Overview
In the Matter of Sawyer is an important conviction discipline case addressing moral turpitude per se arising from federal bank fraud–related misconduct, the scope of the State Bar Court’s review beyond the record of conviction, and proportionality in discipline for criminal misconduct not directly committed in the practice of law.
Facts
Respondent pleaded guilty in federal court to a misdemeanor charge of being an accessory after the fact to the submission of false financial information to a federally insured bank in connection with obtaining financing for agricultural business investments.
Respondent provided financial statements and first pages of federal income tax forms for several years that had never been filed with the Internal Revenue Service. These documents were later submitted to multiple banks to support loan applications.
A loan was eventually approved to finance a turkey farm operation, but after the project failed and the loan went into default, the bank discovered the tax returns had not been filed and reported the matter to federal authorities.
Charges
- Criminal conviction involving moral turpitude per se
- Submission of misleading financial documents
Key Legal Principles
1) Conviction of accessory after the fact to bank fraud involves moral turpitude per se
The Review Department held that assisting in concealing false financial representations made to a federally insured bank constitutes moral turpitude per se.
2) Discipline review extends beyond the conviction itself
The State Bar Court is not limited to the specific criminal count of conviction but may consider all surrounding circumstances of the misconduct.
3) Credibility deference depends on type of evidence
The rule requiring deference to a hearing judge’s credibility findings does not apply when testimony exists only in written deposition form.
4) Intent to repay a loan does not mitigate misconduct
A respondent’s belief that a business venture would succeed does not excuse misrepresentations made to obtain financing.
5) Lack of proof of financial falsity affects discipline severity
Because the State Bar did not prove the financial figures themselves were false, discipline was reduced below the presumptive standard.
Aggravation
- Significant financial harm to the lending bank
- Multiple instances of providing misleading documentation
Mitigation
- Sixteen years of discipline-free practice
- Restitution paid
- No clear proof financial statements were false
Outcome
The Review Department reduced the hearing judge’s discipline recommendation, imposing three years’ stayed suspension, three years’ probation, and eighteen months of actual suspension, with full credit for interim suspension.
Sanctions Table
| Issue | Finding |
|---|---|
| Criminal conviction | Moral turpitude per se |
| Scope of review | Includes surrounding misconduct circumstances |
| Mitigation | No prior discipline and restitution |
| Final discipline | 18-month actual suspension (credited by interim suspension) |
