Risk Update

Risk News — Client Confidential Information in Malpractice Matter, Military Lawyer Conflicts Concern, Anti-AML Advocacy

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David Kluft asks: “If Clients A & B are related, can I reveal Client A’s Confidential Information To Defend Myself Against Client B’s Malpractice Suit?” —

  • “A WA attorney separately represented a Father and Son various legal matters. At some point, the lawyer also borrowed money from the Father and the loan was forgiven. After the Father died, the Father’s estate sued the lawyer for breach of fiduciary duty, presumably with the goal of winding back the loan forgiveness.”
  • “The lawyer wanted to prove that the attorney client relationship with the Father ended before the loan, but in order to do that he needed to produce confidential information from the Son’s file, over the objection of the Son, who along with other relatives was supporting the estate’s case.”
  • “The lawyer claimed disclosing the Son’s files qualified for the self-defense exception in Rule 1.6(b)(5), which allows a lawyer to disclose confidential information ‘to establish a claim or defense on behalf of the lawyer in a controversy between the lawyer and the client… or to respond to allegations in any proceeding concerning the lawyer’s representation of the client.'”
  • “The WA Ct. of Appeals disagreed, holding that disclosure of the Son’s confidential information was not covered by the exception because the relevant “client” for purposes of the exception was the estate, not the Son, and there technically was no controversy with the Son.”
  • Decision: here.

Using Military Lawyers as Immigration Judges is Ill-Advised and Potentially Illegal” —

  • “It violates individual rights and is an inappropriate use of the military. The Trump administration’s reported authorization of 600 military lawyers to act as temporary immigration judges would deprive immigrants of a fair hearing and further erode the line between the military and civilian government.”
  • “This is true regardless of the professionalism of the military lawyers. Immigration judges are specially trained administrative judges in the Department of Justice who oversee deportation hearings. In late August, the DOJ issued a rule allowing ‘any attorney’ to be selected as a temporary immigration judge, eliminating the previous requirement that temporary judges have years of adjudicatory, litigation, or immigration experience. Multiple news reports on the Trump administration’s authorization of the use of military lawyers followed in early September.”
  • “In addition, ethical rules are fundamental to the rule of law, but the legal and ethical obligations of military lawyers and immigration judges are in tension. By regulation and guidelines, immigration judges are obligated to be impartial. Military lawyers would be bound by those same rules while serving as immigration judges, but even when sent to the DOJ, JAGs remain bound to follow the Uniform Code of Military Justice which requires JAGs to obey a lawful order. Failing to do so risks career consequences or even court martial. That obligation raises questions about whether JAGs would be placed in a position where it would be impossible to be truly impartial.”
  • “Moreover, under military ethics rules, JAGs can’t act in a way that is prejudicial to the administration of justice, nor can they represent clients with a conflict of interest. If a military attorney’s usual job is to represent the military as a prosecutor or adviser, simultaneously working for a temporary period as a judge — who does not represent the government — potentially puts the officer in a precarious ethical bind.”
  • “A JAG’s legal and ethical obligations to follow orders make it challenging to provide a truly fair hearing to the immigrants in their courtroom, a conundrum with constitutional implications.”

Lawyers reject ‘high risk’ rating for money laundering” —

  • “Classifying legal services providers as ‘high risk’ for money laundering is wrong, anti-money laundering specialists told the Law Society’s economic crime conference last week – amid concern over HM Treasury proposals to bolster the AML regime.”
  • “Legal services providers were assessed as high risk for money laundering in the 2017, 2020 and 2025 national risk assessments published by the Home Office and HM Treasury. The latest assessment states that law firms are attractive to criminals ‘due to perceptions of the sector’s integrity’.”
  • “However, at this week’s conference, Marcus Thompson, a partner at Kirkland & Ellis International who assists corporate clients on anti-money laundering, said he disagreed with the rating. ‘The whole point of becoming a lawyer is the rest of society rightly regards lawyers as people of integrity… who act at a standard above most people in society,’ Thompson said.”
  • “Thompson acknowledged that some sectors of the legal economy are more vulnerable than others, but ‘that does not justify the National Risk Assessment of lawyers being at highest risk of money laundering. I think that’s too simplistic’.”
  • “Amy Bell, chair of the Society’s economic crime taskforce, said law enforcement agencies have been asked to share examples of where they believe solicitors could have prevented criminals from using their services. ‘Until we have seen that data, it is difficult to say, ‘Watch out for this’,’ Bell said.”
  • “Meanwhile, the Society is expected to push back on Treasury proposals that would require banks to take ‘reasonable measures’ to understand the purpose of the pooled client account, gather sufficient information about each client’s business and assess the risk associated with the account.”
  • “Simmons & Simmons partner Amasis Saba, a member of the Society’s taskforce, said the onus will fall on banks to be comfortable about who the beneficial owners are, which could include counterparties. ‘This is an area the Law Society will be pushing back on… Your teams are going to get battered by requests. If you have multiple banks, [that means] multiple requests,’ Saba said.”
Risk Update

Law Firm Conflicts Developments — Disqualification Under Former Client Conflict Rule, IP Practice Conflicts Cause Lawyer Laterals

