Michigan Attorney Discipline Board
The state of Michigan’s Attorney Discipline Board consists of three lawyers and six laypeople. The ADB investigates complaints of professional misconduct filed by attorneys in Michigan. The members of the Board are appointed by the State Bar of California. The ADB can suspend or disbar a lawyer who violates the rules of conduct. The ADB can also order a lawyer to stop practicing in a specific state or resign if a client files a complaint against him or her.
The Michigan Attorney Discipline Board has announced that Dykema attorney James M. Campbell has been appointed to its Vice-Chair.
He previously served on the Board. The Attorney Discipline Bureau is the adjudicative arm of Michigan’s Supreme Court and has the exclusive constitutional power to supervise and discipline attorneys. The Michigan Bar Association has a full list of current and former members of the Attorney Discipline Committee. The ADB is the state’s only adjudicative body to discipline and supervises attorneys in the state.
The Board is the adjudicative arm of the Michigan Supreme Court. The ADB oversees panels of attorneys who are subject to disciplinary action by the Supreme Court. The members are appointed by the governor and serve three-year terms. The Board is comprised of six attorneys and three laypersons who are appointed by the Governor. The members serve in an advisory capacity and may serve more than two full terms. At its meetings, the Attorney Discipline Commission reviews cases and decides whether to reinstate an attorney.
James M. Cameron, a Dykema attorney, has been appointed to the Attorney Discipline Board for a one-year term.
The ADB oversees the panel of attorneys who fail to appear at hearings. The board then orders that the respondent provide a justifiable reason for his inability to appear. The court then considers this cause when considering the sanction. The Board has a responsibility to maintain the public’s trust and morals.
The Michigan Supreme Court has appointed James M. Cameron to its Attorney Discipline Board. He will serve a one-year term. The ADB is the adjudicative arm of the attorney discipline system in Michigan. It is responsible for the supervision and disciplining of attorneys in the state. The Board has six attorneys and three laypersons and has the sole constitutional authority to regulate the professional conduct of Michigan attorneys. It is composed of five laypersons and one attorney.
The Attorney Discipline Board is the adjudicative arm of the state’s attorney discipline system.
It supervises attorneys in Michigan who violate the state’s rules of professional conduct. The board also has jurisdiction over those attorneys who are temporarily admitted under MCR 8.126. The ADB is comprised of six attorneys and three laypersons who volunteer their time to serve on the Michigan attorney discipline board. Its members are appointed by the state’s Supreme Court.
The Michigan Attorney Discipline Board is the adjudicative arm of the state’s Supreme Court. It is constitutionally mandated to oversee and discipline Michigan attorneys. It is composed of six attorneys and three laypersons who volunteer to serve on the Board. The Board’s members have a one-year term. The term is renewable and a Michigan attorney must serve a two-year term before being eligible to be reappointed.
The Michigan Supreme Court appoints a new chair of the Attorney Discipline Board.
The Board is the adjudicative arm of the state’s attorney discipline system. It has the sole constitutional authority to oversee and discipline attorneys in Michigan. The board consists of six attorneys and three laypersons who volunteer to serve on the board. The members of the board are elected by the Supreme Court and serve three-year terms.
The Michigan Supreme Court has appointed James M. Campbell to the Attorney Discipline Board. He will serve a one-year term. He was first appointed to the Board in 2011. The board is the adjudicative arm of the state’s attorney discipline system. The members of the Board are comprised of six attorneys and three non-attorneys. The Attorney Discipline Act was passed in 1957 and is the governing body for the legal profession in Michigan.
