rules of Professional Conduct, Stovall said. Rule 5.5(b)(1) bans lawyers licensed in other states from establishing a "systematic and continuous presence" in Connecticut in order to practice law.

However, there is a "safe harbor" rule for attorneys licensed in New York or other jurisdictions and who are practicing law in Connecticut only a "temporary" basis. The safe harbor applies, according to the rule, if the lawyer is providing services that arise "out of or are substantially related to the legal services provided to an existing client of the lawyer's practice or in a jurisdiction in which the lawyer is admitted to practice."

But a Connecticut-dwelling attorney doing work for non-Connecticut clients technically could be breaking the rule if they regularly work at home or on their commute through Fairfield County on the way to New York.

"If you read the rule literally, you wouldn't be practicing law on a temporary basis and [thus] not entitled to the safe harbor," Stovall said. She added that, given the ease of long-distance communications in the Information Age, it would be an "absurd result" if a lawyer was disciplined for sitting in a Connecticut home and offering counsel to a New York client. That is a "reflection of how the rules can't keep up with how people practice," she said.

Mark Dubois, who was Connecticut's first chief disciplinary counsel and is now counsel at Geraghty & Bonnano in New London, noted that the Rules of Professional Conduct are based on a 19th-century world in which lawyers were representing clients in the same town. In that era, he said, attorneys from Hartford would never even be representing clients from New Haven, much less New York.

Dubois said many bar regulators judge UPL matters simply by applying the "where-is-your-butt" test. In other words, UPL is determined if an attorney is physically located in a place where he or she is not licensed to practice.

But Dubois said a small number of states have given regulators more flexibility to make judgment calls. Among them is Arizona, he said, where a regulator might try to distinguish between attorneys giving advice about Arizona law when they're not licensed in Arizona, and attorneys who happen to be temporarily staying in a Tucson hotel room who log into their New London computers and give advice to Connecticut clients.

Moving forward, he said, questions for regulators investigating possible UPL violations will include: "Where are you when you're doing [legal work]? Are you where the client is? Where is the predominant effect of your conduct felt? Is it where you are physically?"

While an attorney could be violating UPL rules while doing legal work on a business trip, regulators are unlikely to spend the effort to discipline them, Dubois said. He said they are more concerned about protecting consumers from attorneys who don't know what they're doing and from having their money stolen by dishonest lawyers.

Burns, who commutes from her home in Wilton to a Goldberg Segalla office in midtown Manhattan, agrees that attorneys who rely on technology to do business away from their formal law office have more pressing challenges than aggressive disciplinary officials.

If faced with a professional malpractice lawsuit, she said, lawyers run the risk that they could be violating their insurance policy's "standard of care" clause because they are giving advice about the laws of a state that they don't often work in. A malpractice insurance provider isn't going to like it if an attorney isn't keeping up with the practice of law in the state where she is licensed because she often practices from a remote locations, Burns said.

Then there's the whole matter of cybersecurity. A data breach of confidential information caused by accessing files from an out-of-office location poses a significant liability concern. Lawyers, said Burns, are responsible for maintaining client confidentially "regardless of the pitfalls and failings of technology." 

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