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Federal Court Addresses Standing to Bring Disqualification Motion under Former Client Conflict Rule” —

  • “The federal district court in Seattle recently highlighted a key procedural requirement for most disqualification motions based on asserted former client conflicts: The party bringing the motion must show that they were, in fact, a former client of the lawyer or law firm targeted. “
  • Thompson v. Seattle Public Schools, 2025 WL 2654650 (W.D. Wash. Aug. 8, 2025) (unpublished), involved employment discrimination claims against the defendant school district. The lead lawyer for the school district had earlier investigated employment claims by the plaintiff against another local school district. The plaintiff argued that the lawyer’s earlier investigation constituted a former client conflict under RPC 1.9 that warranted disqualification.”
  • “The court noted that regardless of whether the two matters shared any common facts, the plaintiff lacked standing to bring a disqualification motion against the lawyer because the plaintiff had never been a client of the lawyer. The court reasoned that RPC 1.9 on its face is predicated on the fact that the lawyer or law firm involved had formerly represented the client. Disqualification motions for conflicts, in turn, are ordinarily reserved solely for current or former clients of the law firm involved—usually framed under the procedural requirement of ‘standing.’ Lacking that here, the court denied the motion. The court also later denied reconsideration at 2025 WL 2653675 (W.D. Wash. Sept. 16, 2025) (unpublished). “
  • “Although Thompson is an ‘unpublished’ decision, the federal court in Seattle discussed standing in the disqualification context for conflicts generally in the relatively recent reported decision of United States Fire Insurance Company v. Icicle Seafoods, Inc., 523 F. Supp.3d 1262 (W.D. Wash. 2021).”

Rate Sensitivity, Conflicts Continue to Loom Over Big Law IP Practices” —

  • “The exit of 21 intellectual property litigators from Ropes & Gray for Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton last week is one of the latest group moves in the practice area this year, as some law firms decide to step back from the practice while others are taking advantage of recruiting top talent in a shifting Big Law environment. Among a number of IP litigator moves in the past year, Weil, Gotshal & Manges picked up at least six IP litigators from Latham & Watkins, and two IP Willkie Farr & Gallagher IP litigators moved to Gemini Law, a boutique based in New York.”
  • “Some observers point to increasing client demand in some corners of IP law for law firms that already have built-out practices and intersecting practices for blue-chip clients. Still others point to potential conflicts or higher billing rate pressure in some IP litigation, compared with other Big Law practices, leading many IP lawyers to move to smaller or slightly less profitable law firms. IP litigators have said that charging elevated premiums to IP clients has forced some attorneys to abandon their firms for ones that allow for lower rates.'”
  • “Besides rate pressure, conflicts may also prompt firms to step back more from IP litigation, said law firm consultant Lisa Smith, a principal with Fairfax Associates.'”
  • “‘Firms are taking a look at IP from a couple of perspectives. Certainly, one is a rate perspective. Some of the prosecution work, in particular, is not always a fit for an Am Law 50 firm. The litigation is still a desirable practice, but conflicts get in the way. That’s where we see it just doesn’t fit,’ she said.'”
    Conflicts can arise easily, she said, because IP litigation often involves going after competitors in a particular industry sector, so it can be problematic for a firm that represents multiple companies in a sector.'”
  • “William Munck, global managing partner of Dallas-founded technology firm Munck Wilson Mandala, said ‘nobody is backing off IP litigation,’ and his firm is seeing as much as it always has.’ However, he acknowledged seeing practice groups move from a ‘mega-firm’ to a smaller firm, because they can compete with lower leverage and the efficiency of using AI. ‘With AI tools, firms like ours can now compete with any project that’s out there,’ he said.'”
jobs

BRB Risk Jobs Board — New Business Intake Assistant (Burr & Forman)

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This week, we’re pleased to highlight a second job opening at Burr & Forman (following its earlier Conflicts Attorney posting). They’re also looking for a: “New Business Intake Assistant” —

  • Burr & Forman LLP has an immediate opening in our Columbia, SC or Birmingham, AL office for a full-time New Business Intake Assistant.
  • This position will support the firm’s New Business Intake Department through the screening of new and existing clients for potential conflicts, performing due diligence on new business opportunities, and ensuring compliance with the Rules of Professional Conduct and client outside counsel guidelines.


KEY CONTRIBUTIONS

  • Assist New Business Intake team with processing new matter requests in the firm’s conflicts software.
  • Perform background checks and other due diligence related to new matters.
  • Review new matters for accuracy and completion, confirming that required documents such as engagement letters, outside counsel guidelines, and waivers are attached.
  • Complete data entry of new matters into the firm’s conflicts software.
  • Perform general client matter maintenance, including updating client addresses, names, or corporate trees.
  • Track and follow up on the status of executed engagement letters.
  • Close matters in the firm’s billing and conflicts systems.
  • Assist with outside counsel guidelines which may include tasks such as uploading and integrating documents to an outside counsel management database and following up with attorneys to confirm that client outside counsel guidelines are the most recent version.
  • Other responsibilities as needed.


