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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com
An Indianapolis attorney who was recently diagnosed with a mental health condition has been suspended from the practice of law and must participate in recovery services with the Indiana Judges and Lawyers Assistance Program.
The misconduct at issue in In the Matter of: Hilary Bowe Ricks, 49S00-1612-DI-682, centers on Hilary Bowe Ricks’ representation in two post-conviction relief cases, for which she had accepted client retainers. In the first case, Ricks never completed a review of the record, nor did she request the record from the Indiana Court of Appeals. She also did not respond to messages from the client and the client’s mother seeking information about the case and, later, seeking a refund and return of case materials.
Similarly, a year of inaction passed in the second case before the client and a prison volunteer asked Ricks to forward the client’s funds, which were held in trust, to another legal service provider. Ricks also ignored those requests, and both clients filed grievances with the Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission.
Ricks then failed to cooperate with the commission’s investigations, prompting two noncooperation proceedings. She eventually complied after the Supreme Court issued show cause orders, but she acknowledged she did not have an excuse for her failure to timely comply.
Then in 2017, Ricks was diagnosed with panic and depressive disorders, according to the Supreme Court’s order handed down Thursday. Her condition was undiagnosed at the time of her ethical violations, the court said, and she has since begun treatment and is involved with JLAP.
After noting that Ricks has faced discipline for similar conduct in the past in Matter of Ricks, 835 N.E.2d 208 (Ind. 2005), the justices determined she had violated four Indiana Rules of Professional Conduct:
• Rule 1.3, failing to act with reasonable diligence and promptness;
• Rule 1.4(a)(4), failing to comply promptly with a client’s reasonable request for information;
• Rule 1.16(d), failing to refund an unearned fee and to promptly return client case file materials, and;
• Rule 8.1(b), knowingly failing to respond to a lawful demand for information from a disciplinary authority.
The court imposed a 180-day suspension on Ricks, beginning Sept. 6, with 90 days served and 90 days stayed subject to the completion of probation. Ricks must comply with seven probation conditions, including:
• Entering a long-term JLAP monitoring agreement within 30 days;
• Fulfilling all requirements of the monitoring agreement;
• Reporting of her compliance to the commission by JLAP quarterly;
• Submitting a plan naming another lawyer to review her client files and take immediate protective action, if necessary, within 90 days;
• Committing no new violations of the Rules of Professional Conduct;
• Cooperating with the commission promptly and fully, and;
• Reporting probation and/or monitoring agreement violations to JLAP and the commission immediately.
If Ricks violates any of her probation conditions, the commission can petition to revoke her probation, which, if granted, would require her to actively serve the balance of her suspension. In that situation, she could only be reinstated through the procedures laid out in Admission and Discipline Rule 23(18)(b).
Ricks’ suspension is effective Sept. 6, and she is prohibited from taking on new clients between now and then. Her probation will remain in effect until it is terminated pursuant to a petition filed under Admission and Discipline Rule 23(16).
The costs of the proceeding are assessed against Ricks. All justices concurred.
Attorney General Curtis Hill today reiterated his support for expanding the number of early-voting sites in Marion County. He also announced his appeal of a federal court ruling that would circumvent state law.
“In our system of representative government, we must — as a matter of civic duty — ensure that as many people as possible are able to participate in free and fair elections,†Attorney General Hill said. “In every lawful way, we should maximize the convenience and ease with which citizens may cast their ballots. Establishing a plentiful number of early-voting sites is one such strategy.â€
Attorney General Hill praised Marion County officials for their work.
“We have not nor do we intend to interfere with the decision by the Marion County Election Board to add six satellite voting locations,” Attorney General Hill said. “I support the board’s efforts to make voting more accessible to the public. At the same time, my obligation as Attorney General is to defend the laws passed by the General Assembly — such as the Indiana statute requiring a unanimous vote by a county election board in order to establish satellite offices for early voting.”
Staff Report
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS—Gov. Eric Holcomb has released a study on school safety that recommends regular active shooting drills and boosting mental health spending to identify troubled students and enhance services available.
“Ensuring every one of our students has a safe place to learn and grow is of the utmost importance,†Holcomb said in a statement when he released the report Friday. “This assessment is an important step toward helping our schools be better prepared for the unknown.â€
The report, prepared over the past several months in the aftermath of the Parkland, Florida, and Noblesville shootings, has 18 recommendations organized around mental health services, tools and training, and policy changes.
Holcomb said he will immediately take steps to implement some of the recommendations:
In addition to active shooter drills in schools and enhancing mental health services, the report also recommended:
Indiana House Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, Sen. Rodric Bray, R-Martinsville, who is president pro tem-elect of the Senate, and House Minority Leader Terry Goodin, D-Austin, all expressed their willingness to work with the governor on measures to improve school safety.
A team of state leaders and subject matter experts from across the state conducted in-person and phone interviews, online surveys, and community forums to gather feedback for the report. More than 400 responses were collected from school administrators, educators, first responders, public safety officials and others.
The report was compiled by a working group formed by Indiana Department of Homeland Security Director Bryan Langley, in conjunction with David Woodward, the Indiana Department of Education’s Director of School Building Physical Security and Safety.
