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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Judith Berrett Washington Residents and Others Receive Compensation from the
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| Name | WSBA No. | City | Status |
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David A. Ambrose |
21764 | Edgewood | suspended |
| John M. Cooper | 22977 | College Place | suspended |
| Dan P. Danilov | 170 | Seattle | suspended |
| Thomas J. Earl | 10902 | Moses Lake | disbarred |
| Terry O. Forbes | 5626 | Everett | suspended |
| Dana P. Gelman | 20147 | Tacoma | disbarred |
| Michael R. Hutton | 5673 | Seattle | suspended |
| Michael Johnson-Ortiz | 23580 | Seattle | disbarred |
| Kevin M. Kopra | 29651 | Seattle | suspended |
| Robert C. Lyons | 22275 | Tacoma | disbarred |
| Oleg E. Ordinartsev | 27574 | Redmond | suspended |
| R. Stuart Phillips | 29701 | Poulsbo | disbarred |
| Glenn E. Reed | 5328 | Mount Vernon | disbarred |
| Curtis A. Shelton | 9629 | Vancouver | disbarred |
| Chul Shirts | 24993 | Vancouver | disbarred |
| Randall St. Mary | 4331 | Everett | disbarred |
| David S. Teske | 14823 | Edmonds | disbarred |
| Phillip L. Weinberg | 18622 | Woodinville | suspended |
| Gregory S. Wilson | 12012 | Tacoma | resigned in lieu of disbarment |
Washington was one of the first states in the country to establish a client-protection fund. The WSBA "indemnity fund" was first established in 1960, and in 1994, the Washington State Supreme Court established the current Lawyers' Fund for Client Protection at the request of the WSBA. Today, every state in the union maintains a similar fund. Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and other countries also maintain such funds. Although common to the legal profession, similar protection and compensation funds are unknown in most other professions. Since 1960, the WSBA fund has given more than $2.3 million to the victims of the few dishonest lawyers in this state.
The members of the WSBA Board of Governors serve as trustees of the fund. They appoint and oversee the Lawyers' Fund for Client Protection Committee, which is composed of 11 lawyers and two nonlawyers. During 2005, Olympia attorney James A. Connolly chaired the Committee, and WSBA General Counsel Robert Welden served as counsel, a function he has performed since 1988. A complete copy of the Lawyers' Fund for Client Protection 2005 Annual Report and further information about the fund are available on the WSBA website at www.wsba.org/lawyers/groups/lawyersfund.
The mission of the Washington State Bar Association is to promote justice and serve its members and the public. Among the ways the WSBA does this is through the Lawyers' Fund for Client Protection, and by administering and operating the lawyer discipline system on behalf of the Washington State Supreme Court. Those who have a complaint against a lawyer and wish to file a grievance or make an application to the fund can contact the WSBA by telephone at 800-945-WSBA or 206-443-WSBA, or by e-mail at questions@wsba.org. Information about filing a grievance can be found on the WSBA website at www.wsba.org/info/operations/odc/grievance.htm. Information about the fund can be found on the WSBA website at www.wsba.org/lawyers/groups/lawyersfund.
About the WSBA
The Washington State Bar Association is an instrumentality of the state exercising a governmental function authorized by the Washington State Supreme Court to license the state's 29,200 lawyers. The WSBA both regulates lawyers under the authority of the Court and serves its members as a professional association — all without public funding.
As a regulatory agency, it administers the bar admission process, including the bar exam; provides record-keeping and licensing functions; and administers the lawyer-discipline system. As a professional association, the WSBA provides continuing legal education for attorneys, in addition to numerous other educational and member-service activities.
The governance of the WSBA is vested in its 14-person Board of Governors. There are three governors from the seventh congressional district; one from each of the other eight districts; and three at-large members, one of whom represents the Young Lawyers Division. The 2005-2006 president is S. Brooke Taylor, of Port Angeles, and the 2005-2006 president-elect is Ellen Conedera Dial, of Seattle.
The board meets regularly (every six weeks) at various locations around the state, and its meetings are open to the public. Much of the work of the Bar is carried out through 23 standing committees; 24 sections; and a Young Lawyers Division, with its many committees.
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