THE ESSENTIALS

  • Two to five years of legal experience, preferably with New Business Intake in a law firm.
  • Bachelor’s degree or equivalent combination of education, training, and experience.
  • Experience with Intapp and Aderant preferred.
  • Proficiency with Microsoft Word and Outlook.
  • Highly organized, detail-orientated, and proactive with a desire to take ownership.
  • Balance competing priorities and work effectively in a fast-paced environment, exercising patience and professionalism during stressful situations.
  • Ability to work independently and with a team.
  • Strong verbal and written communication skills.
  • Some overtime may be required.


About Burr & Forman

  • Just as we recruit talented attorneys, we also seek and reward talented professional support staff. Our support staff is critical to client service efforts, and the service we provide our clients is critical to the life of our firm. Knowing this, we want to make the lives of the people who work here better. We want you to love your job; we want you to be enthusiastic about coming to work every day. Burr & Forman is recognized across the Southeast by various publications as a “Best Place to Work” and “Healthiest Employer.”
  • Burr & Forman is a large firm, but we work hard to keep a small firm mindset. Burr is an energetic and engaging place to be, and is fulfilling on many levels. Here, you’ll get a chance to make a difference for our clients and for the community in which you live. Each year, the firm sets aside a week to honor the efforts of our staff. Staff Appreciation Week often includes a catered breakfast, an afternoon desert and coffee bar, gift cards, and a catered lunch.

See the complete job posting for more details on the job and to apply for this position.

 

And if you’re interested in seeing your firm’s listings here, please feel free to reach out

Risk Update

Risk Developments — Treasury v DOJ Not a Disqualifying Conflict as US is “One Client,” Fake Citation Compliance Falls to Opposing Counsel,

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Another interesting find from David Kluft: “Can the whole DOJ be disqualified if different government agencies have adverse interests?” —

  • “A VA relator filed a qui tam action alleging illegal activities by five defense contractors and the Department of Defense in how contracts were awarded.”
  • “He argued that the Attorney General should be disqualified from intervening on behalf of the United States, because it had obligations to both the U.S. Treasury (which was harmed by the illegal activities) and to the DOD (which he alleged was in on the illegal activities).”
  • “The Court rejected the argument because the United States was a single client for conflict analysis. Also, the relator failed to identify a particular government attorney with this conflict, and in any case DOJ attorney conflicts are not imputed to the entire DOJ.”
  • Decision: here.

New York State Bar “Opinion 1284 (09/16/2025) Multi-Jurisdictional Practice; Referral Fees; Division of Fees” —

  • Topic: Multi-Jurisdictional Practice; Referral Fees; Division of Fees
  • Digest: Lawyers admitted in New York and a foreign jurisdiction who associate with a lawyer admitted only in the foreign jurisdiction may divide a fee with that lawyer because Rule 1.5(g) explicitly permits lawyers associated in the same law firm to share fees. But the New York-licensed attorneys in the firm must exercise supervision pursuant to Rule 5.1 over the non-New York partner to the extent such partner’s conduct implicates the New York Rules of Professional Conduct.

A New Wrinkle in AI Hallucination Cases: Lawyers Dinged for Failing to Detect Opponent’s Fake Citations” —

  • “A new decision from the California Court of Appeals adds an intriguing dimension to the growing body of AI hallucination sanctions cases, raising the question of a lawyer’s duty to detect fabricated, AI-generated citations — not in the lawyer’s own filings, but in an opponent’s.”
  • “While the court did impose a $10,000 sanction on the attorney who filed two appellate briefs containing fake citations, it also declined to award attorneys’ fees or costs to the opposing counsel, because of counsel’s failure to report the fake citations to the court or even to detect them. That makes this what may be the first judicial decision to touch on on whether lawyers have a duty to detect and report their opponents’ AI-generated fake citations.”
  • “The attorney, Amir Mostafavi, used ChatGPT and other AI tools to ‘enhance’ his appellate briefs, then failed to verify the citations before filing. The court found that 21 of 23 case quotations in his opening brief were fabricated, along with many more in the reply brief. Some cases did not discuss the topics for which they were cited, and others did not exist at all.”
  • “‘Nearly all of the legal quotations in plaintiff’s opening brief, and many of the quotations in plaintiff’s reply brief, are fabricated,’ the court said.”
  • “But what makes Noland unique is the court’s explicit decision not to award attorneys’ fees to the opposing counsel, despite finding the appeal frivolous and despite opposing counsel’s request for such an award. The court explained:”
  • ” ‘We decline to order sanctions payable to opposing counsel. While we have no doubt that such sanctions would be appropriate in some cases, in the present case respondents did not alert the court to the fabricated citations and appear to have become aware of the issue only when the court issued its order to show cause.'”
  • “Although the court did not elaborate beyond that statement, its reasoning raises the question: What is the role of opposing counsel in policing AI hallucinations? Put another way: What is a lawyer’s responsibility to detect and report an opponent’s use of hallucinated citations?”
  • “The court appears to suggest that had opposing counsel spotted the fake citations and alerted the court, they might have been entitled to be awarded sanctions. Conversely, their failure to detect the fabrications made them undeserving of compensation.”
  • “But in the AI era, could it be that lawyers have a heightened responsibility to check their opponents’ citations? Does the responsibility now extend not just to the lawyer’s clients, but to the courts?”
  • “It is fair to say, I think, that the Noland court’s denial of attorney fees to defendants who failed to spot obvious fabrications hints at an evolving standard of professional competence.”
  • “In denying opposing counsel’s request for attorneys’ fees, the Noland court appeared to fault counsel on two counts: their failure to alert the court to the fabricated citations, and their failure to even notice them in the first place.”
  • “The Noland court’s decision seems to suggest that, at minimum, lawyers who spot AI hallucinations and alert the court may be rewarded (or at least may be eligible to be reward), while those who miss them may not be entitled to fee-shifting even when the opposing brief is ultimately sanctioned.”
  • “While Noland appears to be the first case to explicitly address opposing counsel’s role in detecting AI hallucinations, it likely won’t be the last. As AI-generated fake citations become more sophisticated and potentially harder to detect, courts will need to develop clearer standards about what level of diligence opposing counsel should exercise.”
  • Decision: here.
Risk Update

