Disciplinary charge: AG Rokita charged with three counts of attorney misconduct by an Indiana judicial panel
- By Marilyn Odendahl, The Indiana Citizen
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Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita has been charged with three counts of attorney misconduct by the Indiana Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Commission, which said comments he made about Indianapolis OB/GYN Caitlin Bernard caused “irreparable harm†and “burdened the court system.â€
The disciplinary commission filed the complaint against Rokita with the Indiana Supreme Court Monday. The complaint stems from remarks Rokita made in the days and weeks after The Indianapolis Star reported Bernard had performed an abortion on a 10-year-old Ohio rape victim in June 2022.
Specifically, the commission said the attorney general violated state confidentiality laws by publicly speaking about his office’s investigation into Bernard prior to filing the administrative complaint with the Medical Licensing Board of Indiana.
Rokita, the commission stated in the complaint, breached the confidentiality requirements of Indiana Code section 25-1-7-10(a), which “caused irreparable harm to Dr. Bernard’s reputational and professional image.†Also, the break of confidentiality “burdened the court system and caused additional and logistical issues for the Medical Licensing Board to navigate.â€
As a result, the commission has charged Rokita with violating three Indiana Attorney Rules of Professional Conduct. It has requested that Rokita be disciplined but did not make any recommendation as to what action the Indiana Supreme Court should take.  Sixteen days after declaring “we won†in its fight against Indianapolis OB/GYN Caitlin Berna
In announcing the filing of the complaint, the Indiana Supreme Court emphasized the charges are allegations. The attorney general will have the opportunity to respond to the charges.
A trial-like proceeding may be held looking into the allegations of misconduct, or the commission and Rokita could reach an agreement and present it to the Supreme Court. The justices will ultimately determine if any misconduct has occurred and what sanction is warranted.
Rokita issued a statement, saying he would be filing a response to the complaint Monday. He defended his actions and pointed out that Bernard had been reprimanded and fined by the Medical Licensing Board for violating the Ohio girl’s privacy.
“We will continue defending Indiana’s laws and ensure that licensed medical professionals and other healthcare providers are held accountable when they violate their patients’ privacy and fail to obtain consent,†Rokita said in his statement.
Bernard’s attorney, Kathleen DeLaney of DeLaney & DeLaney in Indianapolis, issued a press release about the disciplinary charges being filed but declined to comment on the specific allegations contained in the complaint.
“Our legal team had no involvement in the recent charges filed and therefore cannot comment on them. We will watch how the Disciplinary Commission process proceeds and let the complaint speak for itself,†DeLaney said in the statement.
DeLaney noted that when the Medical Licensing Board reprimanded Bernard, it also found she did not fail to report child abuse and that she was not unfit to practice medicine, as alleged in the administration complaint filed by Rokita.
Three Rules
In the complaint, the commission highlighted Rokita’s statement he made on national television on July 13, 2022, while his office’s investigation into Bernard was ongoing. Appearing on Jesse Watters show on Fox News, the attorney general described Bernard as an “abortion activist acting as a doctor—with a history of failure to report.â€
The commission found the extrajudicial comment violated the Indiana Attorney Rules of Professional Conduct 3.6(a), which prohibits lawyers from making statements that could prejudice legal proceedings. Also, the commission determined the comment violated Rule 4.4(a), which bars attorneys from taking actions that are only meant to harass a person or from obtaining evidence by using methods that violate the law.
In addition, the commission held that Rokita violated Rule 8.4(a), saying he committed professional misconduct by making statements and/or directing others to make public comments about the investigation into Bernard prior to the matter being referred to the Medical Licensing Board of Indiana.
Rokita is the second Republican attorney general within the past five years to face disciplinary charges. His predecessor, Curtis Hill, was investigated after four women accused him of inappropriately touching them at a party following the end of the 2018 legislative session.
