A UK doctor was suspended for five months after scheduling fake appointments to leave work early and pick up her children, sparking debate about the pressures faced by working parents and the need for reforms in the healthcare system.
A teacher named Patrick Lawler was found guilty of professional misconduct for expressing extremist views, including calling Islam 'satanic', discussing cocaine inappropriately, and sharing far-right opinions, leading to potential disrepute for the teaching profession.
Ohio University has terminated head football coach Brian Smith for cause following allegations of professional misconduct, with interim coach John Hauser leading the team in the upcoming bowl game as a search for a new head coach begins.
Las Vegas attorney Joe Houston II, who fatally shot his ex-daughter-in-law and her husband during a custody deposition, had been reprimanded by the State Bar of Nevada for professional misconduct related to a divorce case. The bar found that Houston failed to provide a refund to a client and issued a $1,500 fine. This incident adds to a history of disciplinary actions against Houston, including a previous sanction for "disrespect" during a divorce hearing in 2006.
California lawyers are now required to report any knowledge of attorneys involved in treason, rebellion, or insurrection, according to Senate Bill 40 signed into law by Governor Gavin Newsom. The law exempts information protected by attorney-client privilege and aims to prevent harassment. It also increases oversight of the California State Bar, with the appointment of its executive director and general counsel requiring approval from the California Senate. The bill was prompted by a recent audit of the State Bar's handling of the Thomas Girardi scandal, where the former lawyer was disbarred for embezzlement and bribery. The State Bar is currently facing a class action lawsuit from former Girardi clients.
Dr. Jordan Peterson has lost his appeal against the College of Psychologists of Ontario's directive to undergo social media training following complaints about his controversial tweets. The Ontario court ruled that the training was within the college's mandate to regulate the profession and did not infringe on Peterson's freedom of expression. The Canadian Constitution Foundation, which defended Peterson, expressed disappointment and argued that professionals should not have to censor their speech for fear of regulatory bodies penalizing unpopular opinions. Peterson has been ordered to pay the college's legal costs and expressed his intention to retain his license while standing by his statements.
A committee overseeing attorney conduct at the D.C. Court of Appeals has recommended that Rudy Giuliani, former personal attorney to Donald Trump, be disbarred for his role in attempting to block the 2020 presidential election results in Pennsylvania. The committee determined that Giuliani, a sworn officer of the court, had no evidence to support his claims of massive election fraud and that his actions were destructive and dishonest. The recommendation will be reviewed by the full board and ultimately decided by the D.C. Court of Appeals. Giuliani's law license in New York was temporarily suspended earlier this year for similar reasons.
California bar authorities are seeking to disbar attorney John Eastman, the key architect of the fringe legal theory that former President Donald Trump used to subvert the 2020 election. Eastman's bar trial, on charges of professional misconduct, comes as he and Trump await word on whether they'll be criminally charged for the scheme. The trial will expose Eastman's conduct as "fundamentally dishonest and intended to disrupt the lawful certification of the winner of the 2020 election."
Two lawyers are facing possible punishment over a filing in a lawsuit against an airline that included references to past court cases that were actually invented by the artificial intelligence-powered chatbot, ChatGPT. The lawyers blamed the program for tricking them into including fictitious legal research in a court filing. Microsoft has invested some $1 billion in OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT. The case demonstrated how the lawyers might not have understood how ChatGPT works because it tends to hallucinate, talking about fictional things in a manner that sounds realistic but is not.