DEADLINE APPROACHING — Risk Compensation Survey Reminder

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We’re in the home stretch for the 2025 risk compensation survey.

We have 80+ participants and 430+ data points. 

I am still holding the “end of September” deadline, as it takes a few weeks to generate and distribute reports. That means this closes next week.

(If you need help or have questions, please feel free to reach out to me directly!)

If you haven’t participated yet and would like to receive a copy of the eventual report / personal benchmark, please do!

  • Background details on the survey are here, in case you missed that update (or the big, bold reminder in the daily emails).
  • A direct link to the survey is: here.
  • And for those of you who want to help, please do pass on details to your internal and external colleagues, and feel free to like/re-share our LinkedIn post (for the few risk professions who aren’t already reading the blog)

 

Thanks for reading. Regular risk updates will be back tomorrow!

Risk Update

Cakes and Cut Deals — Chocolate Cake Not a Conflict, Deal-cutting Firms Facing Administration,

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David Kluft notes: “If the judge exchanged a chocolate cake recipe with opposing counsel’s mom, can I get her recused?” —

  • “In a TN civil bench trial, the transcript began with a partial conversation between defense counsel and the judge about a chocolate cake recipe, and a strange reference by the judge that she had already ‘told [plaintiff’s counsel] about the chocolate cake recipe,’ followed by laughter.”
  • “The ‘chocolate cake recipe’ conversation was referencing the fact that the judge’s son and defense counsel were best friends as children in the 1980s, and the judge had exchanged a cake recipe with defense counsel’s mom, but then the families fell out of touch.”
  • “This relationship was apparently disclosed prior to trial, but it was not captured on the transcript. Plaintiff did not move to recuse before trial, but did so after he didn’t like the judgment. Plaintiff claimed that bringing up the chocolate cake recipe relationship 10 seconds before trial started was essentially an unfair ambush that caught him unaware.”
  • “On appeal, the TN Supreme Court affirmed denial of the recusal motion, holding that the plaintiff did not timely move for recusal, that the mere existence of a friendship between a judge and a lawyer is not enough for recusal, and that a friendship between the judge’s son and defense counsel that ended thirty years earlier was not enough to raise a legitimate question about the judge’s impartiality.”
  • Decision: here.

Some law firms that cut deals with Trump take cases opposing his administration” —

  • “When nine U.S. law firms struck agreements with President Donald Trump in March and April to head off a crackdown on their business, it prompted broad concern that the deals would deter them from taking cases against his policies. Months later, at least four of them are involved in lawsuits opposing Trump’s administration in cases involving transgender rights, immigration, tariffs and wind power, court records show.”
  • “The four firms are Latham & Watkins; Willkie Farr & Gallagher; Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom; and Milbank. They represent clients that have sued the administration since May, after the agreements were reached.”
  • “It is unclear whether these four firms or others may still be steering clear of certain cases for fear of drawing Trump’s ire or imperiling their agreements with the Republican president. Some legal experts said law firms may be wrestling with competing pressures, since representing clients against the government is a key driver of business and prestige.”
  • “‘A lot of litigation is opposed to the federal government,’ said Michael McCabe, a business lawyer who advises other attorneys on ethics matters. ‘All of that work is an important part of a law firm economy.'”
    “A Reuters investigation in July found that dozens of major law firms, wary of retaliation, have broadly scaled back pro bono work, workplace diversity initiatives and litigation that could place them in conflict with Trump. Reuters also found that top firms had pulled back from litigation against the U.S. government.”
  • “Legal industry experts said the lawsuits involving the four firms that have reached agreements with Trump include the kinds of matters large firms cannot easily give up, serving important clients or spearheaded by key lawyers at the firms.”
Risk Update

Risk Updates — Opposing Form Counsel Not Conflicted, Some Say Accounting Private Equity Deals Skirt States’ Rules, School District Keeps Firm Facing Conflict Charge

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David Kluft asks: “If opposing counsel needs to prove my income in 2023, and she learned my income while representing me in 2021, does she have a conflict?” —

  • “An AL lawyer briefly represented a man in a lease dispute in 2021. In 2023, the lawyer represented a party adverse to the same man in a custody and child support trial. The man moved to disqualify the lawyer because, although the lease dispute was otherwise unrelated to the custody dispute, the lawyer did learn information about the man’s income in 2021, and his income was relevant to the issue of child support.”
  • “The Court of Appeals acknowledged that this might have created a former client conflict of interest under Rule 1.9. However, it turns out the man changed jobs in between the two cases, so anything the lawyer knew about his income back in 2021 had become irrelevant. Motion denied.”
  • Decision: here.