Hill was charged with violating two rules of professional conduct and the “Oath of Attorneys.†The judge who presided over his disciplinary hearing recommended the Indiana Supreme Court suspend Hill’s law license for 60 days without automatic reinstatement. However, the justices, who determined that Hill violated professional conduct rules and committed battery in the case, took away his license for 30 days and then returned it.
Public Comments
The disciplinary case originates from Rokita’s actions last summer in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization which overturned federal protections on abortion.
On July 1, 2022, The Indianapolis Star published an article that included the story of Dr. Bernard performing an abortion on a 10-year-old Ohio rape victim. The story quickly gained national attention, and on July 13, 2022, Rokita started speaking publicly about Bernard and his office’s investigation into her actions.
He first appeared on Watters’ show on Fox News, where he also said his office was “gathering evidence†and “looking at her licensure.â€
Then, in making public a letter he sent to Gov. Eric Holcomb and in a press release, Rokita again stated his office was investigating Bernard.
In September 2022, Rokita talked about the investigation on a Facebook Live broadcast and with local news reporters.
Rokita’s appearances and public statements drew sharp rebukes from the Indiana legal community. Former Indiana University Maurer School of Law Dean Lauren Robel was the first to condemn the attorney general and call for the disciplinary commission to investigate him.
“What General Rokita did, in essence, was identify a private citizen whose political view he disagrees with and suggest repeatedly, on national television, and on the Attorney General’s official website, that she had broken the law, with no evidence to support those claims,†Robel wrote. “If he can throw the entire weight of his office without consequence to attack Dr. Bernard, he can do so to target any private citizen with whom he disagrees. This is the opposite of the rule of law.â€
In November, Bernard and her colleague, OB/GYN Amy Caldwell, filed a complaint against Rokita for his public comments and asked the court to prohibit him from speaking further. Marion County Superior Court Judge Heather Welch denied the motion for preliminary injunction in December 2022 but, in her order, she detailed Rokita’s actions and found he likely violated confidentiality laws by speaking about Bernard.
The commission’s complaint includes a copy of Welch’s order.
Attorneys from Schaerr Jaffe filed a motion to remove the comments about Rokita from Welch’s order. They eventually dropped their request when the judge presiding over the matter said they would have to return to Welch’s courtroom and make their arguments to her.
Disciplinary Process
The disciplinary commission’s investigations are typically secretive. But in a January petition for temporary admission to practice in Indiana, the attorneys from Schaerr Jaffe, a Washington, D.C., law firm, stated they were representing Rokita in the disciplinary matter.
That a complaint with the Indiana Supreme Court against Rokita has been filed signals the disciplinary commission reviewed the investigation into his actions and found “probable lawyer misconduct.â€
If the case proceeds to trial, a hearing officer will be appointed and the commission and Rokita will present their arguments. The hearing officer will make a recommendation to the Indiana Supreme Court, which will make the final determination as to what, if any, discipline will be imposed.
FOOTNOTE: This article was published by TheStatehouseFile.com through a partnership with The Indiana Citizen (indianacitizen.org), a nonpartisan, nonprofit platform dedicated to increasing the number of informed, engaged Hoosier citizens.
Marilyn Odendahl has spent her journalism career writing for newspapers and magazines in Indiana and Kentucky. She has focused her reporting on business, the law and poverty issues.
Dwight Adams, a freelance editor and writer based in Indianapolis, edited this article. He is a former content editor, copy editor and digital producer at The Indianapolis Star and IndyStar.com, and worked as a planner for other newspapers, including the Louisville Courier Journal.Â
This case?
It is about how an OLD MAN RAPED at 10 year-old young girl, and got her pregnant.
This is about a MONSTER raping a 10-year-old girl, and she is pregnant with the child of a OLD MAN MONSTER!
She is a child. WHAT KIND OF PEOPLE ARE YOU, Indiana Voters?
How can you support Rokita on this issue?
Leave that family alone!
The State of Indiana Attorney General should NOT BE INVOLVED HERE.
She is 10-years-old, and was RAPED BY AN OLD MAN.
And is pregnant with the child of a monstrous OLD MAN.
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