Doug Ducey signs bill targeting state bar complaints

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In this Thursday, April 15, 2021, file photo, Arizona Republican Gov. Doug Ducey speaks during a bill signing in Phoenix. Ducey (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File)

Gov. Doug Ducey has signed a bill requiring the state bar to pay attorney fees and other costs if the organization seeks to discipline a lawyer and ends up losing.

The Republican governor signed the measure on Monday, hours after Senate Republicans gave final approval in a party-line vote.

Critics warned the measure has the potential to discourage investigations of attorneys accused of ethical violations or other misbehavior.

Republican Sen. Vince Leach introduced the bill after Democratic Secretary of State Katie Hobbs filed a bar complaint against Republican Attorney General Mark Brnovich, which he said had “weaponized” the bar complaint system. Hobbs said Brnovich and lawyers in his office broke attorney ethics rules while representing her in cases related to the 2020 election. Brnovich agreed to a settlement this year with the State Bar of Arizona.

Under the new law, the bar will be required to pay for attorney fees and court costs if it pursues discipline but doesn’t win the case. Leach’s bill originally would have required the bar to also pay for investigation costs, the loss of future earnings, and damage to a lawyer’s reputation, but those provisions were stripped from the bill by the House.

Joel England, executive director of the state bar, told lawmakers the small number of disciplinary cases shows the system has not been weaponized.

He said with nearly 25,000 lawyers in the state, there were 2,885 charges, and 403 were investigated in 2020. He said formal action was taken in 68 cases.

Republished with the permission of the Associated Press.