Uvalde CISD votes to keep law firm amid conflict of interest concerns” —

  • “The Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District voted to continue to use legal services from a law firm that also represented a former officer facing charges in connection with the Robb Elementary shooting, despite concerns of a conflict of interest.”
  • “On Monday night, the UCISD board voted to continue to use Thompson & Horton legal services, as assigned by the district. The board also authorized the superintendent to obtain an independent ethics attorney to review ‘any actual or potential conflict of interest’ related to the Robb Elementary litigation.”
  • “In addition, the board passed a motion to waive attorney-client privilege to the independent attorney to produce Thompson & Horton’s conflict of interest ethics analyst.”
  • “‘We’ve been trying to do what’s right, but you’re only as good as your legal team,’ trustee Jesse Rizo said. ‘We’ve been failed…time and time again.'”
  • “Walsh Gallegos represented the district during a lawsuit from KSAT and other media organizations to make the records public, as the district had sought to withhold documents and information connected to the massacre. Two teachers and 19 students died in the shooting on May 24, 2022.”
  • “Court records show that Thompson & Horton attorneys represented former UCISD officer Adrian Gonzales and current UCISD board Vice President JJ Suarez in a separate federal lawsuit related to the shooting filed by several families of the victims.”
  • “The school board voted to release all records in July and end the lawsuit after a Texas appeals court ruled in favor of KSAT and the other news outlets.”

Private Equity Deals Leave State Accounting Boards on Sidelines” —

  • “State regulators are sounding the alarm as private equity-backed accounting firms test the limits of longstanding rules and laws designed to protect the objectivity of licensed CPAs. Firms that have cut PE deals rely on a complex legal structure that has touched off a cascade of ethics and professional conduct concerns. State regulators fear the evolving ownership models could erode the value of professional accounting licenses and ultimately undermine the capital markets that depend on auditors’ work.”
  • “State laws hamper regulators’ ability to oversee the new arrangements because of the narrow scope of firm licensing requirements—a gap some state boards aim to close.”
  • “‘It’s a very profit-driven, short-term ownership structure,’ said Haley Lyons, chair of the Oregon Board of Accountancy. ‘How do we ensure long-term relationships for members of the public? How do we ensure quality standards are upheld over time?'”
  • “The effort to bolster oversight comes as a rising number of US accounting firms have cut deals with third party investors in the last six years, with nearly half of the top 30 firms now at least partially owned by private equity.”
  • “The volume and speed of the ownership overhauls has caught boards of accountancy flat-footed as they look to enforce state ownership and ethics requirements for licensed CPA firms meant to ensure companies and private individuals work with a dependable, independent accountant.”
  • “Firms themselves are looking for more guidance. Grant Thornton Advisors LLC, one of the biggest US firms with private equity ownership, said in its latest transparency report that it put in place its own safeguards to ensure its auditors make critical decisions regarding promotions, staffing and its client roster. But the firm and others are calling for updated conflict of interest rules to help manage a complex mix of threats to their independence.”
    “The largest private equity-backed accounting firms operate nationwide and are licensed in multiple states, making it harder for individual states to police requirements that at least 51% of a registered firm’s owners are credentialed CPAs. In some cases, regulators don’t know that a firm has new non-CPA owners.”
  • “The difference for private equity-backed firms is they have a contractual agreement spelling out what the firm has to achieve in order to earn periodic payments from the outside investors, said Joe Tarasco, CEO of Accountants Advisory Group LLC.”
  • “Industry watchers fear the profit targets common among private equity-backed businesses might encourage auditors to take shortcuts or accept work that falls outside their qualifications.”
  • “State accounting boards are also monitoring an industry ethics committee that is working to provide clearer guidance as firms navigate potential conflicts of interest among their auditors, the PE-backed business, and the universe of companies also held by their outside investors.”
  • “An initial proposal from the American Institute of CPAs ethics body doesn’t go far enough to address the pressures CPAs will face to meet their investors’ demands, state regulators have told the committee.”
  • “‘The guidance cannot resolve a fundamental structural issue: the inherent conflict between private equity investment objectives and professional independence requirements,’ the Washington State Board of Accountancy in a letter to the committee. The board didn’t respond to a request for comment.”
  • “Firms should set up a framework to preserve the independence of their accountants before any deals close, Grant Thornton said in a statement to Bloomberg Tax.”
  • “Many state regulators want to see the ethics committee’s approach before revising their own licensing requirements.”
  • “‘I haven’t seen a case where the existence of private equity on the attest side of an audit practice has resulted in a negative impact,’ said Mullen, who serves on the Virginia board. ‘This is not to say that we will wait until that problem occurs. We won’t.'”
jobs

BRB Risk Jobs Board — Conflicts Attorney (Burr & Forman)

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Our latest job listing comes from Burr & Forman, who are looking for a: “Conflicts Attorney” —

  • Burr & Forman has an immediate opening for a Conflicts Attorney located in our Birmingham, Columbia, or Tampa office.
  • This position will support the firm’s risk management efforts with a focus on new matter intake; lateral hire screening; client background screening; resolution of conflicts of interest including waivers as needed; engagement letters; and Outside Counsel Guidelines.
  • The Conflicts Attorney will work closely with many individuals across the firm, including the Risk Management team, attorneys and legal support.


