Ivey 1335 rel.PDF (2003)
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BOARD OF PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY
of the
SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE
LANCE B. BRACY WILLIAM W. HUNT, III
CHIEF DISCIPLINARY COUNSEL 1101 KERMIT DRIVE, SUITE 730 CHARLES A. HIGH
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE 37217 SANDY GARRETT
LAURA L. CHASTAIN
DEPUTY CHIEF DISCIPLINARY COUNSEL TELEPHONE: (615) 361-7500 JESSE D. JOSEPH
(800) 486-5714 JAMES A. VICK
BEVERLY P. SHARPE FAX: (615) 367- 2480 THERESA M. COSTONIS
CONSUMER COUNSEL/DIRECTOR E-MAIL: ethics@tbpr.org DISCIPLINARY COUNSEL
RELEASE OF INFORMATION
RE: JAMES MICHAEL IVEY, BPR #16160
CONTACT: SANDY GARRETT
BOARD OF PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY
615-361-7500
January 9, 2003
PARSONS LAWYER PUBLICLY CENSURED
Parsons lawyer James Michael Ivey received a Public Censure on January 6,
2003, by the Board of Professional Responsibility. The censure was issued by the
Board pursuant to Rule 9, Section 8 of the Rules of the Tennessee Supreme Court.
Ivey did not request a hearing in the matter. A former client of Ivey obtained a criminal
warrant charging an acquaintance with theft of two promissory notes. A preliminary
hearing resulted in dismissal of the charges. Thereafter the former client, an alleged
victim, advised the district attorney that she had previously sent Ivey copies of the notes
for safekeeping. The copies had, in fact, been received by Ivey, who did not open a file
or otherwise mark the date of their receipt.
The district attorney contacted Ivey to determine how long he had possessed the
copies, as the district attorney suspected that they were perhaps fabricated. Ivey told
the district attorney that he had been contacted by the client concerning the copies over
a year previously, and that he did not know the actual date of the receipt, but had had
the copies for âsometime.â The district attorney stated he was told by Ivey the copies
were received over a year previously. In part, because of this conversation, the district
attorney obtained an indictment for theft of the notes.
After the prosecution commenced, it was proven that the notes had been
fabricated by the former client, and copies sent to Ivey. Ivey had no part in the
fabrication of the notes, or in instigating the criminal prosecution. The district attorney
sent a TBI investigator to Ivey, and the investigator reported that he was told the copies
were received more than a year previously. The district attorney then dismissed the
theft prosecution and in turn indicted both Ivey and the former client.
Ivey then performed an investigation into the most likely date the copies were
received by him and gave a statement to the TBI in which he stated that the district
attorney had been misled to believe Ivey had possessed the copies for a longer period
that he actually did. The criminal charge against Ivey was dismissed.
Iveyâs actions constitute ethical misconduct in violation of DR 1-102(A)(1)(4)(5)
and (6) of the Code of Professional Responsibility.
LLC:mw
Ivey 1335 rel.doc