TheStatehouseFile.com is a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
By Janet Williams
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS—A federal judge Thursday rejected Attorney General Curtis Hill’s attempt to unravel the consent decree reached earlier this summer requiring Marion County to establish satellite voting sites in November and in future elections.
Senior Judge Sarah Evans Barker said Hill’s objections to the consent decree reached between the county election board and Common Cause of Indiana and the local branch of the NAACP are without merit.
Common Cause and the NAACP sued last year to require Marion County to provide more than one location for voters to cast ballots in advance of the election. The consent decree requires the election board to have six satellite voting sites in November.
A final decree, signed off on by all parties and approved by Barker in July, requires the county to have two satellite sites in the primary and five in the general election in future years.
Marion County, which is majority Democratic, was the only county in central Indiana to have only one early voting site, prompting the voting rights lawsuit. The other counties are majority Republican.
Earlier Thursday, Indiana Solicitor General Thomas M. Fisher faced the media to defend the widely criticized decision of his embattled boss, Hill, to jump into the voting case.
“Our goal is rather routine,†Fisher said. “It is to defend the application of Indiana statutes as written.â€
Fisher maintained the consent decree binds future election boards to the agreement. State law requires county election boards to unanimously approve satellite voting sites and the lone Republican member of the Marion County election board had, until the lawsuit, refused to approve it.
Noting that the state had argued that it is against the public interest to enforce a consent decree dictating how local elections are run, Barker said, “That is not a cogent objection; it is the expression of a preference by the Attorney General for noninterference in voting rights cases generally.â€
She added that violations of federal rights justify the imposition of federal remedies.
Julia Vaughn, policy director of Common Cause of Indiana, and Indiana Secretary of State Connie Lawson, the state’s top election official, both blasted Hill’s action.
Vaughn said in a statement that Hill’s motion should be dismissed because it has no merit.
“The Attorney General is trying to disrupt a bipartisan agreement reached after months of negotiations,†she said. “He is wasting taxpayer money on a partisan political fight.â€
Lawson, whose name is on the court papers Hill’s team filed Tuesday, sharply criticized the attorney general for interfering in the case and for not notifying her that he was filing a motion to unravel the consent decree.
Fisher never directly answered questions about why Lawson’s office was never notified, except to say she was dropped as a defendant in the case last year.
A spokesman for Hill’s office said the attorney general will appeal Barker’s order to the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Hill, meanwhile, is being investigated by the state’s inspector general and a special prosecutor on charges that he groped four women at a downtown Indianapolis bar at the end of the 2018 regular session in March. State House and Senate leaders of both political parties as well as Gov. Eric Holcomb have called for Hill to resign. Hill has refused and denies any wrongdoing.
Janet Williams is executive editor of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
MONDAY
“A friend loves at all times, and a brother is born for a time of adversity.†Proverbs 17:17 NIV
TUESDAY
“One who has no sense shakes hands in pledge and puts up security for a neighbor.â€
Proverbs 17:18 NIV
WEDNESDAY
“Whoever loves a quarrel loves sin; whoever builds a high gate invites destruction.â€
Proverbs 17:19 NIV
THURSDAY
“One whose heart is corrupt does not prosper; one whose tongue is perverse falls into trouble.â€
Proverbs 17:20 NIV
FRIDAY
“To have a fool for a child brings grief; there is no joy for the parent of a godless fool.â€
Proverbs 17:21 NIV
SATURDAY
“The wicked accept bribes in secret to pervert the course of justice.†Proverbs 17:23
SUNDAY
“A discerning person keeps wisdom in view, but a fool’s eyes wander to the ends of the earth.â€
Proverbs 17:24
Submitted to the City-County Observer by Karen Seltzer
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A three-run seventh inning propelled the Evansville Otters to a 6-5 victory over the Florence Freedom on Sunday afternoon at Bosse Field in front of 879 fans.
The win gave the Otters the series victory, as Evansville took three out of four against Florence over the weekend.
Travis Harrison got the Otters on the board with an RBI double in the first.
Ryan Long swatted a solo home run in the third, his eleventh home run of the year, to put the Otters ahead 2-0.
Florence scored their first run of the game in the fifth when Keivan Berges singled home a run.
Evansville got that run back in the sixth on a Jeff Gardner RBI double to put the Otters ahead 3-1.
The Otters broke the game open with three runs in the seventh. J.J Gould led off the frame with a double and was brought home on a David Cronin single. After Long was hit by a pitch, Austin Bush chopped a ball over the head of the first baseman to score Cronin from second. Gardner capped off the inning with a sacrifice fly to make it 6-1 Evansville.
Florence got within one run in the ninth thanks to a Berges grand slam, but Alex Phillips came on and struck out the final two hitters to earn his third save of the year and secure the 6-5 victory for the Otters.
Austin Nicely gets the win for Evansville, his sixth of the year. Nicely went five innings, allowing one run on six hits while walking four and striking out three.
Mike Castellani absorbs the loss for the Freedom. Castellani worked three innings, giving up two runs on four hits while striking out one and walking one.
Lemur is a female brown tabby cat! She was the mom of the “Monkey†kittens, who have all been adopted. Lemur is sweet & outgoing, so she is now available at River Kitty Cat Café in downtown Evansville! Her adoption fee is $40 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!
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