KEY CONTRIBUTIONS

  • Assist in supervision of conflicts of interest and new client and new matter intake processes as well as assisting department personnel carrying out these functions
  • Develop expertise on conflicts rules and approaches in specific practice areas
  • Serve as Subject Matter Expert (SME) on the firm’s conflicts and new business intake system, as well as client due diligence research
  • Facilitate the timely resolution of potential conflicts problems for attorneys across the firm
  • Respond to conflict inquiries; interfacing with professionals and legal assistants at all levels of seniority to confirm the status of existing or pending transactions and resolve identified conflict issues
  • Assist in preparation and follow-up of both engagement letters and waiver letters
  • Advise attorneys and staff on the Rules of Professional Conduct, including conflicts, and assist in adherence to such rules and firm policies when drafting, reviewing and coordinating client engagement and conflict waiver letters
  • Assist in reviewing terms of engagement, including outside counsel guidelines, for conflicts and business issues
  • Assist with communicating firm policies and procedures relating to conflicts and intake and make recommendations for changes when appropriate
  • Assist in building and tracking a database of identified business conflicts and other applicable data
  • Other responsibilities as needed


THE ESSENTIALS

  • J.D. degree from accredited law school and member in good standing of the state bar
  • 3+ years of legal experience working with conflicts and knowledge of conflict rules
  • Experience with Intapp a plus
  • Highly organized, detail-orientated, proactive with a desire to take ownership
  • Balance competing priorities and work effectively in a fast-paced environment, exercising patience and professionalism during stressful situations
  • Ability to work independently and with a team
  • Strong verbal and written communication skills
  • Ability to maintain effective relationships with a diverse group of attorneys, staff, clients and outside contacts
  • Some travel may be required


About Burr & Forman

  • Just as we recruit talented attorneys, we also seek and reward talented professional support staff. Our support staff is critical to client service efforts, and the service we provide our clients is critical to the life of our firm. Knowing this, we want to make the lives of the people who work here better. We want you to love your job; we want you to be enthusiastic about coming to work every day. Burr & Forman is recognized across the Southeast by various publications as a “Best Place to Work” and “Healthiest Employer.”
  • Burr & Forman is a large firm, but we work hard to keep a small firm mindset. Burr is an energetic and engaging place to be, and is fulfilling on many levels. Here, you’ll get a chance to make a difference for our clients and for the community in which you live. Each year, the firm sets aside a week to honor the efforts of our staff. Staff Appreciation Week often includes a catered breakfast, an afternoon desert and coffee bar, gift cards, and a catered lunch.

See the complete job posting for more details on the job and to apply for this position.

 

And if you’re interested in seeing your firm’s listings here, please feel free to reach out

Risk Update

Conflicts News — NJ Comptroller Report Alleges Law Firm Conflicts, Appeals Court Remembers Pepperidge Farm Conflicts Concerns

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Plaintiffs’ atty family ties trash class action vs Pepperidge Farm” —

  • “A state appeals panel has pulled the plug, for now, on a class action lawsuit accusing snack food maker Pepperidge Farm of violating Illinois’ biometrics privacy law, as appellate justices said a Cook County judge was wrong to green light the lawsuit even though the lead plaintiff’s daughter worked as an attorney at one of the law firms leading the lawsuit.”
    “In the ruling, the justices said Loftus should not have allowed the class action to go forward without at least asking more questions about potential conflicts of interest among the plaintiffs’ lawyers in the case.”
  • “In particular, the justices noted that the named plaintiff in the action, Tyrone Brewer, who was to act as the class representative, is father to Celetha Chatman, one of two members of the Chicago law firm, known as Community Lawyers, which was approved by Loftus to serve as class counsel to lead the action. According to court documents, Chatman works at the firm alongside her law partner, attorney Michael Wood.”
  • “While Chatman is not listed as a ‘class counsel’ on the case, Wood is, the appellate justices noted. And, they said, that should have raised significant concerns about potential conflicts of interest.”
  • “‘Here, we conclude that certification was unreasonable given the risks to the class arising from the fact that the sole representative plaintiff is Chatman’s father, as well as the relationships between Chatman and the attorneys appointed as class counsel,’ the appellate justices wrote.”
  • “‘… Significantly, the court explicitly and correctly recognized that the continued involvement of plaintiff’s daughter as class counsel posed a conflict of interest that might harm unrepresented class members. It hypothesized that plaintiff (Chatman’s father) might decline a settlement offer that would otherwise be in the best interest of the class members, because of an interest in maximizing attorneys’ fees for class counsel, including his daughter. In recognition of this conflict, it precluded Chatman from serving as class counsel.”
  • “The lawsuit accused Pepperidge Farm of allegedly violating the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) by allegedly requiring employees to scan their hands to verify their identities to gain entrance to the company’s bakery facility in suburban Downers Grove.”
  • “In May 2022, the plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed their lawsuit in federal court, but immediately refiled their claims in Illinois state court in Cook County Circuit Court. The new complaint identified only Drew as Brewer’s lawyer. According to court documents, Drew also has a past affiliation with Chatman’s firm, as a former law clerk at the firm.”
  • “However, when the plaintiffs filed their request for class certification in April 2023, the new motion included two additional lawyers, including Wood, of Community Lawyers, and Daniel Brown, of the firm of Williams Barber & Morel, of Chicago.”
  • “In her approval, Loftus specifically addressed Chatman’s involvement in the case, noting she was Brewer’s daughter and expressly forbidding her from taking part in the case. However, she still granted the motion to name Chatman’s law partner, Wood, and Chatman’s firm as class counsel. Loftus also named Drew as class counsel, despite his past affiliations with Chatman and Wood and their firm.”
  • “Pepperidge Farm appealed, arguing the certification was improper because of the clear potential for conflict of interest in allowing Chatman’s firm to represent Chatman’s father in a class action potentially worth many millions of dollars, or more.”
    “On appeal, the First District justices agreed the risk of conflict of interest was too high in this case. The decision was authored by Justice Aurelia Pucinski. Justices Terrence J. Lavin and Cynthia Y. Cobbs concurred in the ruling.”
  • “The justices noted Loftus’ decision ignored longstanding precedent that should exclude not only Chatman, but her firm, as well.”
  • “‘… We are troubled that the court failed to conduct an adequate factual inquiry to assess whether the other attorneys could remain as class counsel, given their relationships with Chatman,’ Pucinski wrote for the panel.”
  • “The justices further noted their concerns over the ethics of the attorney arrangement in the case were bolstered by past potential ethics violations identified against Chatman and Wood by a federal judge in other cases. Specifically, Chatman and Wood were admonished by federal judges ‘concerning their misconduct in fabricating (Fair Debt Collection Practices Act) cases for the purpose of collecting attorney’s fees.’ A federal judge in 2020 threatened them with ‘severe sanctions’ … ‘should that conduct occur in the future.'”

Comptroller report alleges Norcross-founded firm violated disclosure, conflict of interest laws” —

  • “The state’s acting comptroller released a searing report against an insurance firm founded by Democratic South Jersey power broker George E. Norcross on Tuesday, accusing Conner Strong & Buckelew of violating disclosure laws and improperly influencing public contracting processes. “
  • “Acting Comptroller Kevin Walsh said Conner Strong & Buckelew and affiliated firms steered public contracts toward themselves via conflicts of interest. A spokesperson for Norcross called the report politically motivated and vehemently denied wrongdoing.”
  • “‘There is no clearer conflict of interest than when a company writes the RFP, reviews the bids, and then steers the contract to itself,’ Walsh said in a press release. ‘What makes this worse is that the vendor concealed from the State and its public entity clients that it was operating on all sides of contracting processes that are supposed to protect taxpayer funds.'”
  • “Conner Strong & Buckelew is one of the country’s 20 largest insurance brokerage firms. The comptroller’s office said the findings came after a routine review of HIF procurement proposals. The HIFs at the center of the investigation represent some 40,000 local government employees and about 109,700 total enrollees.”
  • “The report says municipalities in the state are allowed to form health insurance funds (HIFs) to provide health insurance to employees and pool risk across a whole region to lower costs. The report found Conner Strong & Buckelew and its ‘alter ego,’ PERMA, ‘improperly gained control’ over HIFs’ contracting processes, allegedly competing for and winning the same government contracts they helped write.”
  • “‘CSB and PERMA purport to be separate, independent entities linked only by a parent company. CSB generally serves as program manager, acting as broker and underwriter for insurance funds, while PERMA is contracted as the administrator, managing day-to-day operations for HIFs. … [The report] found, however, CSB and PERMA function as one entity, with PERMA under CSB’s supervision, sharing leadership and employees,’ the report’s announcement states.”
  • “The report also accused Conner Strong & Buckelew of fabricating the existence of a public insurance entity billed Hi Fund.”
Risk Update

Disqualifications Debated — Estate Matter Raises Former Client Conflicts Clash, New Zealand Supreme Court Denies Conflict of Interest Appeal

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Colorado justices tell Arapahoe County judge to reconsider disqualification of law firm from case” —

  • “The Colorado Supreme Court on Monday directed an Arapahoe County judge to reconsider his prior decision to remove a law firm from a civil lawsuit due to a conflict of interest. In an unsigned Sept. 8 order, the justices laid out specific issues the judge needed to examine before concluding that the work an attorney performed years ago for one set of litigants precluded his new law firm from representing the opposing litigants in a different lawsuit.”
  • “In 2016, the family of oil and gas executive Jack Grynberg filed suit over the ownership and control of his companies. Evidence indicated Grynberg’s cognitive decline resulted in him falling victim to scams. Grynberg, who died in 2021, lost the litigation.”
  • “In 2022, the administrator of his estate filed a malpractice suit against Dorsey & Whitney LLP, the law firm that represented Grynberg. The complaint alleged they ‘pursued scorched-earth litigation tactics’ that isolated Grynberg from his family and prevented him from receiving medical care for his cognitive issues.”
  • “Two of Grynberg’s adult children moved to intervene and sought to remove the lawyers at Richards Carrington, LLP, who were representing Dorsey & Whitney. They argued one partner at the defense firm, Michael Mulvania, represented them in the prior litigation and there was a ‘substantial risk’ he possessed confidential information that was relevant to the new lawsuit.”
  • “In an April 8 order, District Court Judge Don J. Toussaint agreed with the Grynberg siblings.”
  • “‘Mulvania substantially participated in the 2016 lawsuit. Mulvania billed 812.5 hours for work, and he was privy to privileged and confidential information throughout his representation in that matter,’ wrote Toussaint. ‘Based on the totality of the circumstances, disqualification is warranted.'”
  • “Richards Carrington turned to the Supreme Court. The attorneys argued any confidential information had already been disclosed publicly, that the firm had already implemented an ‘ethical screen’ excluding Mulvania from the case and that Mulvania had ‘limited involvement’ in the original litigation over Grynberg’s companies.”
  • “‘To hold otherwise — in a case where nonparties have moved to disqualify counsel based upon the most attenuated and remote of circumstances — would dangerously expand the scope of permissible disqualifications, effectively prohibit ethical screens in any circumstance, and prejudice law firms of all sizes while incentivizing and proliferating the use of disqualification motions as litigation tactics,’ wrote the attorneys.”
  • “The Grynberg children, the estate administrator and Toussaint all responded to Richards Carrington’s petition to defend the decision. Generally, they argued Mulvania was potentially exposed to confidential information about the Grynberg children’s impressions of their father’s cognitive capacity. Mulvania’s new firm could use that knowledge to expose potential inconsistencies in the Grynberg children’s accounts to defend against the malpractice case.”
  • “Yet, ‘Mulvania’s duties to Rachel and Stephen (Grynberg) as his former clients would prevent him from revealing the confidential information that Rachel and Stephen disclosed to him (or didn’t), thereby compromising his duty to zealously represent the Dorsey Defendants. That is a textbook former-client conflict of interest,’ wrote attorneys for the estate administrator.”
  • “Richards Carrington countered that there were no facts ‘or even plausible theories’ that the Grynberg children would have disclosed relevant and confidential information to Mulvania during the short time he worked on the prior litigation. Moreover, the Grynbergs had already commented publicly on the complained-about details.”
  • “The Supreme Court’s order noted the rules of professional conduct do typically prohibit a lawyer in one case from going up against their former client in the ‘same or a substantially related matter.’ But rather than rule on the disqualification issue, the justices ordered Toussaint to address additional relevant factors before he disqualified Richards Carrington.”

Supreme Court denies leave to appeal in case alleging lawyer’s conflict of interest” —

  • “New Zealand’s Supreme Court has refused leave to appeal requested by an applicant alleging a conflict of interest or apparent bias against the chair of the respondent expert consenting panel, convened under the COVID-19 Recovery (Fast-track Consenting) Act 2020. “
  • “In Glenpanel Development Limited v Expert Consenting Panel, [2025] NZSC 109, the matter revolved around the issue of whether to disqualify the panel chair due to a conflict of interest or apparent bias. “
  • “A judge of New Zealand’s High Court saw no conflict of interest in:
    • the panel chair’s status as a partner in law firm Brookfields Lawyers, which acted for a competitor to the applicant
    • his role as an advisor who counselled the Auckland Council and Auckland Transport on the 2020 legislation’s meaning”
  • “The High Court judge found no question of apparent bias or predetermination where there was no evidence that the applicant’s competitor was interested in opposing the development subject of the proceedings. The applicant appealed. New Zealand’s Court of Appeal agreed with the High Court judge and declined to disqualify the panel chair based on a conflict of interest or apparent bias. “
  • “However, the appeal court allowed the appeal on other grounds. It directed the panel to reconsider the application in view of the Supreme Court’s ruling in Royal Forest and Bird Protection Society of New Zealand Inc v New Zealand Transport Agency, [2024] NZSC 26. “
  • “The applicant alleged a live issue since the lawfulness of the panel chair’s conduct might impact the cost amount or require payment to the Environmental Protection Agency under the 2020 legislation’s processes for administrative cost recovery. “
  • “The Supreme Court of New Zealand dismissed the application for leave to appeal. The Supreme Court noted that the chair has since resigned from the panel and that the 2020 legislation has since been repealed. “
  • “The Supreme Court accepted that a question of general or public importance might have arisen concerning the tests for apparent bias and conflicts of interest for lawyers acting in a quasi‑judicial capacity as expert consenting panel members. “
  • “However, the Supreme Court ruled that this issue was no longer live in this matter, given that the chair would not participate in the panel’s reconsideration. “
  • “The Supreme Court found that the applicant appeared to have raised the issue of exposure to administrative costs as an afterthought. The Supreme Court noted that it had no information about the criteria applied or the amount potentially attributed to the appeal court’s refusal to disqualify the panel chair. “